Or. Admin. R. 340-150-0410 - Release Detection Requirements and Methods for Underground Piping
(1) For underground
piping that routinely contains a regulated substances, an owner and permittee
of a petroleum UST system must provide release detection which meets the
requirements of this rule.
(2)
Pressurized piping. For underground piping that conveys regulated substances
under pressure, an owner and permittee must insure that the piping is equipped
with an automatic line leak detector that alerts an owner and permittee to the
presence of a leak by restricting or shutting off the flow of regulated
substances through underground piping or by triggering an audible or visual
alarm. Interstitial monitoring sensor systems or stand alone "sump" sensors are
not an acceptable alternative for a line leak detector. In addition,
(a) The line leak detector must be approved
by a national organization (e.g., the National Work Group on Leak
Detection);
(b) The line leak
detector must be capable of detecting a leak of three gallons per hour at ten
pounds per square inch line pressure within one hour; and
(c) An annual test of the operation of the
line leak detector must be conducted in accordance with the manufacturer's
requirements.
(3) In
addition to the requirements of section (2) of this rule, an owner and
permittee with pressurized piping must conduct an annual line tightness test
that can detect a 0.1 gallon per hour leak rate at one and one-half times the
operating pressure. Interstitial monitoring sensors may replace the annual line
tightness test if:
(a) The equipment is
designed, constructed and installed to monitor all portions of the underground
piping that routinely contains a regulated substance; and
(b) The requirements for interstitial
monitoring (OAR
340-150-0465
) are met.
(4) Suction
piping. For underground piping that conveys a regulated substance under suction
(i.e., piping that operates at less than atmospheric pressure), an owner and
permittee must check the piping for the presence of air in the pipeline in
accordance with the National Fire Protection Association standard NFPA,
329"Recommended Practices for Handling Releases of Flammable and
Combustible Liquids and Gases" Chapter 5, Release Detection of Tanks and
Piping, subsection 5-2.3.2(b), if any of the following indicator conditions are
observed by any person dispensing a regulated substance:
(a) If there are indications of air in the
pipeline or other unusual operating conditions are observed (refer
toNational Fire Protection Association standard NFPA, 329 subsection
5-2.3.2(a)for specific indicators), the pipeline check valve should be
inspected to determine if it is seated tightly. The check valve must be
repaired, replaced or sealed off as appropriate depending on the results of the
inspection; and
(b) The
requirements of OAR
340-150-0350
through
340-150-0354
must be met for any repair, modification or replacement actions taken to
correct a problem.
(5)
In addition to the requirements of section (4) of this rule, an owner and
permittee of suction piping must conduct a line tightness test at least once
every three years in accordance with manufacturers requirements.
(6) Release detection is not required for
suction piping that is designed and constructed to meet the following
standards:
(a) The below grade underground
piping operates at less than atmospheric pressure;
(b) The below grade underground piping is
sloped so that the contents of the pipe will drain back into the UST if the
suction is released;
(c) Only one
check valve is present in each suction line;
(d) The check valve is located directly below
and as close as practical to the suction pump; and
(e) A method is provided that allows the
department to readily determine compliance with this section of the
rule.
(7) In lieu of
conducting line tightness tests on either pressurized or suction piping, an
owner and permittee may conduct monthly monitoring by one of the applicable
release detection methods described in OAR
340-150-0450
through
340-150-0470,
if the method is designed to detect a release from any portion of the
underground piping that routinely contains a regulated substance.
(8) An owner and permittee must retain at a
minimum the last completed line test, line leak detector test or the most
current 12 consecutive months of release detection records for
piping.
(9) An owner and permittee
must report to the department any leak test results or other observations or
results indicating the possibility of a release within 24 hours as a suspected
release (OAR
340-150-0500
) and immediately begin investigation in accordance with
340-150-0510.
Notes
Publications: Publications referenced are available from the agency.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 466.706 - 466.835, 466.994 & 466.995
Stats. Implemented: ORS 466.746 & 466.765
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.