Or. Admin. Code § 690-350-0030 - ASR Under ASR Permit
(1) ASR
Permit Required. On-going authorization to store and recover water injected
into an aquifer requires an ASR permit. Only after completion of an ASR testing
program under a limited license may an applicant apply for a permanent ASR
permit.
(2) Water Right before ASR
Permit. A person shall possess a water right or have a water right holder
agreement which allows use of a water right for the injection source water
before applying for an ASR permit. This water right shall be either a permit or
certificate.
(3) Pre-application
Conference. The Department requires at least one pre-application conference
with a prospective permittee prior to filing an ASR permit application. The
purpose of the conference is to discuss the ASR testing results, information
needed for the application, and possible constraints on a project. The
conference may serve as a point of review for the apparent adequacy of the
applicant's hydrogeologic and other information. The Department shall invite
personnel from both the DEQ and HD to the conference.
(4) Permit Application. A request for an ASR
permit shall be submitted on a form provided by the Department. The application
shall consist of the following:
(a)
Information on, and Attachments to, the Form:
(A) Name, address and telephone number of the
applicant;
(B) The proposed source
for injection water, maximum diversion rate, maximum injection rate at each
well(s), maximum storage volume, maximum storage duration, and maximum
withdrawal rate at each well(s);
(C) Identification of Water Right for
Injection Source Water. The water right(s) for which the ASR permit is
sought;
(D) Water Right Holder
Agreement. If the applicant is not the holder of the water right for the
proposed ASR project as cited in paragraph (C) of this subsection, a statement
from the water right holder shall indicate permission for use of the water for
ASR;
(E) Limited License(s) Used
for Testing. The limited license which was issued to perform the ASR testing
necessary for this application;
(F)
Legal Land Use. Evidence that land use and development approval from a local
government is obtained or unnecessary;
(G) Map. The map submitted with the ASR
application shall be prepared by a certified water right examiner and meet the
following criteria:
(i) The application map,
which is made part of the record, shall be of permanent quality and drawn with
sufficient clarity so as to be easily reproduced;
(ii) The map shall be drawn on vellum or
mylar except that maps measuring 11" x 17" or smaller may be prepared on
good-quality paper. The map shall be drawn to a standard, even scale of not
less than 4 inches = 1 mile. A small area map may be more easily and clearly
drawn to a larger scale, such as 1 inch = 400 feet;
(iii) The map shall show clearly the location
of each injection source water diversion point, or well, by reference to a
recognized public land survey corner. The locations may be shown by distance
and bearing or by coordinates (distance north or south and distance east and
west from the corner);
(iv) The map
shall show clearly the location of main canals, ditches, pipelines, or flumes
which are used to transport injection source water to the injection
well(s);
(v) The map shall show
clearly the location of the well(s) where water is to be injected;
(vi) The map shall show clearly the location
of the well(s) where water is to be recovered;
(vii) The map shall show clearly the location
of observation well(s);
(viii) The
map shall show clearly other topographical features such as roads, streams,
railroads, etc., which may be helpful in locating the diversion points in the
field; and
(ix) The map shall show
clearly the scale to which the map is drawn, the section number, township, and
range, and a North directional symbol.
(H) Applicants that are public supply systems
as defined by the Health Division (OAR 333-061-0020(68)) shall acknowledge the
need to comply with the Health Division's plan submission and review
requirements (OAR 333-061-0060);
(I)
Other Information. Any other information required by the Department.
(b) Supplemental Reports:
(A) Proposed ASR Operations. A detailed
description of proposed ASR operations shall include a description of the
proposed manner of ASR operations including injection rates specific to each
well, water storage volumes, injected water storage durations, recovery rates
at each well, water level monitoring including a quality assurance and quality
control plan, water quality sampling, contingency plan for use of recovered
water if the intended use isn't possible and reporting. (A licensed
professional will be required to develop this information as required by Oregon
Law);
(B) Proposed System Design.
The proposed system design package shall include well construction information
for any injection, recovery, observation and source wells, the wellhead
assembly, piping system for injection and recovery, and other conceptual design
components of the system. (A licensed professional will be required to develop
this information as required by Oregon Law;
(C) Test Report. The results of testing under
the limited license, including:
(i) Quality of
Injection Source Water. Test results of the quality of the injection source
water as required in the test plan proposal under the limited
license;
(ii) Quality of Receiving
Aquifer Water. Test results of the quality of the aquifer water as required in
the test plan proposal under the limited license;
(iii) Quality of Recovered Water. Test
results of the quality of the recovered aquifer water as required under the
limited license;
(iv) Groundwater
Information. Hydrogeologic information shall include the local geology, a
conceptual hydrogeologic model, a description of the aquifer targeted for
storage, estimated flow direction and rate of movement, allocation of surface
water, springs or wells within the area affected by ASR wells, rationale for
estimating the affected area, anticipated changes to the groundwater system due
to the proposed ASR project, potential natural resource problems of testing,
and other information on groundwater and surface water conditions for basing
recovery estimations. (A licensed professional will be required to develop this
information as required by Oregon law. (ORS
672.505 -
705));
(D) Comments on
Source Water/Standards. The applicant shall address the following situations as
they apply:
(i) If a constituent that is
regulated under OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165) is detected in the
source water, the applicant shall demonstrate that there are not other sources
of water available to the applicant which would be satisfactory for injection
and lower in the constituent of concern. Other sources are limited to those for
which the applicant has water rights;
(ii) If a constituent is detected in the
source water above 50% of the levels established under OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165), the applicant shall
install a treatment method, system or other alternative method to reduce the
constituent to less than 50% of those levels, unless the applicant can show
that there is not a treatment method, system or other alternative method that
will reduce the level of a contaminant below the 50% level, or the lesser of:
(I) The applicant can show that it would be
more costly to provide the treatment method, system or other alternative method
necessary than to obtain the same amount of stored water from the next cheapest
feasible water supply alternative; or
(II) In the case of a drinking water system
the applicant can show the cost of adding the treatment method, system or other
alternative method increases the cost per household of providing water
(including operation, maintenance, and debt service for prior water projects)
above 1.5% of the median household income of the community.
(iii) Notwithstanding paragraph (4)(b)(D)(ii)
of this rule, in the event the applicant cannot reduce a constituent to less
than the 50% level, the applicant shall minimize the constituent level by
providing the level of treatment available or other alternative method which
for the same amount of stored water is not as costly as either the next
cheapest water supply alternative or an amount equal to that necessary to
increase the cost per household of providing water to 1.5% of the median
household income of the community, whichever is less;
(iv) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (4)(b)(D)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this rule and after consulting with
the DEQ and the HD, the Department may determine that the circumstances are
such that an alternative source, treatment method, system, or other alternative
method is acceptable or not necessary.
(c) Other Information. Any other information
required by the Department.
(5) Permit Application Processing:
(a) Review of Application for Completeness.
Within 45 days after an individual submits or resubmits an application, the
Department shall consult with DEQ and HD about the completeness of the
application, determine the completeness of the application, and either:
(A) Notify the applicant that it is complete
for purposes of evaluation; or
(B)
Notify the applicant of what additional information is required before the
application is resubmitted.
(b) Public Notice/Comment Period. Within 7
days after determining that an application is complete, the Department shall
provide public notice of the request to the public in the same manner as is
used for water use applications. The appearance in the public notice commences
a 60-day public comment period for the application. The Department may require
additional information from the applicant pursuant to its own concerns and
those raised by the public comments;
(c) DEQ and HD Assistance. The Department
shall rely on the DEQ and the HD to comment on and recommend conditions for the
permit and shall provide the public notice and a copy of the complete
application to those agencies at the opening of the comment period;
(d) Scope of Public Interest Review. When
making a public interest determination, the Department shall receive comments
from interested parties or agencies for consideration of permit issuance,
proposed conditions, and limitations. The public interest review standards
shall apply only to the matters raised by the ASR permit application, not to
the water right for injection source water;
(e) Referral to Commission. In the discretion
of the Director, the Director may refer policy matters raised by the ASR
application to the Commission for decision;
(f) Proposed Final Order. After considering
comments and/or recommendations specific to the proposed ASR project during the
60-day public comment period, the Director shall issue a proposed final order
on the application. The proposed final order shall be mailed to the applicant,
commenting agencies, and commentors. Notice of the proposed final order shall
be given in the weekly notice published by the Department;
(g) Protests:
(A) The Department shall allow a 45-day
protest period, starting when the proposed final order is noticed in the public
notice;
(B) Protests may be filed
by any person objecting to the proposed issuance of a permit, and by any
applicant objecting to proposed permit conditions;
(C) Protests shall be in the form and manner
specified in OAR Chapter 690, Division 2.
(h) Director's Action on the Application.
After the close of the protest period and after consideration of any protest
filed, the Director may:
(A) Issue the permit
with proper conditions upon finding that:
(i)
The proposed ASR project will not impair or be detrimental to the public
interest; and
(ii) There is a water
right for injection source water.
(B) Propose to deny the application and refer
to contested case hearing upon finding that the ASR project will impair or be
detrimental to the public interest;
(C) Offer the applicant and protester(s) the
opportunity to engage in discussions to try and resolve issues of
concern;
(D) Refer to contested
case hearing to consider protests against approval of the application or
protests against proposed permit conditions; or
(E) Refer the application to the Commission
to address policy matters raised by the application.
(i) The Department shall send a copy of the
final order to commentors and protesters.
(6) Permit Conditioning. The following
conditions shall be placed on the ASR permit:
(a) Injection/Storage/Recovery. The permit
will specify the maximum allowable injection rate at each well, the maximum
allowable storage volume, the maximum storage duration and the maximum
allowable recovery rate at each well. These maximum values shall substantially
reflect those amounts which were successfully demonstrated under the limited
license;
(b) Record of Use. The
permittee shall maintain a record of injection and recovery, including the
total number of hours of injection and recovery and the total metered quantity
injected and recovered. The record of use may be reviewed by Department staff
upon request;
(c) Permit
Modification/Revocation. The Department shall notify the permittee in writing
when the Director either considers modifying or revoking the permit and allow
the permittee to respond:
(A) The Director may
modify the ASR permit for any of the following reasons:
(i) To reflect changes in HD and DEQ water
quality or treatment standards;
(ii) To address needed technological changes
as requested by DEQ or HD to minimize constituents regulated under OAR
333-061-0030 (ORS 448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165);
(iii) Upon written request from the permittee
for minor adjustments to the authorization in the permit;
(iv) Upon written request from the permittee
for changes in the limits for the recovery of stored water. Any person
operating an ASR project under a permit, upon approval by the Director, may
recover up to 100 percent of the water stored in the aquifer storage facility
if valid scientific data gathered during operations under the limited license
or permit demonstrate that the injected source water is not lost through
migration or other means and that groundwater otherwise present in the aquifer
has not been irretrievably lost as a result of aquifer storage or
recovery.
(B) The
Director may revoke or modify the ASR permit for any of the following reasons:
(i) to prevent or mitigate substantial
interference with other water rights, minimum perennial streamflows established
prior to the granting of the ASR permit, or aquifer water quality; or
(ii) to address any other unintended,
injurious effects of the ASR activity.
(C) The Department shall offer an additional
public comment opportunity consistent with the notice and comment provisions of
this rule prior to modifying or revoking the permit.
(d) Compliance with Other Laws. The injection
of acceptable water into an aquifer(s) under an ASR permit shall comply with
all applicable local, state or federal laws;
(e) Water Quality Conditions:
(A) The ASR permit shall include conditions
to minimize, to the extent technically feasible, practical and cost-effective,
the concentration of constituents in the injection source water that are not
naturally present in the aquifer;
(B) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph
(6)(e)(C) of this rule, if the injection source water contains constituents
regulated under OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165) that are detected at
greater than 50 percent of the established levels, the aquifer storage and
recovery permit may require the permittee to employ technically feasible,
practical and cost-effective methods to minimize concentrations of such
constituents in the injection source water. The Department, in consultation
with DEQ and HD, may set specific limits between 50 and 100% of the established
level for constituents regulated under OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165) as provided by the
standards in (4)(b)(D) of this rule;
(C) Constituents that have a secondary
contaminant level or constituents that are associated with disinfection of the
water may be injected into the aquifer up to the standards established under
OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273);
(D) The Department may, based upon valid
scientific data, further limit certain constituents in the injection source
water if the Department finds that those constituents will interfere with or
pose a threat to the maintenance of the water resources of the state for
present or future beneficial uses;
(E) The permittee shall be in compliance with
treatment requirements and performance standards for source waters that fall in
categories identified in OAR 333-061-0032;
(F) If during the course of ASR operations a
constituent which is regulated under OAR 333-061-0030 (ORS
448.131 and
448.273) or OAR 340-040 (ORS
468B.165) is detected above the
level prescribed in the permit, the permittee shall stop injection activities
and notify the Department.
(f) Monitoring/Sampling/Recovery/Reporting:
(A) The permit shall include requirements for
reporting, sampling and monitoring the ASR project aquifer impacts and for
constituents reasonably expected to be found in the injection source
water;
(B) The permit shall specify
limits for the recovery of stored water up to 100 percent.
(g) Protection for Existing Users. The ASR
permit shall be conditioned to protect existing water rights and the water
quality of existing users that rely upon the receiving aquifer and the
injection source water;
(h) Other
Conditions. The permit may contain any other conditions required by the
Director to protect the public welfare, health, and safety.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 536.027 & ORS 537.534
Stats. Implemented: ORS 537.531 - ORS 537.534
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