"Class V
injection well" means all injection wells not included in Classes I, II, III,
or IV. Class V wells are usually shallow injection wells that inject fluids
above the uppermost groundwater aquifer. Some examples are dry wells, French
drains used to manage storm water and drain fields.
(a) The following are examples of Class V
injection wells that are allowed in Washington:
(i) Drainage wells used to drain surface
fluids, primarily storm water runoff, into or below the ground surface, such
as, but not limited to, a drywell or infiltration trench containing perforated
pipe;
(ii) Heat pump or cooling
water return flow wells used to inject water previously used for heating or
cooling;
(iii) Aquifer recharge
wells used to replenish the water in an aquifer;
(iv) Salt water intrusion barrier wells used
to inject water into a fresh water aquifer to prevent the intrusion of salt
water into the fresh water;
(v)
Septic systems serving multiple residences or nonresidential establishments
that receive only sanitary waste and serve twenty or more people per day or an
equivalent design capacity of 3,500 gallons or larger per day;
(vi) Subsidence control wells (not used for
the purpose of oil or natural gas production) used to inject fluids into a
nonoil or gas producing zone to reduce or eliminate subsidence associated with
the removal of fresh water;
(vii)
Injection wells associated with the recovery of geothermal energy for heating,
aquaculture and production of electric power;
(viii) Injection wells used in experimental
technologies;
(ix) Injection wells
used for in situ recovery of lignite, coal, tar sands, and oil shale;
(x) Injection wells used for remediation
wells receiving fluids intended to clean up, treat or prevent subsurface
contamination;
(xi) Injection wells
used to inject spent brine into the same formation from which it was withdrawn
after extraction of halogens or their salts;
(xii) Injection wells used to control
flooding of residential basements;
(xiii) Injection wells used for testing
geologic reservoir properties for potential underground storage of natural gas
or oil in geologic formations; if the injected water used is of equivalent or
better quality than the groundwater in the targeted geologic formation and the
groundwater in the targeted geologic formation is nonpotable and/or toxic
because of naturally occurring groundwater chemistry;
(xiv) Injection wells used as part of a
reclaimed water project as allowed under a permit; and
(xv) Injection wells used to inject carbon
dioxide for geologic sequestration.
(b) The following are examples of Class V
wells that are prohibited in Washington:
(i)
New and existing cesspools including multiple dwelling, community or regional
cesspools, or other devices that receive sanitary wastes that have an open
bottom and may have perforated sides that serve twenty or more people per day
or an equivalent design capacity of 3,500 gallons or larger per day. The UIC
requirements do not apply to single family residential cesspools or to
nonresidential cesspools which receive solely sanitary waste and have the
capacity to serve fewer than twenty persons a day or an equivalent design
capacity of less than 3,500 gallons per day;
(ii) Motor vehicle waste disposal wells that
receive or have received fluids from vehicular repair or maintenance activities
(see definition of motor vehicle waste disposal wells in WAC
173-218-030). UIC wells receiving
storm water located at vehicular repair, maintenance or dismantling facilities
shall not be considered waste disposal wells if the wells are protected from
receiving vehicle waste;
(iii)
Wells used for solution mining of conventional mines such as stopes
leaching;
(iv) Backfill wells used
to inject a mixture of water and sand, mill tailings or other solids into mined
out portions of subsurface mines whether what is injected is a radioactive
waste or not;
(v) UIC wells
receiving fluids containing hazardous substances (see definition for hazardous
substances in WAC
173-218-030) except for wells:
(A) Allowed under (a)(x) of this subsection;
or
(B) Receiving storm water that
meets the nonendangerment standard by applying the best management practices
and requirements in WAC
173-218-090 or storm water
authorized under a permit; and
(vi) UIC wells receiving industrial
wastewater except for industrial wastewater authorized under a
permit.