055-4 Wyo. Code R. §§ 4-1 - Pollution and Surface Damage (Forms 14A and 14B)
(a) These
rules are intended to protect human health and the environment by avoiding
contamination of the soils and underground and surface waters at drilling or
producing locations. Applications to construct pits, provided for in these
rules, shall be approved if the pit will not cause the contamination of surface
or underground water, and endanger human health or wildlife. Approval by the
Commission of applications for permits for reserve or produced water pits does
not relieve the Owner or Operator of the obligation to comply with the
applicable federal, local, or other state permits or regulatory
requirements.
(b) The Commission
exercises its regulatory authority over the construction, location, operation,
and reclamation of oilfield pits within a lease, unit or communitized area
which is used solely for the storage, treatment, and disposal of drilling,
production and treater unit wastes. The following pits are subject to this
regulation:
(i) Reserve pits on the drilling
location;
(ii) Reserve pits off the
location within a lease, unit or communitized area permitted by Owner or unit
Operator drilling the well;
(iii)
Produced water retention pits, skim pits, and emergency production pits
including the following:
(A) Pits associated
with approved disposal wells which act as fluid storage, filtering or settling
ponds prior to underground disposal in a Class II well;
(B) Pits constructed for disposal of produced
fluids in connection with oil and gas exploration and production used as part
of the filtering and/or settling process upstream of a National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) discharge point;
(C) Pits constructed in association with
heater treaters or other dehydration equipment used in production, such as free
water knockouts, or first, second and third stage separators;
(D) Pits constructed for blowdown or gas
flaring purposes.
(iv)
Pits constructed for the storage and treatment of heavy sludges, oils, or basic
sediment and water (BS&W) in connection with production
operations;
(v) Temporary pits
constructed during well workovers, including spent acid and frac fluid
pits;
(vi) Permanent or temporary
emergency use pits;
(vii)
Miscellaneous pits associated with oil and gas production not listed
above.
(c)
Permits. In addition to the permits required by the Commission and
the Bureau of Land Management, the following agencies may also have authorities
over the management of oil field wastes:
(i)
The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality administers the following
regulatory programs:
(A) Commercial ponds and
pits used for the retention and disposal of fluids;
(B) Class I hazardous waste and nonhazardous
waste wells under the Underground Injection Control (UIC) Program;
(C) National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System Program (NPDES);
(D)
Regulations for releases of oil and hazardous substances into waters of the
state and Wyoming Contingency Plan;
(E) Roadspreading, landspreading, and
landfarming of exploration and production wastes;
(F) Solid waste disposal facilities operated
by municipalities and privately by the oil and gas industry;
(G) Cathodic protection wells;
(H) Underground storage tanks;
(I) Sanitary waste treatment systems;
and,
(J) Air quality
standards;
(ii) The
Bureau of Land Management administers surface operating standards for oil and
gas exploration and development on federal lands, Tribal lands and/or leases in
Wyoming;
(iii) The Office of the
State Engineer regulates surface water appropriation, construction of water
supply wells and appropriation of water from those wells, and the beneficial
use of water produced in association with the recovery of hydrocarbons which
includes water from coalbed methane wells. The State Engineer's Office should
be contacted for dam safety requirements;
(iv) The United States Fish and Wildlife
Service administers the Migratory Bird Treaty Act in Wyoming. Oil and gas
Owners or Operators have to be aware of the obligation to comply with this
regulation as they permit, construct, and maintain all facilities that may
contain hydrocarbons or produced waters. Appendix A of these rules includes
information on that legislation.
(v) The Commission shall, to the maximum
extent possible and consistent with its statutory obligations and authorities
set forth in Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§
30-5-101 through
30-5-127, adopt such policies and
practices as may be required in compliance with Executive Order 2010-4,
Greater Sage-Grouse Core Area Protection, Appendix
J.
(d)
Oil and Gas
Commission Pit Permits. No retaining pit or below-grade structure used
for the containment of fluids, as defined in this section, shall be constructed
unless Form 14A (Application for Permit to Construct and Use Earthen Pit for
Retention of Produced Water) or 14B (Application for Permit to Construct and
Use Earthen Pit for Temporary Use, or Reserve Pit), has been submitted to and
approved by the Supervisor. The Commission shall not approve any application,
either Form 14A or 14B until the applicant has demonstrated compliance with the
requirements of the Split Estates Act, if the application is subject to the
Split Estates Act, as contained within Chapter 3, Section
8(d) of these
rules.
(e) Owners or Operators of
produced water retaining pits in operation prior to June 1, 1984, may continue
to use such pits as long as the operation conforms to the current requirements
of new pits. Owners of existing pits shall be responsible for providing the
information included on Form 14A upon request of the Supervisor.
(f) The Supervisor may administratively
approve fieldwide or areawide applications covering the standardized
construction and operation of earthen retaining pits.
(g) Optional Form 18 (Soil & Groundwater
Information) is provided for the Owner's/Operator's use, if they choose, to
supplement Forms 14A and 14B to record and document shallow groundwater and
subsoil types when they drill shallow holes such as the rat hole, mouse hole or
conductor on the drill site. Form 18 can be used to demonstrate that a well is
not in a critical area where groundwater is at a depth of less than twenty feet
(20') or in an area that has permeable subsoil.
(h)
Centralized Pits. Owners or
Operators must obtain approval of the Supervisor for the location, construction
and closure of noncommercial centralized pits located within a lease, unit, or
communitized area used for field operations. Requirements may be more stringent
than individual reserve or produced water pits depending on pit size, waste
type, migratory bird protective measures, mosquito control with the county weed
and pest control board guidance in the county where operations are located, and
location. Applicants, upon request of the Supervisor, shall provide additional
notice, plats and plan views, and information relative to the location of water
supplies, residences, schools, hospitals, or other structures where people are
known to congregate, site security, groundwater monitoring and leak detection.
These permits will be issued for a term of five (5) years and may be renewed at
the discretion of the Supervisor.
(i)
Emergency Pits. Prior to
construction, permanent emergency pits must be approved on Form 14B
(Application For Permit To Construct and Use an Earthen Pit for Temporary Use,
or Reserve Pit). Within twenty-four (24) hours of the first business day after
construction of a temporary emergency pit or use of a permanent emergency pit,
the Owners or Operators shall verbally advise the Supervisor of the existence
of the pit and of the estimated time it will be in use.
(j)
Reserve Pits. Form 14B must
be submitted and approved in conjunction with an Application for Permit to
Drill (Form 1). Approval of this permit must be obtained before drilling
commences. The staff must be provided at least one (1) working day to evaluate
the location (for distance from surface waters, depth to useable ground water,
soils, distance from human habitation, etc.) and to evaluate the fluids which
potentially will be retained in the pit (for types of drilling and completion
fluids proposed for use, for presence of salt sections, and for the length of
time the pit will be in use, etc.). The Commission may request additional
information to complete its evaluation. Owners and Operators using closed
systems who wish to use a pit to receive drill cuttings must apply for and
receive permission to construct on Form 14B.
(k) Permits are valid for a term of one (1)
year from the date of issuance unless an extension has been approved for the
Application for Permit to Drill (Form 1) and for as long as the permit
conditions are met. Falsification of information on the application or filing
of an incomplete application will result in automatic denial of the
request.
(l)
Workover and
Completion Pits in Critical Areas. Approval of workover and completion
pits proposed to be constructed in locations meeting the definition of pits in
critical areas must be applied for and obtained on Form 14B prior to their
construction and use.
(m)
Application May be Done in the Following Manner:
(i) Submitting Form 14B application for
individual new (concurrent with filing an Application for Permit to Drill,
(Form 1)) or existing wells;
(ii)
Submitting Form 14B application for a field or unit wide permit, listing all
wells meeting any of the above criteria.
(n) If the Owner or Operator complies with
the approved Form 14B terms and conditions, no further approval to construct
and use workover or completion pits will be required for those well sites.
However, subsequent reporting, within thirty (30) days of completion of
operations on Form 4 (Sundry Notice), is required each time a pit is
constructed and used. Alternative reporting requirements such as annual
reporting may be approved by the Supervisor.
(o)
Workover and Completion Pits in
Non-Critical Areas. Workover and completion pits proposed to be
constructed in locations not meeting any of the criteria listed in the
definition of Pits in Critical Areas, Chapter 1, Section
2(nn) of these rules, will
require either:
(i) Submittal of a Form 14B
application for a field or individual well basis to receive a one-time approval
to construct and use workover and completion pits. As long as the Owner or
Operator complies with the approved Form 14B terms and conditions, no further
application/notice will be required for future construction and use of workover
and completion pits.
(ii)
Notification to the Supervisor via Sundry Notice (Form 4), subsequent to the
construction and use of a workover or completion pit. This must be submitted
within thirty (30) days of completion of operations and include the following
information:
(A) Schematic diagram showing
the location of the workover or completion pit in relation to existing
production equipment;
(B) Length of
time the pit was in use; and,
(C)
Statement addressing the types of fluids placed in the pit and that those
fluids were removed prior to closure.
(p)
General Information for Workover
and Completion Pits. Upon review of Form 14B applications, the
Commission staff will evaluate well locations to determine if their proposed
siting is in a critical area (for distances from surface waters, depth to
useable groundwater, soils, distances from human habitation, etc.). In the
event construction is approved, special precautions or operational restrictions
may be required by the Supervisor at these well facilities in order to avoid
contamination of groundwater and surface water at the well location.
(q)
Workover Pits should retain
only Resources Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) exempt wastes. Other wastes
should be managed in tanks for later recycling, reuse, or proper disposal.
Owners or Operators should design workover or completion procedures so that
additives will be expended while correcting the down-hole problems. Workover
and completion pits shall be open only for the duration of operations and must
be closed within thirty (30) days after the operation is complete.
(r)
Produced Water Pits. Form
14A must be submitted and approved prior to use of a produced water pit. The
Commission may request additional information to determine if the proposed pit
location meets the definition of Pits in Critical Areas, Chapter 1, Section
2(nn).
(i) The information required for submittal
includes a standard water analysis (Form 17) to include oil and grease, maximum
and average estimated inflow, size of pit, freeboard capacity, original of pit
contents, method of disposal of pit contents, maximum fluid level above average
ground level, distance to closest surface water, depth to groundwater, subsoil
type and type of sealing material. A plan view map and topographic map of
sufficient size and detail to determine surface drainage system and all natural
waterways and irrigation systems, if applicable, must be attached. The
Commission may request additional information.
(ii) Because of the potential for direct
communication with shallow groundwater resources of the state, application for
approval of construction of percolation pits for containment and discharge of
water produced in association with coalbed methane gas in the Powder River
Basin may be accompanied by a review of the groundwater issues by the
Department of Environmental Quality as determined by the Supervisor. If the
proposed construction meets with requirements of the Commission's Rules, the
application may be granted.
(s)
Below Grade Structures
(Tinhorns). For the purpose of its regulation, the Commission requires
below grade structures (including tinhorns) used to receive oil, condensate, or
produced water, to be applied for on Form 14A. Construction must be done in
accordance with good engineering practice and the staff must be provided the
opportunity to inspect prior to any use. A written monitoring program for all
permitted below grade structures must be submitted and approved by the
staff.
(t)
Marking.
The Owner/Operator shall mark each pit in a conspicuous place with his name and
the legal description of the location of the pit and shall take all necessary
means and precautions to preserve these markings. Exempted from this
requirement are pits in close proximity to injection or producing wells marked
in accordance with Chapter 3, Section 19.
(u)
Location. When any retaining
pit is located in an area with a high potential for communication between the
pit contents and surface water or shallow ground water, or to provide
additional protection to human beings when operations are conducted in close
proximity to water supplies, residences, schools, hospitals, or other places
where people are known to congregate, or to provide protection to livestock and
wildlife, the Commission may require such modifications or changes in the
Owner's/Operator's plans as it deems necessary including, but not limited to,
running a closed system, lining the pit, installing monitoring systems and
providing additional reporting, or any other reasonable requirement that will
insure the protection of fresh water. In areas where ground water is less than
twenty feet (20') below the surface, a closed system must be utilized for well
drilling operations.
(v)
Unlined pits shall not be constructed in fill. Pits of any kind
shall not be constructed in drainages, or in the floodplain of a flowing or
intermittent stream, or in an area where there is standing water during any
portion of the year. Ground and surface water maps are available for review or
consultation at the Commission, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), or the State
Engineer's Office.
(w)
Construction. Lining of pits with reinforced oilfield grade
material, compatible with the waste to be received, will be required by the
Supervisor or Commission under certain circumstances including, but not limited
to, pits proposed to be constructed in areas defined as critical as well as on
sites with sandy soils, shallow groundwater, in groundwater recharge areas, or
sites immediately adjacent to the Green River or the Colorado River drainage
and other sensitive environments or circumstances identified by the Commission.
Pits proposed to be constructed in the Powder River Basin for percolation of
water produced in association with the recovery of coalbed methane gas into
shallow sands or aquifers may be considered by the Commission if the applicant
can demonstrate their operation will comply with water quality standards of the
Department of Environmental Quality. When required by Supervisor, the
Commission staff will provide applicable information to the Department of
Environmental Quality for their co-review. Pits constructed in fill or those
used to retain oil base drilling muds, high-density brines, and/or completion
or treating fluids must be lined. Pits constructed to retain produced water
with a total dissolved solids concentration in excess of ten thousand
milligrams per liter (10,000 mg/l) must be lined. The Supervisor, on a case by
case basis, will determine if pits retaining water with a total dissolved
solids concentration less than ten thousand milligrams per liter (10,000 mg/l)
will be required to be lined. The Commission staff must be provided at least
twenty-four (24) hours notice of commencement of construction and/or of closure
of pits so that an inspection can be made. Additionally, the following
construction standards for pits are required to be met or exceeded:
(i) Soil mixture liners, recompacted clay
liners, and manufactured liners must be compatible with the waste contained. On
request of the Supervisor, the Operator must provide evidence of the chemical
resistance of the liner selected for use.
(ii) Liners constructed of synthetic
materials must meet the following specifications: a 9 to 12 mil thickness,
greater than 20% elongation at failure, puncture strength of 60 pounds, tear
strength of 50 pounds, and permeability less than
10-7 cm/sec. Joints must be overlapped a minimum of
2 inches and seams sealed as recommended by the manufacturer. Blemishes, holes,
or scars must be repaired per manufacturer's recommendation. Breaches in the
liner for siphons or other equipment must be reinforced.
(iii) Slopes for soil mixture liners or
recompacted liners shall not exceed 3:1. Slopes for manufactured liners shall
not exceed 1:1.
(iv) Reasonable
provisions for protection of liners during filling and emptying activities must
be included in the construction plans.
(v) Manufactured liners must be installed
over smooth fill subgrade which is free of pockets, loose rocks, or other
materials which could damage the liner. Sand, sifted dirt or bentonite are
suggested. At no time will straw or any other organic material except synthetic
cushion fabric designed for that purpose be used for a liner cushion.
Installation of synthetic or soil mixture liners must be in accordance with
accepted engineering practice.
(vi)
Liner edges must be secured. The Commission requires that liner edges be placed
in a trench which is deep enough to receive approximately one foot (1') of
compacted soil which will anchor the material.
(vii) Monitoring systems may be required for
pits constructed in sensitive areas. Such pits must be operated in a manner
that avoids damage to liner integrity. Periodic inspections, weekly at a
minimum, of pits must be made by the Owner or Operator and documentation of
such inspections may be required to be submitted to the Supervisor at his
request.
(viii) Liquids must be
kept at a level that takes into account extreme precipitation events and
prevents overtopping and unpermitted discharges. Appendix B includes average
annual precipitation rates for the state.
(x)
Operation. Owners or
Operators will take such reasonable measures to manage pits so that the pits
are used solely for retention or disposal of fluids associated with the
operation for which the pit was originally constructed and for which the permit
was granted. Reserve pits cannot be used as production pits; separate pits must
be constructed and permitted. Permits are granted taking into consideration the
salinity, hydrocarbon content, pH, and other characteristics of the fluids
which may be detrimental to the environment if they were to be directly applied
to soils. Use of a pit by persons other than the Owner or Operator is
prohibited unless approved by the Supervisor and by the Owner or Operator of
the pit. Pits shall not receive, collect, store, or dispose of any wastes that
are listed or defined as hazardous wastes and regulated under Subtitle C of
RCRA, except in accordance with state and federal hazardous waste laws and
regulations. The pit permit or approval is automatically canceled if these
provisions are not met. See Appendix C of these rules for additional
information.
(y) Unused commercial
products shall not be disposed with exempt oilfield wastes. The commingling of
any listed hazardous waste with the otherwise exempt pit contents may render
the entire mixture a hazardous waste and results in closing the pit under the
RCRA hazardous waste regulations. All reasonable efforts should be made to
completely use commercial products. Products should be returned to the vendor
if appropriate, or segregated from other wastes for management or disposal. Oil
base muds must be segregated from water base drilling fluids because pit
closure is complicated by their presence. Mixing and treating of oil based and
water-based muds can be allowed with approval of the Supervisor. Rigwash may be
routed to the reserve pit provided care is taken to avoid contamination of the
pit contents by rig oil and other nonexempt wastes. See Appendix C of these
rules for more information.
(z)
Where feasible, Owners/Operators are encouraged to increase the use of solids
removal equipment to minimize drilling fluid waste, where practical. The
Commission encourages the recycling of drilling fluids and by administrative
action approves the transfer of drilling fluids intended for recycling. When
removed as a product for use in a drilling operation on another lease, drilling
fluid is not classified as a waste. If federal leases are involved, the Owner
or Operator must obtain the approval of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
The Supervisor requires the following information be included on the Form 14B
or on a Sundry Notice (Form 4) estimated volume, estimated date of transfer,
mud recap, analyses which include at a minimum, pH, chlorides, and oil and
grease. To protect shallow groundwater, drilling muds with chlorides testing in
excess of 3,000 parts per million or those containing hydrocarbons cannot be
used in drilling operations until after the surface casing has been
set.
(aa) Trash and sanitary waste
should be properly contained and hauled to approved disposal locations, not
retained in or disposed of in pits on location or downhole. Owners/Operators
should consult the county sanitarian and/or the Department of Environmental
Quality regarding appropriate disposal of sanitary wastes.
(bb) All pits shall be fenced completely and
for any produced water pit, workover, completions, or emergency pit found
containing oil, sheens, condensate, other hydrocarbons or chemicals proven to
be hazardous to public health, safety and welfare, or to wildlife, domestic
animals, or migratory birds, the Owner or Operator shall have these fluids
removed as soon as practical or in accordance with Chapter 4, Section
1(dd) of these rules. If
timely fluid removal is not possible, the pit should be netted or otherwise
secured in a manner that avoids the loss of wildlife, domestic animals, or
migratory birds. Alternative methods of netting or securing pits may be
authorized at the discretion of the Supervisor. See Appendix A for information
relative to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Owners or Operators shall provide
for devices on hydrogen sulfide flare stacks to discourage birds from perching.
The Supervisor may make additional requests for security when operations are
conducted in close proximity to residences, schools, hospitals, or other
structures or locations where people are known to congregate. For reserve pits,
see subsection (jj) of this section.
(cc) Blowdown, flare, and emergency pits
cannot be used for long-term storage or disposal.
(dd) All retaining pits shall be kept
reasonably free of surface accumulations of oil and other liquid hydrocarbon
substances and shall be cleaned within ten (10) days after discovery of the
accumulation by the Owner/Operator or notice from the Supervisor.
(ee) The Owner or Operator shall not pollute
streams, underground water, or unreasonably damage or occupy the surface of the
leased premises or other lands. At no time will the fluid contents of any pit
be discharged or allowed to escape to the surface without prior approval
through issuance of an NPDES permit by the Department of Environmental Quality
(DEQ) and other required authorization. At no time will drilling fluids be
discharged into live waters or into any drainages that lead to live waters of
the state. If liquid products of wells cannot be treated or destroyed, or if
the volume of such products is too great for disposal by the usual method of
onsite natural evaporation and burial of solids, the Supervisor must be
consulted and the liquids disposed of by an approved method.
(ff)
Testing. For the purpose of
its regulation of oilfield pits and wastes, the Commission recognizes and
requires, when deemed appropriate, the following tests:
(i) Standard Water Analysis - Form
17
(ii) Toxicity Characteristic
Leaching Procedures (TCLP), EPA Method 1311; July 1992.
(iii) Oil and Grease or Total Petroleum
Hydrocarbon (TPH), EPA Method 418.1; 1978.
(iv) Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon, Condensate
and High Gravity Crude, EPA, Method 8015, Gasoline and Diesel Range; July
1992.
(v) United States Department
of Agriculture, Sodium Absorption Ratio (SAR), Exchangeable Sodium Percentage
(ESP); 1984.
(vi) Wyoming Oil and
Gas Commission Leachate Test Procedure; April 27, 1999.
(gg) Soil borings and soil testing must be
performed by an independent engineering or geotechnical soil testing company or
laboratory according to sound engineering practice in accordance with
established industry standards. The logs of all borings, together with
associated laboratory testing to classify soils and to measure soil strength,
permeability, and other related parameters shall be submitted to the
Supervisor.
(hh) Sampling
procedures are subject to review by the Supervisor because variations in
sampling protocol allow differentiation of waste fluid compositions due to
normal distribution.
(ii)
Closure. If the pit is proposed to be closed through the usual
method of onsite natural evaporation and subsequent burial of solids, if pit
treatment procedures are going to be applied, or if closure plans have changed
from the original proposal approved on Form 14A or 14B, or any time wastes are
disposed off-site, a Sundry Notice (Form 4) must be submitted and approved
prior to closure. Information relative to approved commercial disposal
facilities is available from the DEQ Water Quality Division. Information
relative to companies whose methods to chemically and/or mechanically treat
pits have been approved by the Commission may be obtained from the agency. The
Commission staff must be provided the opportunity to witness closure
operations. Verbal notice at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to closure is
required. Closure must be conducted in accordance with lease and landowner
obligations and with local, state, and federal regulations:
(i) Oil, water, and other fluids must be
immediately removed from emergency pits and disposed in accordance with the
Commission's rules. In the case of temporary emergency pits, evaporation or
percolation of fluids prior to closure is not an acceptable disposal method.
Permitted permanent emergency pits will not require immediate closure after use
and fluid removal;
(ii) Trenching
or squeezing pits is expressly prohibited. Burial methods cannot compromise the
integrity of manufactured, soil mixture, or recompacted clay liners without
written approval by the Supervisor. One-time landspreading of reserve pit
fluids on the drilling pad may be approved upon submittal of analyses, mud
recaps and treating summaries, groundwater identification, and other
information that is deemed appropriate. Prior approval must be obtained from
the Supervisor if drilling fluid is disposed on the drill pad. A Sundry Notice
(Form 4) with appropriate supporting detail must be submitted following the
operation. Any offsite waste disposal is subject to DEQ regulations;
(iii) Closure standards and testing
requirements for all pits will be determined by the Supervisor based upon
site-specific conditions;
(iv) Pit
solids showing high concentrations of salt (exchangeable sodium percentage
above 15) must be removed from the location and disposed in a permitted
facility, encapsulated, or chemically or mechanically treated;
(v) When drilling with oil-based muds,
oil-based mud solids must be removed and disposed in a permitted facility;
solidified using a Commission approved commercial pit treatment, roadspread,
landspread, landfarmed; or, bioremediated in accordance with Commission or
Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality rules. Burial after encapsulation
or solidification will be approved if the stabilized mixture contains less than
ten milligrams per liter (10 mg/l) leachable oil and less than five thousand
milligrams per liter (5,000 mg/l) leachable dissolved solids using the Wyoming
Leachate Test defined in Chapter 4, Section
1(ff), Testing.
(jj) For reserve pits containing
oil, sheens, condensate, other hydrocarbons or chemicals proven to be hazardous
to public health, safety and welfare, or to wildlife, domestic animals, or
migratory birds, the Owner or Operator shall have these fluids removed as soon
as practical. If fluid removal is not possible in a timely manner, the reserve
pit shall be fenced completely and netted or otherwise secured at the time the
rig substructure has been moved from the location in a manner that avoids the
loss of wildlife, domestic animals, or migratory birds. Alternative methods of
netting or securing pits may be authorized at the discretion of the
Supervisor.
(kk) All trash, paper,
and unused structures or equipment must be removed from the location upon
completion of operations. With landowner consent, Owners/Operators may
temporarily store equipment (such as drilling rigs) on a location while it
awaits transfer. Reserve and produced water pits cannot be used for disposal of
refuse, failed equipment parts, or unused chemicals. Proper closure of the pit
is compromised by the inappropriate use of the pit for trash disposal and may
result in revocation of the permit. Further, Owners/Operators are encouraged to
choose chemical additives which are lower in toxicity or do not exhibit RCRA
hazardous characteristics. See Appendix D for suggestions. Additionally,
Owners/Operators are encouraged to refer to Material Safety Data Sheets
provided by vendors as products are selected.
(ll) The Commission specifically prohibits
the use of dispersants, wetting agents, surface reduction agents, surfactants,
or other chemicals that destroy, remove, or reduce the fluid seal of a reserve
pit and allow the fluids contained therein to seep, drain, or percolate into
the soil underlying the pit.
(mm)
Landfarming and landspreading must be approved by the DEQ. Jurisdiction over
roadspreading or road application is shared by DEQ and the Commission.
Roadspreading or road application is a process whereby wastes are incorporated
into a roadbed, typically for beneficial use, with minimal environmental risk.
The Commission is the agency responsible for permitting road applications of
RCRA-exempt exploration and production wastes which include drilling fluids,
produced water and produced water-contaminated soils, waste crude oil, sludges,
and oil-contaminated soils inside the boundaries of a lease, unit, or
communitized area. The roadspreading application shall include acceptable
evidence of landowner consent and the information included on the Commission's
Form 20. Landfarming, landspreading, and roadspreading shall be protective of
human health and the environment and shall be performed in compliance with all
other applicable State and Federal regulations and requirements.
(nn) The Commission may require testing of
wastes and additional disposal requirements prior to closure of a pit if they
have reason to believe exempt exploration and production wastes have been
commingled with hazardous wastes, upon analysis of an Owner's/Operator's mud
program, or in previously identified sensitive environments.
(oo)
Commercial Treatment of
Pits. Any person, corporation, or company desiring to chemically and/or
mechanically treat pits in Wyoming must apply for and receive permission to do
so from the Commission after a public hearing. Types of approved treatments
include enhanced evaporation, solidification, centrifuging, etc. The Commission
will approve those methods that can successfully demonstrate a capability to
accomplish some or all of the following criteria:
(i) Compressive strengths that are
appropriate for post drilling or production activities;
(ii) Reductions in weight or volume of
waste;
(iii) Removal or reduction
of harmful properties of waste; and,
(iv) Reduction or elimination of mobility or
leachability of constituents.
(pp) An Operator or Owner wishing to treat
pits for closure must submit to the Commission on a Sundry Notice (Form 4) a
plan outlining the objectives that the treatment is designed to achieve (e.g.,
waste volume reduction, toxicity reduction/removal, chemical fixation, etc.).
The Commission's approval will be based upon the selected method's demonstrated
capability to achieve the objectives described in the sundry notice.
Consideration must be given to applicable federal, local, or state permits or
regulatory requirements when performing mechanical or chemical treatment of pit
wastes. A list of approved methods and vendors is available from the
Commission.
(qq)
Reclamation. Reclamation of unused production pits or any other
temporary retaining pits, including reserve pits, shall be completed in as
timely a manner as climatic conditions allow. Production pit areas and reserve
pits will be reclaimed after they have dried sufficiently following the removal
of any oil, sheens, or other hydrocarbons, or if they contain chemicals harmful
to wildlife, domestic animals and migratory birds, or if proven to be hazardous
to public health, safety and welfare, and no later than one (1) year after the
date of last use, unless the Supervisor grants an administrative variance for
just cause and after Oil and Gas Conservation Commission staff inspection.
Because their construction may be a benefit to landowners, pits used solely for
the retention of water produced in association with the recovery of coalbed
methane gas in the Powder River Basin may be left open with the approval of the
Supervisor and subject to Chapter 3, Section
4(h)(ii) of these rules. A
statement of acceptance which clearly indicates the surveyed location, precise
size of the pit, and willingness on the part of the landowner to accept all
future responsibility for the structure and its contents, accompanied by a
current written cost estimate for pit closure prepared by a Wyoming registered
professional engineer with expertise in surface pit remediation, must be
provided to and accepted by the Supervisor. The landowner's signature on the
statement of acceptance must be notarized.
(rr) Site rehabilitation should be in
accordance with reasonable landowner's wishes, and/or resemble the original
vegetation and contour of the adjoining lands. Where practical, topsoil must be
stockpiled during construction for use in rehabilitation. All disturbed areas
on state lands will be reseeded. Appendix F of these rules includes information
on seeding. The Owner or Operator shall advise the Supervisor of the completion
of reclamation of a production or reserve pit by submitting a Sundry Notice
(Form 4).
(ss)
One-Time
Downhole Disposal. By formal order or by administrative action the
Commission may approve of one-time disposal of a limited volume of fluid
produced in the course of drilling operations from one specific well. This is
not an operation designed for downhole disposal of drilling fluids from
offsetting or additional wells. This application is not to be confused with the
approval of a Class II well for underground disposal of water produced in
association with the recovery of hydrocarbons under the Underground Injection
Control Program. Disposal by injection shall not be initiated until such time
as approval has been granted by the Commission.
(tt) An application for approval of reserve
pit fluid injection shall demonstrate that water in the proposed disposal
interval is in excess of ten thousand milligrams per liter (10,000 mg/l) total
dissolved solids or has received an aquifer exemption under Chapter 4, Section
12 of these rules and that fresh water or
Underground Sources of Drinking Waters (USDW) will not be influenced by the
disposal operation. Data to support this finding shall include, but not be
limited to, the following:
(i) Full detail of
the casing, cementing, and completion of the well including cement
logs;
(ii) Formation tops and
depths to the deepest USDW;
(iii)
Copies of the mud recaps, appropriate analyses of the fluid, and an estimate of
the volume of the fluids to be disposed;
(iv) Abandonment procedure and demonstration
that the disposal zone can be isolated;
(v) Maximum disposal pressure anticipated and
information relative to fracture pressures of the confining zone. Pump pressure
must be limited so that fractures will not extend to the base of a USDW and/or
a groundwater aquifer;
(vi) The
statement that the Owner or Operator will make arrangements to provide at least
twenty-four (24) hours notice of disposal operation so that a Commission
technician might be present as a witness; and,
(vii) Statement that on completion of the
work a temperature survey or suitable alternative will be run to show fluid was
placed in the proposed interval.
(uu) Upon completion of the work, the
applicant must file a Sundry Notice (Form 4) summarizing the disposal
operation.
(vv) The Commission or
its staff may designate conditions other than those listed in this rule, as it
deems necessary to ensure safe disposal of these fluids. The application shall
be approved if the application for a permit is complete and if water in the
proposed interval has total dissolved solids in excess of ten thousand
milligrams per liter (10,000 mg/l) and fresh water or Underground Sources of
Drinking Water will not be influenced by the disposal operation.
Notes
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.