Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
Injection wells are classified as follows:
a) Class I Injection Wells. A Class I
injection well is any of the following:
1) A
Class I hazardous waste injection well that is used by a generator of hazardous
waste or an owner or operator of a hazardous waste management facility to
inject hazardous waste beneath the lowermost formation containing an
underground source of drinking water within 402 meters (one-quarter mile) of
the well bore.
2) An industrial or
municipal disposal well that injects fluids beneath the lowermost formation
containing an underground source of drinking water within 402 meters
(one-quarter mile) of the well bore.
3) A radioactive waste disposal well that
injects fluids below the lowermost formation containing an underground source
of drinking water within 402 meters (one-quarter mile) of the well
bore.
b) Class II
Injection Wells. A Class II injection well is one that injects any of the
following types of fluids:
1) Fluids that are
brought to the surface in connection with conventional oil or natural gas
production and which may be commingled with wastewaters from gas plants that
are an integral part of production operations, unless those waters are
classified as a hazardous waste at the time of injection;
2) Fluids that are used for enhanced recovery
of oil or natural gas; and
3)
Fluids that are used for storage of hydrocarbons that are liquid at standard
temperature and pressure.
c) Class III Injection Wells. A Class III
injection well is one that injects fluid for extraction of minerals, including
one used in any of the following activities:
1) Mining of sulfur by the Frasch
process;
2) In situ production of
uranium or other metals. This category includes only in situ production from
ore bodies that have not been conventionally mined. Solution mining of
conventional mines, such as stopes leaching, is included in Class V;
or
3) Solution mining of salts or
potash.
BOARD NOTE: Class III injection well would include a well
that is used for the recovery of geothermal energy to produce electric power,
but would not include a well that is used in heating or aquaculture that falls
under Class V.
d)
Class IV Injection Wells. A Class IV injection well is any of the following:
1) A well used by a generator of hazardous
waste or of radioactive waste, by an owner or operator of a hazardous waste
management facility, or by an owner or operator of a radioactive waste disposal
site to dispose of hazardous waste or radioactive waste into a formation that
contains an underground source of drinking water within 402 meters (one-quarter
mile) of the well.
2) A well used
by a generator of hazardous waste or of radioactive waste, by an owner or
operator of a hazardous waste management facility, or by an owner or operator
of a radioactive waste disposal site to dispose of hazardous waste or
radioactive waste above a formation that contains an underground source of
drinking water within 402 meters (one-quarter mile) of the well.
3) A well used by a generator of hazardous
waste or an owner or operator of a hazardous waste management facility to
dispose of hazardous waste that cannot be classified pursuant to subsection
(a)(1), (d)(1), or (d)(2) (e.g., wells used to dispose of hazardous wastes into
or above a formation that contains an aquifer that has been exempted pursuant
to Section
730.104
).
e) Class V Injection
Wells. A Class V injection well is any not included in Class I, Class II, Class
III, Class IV, or Class VI. Specific types of Class V injection wells include
the following:
1) Air conditioning return
flow wells used to return the water used in a heat pump for heating or cooling
to the supply aquifer;
2)
Cesspools, including multiple dwelling, community, or regional cesspools, or
other devices that receive wastes that have an open bottom and sometimes have
perforated sides. The UIC requirements do not apply to single family
residential cesspools or to non-residential cesspools that receive solely
sanitary wastes and have the capacity to serve fewer than 20 persons a
day;
3) Cooling water return flow
wells used to inject water previously used for cooling;
4) Drainage wells used to drain surface
fluid, primarily storm runoff, into a subsurface formation;
5) Dry wells used for the injection of wastes
into a subsurface formation;
6)
Recharge wells used to replenish the water in an aquifer;
7) 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;
8) Sand
backfill and other 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;
9) Septic system wells used to inject the
waste or effluent from a multiple dwelling, business establishment, community,
or regional business establishment septic tank. The UIC requirements do not
apply to single family residential septic system wells, or to nonresidential
septic system wells that are used solely for the disposal of sanitary waste and
which have the capacity to serve fewer than 20 persons a day;
10) Subsidence control wells (not used for
the purpose of oil or natural gas production) used to inject fluids into a
non-oil or gas producing zone to reduce or eliminate subsidence associated with
the overdraft of fresh water;
11)
Radioactive waste disposal wells other than Class IV injection wells;
12) Injection wells associated with the
recovery of geothermal energy for heating, aquaculture, or production of
electric power;
13) Wells used for
solution mining of conventional mines such as stopes leaching;
14) Wells used to inject spent brine into the
same formation from which it was withdrawn after extraction of halogens or
their salts; and
15) Injection
wells used in experimental technologies.
f) Class VI Injection Wells. A Class VI
injection well is any of the following:
1) An
injection well that is not experimental in nature and which is used for
geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide beneath the lowermost formation
containing a USDW;
2) An injection
well that is used for geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide and which has
been granted a permit that includes alternative injection well depth
requirements pursuant to Section
730.195;
or
3) An injection well that is
used for geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide and which has received an
expansion to the areal extent of an existing Class II enhanced oil recovery or
enhanced gas recovery aquifer exemption pursuant to Section
730.104
and 35 Ill. Adm. Code
704.123(d).
BOARD NOTE: Derived from
40 CFR
146.5
(2017).