Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A.
Signatories. All reports required by permit or regulation and other information
requested by the Office of Conservation shall be signed as in applications by a
person described in
§3305. D or
§3305 E
B. Financial Responsibility
1. Closure and Post-Closure. The owner or
operator of a solution-mining well shall maintain financial responsibility and
the resources to close, plug and abandon and, where necessary, conduct
post-closure care of the solution-mining well, cavern, and related facilities
as prescribed by the Office of Conservation. The related facilities shall
include all surface and subsurface constructions and equipment exclusively
associated with the operation of the solution mining cavern including but not
limited to Class II saltwater disposal wells and any associated equipment or
pipelines whether located inside or outside of the permitted facility boundary.
Evidence of financial responsibility shall be by submission of a surety bond, a
letter of credit, certificate of deposit, or other instrument acceptable to the
Office of Conservation. The amount of funds available shall be no less than the
amount identified in the cost estimate of the closure plan of
§3337.A and
post-closure plan of
§3337.B Any financial
instrument filed in satisfaction of these financial responsibility requirements
shall be issued by and drawn on a bank or other financial institution
authorized under state or federal law to operate in the state of Louisiana. In
the event that an operator has previously provided financial security pursuant
to LAC 43: XVII.3309, such operator shall provide increased financial security
if required to remain in compliance with this Section, within 30 days after
notice from the commissioner.
2.
Renewal of Financial Responsibility. Any approved instrument of financial
responsibility coverage shall be renewed yearly. Financial security shall
remain in effect until release thereof is granted by the commissioner pursuant
to written request by the operator. Such release shall only be granted after
plugging and abandonment and associated site restoration is completed and
inspection thereof indicates compliance with applicable regulations or upon
transfer of such well.
3.
Assistance to Residents. The operator shall provide assistance to residents of
areas deemed to be at immediate potential risk in the event of a sinkhole
developing or other incident that leads to issuance of a mandatory or forced
evacuation order pursuant to
R.S.
29:721 et seq., if the potential risk or
evacuation is associated with the operation of the solution-mining well or
cavern.
a. Unless an operator of
solution-mining well or cavern submits a plan to provide evacuation assistance,
acceptable to the commissioner, within five days of the issuance of a mandatory
or forced evacuation order pursuant to
R.S.
29:721 et seq., associated with the operation
of a solution-mining well or cavern, the commissioner of conservation shall:
i. call a public hearing as soon as
practicable to take testimony from any interested party including the authority
which issued the evacuation order and local governmental officials for the
affected area to establish assistance amounts for residents subject to the
evacuation order and identify the operator(s) responsible for providing
assistance, if any. As soon as practicable following the public hearing the
commissioner shall issue an order identifying any responsible operator(s) and
establishing evacuation assistance amounts. The assistance amounts shall remain
in effect until the evacuation order is lifted or until a subsequent order is
issued by the commissioner in accordance with Clause ii of this Subparagraph
below;
ii. upon request of an
interested party, call for a public hearing to take testimony from any
interested party in order to consider establishing or modifying the evacuation
assistance amounts and/or consider a challenge to the finding of a responsible
operator(s). The public hearing shall be noticed and held in accordance with
R.S.
30:6. The order shall remain in effect until
the evacuation is lifted or the commissioners order is modified, supplemented,
or revoked and reissued, whichever occurs first.
b. Assistance to Residents payments shall not
be construed as an admission of responsibility or liability for the emergency
or disaster.
4.
Reimbursement. The operator shall provide the following.
a. Reimbursement to the state or any
political subdivision of the state for reasonable and extraordinary costs
incurred in responding to or mitigating a disaster or emergency due to a
violation of this Chapter or any rule, regulation or order promulgated or
issued pursuant to this Chapter. Such costs shall be subject to approval by the
director of the Governors Office of Homeland Security and Emergency
Preparedness prior to being submitted to the permittee or operator for
reimbursement. Such payments shall not be construed as an admission of
responsibility or liability for the emergency or disaster.
i. The commissioner shall have authority to
ensure collection of reimbursement(s) due pursuant to
R.S.
30:4.M.6.b and this Subparagraph.
ii. Upon petition by the state or any
political subdivision of the state that is eligible for reimbursement under
this Subparagraph, the commissioner shall issue an order to the permittee or
operator to make payment within 30 days for the itemized costs and/or the
appraised amount.
iii. Failure to
make the required payment(s) shall be a violation of the permit and these
rules.
iv. Should any interested
party dispute the amount of reimbursement, they may call for a public hearing
to take testimony from all interested parties. The public hearing shall be
noticed and held in accordance with
R.S.
30:6.
b. Reimbursement to any person who owns
noncommercial residential immovable property located within an area under a
mandatory or forced evacuation order pursuant to
R.S.
29:721 et seq., for a period of more than 180
days, without interruption due to a violation of this Chapter, the permit or
any order issued pursuant to this Chapter. The offer for reimbursement shall be
calculated for the replacement value of the property based upon an appraisal by
a qualified professional appraiser. The replacement value of the property shall
be calculated based upon the estimated value of the property prior to the time
of the incident resulting in the declaration of the disaster or emergency. The
reimbursement shall be made to the property owner within 30 days after notice
by the property owner to the permittee or operator indicating acceptance of the
offer and showing proof of continuous ownership prior to and during the
evacuation lasting more than 180 days, provided that the offer for
reimbursement is accepted within 30 days of receipt, and the property owner
promptly transfers the immovable property free and clear of any liens,
mortgages, or other encumbrances to the permittee or operator. Such payments
shall not be construed as an admission of responsibility or liability.
C. Duty to
Comply. The operator must comply with all conditions of a permit. Any permit
noncompliance is a violation of the act, the permit and these rules and
regulations and is grounds for enforcement action, permit termination,
revocation and possible reissuance, modification, or denial of any future
permit renewal applications if the commissioner determines that such
noncompliance endangers underground sources of drinking water. If the
commissioner determines that such noncompliance is likely to endanger
underground sources of drinking water, it shall be the duty of the operator to
prove that continued operation of the solution-mining well shall not endanger
the environment, or the health, safety and welfare of the public.
D. Duty to Halt or Reduce Activity. It shall
not be a defense for an owner or operator in an enforcement action to claim it
would have been necessary to halt or reduce the permitted activity to maintain
compliance with the conditions of this Rule or permit.
E. Duty to Mitigate. The owner or operator
shall take all reasonable steps to minimize or correct any adverse impact on
the environment such as the contamination of underground sources of drinking
water resulting from a noncompliance with the permit or these rules and
regulations.
F. Proper Operation
and Maintenance
1. The operator shall always
properly operate and maintain all facilities and systems of injection,
withdrawal, and control (and related appurtenances) installed or used to
achieve compliance with the permit or these rules and regulations. Proper
operation and maintenance include effective performance (including well/cavern
mechanical integrity), adequate funding, adequate operation, staffing and
training, and adequate laboratory process controls including appropriate
quality assurance procedures. This provision requires the operation of back-up,
auxiliary facilities, or similar systems when necessary to achieve compliance
with the conditions of the permit or these rules and regulations.
2. The operator shall address any
unauthorized escape, discharge, or release of any material from the
solution-mining well, cavern, and related facility, or parts thereof that is in
violation of any state or federal permit or which is not incidental to normal
operations, with a corrective action plan. The plan shall address the cause,
delineate the extent, and determine the overall effects on the environment
resulting from the escape, discharge, or release. The Office of Conservation
shall require the operator to formulate a plan to remediate the escaped,
discharged, or released material if the material is thought to have entered or
has the possibility of entering an underground source of drinking
water.
3. The Office of
Conservation may immediately prohibit further operations if it determines that
continued operations of a solution-mining well, cavern, and related facility,
or parts thereof, may cause unsafe operating conditions, or endanger the
environment, or the health, safety and welfare of the public. The prohibition
shall remain in effect until it is determined that continued operations can and
shall be conducted safely. It shall be the duty of the operator to prove that
continued operation of the solution-mining well, or part thereof, shall not
endanger the environment, or the health, safety and welfare of the public.
4. The Office of Conservation may
immediately prohibit further operations if it determines that continued
operations at a solution-mining well, cavern, and related facility, or parts
thereof, may cause unsafe operating conditions, or endanger the environment, or
the health, safety and welfare of the public. The prohibition shall remain in
effect until it is determined that continued operations can and shall be
conducted safely. It shall be the duty of the operator to prove that continued
operation of the solution-mining well, or part thereof, shall not endanger the
environment, or the health, safety and welfare of the public.
G. Inspection and Entry.
Inspection and entry at a solution-mining well facility by Office of
Conservation personnel shall be allowed as prescribed in R.S. of 1950, Title
30, Section 4.
H. Property Rights.
The issuance of a permit does not convey any property rights of any sort, or
any exclusive privilege or servitude.
I. Notification Requirements. The operator
shall give written, and where required, verbal notice to the Office of
Conservation concerning activities indicated in this Subsection.
1. Any change in the principal officers,
management, owner or operator of the solution-mining well shall be reported to
the Office of Conservation in writing within 10 days of the change.
2. Planned physical alterations or additions
to the solution-mining well, cavern, surface facility or parts thereof that may
constitute a modification or amendment of the permit. No mechanical integrity
tests, sonar caliper surveys, remedial work, well or cavern abandonment, or any
test or work on a well or cavern (excluding an interface survey not associated
with a mechanical integrity test) shall be performed without prior
authorization from the Office of Conservation. The operator must submit the
appropriate work permit request form (Form UIC-17 or subsequent document) for
approval.
3. Whenever there has
been no injection into a cavern for one year or more the operator shall notify
the Office of Conservation in writing within seven days following the three
hundred and sixty-fifth day of the cavern becoming inactive (out of service).
The notification shall include the date on which the cavern was removed from
service, the reason for taking the cavern out of service, and the expected date
that the cavern shall be returned to service. See
§3331 for additional requirements for
inactive caverns.
4. The operator
of a new or converted solution-mining well shall not begin mining operations
until the Office of Conservation has been notified of the following:
a. well construction or conversion is
complete, including submission of a notice of completion, a completion report,
and all supporting information (e.g., as-drilled location plat, as-built
diagrams, records, sampling and testing results, well and cavern tests, logs,
etc.) required in §3325;
b. a
representative of the commissioner has inspected the well and/or facility and
finds it is in compliance with the conditions of the permit; and
c. the operator has received written approval
from the Office of Conservation clearly stating solution-mining operations may
begin.
5. Noncompliance
or anticipated noncompliance (which may result from any planned changes in the
permitted facility or activity) with the permit or applicable regulations
including a failed mechanical integrity pressure and leak test of
§3327
6. Permit Transfer. A permit
is not transferable to any person except after giving written notice to and
receiving written approval from the Office of Conservation clearly stating that
the permit has been transferred. This action may require modification or
revocation and re-issuance of the permit (see
§3311. K) to change
the name of the operator and incorporate other requirements as may be
necessary, including but not limited to financial responsibility.
7. Compliance Schedules. Report of compliance
or noncompliance with, or any progress reports on, interim and final
requirements contained in any compliance schedule in these regulations shall be
submitted to the commissioner no later than 14 days following each schedule
date.
8. Twenty-Four Hour Reporting
a. The operator shall report any
noncompliance that may endanger the environment, or the health, safety and
welfare of the public. Any information pertinent to the noncompliance shall be
reported to the Office of Conservation by telephone at (225) 342-5515 within 24
hours from when the operator becomes aware of the circumstances. A written
submission shall also be provided within five days from when the operator
becomes aware of the circumstances. The written notification shall contain a
description of the noncompliance and its cause, the periods of noncompliance
including exact times and dates, and if the noncompliance has not been
corrected, the anticipated time it is expected to continue, and steps taken or
planned to reduce, eliminate and prevent recurrence of the
noncompliance.
b. The following
additional information must also be reported within the 24-hour period:
i. monitoring or other information (including
a failed mechanical integrity test) that suggests the solution mining
operations may cause an endangerment to underground sources of drinking waters,
oil, gas, other commercial mineral deposits (excluding the salt), neighboring
salt operations of any kind, or movement outside the salt stock or
cavern;
ii. any noncompliance with
a regulatory or permit condition or malfunction of the injection/withdrawal
system (including a failed mechanical integrity test of) that may cause fluid
migration into or between underground sources of drinking waters or outside the
salt stock or cavern.
9. The operator shall give written
notification to the Office of Conservation upon permanent conclusion of
solution-mining operations. Notification shall be given within seven days after
concluding operations. The notification shall include the date on which mining
activities were concluded, the reason for concluding the mining activities, and
a plan to meet the minimum requirements as per
§3331 See
§3337 for additional requirements to be
conducted after concluding mining activities but before closing the
solution-mining well or cavern. Solution-mining caverns that are not in an
inactive status as of the date written notification of permanent conclusion of
solution-mining operations is submitted to the Office of Conservation will be
immediately placed in an inactive status.
10. The operator shall give written
notification before abandonment (closure) of the solution-mining well, related
surface facility, or in the case of area permits before closure of the project.
Abandonment (closure) shall not begin before receiving written authorization
from the Office of Conservation.
11. When the operator becomes aware that it
failed to submit any relevant facts in a permit application or submitted
incorrect information in a permit application or in any report to the Office of
Conservation, the operator shall promptly submit such facts and
information.
J. Duration
of Permits
1. Authorization to Operate.
Authorization by permit to operate a solution-mining well shall be valid for
the life of the well, unless suspended, modified, revoked and reissued, or
terminated for cause as described in
§3311.K The
commissioner may issue, for cause, any permit for a duration that is less than
the full allowable term under this Section. Permitting of a Class III
solution-mining well and cavern for Class II hydrocarbon storage or Class V
storage does not nullify or void the existing Class III solution-mining permit
unless expressly ordered by the commissioner.
2. Authorization to Drill, Construct, or
Convert. Authorization by permit to drill, construct or convert a new
solution-mining well shall be valid for two years from the effective date of
the permit. If drilling or conversion is not begun in that time, the permit
shall be null and void and the operator must obtain a new permit.
3. Extensions. The operator shall submit to
the Office of Conservation a written request for an extension of the time of
Paragraph 2 above; however, the Office of Conservation shall approve the
request for one year only for just cause and only if the permitting conditions
have not changed. The operator shall have the burden of proving claims of just
cause.
K. Compliance
Review. The commissioner shall review each issued solution-mining well permit,
area permit, and cavern at least once every five years to determine whether any
permit should be modified, revoked and reissued, terminated, whether a minor
modifications are needed, or if remedial action or additional monitoring is
required for any cavern. Commencement of the compliance review process for each
facility shall proceed as authorized by the Commissioner of Conservation.
1. As a part of the five-year compliance
review, pursuant to RS 40:4.M.2, the operator shall submit the following
minimum information to the Office of Conservation, based upon best available
information.
a. Structural Map. A structural
map of the top of salt including an aerial view of the maximum outline(s) of
the operator's caverns and any other adjacent solution mining caverns, disposal
caverns, storage caverns or room and pillar mines. The maximum cavern outlines
shall be based upon the latest sonar survey for each cavern.
b. Cross-Sections
i. Cross-sections illustrating the closest
approach between an operator's caverns, between an operator's caverns and any
adjacent solution-mining caverns, disposal caverns, storage caverns, or room
and pillar mines if indicated to be proximal to adjacent caverns or
mines.
ii. Cross-sections
illustrating the closest approach between the operator's caverns and the edge
of salt stock, if the edge of the cavern, based upon the best available
information, is indicated to be less than 500 feet from the edge of the salt
stock.
iii. All cross-sections
shall be based upon the latest sonar survey for each cavern and the latest
structural map of the top of salt based upon the best available
information.
c. A
tabulation of each of the operator's caverns with minimum offset distances
listed to adjacent caverns, the edge of salt, and adjacent property
boundaries.
2. As a part
of the five-year compliance review, the well operator shall review the closure
and post-closure plan and associated cost estimates of
§3337 to determine if the conditions
for closure are still applicable to the actual conditions.
3. As a part of the five year compliance
review, the operator shall submit any other information required by the
commissioner.
L.
Schedules of Compliance. The permit may specify a schedule of compliance
leading to compliance with the act and these regulations.
1. Time for Compliance. Any schedules of
compliance under this Section shall require compliance as soon as possible but
not later than three years after the effective date of the permit.
2.Interim Dates. Except as provided in
Subparagraph b below, if a permit establishes a schedule of compliance which
exceeds one year from the date of permit issuance, the schedule shall set forth
interim requirements and the dates for their achievement.
a. The time between interim dates shall not
exceed one year.
b. If the time
necessary for completion of any interim requirements (such as the construction
of a control facility) is more than one year and is not readily divisible into
stages for completion, the permit shall specify interim dates for submission of
reports of progress toward completion of the interim requirements and indicate
a projected completion date.
3. The permit shall be written to require
that progress reports be submitted no later than 30 days following each interim
date and the final date of compliance.
M. Area or Project Permit Authorization
1. The commissioner may issue a permit on an
area basis, rather than for each well individually, provided that the permit is
for injection wells:
a. described and
identified by location in permit application(s) if they are existing wells,
except that the commissioner may accept a single description of wells with
substantially the same characteristics;
b. within the same salt dome, facility site,
or project; and
c. operated by a
single owner or operator.
2. Area permits shall specify:
a. the area within which underground
injections are authorized; and
b.
the requirements for construction, monitoring, reporting, operation, and
abandonment, for all wells authorized by the permit.
3. The area permit may authorize the operator
to construct and operate, convert, or plug and abandon wells within the permit
area provided:
a. the operator notifies the
commissioner at such time as the permit requires;
b. the additional well satisfies the criteria
in §3309.
M.1 and meets the requirements specified in
the permit under
§3309. M 2;
and
c. the cumulative effects of
drilling and operation of additional injection wells are considered by the
commissioner during evaluation of the area permit application and are
acceptable to the commissioner.
4. If the commissioner determines that any
well constructed pursuant to
§3309. M.3 does not
satisfy any of the requirements of
§3309. M.3.a and b,
the commissioner may modify the permit under
§3311. K 3, terminate
under §3311.
K 7, or take enforcement action. If the
commissioner determines that cumulative effects are unacceptable, the permit
may be modified under
§3311. K 3
5. Any approved area permit for hydrocarbon
storage in solution-mined salt caverns shall encompass and be valid for future
Class III solution-mining wells and resulting caverns constructed for the
purpose of future hydrocarbon storage.
N. Recordation of Notice of Existing
Solution-Mining Wells. The owner or operator of an existing solution-mining
well shall record a certified survey plat of the well location in the mortgage
and conveyance records of the parish in which the property is located. Such
notice shall be recorded no later than six months after the effective date of
these rules and the owner or operator shall furnish a date/file stamped copy of
the recorded notice to the Office of Conservation within 15 days of its
recording. If an owner or operator fails or refuses to record such notice, the
commissioner may, if he determines that the public interest requires, and after
due notice and an opportunity for a hearing has been given to the owner and
operator, cause such notice to be recorded.
O. Additional Conditions. The Office of
Conservation shall, on a case-by-case basis, impose any additional conditions
or requirements as are necessary to protect the environment, the health,
safety, and welfare of the public, underground sources of drinking waters, oil,
gas, or other mineral deposits (excluding the salt), and preserve the integrity
of the salt dome.
AUTHORITY
NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with
R.S.
30:4 et seq.