Texas Administrative Code
Title 30 - ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Part 1 - TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Chapter 7 - MEMORANDA OF UNDERSTANDING
Section 7.117 - Memorandum of Understanding between the Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ)
Universal Citation: 30 TX Admin Code § 7.117
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) Need for agreement. Several statutes cover persons and activities where the respective jurisdictions of the RRC and the TCEQ may intersect. This rule is a statement of how the agencies implement the division of jurisdiction.
(1) Section 10
of House Bill 1407, 67th Legislature, 1981, which appeared as a footnote to the
Texas Solid Waste Disposal Act, Texas Civil Statutes, Article 4477-7, provides
as follows: On or before January 1, 1982, the Texas Department of Water
Resources, the Texas Department of Health, and the Railroad Commission of Texas
shall execute a memorandum of understanding that specifies in detail these
agencies' interpretation of the division of jurisdiction among the agencies
over waste materials that result from or are related to activities associated
with the exploration for and the development, production, and refining of oil
or gas. The agencies shall amend the memorandum of understanding at any time
that the agencies find it to be necessary.
(2) Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.414,
relating to Memoranda of Understanding, requires the Railroad Commission of
Texas and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to adopt a memorandum
of understanding (MOU) defining the agencies' respective duties under Texas
Health and Safety Code, Chapter 401, relating to radioactive materials and
other sources of radiation. Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.415,
relating to oil and gas naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) waste,
provides that the Railroad Commission of Texas shall issue rules on the
management of oil and gas NORM waste, and in so doing shall consult with the
Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission (now TCEQ) and the Department of
Health (now Department of State Health Services) regarding protection of the
public health and the environment.
(3) Texas Water Code, Chapters 26 and 27,
provide that the Railroad Commission and TCEQ collaborate on matters related to
discharges, surface water quality, groundwater protection, underground
injection control and geologic storage of carbon dioxide. Texas Water Code,
§
27.049, relating to
Memorandum of Understanding, requires the RRC and TCEQ to adopt a new MOU or
amend the existing MOU to reflect the agencies' respective duties under Texas
Water Code, Chapter 27, Subchapter C-1 (relating to Geologic Storage and
Associated Injection of Anthropogenic Carbon Dioxide).
(4) The original MOU between the agencies
adopted pursuant to HB 1407 (67th Legislature, 1981) became effective January
1, 1982. The MOU was revised effective December 1, 1987, May 31, 1998, August
30, 2010, and again on May 1, 2012, to reflect legislative clarification of the
Railroad Commission's jurisdiction over oil and gas wastes and the Texas
Natural Resource Conservation Commission's (the combination of the Texas Water
Commission, the Texas Air Control Board, and portions of the Texas Department
of Health) jurisdiction over industrial and hazardous wastes.
(5) The agencies have determined that the
revised MOU that became effective on May 1, 2012, should again be revised to
further clarify jurisdictional boundaries and to reflect legislative changes in
agency responsibility.
(b) General agency jurisdictions.
(1) Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
(TCEQ) (the successor agency to the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
Commission).
(A) Solid waste. Under Texas
Health and Safety Code, Chapter 361, §§361.001 - 361.754, the TCEQ
has jurisdiction over solid waste. The TCEQ's jurisdiction encompasses
hazardous and nonhazardous, industrial and municipal, solid wastes.
(B) Water quality.
(i) Discharges under Texas Water Code,
Chapter 26. Under the Texas Water Code, Chapter 26, the TCEQ has jurisdiction
over discharges into or adjacent to water in the state, except for discharges
regulated by the RRC. Upon delegation from the United States Environmental
Protection Agency to the TCEQ of authority to issue permits for discharges into
surface water in the state of produced water, hydrostatic test water, and gas
plant effluent resulting from the activities described in Texas Water Code,
§
26.131(a),
the TCEQ has sole authority to issue permits for those discharges. For the
purposes of TCEQ's implementation of Texas Water Code, §
26.131, "produced water"
is defined as all wastewater associated with oil and gas exploration,
development, and production activities, except hydrostatic test water and gas
plant effluent, that is discharged into water in the state, including waste
streams regulated by 40 CFR Part 435.
(ii) Discharge permits existing on the
effective date of EPA's delegation to TCEQ of NPDES permit authority for
discharges of produced water, hydrostatic test water, and gas plant effluent.
RRC permits issued prior to TCEQ delegation of NPDES authority shall remain
effective until revoked or expired. Amendment or renewal of such permits on or
after the effective date of delegation shall be pursuant to TCEQ's TPDES
authority. The TPDES permit will supersede and replace the RRC permit. For
facilities that have both an RRC permit and an EPA permit, TCEQ will issue the
TPDES permit upon amendment or renewal of the RRC or EPA permit, whichever
occurs first.
(iii) Discharge
applications pending on the effective date of EPA's delegation to TCEQ of NPDES
permit authority for discharges of produced water, hydrostatic test water, and
gas plant effluent. TCEQ shall assume authority for discharge applications
pending at the time TCEQ receives delegation from EPA. The RRC will provide
TCEQ the permit application and any other relevant information necessary to
administratively and technically review and process the applications. TCEQ will
review and process these pending applications in accordance with TPDES
requirements.
(iv) Storm water.
TCEQ has jurisdiction over stormwater discharges that are required to be
permitted pursuant to Title 40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 122.26,
except for discharges regulated by the RRC. Discharge of storm water regulated
by TCEQ may be authorized by an individual Texas Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (TPDES) permit or by a general TPDES permit. These storm
water permits may also include authorizations for certain minor types of
non-storm water discharges.
(I) Storm water
associated with industrial activities. The TCEQ regulates storm water
discharges associated with certain industrial activities under individual TPDES
permits and under the TPDES Multi-Sector General Permit, except for discharges
associated with industrial activities under the jurisdiction of the
RRC.
(II) Storm water associated
with construction activities. The TCEQ regulates storm water discharges
associated with construction activities, except for discharges from
construction activities under the jurisdiction of the RRC.
(III) Municipal storm water discharges. The
TCEQ has jurisdiction over discharges from regulated municipal storm sewer
systems (MS4s).
(IV) Combined storm
water. Except with regard to storage of oil, when a portion of a site is
regulated by the TCEQ, and a portion of a site is regulated by the EPA and RRC,
storm water authorization must be obtained from the TCEQ for the portion(s) of
the site regulated by the TCEQ, and from the EPA and the RRC, as applicable,
for the RRC regulated portion(s) of the site. Discharge of storm water from a
facility that stores both refined products intended for off-site use and crude
oil in aboveground tanks is regulated by the TCEQ.
(v) State water quality certification. Under
the Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 401 (33 U.S.C. Section
1341), the TCEQ performs state water quality
certifications for activities that require a federal license or permit and that
may result in a discharge to waters of the United States, except for those
activities regulated by the RRC.
(vi) Commercial brine extraction and
evaporation. Under Texas Water Code, §
26.132, the TCEQ has
jurisdiction over evaporation pits operated for the commercial production of
brine water, minerals, salts, or other substances that naturally occur in
groundwater and that are not regulated by the RRC.
(C) Injection wells. Under the Texas Water
Code, Chapter 27, the TCEQ has jurisdiction to regulate and authorize the
drilling, construction, operation, and closure of injection wells unless the
activity is subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC. Injection wells under
TCEQ's jurisdiction are identified in §
331.11 of this title (relating to
Classification of Injection Wells) and include:
(i) Class I injection wells for the disposal
of hazardous, radioactive, industrial or municipal waste that inject fluids
below the lower-most formation which within 1/4 mile of the wellbore contains
an underground source of drinking water;
(ii) Class III injection wells for the
extraction of minerals including solution mining of sodium sulfate, sulfur,
potash, phosphate, copper, uranium and the mining of sulfur by the Frasch
process;
(iii) Class IV injection
wells for the disposal of hazardous or radioactive waste which inject fluids
into or above formations that contain an underground source of drinking water;
and
(iv) Class V injection wells
that are not under the jurisdiction of the RRC, such as aquifer remediation
wells, aquifer recharge wells, aquifer storage wells, large capacity septic
systems, storm water drainage wells, salt water intrusion barrier wells, and
closed loop geothermal wells.
(2) Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC).
(A) Oil and gas waste.
(i) Under Texas Natural Resources Code, Title
3, and Texas Water Code, Chapter 26, wastes (both hazardous and nonhazardous)
resulting from activities associated with the exploration, development, or
production of oil or gas or geothermal resources, including storage, handling,
reclamation, gathering, transportation, or distribution of crude oil or natural
gas by pipeline, prior to the refining of such oil or prior to the use of such
gas in any manufacturing process or as a residential or industrial fuel, are
under the jurisdiction of the RRC, except as noted in clause (ii) of this
subparagraph. These wastes are termed "oil and gas wastes." In compliance with
Texas Health and Safety Code, §
361.025
(relating to exempt activities), a list of activities that generate wastes that
are subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC is found at 16 TAC §
3.8(a)(30)
(relating to Water Protection) and at §
335.1 of this title (relating to
Definitions), which contains a definition of "activities associated with the
exploration, development, and production of oil or gas or geothermal
resources." Under Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.415, the
RRC has jurisdiction over the disposal of oil and gas naturally occurring
radioactive material (NORM) waste that constitutes, is contained in, or has
contaminated oil and gas waste.
(ii) Hazardous wastes arising out of or
incidental to activities associated with gasoline plants, natural gas or
natural gas liquids processing plants or reservoir pressure maintenance or
repressurizing plants are subject to the jurisdiction of the TCEQ until the RRC
is authorized by EPA to administer RCRA. When the RRC is authorized by EPA to
administer RCRA, jurisdiction over such hazardous wastes will transfer from the
TCEQ to the RRC.
(B)
Water quality.
(i) Discharges. Under Texas
Natural Resources Code, Title 3, and Texas Water Code, Chapter 26, the RRC
regulates discharges from activities associated with the exploration,
development, or production of oil, gas, or geothermal resources, including
transportation of crude oil and natural gas by pipeline, and from solution
brine mining activities, except that on delegation to the TCEQ of NPDES
authority for discharges into surface water in the state of produced water,
hydrostatic test water, and gas plant effluent resulting from the activities
described in Texas Water Code, §
26.131(a),
the TCEQ has sole authority to issue permits for those discharges. Discharges
regulated by the RRC into or adjacent to water in the state shall not cause a
violation of the water quality standards. While water quality standards are
established by the TCEQ, the RRC has the responsibility for enforcing any
violation of such standards resulting from activities regulated by the RRC.
Texas Water Code, Chapter 26, does not require that discharges regulated by the
RRC comply with regulations of the TCEQ that are not water quality standards.
The TCEQ and the RRC may consult as necessary regarding application and
interpretation of Texas Surface Water Quality Standards.
(ii) Storm water. When required by federal
law, authorization for storm water discharges that are under the jurisdiction
of the RRC must be obtained through application for a National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit with the EPA and authorization from
the RRC, as applicable.
(I) Storm water
associated with industrial activities. Where required by federal law,
discharges of storm water associated with facilities and activities under the
RRC's jurisdiction must be authorized by the EPA and the RRC, as applicable.
Under
33 U.S.C. §
1342(l)(2) and §
1362(24),
EPA cannot require a permit for discharges of storm water from "field
activities or operations associated with {oil and gas} exploration, production,
processing, or treatment operations, or transmission facilities" unless the
discharge is contaminated by contact with any overburden, raw material,
intermediate product, finished product, byproduct, or waste product located on
the site of the facility. Under 16 TAC §
3.8(relating to Water Protection),
the RRC prohibits operators from causing or allowing pollution of surface or
subsurface water. Operators are encouraged to implement and maintain Best
Management Practices (BMPs) to minimize discharges of pollutants, including
sediment, in storm water to help ensure protection of surface water quality
during storm events.
(II) Storm
water associated with construction activities. Where required by federal law,
discharges of storm water associated with construction activities under the
RRC's jurisdiction must be authorized by the EPA and the RRC, as applicable.
Activities under RRC jurisdiction include construction of a facility that, when
completed, would be associated with the exploration, development, or production
of oil or gas or geothermal resources, such as a well site; treatment or
storage facility; underground hydrocarbon or natural gas storage facility;
reclamation plant; gas processing facility; compressor station; terminal
facility where crude oil is stored prior to refining and at which refined
products are stored solely for use at the facility; a carbon dioxide geologic
storage facility under the jurisdiction of the RRC; and a gathering,
transmission, or distribution pipeline that will transport crude oil or natural
gas, including natural gas liquids, prior to refining of such oil or the use of
the natural gas in any manufacturing process or as a residential or industrial
fuel. The RRC also has jurisdiction over storm water from land disturbance
associated with a site survey that is conducted prior to construction of a
facility that would be regulated by the RRC. Under
33 U.S.C. §
1342(l)(2) and §
1362(24),
EPA cannot require a permit for discharges of storm water from "field
activities or operations associated with {oil and gas} exploration, production,
processing, or treatment operations, or transmission facilities, including
activities necessary to prepare a site for drilling and for the movement and
placement of drilling equipment, whether or not such field activities or
operations may be considered to be construction activities" unless the
discharge is contaminated by contact with any overburden, raw material,
intermediate product, finished product, byproduct, or waste product located on
the site of the facility. Under 16 TAC §
3.8(relating to Water Protection),
the RRC prohibits operators from causing or allowing pollution of surface or
subsurface water. Operators are encouraged to implement and maintain BMPs to
minimize discharges of pollutants, including sediment, in storm water during
construction activities to help ensure protection of surface water quality
during storm events.
(III)
Municipal storm water discharges. Storm water discharges from facilities
regulated by the RRC located within an MS4 are not regulated by the TCEQ.
However, a municipality may regulate storm water discharges from RRC sites into
their MS4.
(IV) Combined storm
water. Except with regard to storage of oil, when a portion of a site is
regulated by the RRC and the EPA, and a portion of a site is regulated by the
TCEQ, storm water authorization must be obtained from the EPA and the RRC, as
applicable, for the portion(s) of the site under RRC jurisdiction and from the
TCEQ for the TCEQ regulated portion(s) of the site. Discharge of storm water
from a terminal facility where crude oil is stored prior to refining and at
which refined products are stored solely for use at the facility is under the
jurisdiction of the RRC.
(iii) State water quality certification. The
RRC performs state water quality certifications, as authorized by the Clean
Water Act (CWA) Section 401 (33 U.S.C. Section
1341) for activities that require a federal
license or permit and that may result in any discharge to waters of the United
States for those activities regulated by the RRC.
(C) Injection wells. The RRC has jurisdiction
over the drilling, construction, operation, and closure of the following
injection wells.
(i) Disposal wells. The RRC
has jurisdiction under Texas Water Code, Chapter 27, over injection wells used
to dispose of oil and gas waste. Texas Water Code, Chapter 27, defines "oil and
gas waste" to mean "waste arising out of or incidental to drilling for or
producing of oil, gas, or geothermal resources, waste arising out of or
incidental to the underground storage of hydrocarbons other than storage in
artificial tanks or containers, or waste arising out of or incidental to the
operation of gasoline plants, natural gas processing plants, or pressure
maintenance or repressurizing plants. The term includes but is not limited to
salt water, brine, sludge, drilling mud, and other liquid or semi-liquid waste
material." The term "waste arising out of or incidental to drilling for or
producing of oil, gas, or geothermal resources" includes waste associated with
transportation of crude oil or natural gas by pipeline pursuant to Texas
Natural Resources Code, §
91.101.
(ii) Enhanced recovery wells. The RRC has
jurisdiction over wells into which fluids are injected for enhanced recovery of
oil or natural gas.
(iii) Brine
mining. Under Texas Water Code, §
27.036, the RRC has
jurisdiction over brine mining and may issue permits for injection
wells.
(iv) Geologic storage of
carbon dioxide. Under Texas Water Code, §
27.011 and §
27.041, and subject to the
review of the legislature based on the recommendations made in the preliminary
report described by Section 10, Senate Bill No. 1387, Acts of the 81st
Legislature, Regular Session (2009), the RRC has jurisdiction over geologic
storage of carbon dioxide in, and the injection of carbon dioxide into, a
reservoir that is initially or may be productive of oil, gas, or geothermal
resources or a saline formation directly above or below that reservoir and over
a well used for such injection purposes regardless of whether the well was
initially completed for that purpose or was initially completed for another
purpose and converted.
(v)
Hydrocarbon storage. The RRC has jurisdiction over wells into which fluids are
injected for storage of hydrocarbons that are liquid at standard temperature
and pressure.
(vi) Geothermal
energy. Under Texas Natural Resources Code, Chapter 141, the RRC has
jurisdiction over injection wells for the exploration, development, and
production of geothermal energy and associated resources.
(vii) In situ tar sands. Under Texas Water
Code, §
27.035, the RRC has
jurisdiction over the in situ recovery of tar sands and may issue permits for
injection wells used for the in situ recovery of tar
sands.
(c) Definition of hazardous waste.
(1) Under the Texas Health and Safety Code,
§
361.003(12),
a "hazardous waste" subject to the jurisdiction of the TCEQ is defined as
"solid waste identified or listed as a hazardous waste by the administrator of
the United States Environmental Protection Agency under the federal Solid Waste
Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
as amended (42 U.S.C. §
6901, et seq.)." Similarly,
under Texas Natural Resources Code, § 91.601(1), "oil and gas hazardous
waste" subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC is defined as an "oil and gas
waste that is a hazardous waste as defined by the administrator of the United
States Environmental Protection Agency under the federal Solid Waste Disposal
Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
(42 U.S.C. §§
6901, et seq.)."
(2) Federal regulations adopted under
authority of the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by RCRA, exempt
from regulation as hazardous waste certain oil and gas wastes. Under 40 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) §261.4(b)(5), "drilling fluids, produced waters,
and other wastes associated with the exploration, development, or production of
crude oil, natural gas or geothermal energy" are described as wastes that are
exempt from federal hazardous waste regulations.
(3) A partial list of wastes associated with
oil, gas, and geothermal exploration, development, and production that are
considered exempt from hazardous waste regulation under RCRA can be found in
EPA's "Regulatory Determination for Oil and Gas and Geothermal Exploration,
Development and Production Wastes," 53 FedReg 25,446 (July 6, 1988). A further
explanation of the exemption can be found in the "Clarification of the
Regulatory Determination for Wastes from the Exploration, Development and
Production of Crude Oil, Natural Gas and Geothermal Energy," 58 FedReg 15, 284
(March 22, 1993). The exemption codified at
40
CFR §
261.4(b)(5) and
discussed in the Regulatory Determination has been, and may continue to be,
clarified in subsequent guidance issued by the EPA.
(d) Jurisdiction over waste from specific activities.
(1) Drilling, operation, and
plugging of wells associated with the exploration, development, or production
of oil, gas, or geothermal resources. Wells associated with the exploration,
development, or production of oil, gas, or geothermal resources include
exploratory wells, cathodic protection holes, core holes, oil wells, gas wells,
geothermal resource wells, fluid injection wells used for secondary or enhanced
recovery of oil or gas, oil and gas waste disposal wells, and injection water
source wells. Several types of waste materials can be generated during the
drilling, operation, and plugging of these wells. These waste materials include
drilling fluids (including water-based and oil-based fluids), cuttings,
produced water, produced sand, waste hydrocarbons (including used oil),
fracturing fluids, spent acid, workover fluids, treating chemicals (including
scale inhibitors, emulsion breakers, paraffin inhibitors, and surfactants),
waste cement, filters (including used oil filters), domestic sewage (including
waterborne human waste and waste from activities such as bathing and food
preparation), and trash (including inert waste, barrels, dope cans, oily rags,
mud sacks, and garbage). Generally, these wastes, whether disposed of by
discharge, landfill, land farm, evaporation, or injection, are subject to the
jurisdiction of the RRC. Wastes from oil, gas, and geothermal exploration
activities subject to regulation by the RRC when those wastes are to be
processed, treated, or disposed of at a solid waste management facility
authorized by the TCEQ under Chapter 330 of this title (relating to Municipal
Solid Waste) are, as defined in §
330.3(148) of
this title (relating to Definitions), "special wastes."
(2) Field treatment of produced fluids. Oil,
gas, and water produced from oil, gas, or geothermal resource wells may be
treated in the field in facilities such as separators, skimmers, heater
treaters, dehydrators, and sweetening units. Waste that results from the field
treatment of oil and gas include waste hydrocarbons (including used oil),
produced water, hydrogen sulfide scavengers, dehydration wastes, treating and
cleaning chemicals, filters (including used oil filters), asbestos insulation,
domestic sewage, and trash are subject to the jurisdiction of the
RRC.
(3) Storage of oil.
(A) Tank bottoms and other wastes from the
storage of crude oil (whether foreign or domestic) before it enters the
refinery are under the jurisdiction of the RRC. In addition, waste resulting
from storage of crude oil at refineries is subject to the jurisdiction of the
TCEQ.
(B) Wastes generated from
storage tanks that are part of the refinery and wastes resulting from the
wholesale and retail marketing of refined products are subject to the
jurisdiction of the TCEQ.
(4) Underground hydrocarbon storage. The
disposal of wastes, including saltwater, resulting from the construction,
creation, operation, maintenance, closure, or abandonment of an "underground
hydrocarbon storage facility" is subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC,
provided the terms "hydrocarbons" and "underground hydrocarbon storage
facility" have the meanings set out in Texas Natural Resources Code, §
91.201.
(5) Underground natural gas storage. The
disposal of wastes resulting from the construction, operation, or abandonment
of an "underground natural gas storage facility" is subject to the jurisdiction
of the RRC, provided that the terms "natural gas" and "storage facility" have
the meanings set out in Texas Natural Resources Code, §
91.173.
(6) Transportation of crude oil or natural
gas.
(A) Jurisdiction over pipeline-related
activities. The RRC has jurisdiction over matters related to pipeline safety
for pipelines in Texas, as referenced in 16 TAC §
8.1(relating to General
Applicability and Standards) pursuant to Chapter 121 of the Texas Utilities
Code and Chapter 117 of the Texas Natural Resources Code. The RRC has
jurisdiction over spill response and remediation of releases from pipelines
transporting crude oil, natural gas, and condensate that originate from
exploration and production facilities to the refinery gate. The RRC has
jurisdiction over waste generated by construction and operation of pipelines
used to transport crude oil, natural gas, and condensate on an oil and gas
lease, and from exploration and production facilities to the refinery gate. The
RRC is responsible for water quality certification issues related to
construction and operation of pipelines used to transport crude oil, natural
gas, and condensate on an oil and gas lease, and from exploration and
production facilities to the refinery gate. The RRC has jurisdiction over waste
generated by construction and operation of pipelines transporting carbon
dioxide.
(B) Crude oil and natural
gas are transported by railcars, tank trucks, barges, tankers, and pipelines.
The RRC has jurisdiction over waste from the transportation of crude oil by
pipeline, regardless of the crude oil source (foreign or domestic) prior to
arrival at a refinery. The RRC also has jurisdiction over waste from the
transportation by pipeline of natural gas, including natural gas liquids, prior
to the use of the natural gas in any manufacturing process or as a residential
or industrial fuel. The transportation wastes subject to the jurisdiction of
the RRC include wastes from pipeline compressor or pressure stations and wastes
from pipeline hydrostatic pressure tests and other pipeline operations. These
wastes include waste hydrocarbons (including used oil), treating and cleaning
chemicals, filters (including used oil filters), scraper trap sludge, trash,
domestic sewage, wastes contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
(including transformers, capacitors, ballasts, and soils), soils contaminated
with mercury from leaking mercury meters, asbestos insulation, transite pipe,
and hydrostatic test waters.
(C)
The TCEQ has jurisdiction over waste from transportation of refined products by
pipeline.
(D) The TCEQ also has
jurisdiction over wastes associated with transportation of crude oil and
natural gas, including natural gas liquids, by railcar, tank truck, barge, or
tanker.
(7) Reclamation
plants.
(A) The RRC has jurisdiction over
wastes from reclamation plants that process wastes from activities associated
with the exploration, development, or production of oil, gas, or geothermal
resources, such as lease tank bottoms. Waste management activities of
reclamation plants for other wastes are subject to the jurisdiction of the
TCEQ.
(B) The RRC has jurisdiction
over the conservation and prevention of waste of crude oil and therefore must
approve all movements of crude oil-containing materials to reclamation plants.
The applicable statute and regulations consist primarily of reporting
requirements for accounting purposes.
(8) Refining of oil.
(A) The management of wastes resulting from
oil refining operations, including spent caustics, spent catalysts, still
bottoms or tars, and American Petroleum Institute (API) separator sludges, is
subject to the jurisdiction of the TCEQ. The processing of light ends from the
distillation and cracking of crude oil or crude oil products is considered to
be a refining operation. The term "refining" does not include the processing of
natural gas or natural gas liquids.
(B) The RRC has jurisdiction over refining
activities for the conservation and the prevention of waste of crude oil. The
RRC requires that all crude oil streams into or out of a refinery be reported
for accounting purposes. In addition, the RRC requires that materials recycled
and used as a fuel, such as still bottoms or waste crude oil, be
reported.
(9) Natural gas
or natural gas liquids processing plants (including gas fractionation
facilities) and pressure maintenance or repressurizing plants. Wastes resulting
from activities associated with these facilities include produced water,
cooling tower water, sulfur bead, sulfides, spent caustics, sweetening agents,
spent catalyst, waste hydrocarbons (including used oil), asbestos insulation,
wastes contaminated with PCBs (including transformers, capacitors, ballasts,
and soils), treating and cleaning chemicals, filters, trash, domestic sewage,
and dehydration materials. These wastes are subject to the jurisdiction of the
RRC under Texas Natural Resources Code, § 1.101. Disposal of waste from
activities associated with natural gas or natural gas liquids processing plants
(including gas fractionation facilities), and pressure maintenance or
repressurizing plants by injection is subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC
under Texas Water Code, Chapter 27. However, until delegation of authority
under RCRA to the RRC, the TCEQ shall have jurisdiction over wastes resulting
from these activities that are not exempt from federal hazardous waste
regulation under RCRA and that are considered hazardous under applicable
federal rules.
(10) Manufacturing
processes.
(A) Wastes that result from the use
of natural gas, natural gas liquids, or products refined from crude oil in any
manufacturing process, such as the production of petrochemicals or plastics, or
from the manufacture of carbon black, are industrial wastes subject to the
jurisdiction of the TCEQ. The term "manufacturing process" does not include the
processing (including fractionation) of natural gas or natural gas liquids at
natural gas or natural gas liquids processing plants.
(B) The RRC has jurisdiction under Texas
Natural Resources Code, Chapter 87, to regulate the use of natural gas in the
production of carbon black.
(C)
Biofuels. The TCEQ has jurisdiction over wastes associated with the
manufacturing of biofuels and biodiesel. TCEQ Regulatory Guidance Document
RG-462 contains additional information regarding biodiesel manufacturing in the
state of Texas.
(11)
Commercial service company facilities and training facilities.
(A) The TCEQ has jurisdiction over wastes
generated at facilities, other than actual exploration, development, or
production sites (field sites), where oil and gas industry workers are trained.
In addition, the TCEQ has jurisdiction over wastes generated at facilities
where materials, processes, and equipment associated with oil and gas industry
operations are researched, developed, designed, and manufactured. However,
wastes generated from tests of materials, processes, and equipment at field
sites are under the jurisdiction of the RRC.
(B) The TCEQ also has jurisdiction over waste
generated at commercial service company facilities operated by persons
providing equipment, materials, or services (such as drilling and work over rig
rental and tank rental; equipment repair; drilling fluid supply; and acidizing,
fracturing, and cementing services) to the oil and gas industry. These wastes
include the following wastes when they are generated at commercial service
company facilities: empty sacks, containers, and drums; drum, tank, and truck
rinsate; sandblast media; painting wastes; spent solvents; spilled chemicals;
waste motor oil; and unused fracturing and acidizing fluids.
(C) The term "commercial service company
facility" does not include a station facility such as a warehouse, pipeyard, or
equipment storage facility belonging to an oil and gas operator and used solely
for the support of that operator's own activities associated with the
exploration, development, or production activities.
(D) Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) - (C)
of this paragraph, the RRC has jurisdiction over disposal of oil and gas
wastes, such as waste drilling fluids and NORM-contaminated pipe scale, in
volumes greater than the incidental volumes usually received at such
facilities, that are managed at commercial service company
facilities.
(E) The RRC also has
jurisdiction over wastes such as vacuum truck rinsate and tank rinsate
generated at facilities operated by oil and gas waste haulers permitted by the
RRC pursuant to 16 TAC §
3.8(f) (relating
to Water Protection).
(12) Mobile offshore drilling units (MODUs).
MODUs are vessels capable of engaging in drilling operations for exploring or
exploiting subsea oil, gas, or mineral resources.
(A) The RRC and, where applicable, the EPA,
the U.S. Coast Guard, or the Texas General Land Office (GLO), have jurisdiction
over discharges from an MODU when the unit is being used in connection with
activities associated with the exploration, development, or production of oil
or gas or geothermal resources, except that upon delegation to the TCEQ of
NPDES authority for discharges into surface water in the state of produced
water, hydrostatic test water, and gas plant effluent resulting from the
activities described in Texas Water Code, §
26.131(a),
the TCEQ shall assume RRC's authority under this subsection.
(B) The TCEQ and, where applicable, the EPA,
the U.S. Coast Guard, or the GLO, have jurisdiction over discharges from an
MODU when the unit is being serviced at a maintenance facility.
(C) Where applicable, the EPA, the U.S. Coast
Guard, or the GLO has jurisdiction over discharges from an MODU during
transportation from shore to exploration, development or production site,
transportation between sites, and transportation to a maintenance
facility.
(e) Interagency activities.
(1) Recycling and
pollution prevention.
(A) The TCEQ and the RRC
encourage generators to eliminate pollution at the source and recycle whenever
possible to avoid disposal of wastes. Questions regarding source reduction and
recycling may be directed to the TCEQ External Relations Division, or to the
RRC. The TCEQ may require generators to explore source reduction and recycling
alternatives prior to authorizing disposal of any waste under the jurisdiction
of the RRC at a facility regulated by the TCEQ; similarly, the RRC may explore
source reduction and recycling alternatives prior to authorizing disposal of
any waste under the jurisdiction of the TCEQ at a facility regulated by the
RRC.
(B) The TCEQ External
Relations Division and the RRC will coordinate as necessary to maintain a
working relationship to enhance the efforts to share information and use
resources more efficiently. The TCEQ External Relations Division will make the
proper TCEQ personnel aware of the services offered by the RRC, share
information with the RRC to maximize services to oil and gas operators, and
advise oil and gas operators of RRC services. The RRC will make the proper RRC
personnel aware of the services offered by the TCEQ External Relations
Division, share information with the TCEQ External Relations Division to
maximize services to industrial operators, and advise industrial operators of
the TCEQ External Relations Division services.
(2) Treatment of wastes under RRC
jurisdiction at facilities authorized by the TCEQ under Chapter 334, Subchapter
K of this title (relating to Storage, Treatment, and Reuse Procedures for
Petroleum-Substance Contaminated Soil).
(A)
Soils contaminated with constituents that are physically and chemically similar
to those normally found in soils at leaking underground petroleum storage tanks
from generators under the jurisdiction of the RRC are eligible for treatment at
TCEQ regulated soil treatment facilities once alternatives for recycling and
source reduction have been explored. For the purpose of this provision, soils
containing petroleum substance(s) as defined in §
334.481 of this title (relating to
Definitions) are considered to be similar, but drilling muds, acids, or other
chemicals used in oil and gas activities are not considered similar. Generators
under the jurisdiction of the RRC must meet the same requirements as generators
under the jurisdiction of the TCEQ when sending their petroleum contaminated
soils to soil treatment facilities under TCEQ jurisdiction. Those requirements
are in §
334.496 of this title (relating to
Shipping Procedures Applicable to Generators of Petroleum-Substance Waste),
except subsection (c) of this section which is not applicable, and §
334.497 of this title (relating to
Recordkeeping and Reporting Procedures Applicable to Generators). RRC
generators with questions on these requirements should contact the
TCEQ.
(B) Generators under RRC
jurisdiction should also be aware that TCEQ regulated soil treatment facilities
are required by §
334.499 of this title (relating to
Shipping Requirements Applicable to Owners or Operators of Storage, Treatment,
or Disposal Facilities) to maintain documentation on the soil sampling and
analytical methods, chain-of-custody, and all analytical results for the soil
received at the facility and transported off-site or reused on-site.
(C) The RRC must specifically authorize
management of contaminated soils under its jurisdiction at facilities
authorized by the TCEQ under Chapter 334, Subchapter K of this title (relating
to Storage, Treatment, and Reuse Procedures for Petroleum-Substance
Contaminated Soil). The RRC may grant such authorizations by rule, or on an
individual basis through permits or other written authorizations.
(D) All waste, including treated waste,
subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC and managed at facilities authorized by
the TCEQ under Chapter 334, Subchapter K of this title will remain subject to
the jurisdiction of the RRC. Such materials will be subject to RRC regulations
regarding final reuse, recycling, or disposal.
(E) TCEQ waste codes and registration numbers
are not required for management of wastes under the jurisdiction of the RRC at
facilities authorized by the TCEQ under Chapter 334, Subchapter K of this
title.
(3) Processing,
treatment, and disposal of wastes under RRC jurisdiction at facilities
authorized by the TCEQ.
(A) As provided in
this paragraph, waste materials subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC may be
managed at solid waste facilities under the jurisdiction of the TCEQ once
alternatives for recycling and source reduction have been explored. The RRC
must specifically authorize management of wastes under its jurisdiction at
facilities regulated by the TCEQ. The RRC may grant such authorizations by
rule, or on an individual basis through permits or other written
authorizations. In addition, except as provided in subparagraph (B) of this
paragraph, the concurrence of the TCEQ is required to manage "special waste"
under the jurisdiction of the RRC at a facility regulated by the TCEQ. The
TCEQ's concurrence may be subject to specified conditions.
(B) A facility under the jurisdiction of the
TCEQ may accept, without further individual concurrence, waste under the
jurisdiction of the RRC if that facility is permitted or otherwise authorized
to accept that particular type of waste. The phrase "that type of waste" does
not specifically refer to waste under the jurisdiction of the RRC, but rather
to the waste's physical and chemical characteristics. Management and disposal
of waste under the jurisdiction of the RRC is subject to TCEQ's rules governing
both special waste and industrial waste.
(C) If the TCEQ regulated facility receiving
the waste does not have approval to accept the waste included in its permit or
other authorization, individual written concurrences from the TCEQ shall be
required to manage wastes under the jurisdiction of the RRC at TCEQ regulated
facilities. Recommendations for the management of special wastes associated
with the exploration, development, or production of oil, gas, or geothermal
resources are found in TCEQ Regulatory Guidance document RG-3. (This is
required only if the TCEQ regulated facility receiving the waste does not have
approval to accept the waste included in its permit or other authorization
provided by the TCEQ.) To obtain an individual concurrence, the waste generator
must provide to the TCEQ sufficient information to allow the concurrence
determination to be made, including the identity of the proposed waste
management facility, the process generating the waste, the quantity of waste,
and the physical and chemical nature of the waste involved (using process
knowledge and/or laboratory analysis as defined in Chapter 335, Subchapter R of
this title (relating to Waste Classification)). In obtaining TCEQ approval,
generators may use their existing knowledge about the process or materials
entering it to characterize their wastes. Material Safety Data Sheets,
manufacturer's literature, and other documentation generated in conjunction
with a particular process may be used. Process knowledge must be documented and
submitted with the request for approval.
(D) Domestic septage collected from portable
toilets at facilities subject to RRC jurisdiction that is not mixed with other
waste materials may be managed at a facility permitted by the TCEQ for
disposal, incineration, or land application for beneficial use of such domestic
septage waste without specific authorization from the TCEQ or the RRC. Waste
sludge subject to the jurisdiction of the RRC may not be applied to the land at
a facility permitted by the TCEQ for the beneficial use of sewage sludge or
water treatment sludge.
(E) TCEQ
waste codes and registration numbers are not required for management of wastes
under the jurisdiction of the RRC at facilities under the jurisdiction of the
TCEQ. If a receiving facility requires a TCEQ waste code for waste under the
jurisdiction of the RRC, a code consisting of the following may be provided:
(i) the sequence number "RRCT";
(ii) the appropriate form code, as specified
in Chapter 335, Subchapter R, §335.521, Appendix 3 of this title (relating
to Appendices); and
(iii) the waste
classification code "H" if the waste is a hazardous oil and gas waste, or "R"
if the waste is a nonhazardous oil and gas waste.
(F) If a facility requests or requires a TCEQ
waste generator registration number for wastes under the jurisdiction of the
RRC, the registration number "XXXRC" may be provided.
(G) Wastes that are under the jurisdiction of
the RRC need not be reported to the TCEQ.
(4) Management of nonhazardous wastes under
TCEQ jurisdiction at facilities regulated by the RRC.
(A) Once alternatives for recycling and
source reduction have been explored, and with prior authorization from the RRC,
the following nonhazardous wastes subject to the jurisdiction of the TCEQ may
be disposed of, other than by injection into a Class II well, at a facility
regulated by the RRC; bioremediated at a facility regulated by the RRC (prior
to reuse, recycling, or disposal); or reclaimed at a crude oil reclamation
facility regulated by the RRC: nonhazardous wastes that are chemically and
physically similar to oil and gas wastes, but excluding soils, media, debris,
sorbent pads, and other clean-up materials that are contaminated with refined
petroleum products.
(B) To obtain
an individual authorization from the RRC, the waste generator must provide the
following information, in writing, to the RRC: the identity of the proposed
waste management facility, the quantity of waste involved, a hazardous waste
determination that addresses the process generating the waste and the physical
and chemical nature of the waste, and any other information that the RRC may
require. As appropriate, the RRC shall reevaluate any authorization issued
pursuant to this paragraph.
(C)
Once alternatives for recycling and source reduction have been explored, and
subject to the RRC's individual authorization, the following wastes under the
jurisdiction of the TCEQ are authorized without further TCEQ approval to be
disposed of at a facility regulated by the RRC, bioremediated at a facility
regulated by the RRC, or reclaimed at a crude oil reclamation facility
regulated by the RRC: nonhazardous bottoms from tanks used only for crude oil
storage; unused and/or reconditioned drilling and completion/workover wastes
from commercial service company facilities; used and/or unused drilling and
completion/workover wastes generated at facilities where workers in the oil and
gas exploration, development, and production industry are trained; used and/or
unused drilling and completion/workover wastes generated at facilities where
materials, processes, and equipment associated with oil and gas exploration,
development, and production operations are researched, developed, designed, and
manufactured; unless other provisions are made in the underground injection
well permit used and/or unused drilling and completion wastes (but not workover
wastes) generated in connection with the drilling and completion of Class I,
III, and V injection wells; wastes (such as contaminated soils, media, debris,
sorbent pads, and other cleanup materials) associated with spills of crude oil
and natural gas liquids if such wastes are under the jurisdiction of the TCEQ;
and sludges from washout pits at commercial service company
facilities.
(D) Under Texas Water
Code, §
27.0511(g),
a TCEQ permit is required for injection of industrial or municipal waste as an
injection fluid for enhanced recovery purposes. However, under Texas Water
Code, §
27.0511(h),
the RRC may authorize a person to use nonhazardous brine from a desalination
operation or nonhazardous drinking water treatment residuals as an injection
fluid for enhanced recovery purposes without obtaining a permit from the TCEQ.
The use or disposal of radioactive material under this subparagraph is subject
to the applicable requirements of Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter
401.
(E) Under Texas Water Code,
§
27.026, by individual
permit, general permit, or rule, the TCEQ may designate a Class II disposal
well that has an RRC permit as a Class V disposal well authorized to dispose by
injection nonhazardous brine from a desalination operation and nonhazardous
drinking water treatment residuals under the jurisdiction of the TCEQ. The
operator of a permitted Class II disposal well seeking a Class V authorization
must apply to TCEQ and obtain a Class V authorization prior to disposal of
nonhazardous brine from a desalination operation or nonhazardous drinking water
treatment residuals. A permitted Class II disposal well that has obtained a
Class V authorization from TCEQ under Texas Water Code, §
27.026, remains subject to
the regulatory requirements of both the RRC and the TCEQ. Nonhazardous brine
from a desalination operation and nonhazardous drinking water treatment
residuals to be disposed by injection in a permitted Class II disposal well
authorized by TCEQ as a Class V injection well remain subject to the
requirements of the Texas Health and Safety Code, the Texas Water Code, and the
TCEQ's rules. The RRC and the TCEQ may impose additional requirements or
conditions to address the dual injection activity under Texas Water Code,
§
27.026.
(5) Drilling in landfills. The TCEQ will
notify the Oil and Gas Division of the RRC and the landfill owner at the time a
drilling application is submitted if an operator proposes to drill a well
through a landfill regulated by the TCEQ. The RRC and the TCEQ will cooperate
and coordinate with one another in advising the appropriate parties of measures
necessary to reduce the potential for the landfill contents to cause
groundwater contamination as a result of landfill disturbance associated with
drilling operations. The TCEQ requires prior written approval before drilling
of any test borings through previously deposited municipal solid waste under
§
330.15 of this title (relating to
General Prohibitions), and before borings or other penetration of the final
cover of a closed municipal solid waste landfill under §
330.955 of this title (relating to
Miscellaneous). The installation of landfill gas recovery wells for the
recovery and beneficial reuse of landfill gas is under the jurisdiction of the
TCEQ in accordance with Chapter 330, Subchapter I of this title (relating to
Landfill Gas Management). Modification of an active or a closed solid waste
management unit, corrective action management unit, hazardous waste landfill
cell, or industrial waste landfill cell by drilling or penetrating into or
through deposited waste may require prior written approval from TCEQ. Such
approval may require a new authorization from TCEQ or modification or amendment
of an existing TCEQ authorization.
(6) Coordination of actions and cooperative
sharing of information.
(A) In the event that
a generator or transporter disposes, without proper authorization, of wastes
regulated by the TCEQ at a facility permitted by the RRC, the TCEQ is
responsible for enforcement actions against the generator or transporter, and
the RRC is responsible for enforcement actions against the disposal facility.
In the event that a generator or transporter disposes, without proper
authorization, of wastes regulated by the RRC at a facility permitted by the
TCEQ, the RRC is responsible for enforcement actions against the generator or
transporter, and the TCEQ is responsible for enforcement actions against the
disposal facility.
(B) The TCEQ and
the RRC agree to cooperate with one another by sharing information. Employees
of either agency who receive a complaint or discover, in the course of their
official duties, information that indicates a violation of a statute,
regulation, order, or permit pertaining to wastes under the jurisdiction of the
other agency, will notify the other agency. In addition, to facilitate
enforcement actions, each agency will share information in its possession with
the other agency if requested by the other agency to do so.
(C) The TCEQ and the RRC agree to work
together at allocating respective responsibilities. To the extent that
jurisdiction is indeterminate or has yet to be determined, the TCEQ and the RRC
agree to share information and take appropriate investigative steps to assess
jurisdiction.
(D) For items not
covered by statute or rule, the TCEQ and the RRC will collaborate to determine
respective responsibilities for each issue, project, or project type.
(E) The staff of the RRC and the TCEQ shall
coordinate as necessary to attempt to resolve any disputes regarding
interpretation of this MOU and disputes regarding definitions and terms of
art.
(7) Groundwater.
(A) Notice of groundwater contamination.
Under Texas Water Code, §
26.408, effective
September 1, 2003, the RRC must submit a written notice to the TCEQ of any
documented cases of groundwater contamination that may affect a drinking water
well.
(B) Groundwater protection
letters. The RRC provides letters of recommendation concerning groundwater
protection.
(i) For recommendations related
to normal drilling operations, shot holes for seismic surveys, and cathodic
protection wells, the RRC provides geologic interpretation identifying fresh
water zones, base of usable-quality water (generally less than 3,000 mg/L total
dissolved solids, but may include higher levels of total dissolved solids if
identified as currently being used or identified by the Texas Water Development
Board as a source of water for desalination), and include protection depths
recommended by the RRC. The geological interpretation may include groundwater
protection based on potential hydrological connectivity to usable-quality
water.
(ii) For recommendations
related to injection, the RRC provides geologic interpretation of the base of
the underground source of drinking water. The term "underground source of
drinking water" is defined in 40 Code of Federal Regulations §146.3
(Federal Register, Volume 46, June 24, 1980).
(8) Emergency and spill
response.
(A) The TCEQ and the RRC are members
of the state's Emergency Management Council. The TCEQ is the state's primary
agency for emergency support during response to hazardous materials and oil
spill incidents. The TCEQ is responsible for state-level coordination of assets
and services, and will identify and coordinate staffing requirements
appropriate to the incident to include investigative assignments for the
primary and support agencies.
(B)
Contaminated soil and other wastes that result from a spill must be managed in
accordance with the governing statutes and regulations adopted by the agency
responsible for the activity that resulted in the spill. Coordination of issues
of spill notification, prevention, and response shall be addressed in the State
of Texas Oil and Hazardous Substance Spill Contingency Plan and may be
addressed further in a separate Memorandum of Understanding among these
agencies and other appropriate state agencies.
(C) The agency (TCEQ or RRC) that has
jurisdiction over the activity that resulted in the spill incident will be
responsible for measures necessary to monitor, document, and remediate the
incident.
(i) The TCEQ has jurisdiction over
certain inland oil spills, all hazardous-substance spills, and spills of other
substances that may cause pollution.
(ii) The RRC has jurisdiction over spills or
discharges from activities associated with the exploration, development, or
production of crude oil, gas, and geothermal resources, and discharges from
brine mining or surface mining.
(D) If TCEQ or RRC field personnel receive
spill notifications or reports documenting improperly managed waste or
contaminated environmental media resulting from a spill or discharge that is
under the jurisdiction of the other agency, they shall refer the issue to the
other agency. The agency that has jurisdiction over the activity that resulted
in the improperly managed waste, spill, discharge, or contaminated
environmental media will be responsible for measures necessary to monitor,
document, and remediate the incident.
(9) Anthropogenic carbon dioxide storage. In
determining the proper permitting agency in regard to a particular permit
application for a carbon dioxide geologic storage project, the TCEQ and the RRC
will coordinate by any appropriate means to review proposed locations, geologic
settings, reservoir data, and other jurisdictional criteria specified in Texas
Water Code, §
27.041.
(f) Radioactive material.
(1) Radioactive substances. Under the Texas
Health and Safety Code, §
401.011, the
TCEQ has jurisdiction to regulate and license:
(A) the disposal of radioactive
substances;
(B) the processing or
storage of low-level radioactive waste or NORM waste from other persons, except
oil and gas NORM waste;
(C) the
recovery or processing of source material;
(D) the processing of by-product material as
defined by Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.003(3)(B);
and
(E) sites for the disposal of
low-level radioactive waste, by-product material, or NORM
waste.
(2) NORM waste.
(A) Under Texas Health and Safety Code,
§
401.415, the
RRC has jurisdiction over the disposal of NORM waste that constitutes, is
contained in, or has contaminated oil and gas waste. This waste material is
called "oil and gas NORM waste." Oil and gas NORM waste may be generated in
connection with the exploration, development, or production of oil or
gas.
(B) Under Texas Health and
Safety Code, §
401.412, the
TCEQ has jurisdiction over the disposal of NORM that is not oil and gas NORM
waste.
(C) The term "disposal" does
not include receipt, possession, use, processing, transfer, transport, storage,
or commercial distribution of radioactive materials, including NORM. These
non-disposal activities are under the jurisdiction of the Texas Department of
State Health Services under Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.011(a).
(3) Drinking water residuals. A person
licensed for the commercial disposal of NORM waste from public water systems
may dispose of NORM waste only by injection into a Class I injection well
permitted under Chapter 331 of this title (relating to Underground Injection
Control) that is specifically permitted for the disposal of NORM
waste.
(4) Management of
radioactive tracer material.
(A) Radioactive
tracer material is subject to the definition of low-level radioactive waste
under Texas Health and Safety Code, §
401.004, and
must be handled and disposed of in accordance with the rules of the TCEQ and
the Department of State Health Services.
(B) Exemption. Under Texas Health and Safety
Code, §
401.106, the
TCEQ may grant an exemption by rule from a licensing requirement if the TCEQ
finds that the exemption will not constitute a significant risk to the public
health and safety and the environment.
(5) Coordination with the Texas Radiation
Advisory Board. The RRC and the TCEQ will consider recommendations and advice
provided by the Texas Radiation Advisory Board that concern either agency's
policies or programs related to the development, use, or regulation of a source
of radiation. Both agencies will provide written response to the
recommendations or advice provided by the advisory board.
(6) Uranium exploration and mining.
(A) Under Texas Natural Resources Code,
Chapter 131, the RRC has jurisdiction over uranium exploration
activities.
(B) Under Texas Natural
Resources Code, Chapter 131, the RRC has jurisdiction over uranium mining,
except for in situ recovery processes.
(C) Under Texas Water Code, §
27.0513, the TCEQ has
jurisdiction over injection wells used for uranium mining.
(D) Under Texas Health and Safety Code,
§
401.2625, the
TCEQ has jurisdiction over the licensing of source material recovery and
processing or for storage, processing, or disposal of by-product
material.
(g) Effective date. This Memorandum of Understanding, as of its July 15, 2020, effective date, shall supersede the prior Memorandum of Understanding among the agencies, dated May 1, 2012.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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