Amended in Senate April 4, 2013

Senate BillNo. 395


Introduced by Senator Jackson

February 20, 2013


An act tobegin delete add Article 17 (commencing with Section 25258.3) to Chapter 6.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances.end deletebegin insert amend Section 25159.12 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 3205.2 of the Public Resources Code, relating to hazardous waste.end insert

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 395, as amended, Jackson. Hazardousbegin delete substances: produced water.end deletebegin insert waste: wells.end insert

begin delete

Existing

end delete

begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertExistingend insert law, part of the hazardous waste control law,begin delete requires the Department of Toxic Substances Control to adopt regulations to establish a process by which chemicals or chemical ingredients in products may be identified and prioritized for consideration as being chemicals of concern and to establish a process by which chemicals of concern may be evaluated. The department is prohibited from duplicating or adopting conflicting regulations for regulated product categoriesend deletebegin insert prohibits a person from discharging hazardous waste into an injection well unless certain conditions are met with regard to the location of the well and obtaining a hazardous waste facilities permit. Existing law also imposes other requirements upon the operator of an injection well and defines the term “injection well” for these purposes as excluding wells regulated by the Division of Oil and Gas, pursuant to specified federal regulationsend insert. A violation of the hazardous waste control law is a crime.

This bill wouldbegin delete define produced water and require its regulation as a hazardous substance during the extraction of oil and gas, including hydraulic fracturing operationsend deletebegin insert delete that exclusion of those regulated wells from the definition of “injection well,” thereby subjecting those wells to the requirements imposed upon injection wellsend insert.

Since a violation of these requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

begin insert

(2) Existing law requires an operator of a class II commercial wastewater disposal well who engages in the drilling, redrilling, or deepening of, or any operation altering the casing of, the well, or in maintaining or abandoning the well or attendant facilities, to file with the State Oil and Gas Supervisor an indemnity bond in a specified amount. Existing law defines the term class II commercial wastewater disposal well for this purpose as a well that, among other things, is used to dispose of oilfield wastewater.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would specify that, for this purpose, oilfield wastewater does not include hazardous waste.

end insert
begin delete

 The

end delete

begin insert(3)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertTheend insert California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P2    1begin insert

begin insertSECTION 1.end insert  

end insert
begin insert

The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:

end insert
begin insert

3(a) Produced water is any fluid that is emitted from an oil or
4gas production well. Produced water historically has been exempt
5from California hazardous waste management laws when disposed
6of in class II commercial wastewater disposal wells and therefore
7has been disposed of in these wells without prior testing for
8hazardous content. As a result, no public agency has monitored
9or collected comprehensive data on the volume or toxicity of
10hazardous materials injected into class II commercial wastewater
11disposal wells in California.

end insert
begin insert

P3    1(b) Produced water from oil and gas wells may contain a variety
2of chemicals that are hazardous. Well stimulation techniques often
3inject hazardous chemicals into wells that return to the surface as
4produced water. In addition, fluids emitted from wells may carry
5dissolved hazardous elements from the underground rock
6formation.

end insert
begin insert

7(c) A common form of well stimulation is hydraulic fracturing,
8by which tens of thousands to millions of gallons of fluid are
9injected into a well under pressure. Hydraulic fracturing uses a
10variety of hazardous chemicals. A 2011 survey by the United States
11House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce
12minority staff found 29 chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing are
13(1) known or possible human carcinogens, (2) regulated under the
14federal Safe Drinking Water Act for their risks to human health,
15or (3) listed as hazardous air pollutants under the federal Clean
16Air Act. These chemicals contaminate produced water and are
17eventually disposed of, usually into a class II commercial
18wastewater disposal well. Without proper handling and monitoring
19of hazardous wastes from this process, the state does not have any
20way to know of, or prevent, any contamination in case of a well
21failure.

end insert
begin insert

22(d) Class II commercial wastewater disposal wells may pierce
23aquifers suitable for domestic or agricultural use. If the well casing
24fails, materials may potentially leak into surrounding groundwater.
25Once an aquifer is contaminated, it is virtually impossible to clean
26it. Groundwater is a vital resource for human health,
27environmental well-being, and economic productivity.
28Groundwater should be protected for beneficial uses, including
29human consumption, agriculture, surface water supply, and
30recreation.

end insert
begin insert

31(e) Therefore, it is intent of the Legislature to ensure that oilfield
32waste be regulated in the same manner as other forms of waste by
33removing the exemption for produced water in the Health and
34Safety Code. If the produced wastewater is hazardous, then well
35operators should handle it in the same manner as other forms of
36hazardous waste.

end insert
37begin insert

begin insertSEC. 2.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 25159.12 of the end insertbegin insertHealth and Safety Codeend insertbegin insert is
38amended to read:end insert

39

25159.12.  

For purposes of this article, the following definitions
40apply:

P4    1(a) “Annulus” means the space between the outside edge of the
2injection tube and the well casing.

3(b) “State board” means the State Water Resources Control
4Board.

5(c) “Compatibility” means that waste constituents do not react
6with each other, with the materials constituting the injection well,
7or with fluids or solid geologic media in the injection zone or
8confining zone in a manner as to cause leaching, precipitation of
9solids, gas or pressure buildup, dissolution, or any other effect that
10will impair the effectiveness of the confining zone or the safe
11operation of the injection well.

12(d) “Confining zone” means the geological formation, or part
13of a formation, that is intended to be a barrier to prevent the
14migration of waste constituents from the injection zone.

15(e) “Constituent” means an element, chemical, compound, or
16mixture of compounds that is a component of a hazardous waste
17or leachate and that has the physical or chemical properties that
18cause the waste to be identified as hazardous waste by the
19department pursuant to this chapter.

20(f) “Discharge” means to place, inject, dispose of, or store
21hazardous wastes into, or in, an injection well owned or operated
22by the person who is conducting the placing, disposal, or storage.

23(g) “Drinking water” has the same meaning as “potential source
24of drinking water,” as defined in subdivision (t) of Section 25208.2.

25(h) “Facility” means the structures, appurtenances, and
26improvements on the land, and all contiguous land, that are
27associated with an injection well and are used for treating, storing,
28or disposing of hazardous waste. A facility may consist of several
29waste management units, including, but not limited to, surface
30impoundments, landfills, underground or aboveground tanks,
31sumps, pits, ponds, and lagoons that are associated with an injection
32well.

33(i) “Groundwater” means water, including, but not limited to,
34drinking water, below the land surface in a zone of saturation.

35(j) “Hazardous waste” meansbegin delete any hazardous waste specified asend delete
36 hazardous waste or extremely hazardous waste, as defined in this
37chapter.begin delete Anyend deletebegin insert Aend insert waste mixture formed by mixingbegin delete anyend deletebegin insert aend insert waste or
38substance with a hazardous waste shall be considered hazardous
39waste for the purposes of this article.

P5    1(k) “Hazardous waste facilities permit” means a permit issued
2for an injection well pursuant to Sections 25200 and 25200.6.

3(l) “Injection well” or “well” means any bored, drilled, or driven
4shaft, dug pit, or hole in the ground the depth of which is greater
5than the circumference of the bored hole and any associated
6subsurface appurtenances, including, but not limited to, the casing.
7For the purposes of this article, injection well does notbegin delete include
8either of the following:end delete

9begin delete(1)end deletebegin deleteend deletebegin deleteWellsend deletebegin insert include a wellend insert exempted pursuant to Section 25159.24.

begin delete

10(2) Wells that are regulated by the Division of Oil and Gas in
11the Department of Conservation pursuant to Division 3
12(commencing with Section 3000) of the Public Resources Code
13and Subpart F (commencing with Section 147.250) of Subchapter
14D of Chapter 1 of Part 147 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal
15Regulations and are in compliance with that division and Subpart
16A (commencing with Section 146.1) of Part 147 of Subchapter D
17of Chapter 1 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations.

end delete

18(m) “Injection zone” means that portion of the receiving
19formation that has received, is receiving, or is expected to receive,
20over the lifetime of the well, waste fluid from the injection well.
21“Injection zone” does not include that portion of the receiving
22formation that exceeds the horizontal and vertical extent specified
23pursuant to Section 25159.20.

24(n) “Owner” means a person who owns a facility or part of a
25facility.

26(o) “Perched water” means a localized body of groundwater
27that overlies, and is hydraulically separated from, an underlying
28body of groundwater.

29(p) “pH” means a measure of a sample’s acidity expressed as a
30negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion concentration.

31(q) “Qualified person” means a person who has at least five
32years of full-time experience in hydrogeology and who is a
33professional geologist registered pursuant to Section 7850 of the
34Business and Professions Code, or a registered petroleum engineer
35registered pursuant to Section 6762 of the Business and Professions
36Code. “Full-time experience” in hydrogeology may include a
37combination of postgraduate studies in hydrogeology and work
38experience, with each year of postgraduate work counted as one
39year of full-time work experience, except that not more than three
P6    1years of postgraduate studies may be counted as full-time
2experience.

3(r) “Receiving formation” means the geologic strata that are
4hydraulically connected to the injection well.

5(s) “Regional board” means the California regional water quality
6control board for the region in which the injection well is located.

7(t) “Report” means the hydrogeological assessment report
8specified in Section 25159.18.

9(u) “Safe Drinking Water Act” means Subchapter XII
10(commencing with Section 300f) of Chapter 6A of Title 42 of the
11United States Code.

12(v) “Strata” means a distinctive layer or series of layers of earth
13materials.

14(w) “Waste management unit” means that portion of a facility
15used for the discharge of hazardous waste into or onto land,
16including all containment and monitoring equipment associated
17with that portion of the facility.

18begin insert

begin insertSEC. 3.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 3205.2 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Resources Codeend insertbegin insert is
19amended to read:end insert

20

3205.2.  

(a) Notwithstanding Section 3204,begin delete anyend deletebegin insert aend insert person who
21engages in the operation of a class II commercial wastewater
22disposal well, as defined in subdivision (d), shall file an indemnity
23bond with the supervisor for fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for
24each well so used. The bond shall cover all operations of drilling,
25redrilling, deepening, altering casing, maintaining, or abandoning
26the well and attendant facilities. The bond shall be executed by
27the person as the principal, and by an authorized surety company
28as the surety, and, except for differences in the amount, shall be
29in substantially the same language and upon the same conditions
30as provided in Section 3204.

31(b) A blanket bond submitted under subdivision (a) or (c) of
32Section 3205 may be used in lieu of the bond required in
33subdivision (a), except that the termination and cancellation shall
34be in accordance with subdivision (c) of this section.

35(c) Notwithstanding Section 3207,begin delete anyend deletebegin insert aend insert bond issued in
36compliance with this section may be terminated and canceled and
37the surety relieved of all obligationsbegin delete thereunderend deletebegin insert under the bondend insert
38 when the well is properly abandoned or another valid bond has
39been substitutedbegin delete therefor.end deletebegin insert for the bond.end insert

P7    1(d) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insertA class II commercial wastewater disposal well is a well
2that is used to dispose of oilfield wastewaterbegin insert, as specified in
3paragraph (2),end insert
for a fee and that is regulated by the division
4pursuant to this chapter and Subpart F (commencing with Section
5147.250) of Part 147 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations.

begin insert

6(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), oilfield wastewater does not
7include hazardous waste, as defined in Chapter 6.5 (commencing
8with Section 25100) of Division 20 of the Health and Safety Code.

end insert
begin delete9

SECTION 1.  

Article 17 (commencing with Section 25258.3)
10is added to Chapter 6.5 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:

11 

12Article 17.  Hydraulic fracturing produced water
13

 

14

25258.3.  

For purposes of this article, “produced water” means
15any water brought up from the hydrocarbon bearing formation
16strata during the extraction of oil and gas, including hydraulic
17fracturing operations, and can include formation water, injection
18water, and any chemicals added downhole or during the oil and
19water separation process.

20

25258.4.  

Produced water shall be regulated as, and shall be
21deemed to be, a hazardous waste for purposes of this chapter and
22the regulations adopted pursuant to this chapter.

end delete
23

begin deleteSEC. 2.end delete
24begin insertSEC. 4.end insert  

 No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
25Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
26the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
27district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
28infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
29for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
30the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
31the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
32Constitution.



O

    98