Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySolomon Higgins Modified over 9 years ago
1
TENORM North Dakota’s Journey to Rulemaking
2
BEGINNINGS 2013Oil industry is on the move – 200+ rigs operating capable of 20,000 feet or more – 167 Billion barrels of oil in place – 7.38 billion barrels are recoverable wusing current technology
3
Current Production 12,684 producing wells 1,211,178 barrels per day (8-14-2015) 1,650,075 MCF/day (natural gas) 8-14-2015 – Currently capturing about 75% of natural gas – 25% flare End Result? – 50,000 to 70,000 wells drilled
5
2-20 yard Rolloff containers
6
Problem Solved? Effective June 1, 2014, covered, leak-proof containers designated for filter sock disposal are required to be on-site at saltwater disposal wells at all times and on-site during the drilling, completion and flow-back phases of all new spud (drilled) oil and gas wells.
7
Licensed Haulers On March 13, 2014 the Department of Mineral Resources notified all North Dakota well operators that they must use waste haulers licensed by the North Dakota Department of Health.
8
Current Disposal Options Less than 5 pCi/g – Disposal in local landfill 5 pCi/g or more – Oaks (Baranko) in Montana – Clean Harbors (Colorado) – US Ecology (Idaho)
9
How much Waste is generated 63 cubic yards per day This is equal to 3 twenty yard roll off dumpsters In terms of weight: – Approximately 131 tons per day This could include any of the following: – Frac sand – Tanks bottoms – Scale – Metal parts including pipe, valves, and other steel – Filter socks
10
Can we Raise the Disposal Limit? Argonne National Lab conducted study – $182,000.00 – Sampling data was not used – Worked backwards from the public dose limit of 100 mrem – Calculations based on Special Waste Landfill design – Acceptable disposal concentration 51.6 pCi/g – North Dakota decided to use 50.0 pCi/g
11
Rule Making Process Draft rule promulgated late 2013 based on CRCPD SSR part n – New chapter to the North Dakota Radiological Health rules (33-10-23) – Some additions include: Waste hauler licensing Applicant background and criminal history check Specific record keeping requirements RSO training requirements for certain license types
12
Public Hearings North Dakota rules require 30 day notice of public hearing One public hearing is required 30 day comment period required North Dakota held 3 public hearings and extended the comment period to 80 days
13
Public Comments https://www.ndhealth.gov/EHS/TENORM/Rul es/NDDoH%20Response%20to%20TENORM% 20Comments.pdf https://www.ndhealth.gov/EHS/TENORM/Rul es/NDDoH%20Response%20to%20TENORM% 20Comments.pdf 107 pages of comments with department responses
14
Proposed Rules https://www.ndhealth.gov/EHS/TENORM/Rul es/FINAL%20Radiation%20Control%20TENOR M%20Rules%20-%20NDAC%2033-10-23.pdf https://www.ndhealth.gov/EHS/TENORM/Rul es/FINAL%20Radiation%20Control%20TENOR M%20Rules%20-%20NDAC%2033-10-23.pdf
15
Radiation Program Website https://www.ndhealth.gov/EHS/TENORM/
16
Next Steps 8-12-2015 Approved by North Dakota Health Council Waiting on Attorney General opinion – Then on to the Legislative Rules Committee – Published by the Legislative Council Once published, rules are final – Probably early 2016
17
QUESTIONS? Dale Patrick dpatrick@nd.gov 701-328-5188
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.