EPA Program to Protect Underground Sources from Injection of Fluids Associated with Oil and Gas Production Needs Improvement
www.gao.gov/assets/670/664499.pdf.
DRINKING WATER
Why GAO Did This Study
Every day in the United States, at least
2 billion gallons of fluids are injected
into over 172,000 wells to enhance oil
and gas production, or to dispose of
fluids brought to the surface during the
extraction of oil and gas resources.
These wells are subject to regulation to
protect drinking water sources under
EPA’s UIC class II program and
approved state class II programs.
Because much of the population relies
on underground sources for drinking
water, these wells have raised
concerns about the safety of the
nation’s drinking water.
GAO was asked to review EPA’s
oversight of the class II program. This
report examines (1) EPA and state
roles, responsibilities, and resources
for the program, (2) safeguards to
protect drinking water, (3) EPA
oversight and enforcement of class II
programs, and (4) the reliability of
program data for reporting. GAO
reviewed federal and state laws and
regulations. GAO interviewed EPA and
state officials and reviewed class II
programs from a nongeneralizable
sample of eight states selected on the
basis of shale oil and gas regions and
the highest number of class II wells.
What GAO Recommends
GAO recommends that, among other
things, EPA review emerging risks
related to class II program safeguards
and ensure that it can effectively
oversee and efficiently enforce class II
programs. EPA agreed with all but the
enforcement recommendation. GAO
continues to believe that EPA should
take actions to ensure it can enforce
state class II regulations, as discussed
in the report.
What GAO Found
The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) role in the Underground Injection
Control (UIC) class II program is to oversee and enforce fluid injection into wells
associated with oil and gas production, known as class II wells. EPA has
approved 39 states to manage their own class II programs, and EPA regions are
responsible for managing the programs in remaining states. EPA regions and
states use a mix of resources to manage class II programs, including EPA grant
funding, state funding, and federal and state personnel. EPA’s UIC grant funding
has remained at about $11 million for at least the past 10 years.
Class II programs from the eight selected states that GAO reviewed have
safeguards, such as construction requirements for injection wells, to protect
against contamination of underground sources of drinking water. Programs in two
states are managed by EPA and rely on EPA safeguards, while the remaining six
programs are state managed and have their own safeguards that EPA deemed
effective at preventing such contamination. Overall, EPA and state program
officials reported that these safeguards are protective, resulting in few known
incidents of contamination. However, the safeguards do not address emerging
underground injection risks, such as seismic activity and overly high pressure in
geologic formations leading to surface outbreaks of fluids. EPA officials said they
manage these risks on a state-by-state basis, and some states have additional
safeguards to address them. EPA has tasked its UIC Technical Workgroup with
reviewing induced seismicity associated with injection wells and possible
safeguards, but it does not plan reviews of other emerging risks, such as high
pressure in formations. Without reviews of these risks, class II programs may not
have the information necessary to fully protect underground drinking water.
EPA is not consistently conducting two key oversight and enforcement activities
for class II programs. First, EPA does not consistently conduct annual on-site
state program evaluations as directed in guidance because, according to some
EPA officials, the agency does not have the resources to do so. The agency has
not, however, evaluated its guidance, which dates from the 1980s, to determine
which activities are essential for effective oversight. Without such an evaluation,
EPA does not know what oversight activities are most effective or necessary.
Second, to enforce state class II requirements, under current agency regulations,
EPA must approve and incorporate state program requirements and any
changes to them into federal regulations through a rulemaking. EPA has not
incorporated all such requirements and changes into federal regulations and, as
a result, may not be able to enforce all state program requirements. Some EPA
officials said that incorporating changes into federal regulations through the
rulemaking process is burdensome and time-consuming. EPA has not, however,
evaluated alternatives for a more efficient process to approve and incorporate
state program requirements and changes into regulations. Without incorporating
these requirements and changes into federal regulations, EPA cannot enforce
them if a state does not take action or requests EPA’s assistance to take action.
EPA collects a large amount of data on each class II program, but the data are
not reliable (i.e., complete or comparable) to report at a national level. EPA is
working on a national database that will allow it to report UIC results at a national
level, but the database will not be fully implemented for at least 2 to 3 years.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Related