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Public Act 098-0022 |
SB1715 Enrolled | LRB098 08145 MGM 38238 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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ARTICLE 1. |
Section 1-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act. |
Section 1-5. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, |
unless the context otherwise requires: |
"Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection |
Agency. |
"Aquatic life" means all fish, reptiles, amphibians, |
crayfish, and mussels. |
"Aquifer" means saturated (with groundwater) soils and |
geologic materials that are sufficiently permeable to readily |
yield economically useful quantities (at least 70 gallons per |
minute) of fresh water to wells, springs, or streams under |
ordinary hydraulic gradients.
"Aquifer" is limited to aquifers |
identified as major sand and gravel aquifers in the Illinois |
State Water Survey's Illinois Community Water Supply Wells map, |
Map Series 2006-01. |
"Base fluid" means the continuous phase fluid type, |
including, but not limited to, water used in a high volume |
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horizontal hydraulic fracturing operation.
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"BTEX" means benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene.
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"Chemical" means any element, chemical compound, or |
mixture of elements or compounds that has its own specific name |
or identity, such as a Chemical Abstracts Service number, |
regardless of whether the chemical is subject to the |
requirements of paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of 29 Code of |
Federal Regulations §1910.1200.
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"Chemical Abstracts Service" means the division of the |
American Chemical Society that is the globally recognized |
authority for information on chemical substances.
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"Chemical Abstracts Service number" or "CAS number" means |
the unique identification number assigned to a chemical by the |
Chemical Abstracts Service.
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"Completion combustion device" means any ignition device, |
installed horizontally or vertically, used in exploration and |
production operations to combust otherwise vented emissions. |
"Delineation well" means a well drilled in order to |
determine the boundary of a field or producing reservoir. |
"Department" means the Illinois Department of Natural |
Resources.
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"Diesel" means a substance having any one of the following |
Chemical Abstracts Service Registry numbers: 68334-30-5; |
68476-34-6; 68476-30-2; 68476-31-3; 8008-20-6; or 68410-00-4. |
"Diesel" includes any additional substances regulated by the |
United States Environmental Protection Agency as diesel fuel |
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used in hydraulic fracturing activities under the federal Safe |
Drinking Water Act. |
"Director" means the Director of Natural Resources.
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"Enhanced oil recovery operation" means any secondary or |
tertiary recovery method used in an effort to recover |
hydrocarbons from a pool by injection of fluids, gases or other |
substances to maintain, restore, or augment natural reservoir |
energy, or by introducing gases, chemicals, other substances, |
or heat, or by in-situ combustion, or by any combination |
thereof. |
"Flare" means a thermal oxidation system using an open, |
enclosed, or semi-enclosed flame. "Flare" does not include |
completion combustion devices as defined in this Section.
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"Flowback period" means the process of allowing fluids to |
flow from a well following a treatment, either in preparation |
for a subsequent phase of treatment or in preparation for |
cleanup and returning the well to production. "Flowback period" |
begins when the material the hydraulic fracturing fluid returns |
to the surface following hydraulic fracturing or |
re-fracturing. "Flowback period" ends with either well shut in |
or when the well is producing continuously to the flow line or |
to a storage vessel for collection, whichever occurs first.
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"Fresh water" means surface and subsurface water in its |
natural state that is suitable for drinking water for human |
consumption, domestic livestock, irrigation, industrial, |
municipal and recreational purposes, that is capable of |
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supporting aquatic life, and contains less than 10,000 ppm |
total dissolved solids.
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"Gas" means all natural gas, including casinghead gas, and |
all other natural hydrocarbons not defined as oil.
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"Groundwater" means any water below the land surface that |
is within the saturated zone or geologic materials where the |
fluid pressure in the pore space is equal to or greater than |
atmospheric pressure.
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"Health professional" means a physician, physician |
assistant, nurse practitioner, a registered professional |
nurse, emergency medical technician, or other individual |
appropriately licensed or registered to provide health care |
services.
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"High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations" |
means all stages of a stimulation treatment of a horizontal |
well as defined by this Act by the pressurized application of |
more than 80,000 gallons per stage or more than 300,000 gallons |
total of hydraulic fracturing fluid and proppant to initiate or |
propagate fractures in a geologic formation to enhance |
extraction or production of oil or gas.
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"High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit" means |
the permit issued by the Department under this Act allowing |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations to |
occur at a well site.
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"High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing treatment" |
shall have the same definition as "High volume horizontal |
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hydraulic fracturing operations".
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"Horizontal well" means a well with a wellbore drilled |
laterally at an angle of at least 80 degrees to the vertical |
and with a horizontal projection exceeding 100 feet measured |
from the initial point of penetration into the productive |
formation through the terminus of the lateral in the same |
common source of hydrocarbon supply.
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"Hydraulic fracturing additive" means any chemical |
substance or combination of chemicals, including, but not |
limited to, any chemical or proppant that is added to a base |
fluid for the purposes of preparing a hydraulic fracturing |
fluid for a high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operation.
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"Hydraulic fracturing flowback" means all hydraulic |
fracturing fluid and other fluids that return to the surface |
after a stage of high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations has been completed and prior to the well being |
placed in production.
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"Hydraulic fracturing fluid" means the mixture of the base |
fluid and all the hydraulic fracturing additives, used to |
perform high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing.
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"Hydraulic fracturing string" means any pipe or casing |
string used for the transport of hydraulic fracturing fluids |
during the conduct of the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations.
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"Intake" means a pipe or other means to withdraw raw water |
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from a water source.
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"Landowner" means the legal title holder or owner of real |
property and includes an owner of an undivided interest, a life |
tenant, a remainderman, a public or private corporation, a |
trustee under an active trust, and the holder of the beneficial |
interest under a land trust. "Landowner" does not include a |
mortgagee, a trustee under a trust deed in the nature of a |
mortgage, a lien holder, or a lessee.
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"Low pressure well" means a well with reservoir pressure |
and vertical well depth such that 0.445 times the reservoir |
pressure (in psia) minus 0.038 times the vertical well depth |
(in feet) minus 67.578 psia is less than the flow line pressure |
at the sales meter. |
"Nature preserve" shall have the same meaning as provided |
in Section 3.11 of the Illinois Natural Areas Preservation Act.
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"Oil" means natural crude oil or petroleum and other |
hydrocarbons, regardless of gravity, which are produced at the |
well in liquid form by ordinary production methods or by the |
use of an oil and gas separator and which are not the result of |
condensation of gas after it leaves the underground reservoir.
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"Operator" means the individual or entity controlling the |
right to drill or produce a horizontal well in accordance with |
the requirements of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act.
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"Owner" shall have the same meaning as provided in Section |
1 of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act.
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"Perennial stream" means a stream that has continuous flow |
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in its stream bed during all of the calendar year. |
"Permit" means a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit.
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"Permittee" means a person holding a high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing permit under this Act.
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"Person" means any individual, partnership, |
co-partnership, firm, company, limited liability company, |
corporation, association, joint stock company, trust, estate, |
political subdivision, state agency, or any other legal entity |
or their legal representative, agent, or assigns.
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"Pollution or diminution" means: |
(1) in groundwater, any of the following:
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(A) detection of benzene or any other carcinogen in |
any Class I, Class II, or Class III groundwater;
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(B) detection of any constituent in item (i) of |
subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of |
35 Ill. Adm. Code 620.310 equal to or above the listed |
preventive response criteria in any Class I, Class II, |
or Class III groundwater;
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(C) detection of any constituent in 35 Ill. Adm. |
Code 620.410 (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e) equal to or |
above the listed standard in any Class I, Class II, or |
Class III groundwater;
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(D) detection of any constituent in Class III |
groundwater equal to or above a standard established |
under 35 Ill. Adm. Code 620.260; or
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(E) detection of any constituent in Class I, Class |
II, or Class III groundwater equal to or above a |
cleanup objective listed in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 742.
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(2) in surface water, exceeding any applicable numeric |
or narrative standard in 35 Ill. Adm. Code Part 302 or Part |
304.
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"Produced water" means water, regardless of chloride and |
total dissolved solids content, that is produced in conjunction |
with oil or natural gas production or natural gas storage |
operations, but does not include hydraulic fracturing |
flowback.
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"Proppant" means sand or any natural or man-made material |
that is used during high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations to prop open the artificially created or enhanced |
fractures.
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"Public water supply" means all mains, pipes, and |
structures through which water is obtained and distributed to |
the public, including wells and well structures, intakes and |
cribs, pumping stations, treatment plants, reservoirs, and |
storage tanks and appurtenances, collectively or severally, |
actually used or intended for use for the purpose of furnishing |
water for drinking or general domestic use, and which serves at |
least 15 service connections or which regularly serves at least |
25 persons at least 60 days per year.
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"Register of Land and Water Reserves" means the list of |
areas registered in accordance with Section 16 of the Illinois |
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Natural Areas Preservation Act and Part 4010 of Title 17 of the |
Illinois Administrative Code.
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"Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, |
emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, |
leaching, dumping, or disposing into the environment.
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"Serious violation" means any violation set forth in 62 |
Ill. Adm. Code 240.140(c).
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"Service connection" means the opening, including all |
fittings and appurtenances, at the water main through which |
water is supplied to the user.
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"Surface water" means all water that is open to the |
atmosphere and subject to surface runoff.
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"Total water volume" means the total quantity of water from |
all sources used in the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations, including surface water, groundwater, |
produced water, or recycled water.
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"True vertical depth" or "TVD" means the vertical distance |
from a depth in a planned or existing wellbore or well to a |
point at the surface.
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"Water pollution" means any alteration of the physical, |
thermal, chemical, biological, or radioactive properties of |
any waters of the State, or the discharge of any contaminant |
into any water of the State, as will or is likely to create a |
nuisance or render the waters harmful, detrimental, or |
injurious to public health, safety, or welfare, or to domestic, |
commercial, industrial, agricultural, recreational, or other |
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legitimate uses, or to livestock, wild animals, birds, or fish |
or other aquatic life.
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"Water source" means (1) any existing water well or |
developed spring used for human or domestic animal consumption, |
or (2) any river, perennial stream, aquifer, natural or |
artificial lake, pond, wetland listed on the Register of Land |
and Water Reserves, or reservoir.
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"Well" means any drill hole required to be permitted under |
the Illinois Oil and Gas Act.
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"Well site" means surface areas, including the well, |
occupied by all equipment or facilities necessary for or |
incidental to high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations, drilling, production, or plugging a well.
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"Wildcat well" means a well outside known fields or the |
first well drilled in an oil or gas field where no other oil |
and gas production exists. |
"Wildlife" means any bird or mammal that are by nature wild |
by way of distinction from those that are naturally tame and |
are ordinarily living unconfined in a state of nature without |
the care of man.
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Section 1-10. Intergovernmental cooperation. The |
Department shall have the primary authority to administer the |
provisions of this Act. The Illinois State Geological Survey, |
the Illinois State Water Survey, the Office of the State Fire |
Marshal, and the Agency shall be advised of high volume |
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horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit applications received |
by the Department and lend assistance as required by the |
provisions of this Act. |
Section 1-15. Powers and duties. |
(a) Except as otherwise provided, the Department shall |
enforce this Act and all rules and orders adopted in accordance |
with this Act.
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(b) Except as otherwise provided, the Department shall have |
jurisdiction and authority over all persons and property |
necessary to enforce the provisions of this Act effectively. In |
aid of this jurisdiction, the Director, or anyone designated in |
writing by the Director, shall have the authority to administer |
oaths and to issue subpoenas for the production of records or |
other documents and for the attendance of witnesses at any |
proceedings of the Department.
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(c) The Department may authorize any employee of the |
Department, qualified by training and experience, to perform |
the powers and duties set forth in this Act.
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(d) For the purpose of determining compliance with the |
provisions of this Act and any orders or rules entered or |
adopted under this Act, the Department shall have the right at |
all times to go upon and inspect properties where high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations are being or have |
been conducted.
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(e) The Department shall make any inquiries as it may deem |
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proper to determine whether a violation of this Act or any |
orders or rules entered or adopted under this Act exists or is |
imminent. In the exercise of these powers, the Department shall |
have the authority to collect data; require testing and |
sampling; to make investigation and inspections; to examine |
properties, including records and logs; to examine, check, and |
test hydrocarbon wells; to hold hearings; to adopt |
administrative rules; and to take any action as may be |
reasonably necessary to enforce this Act.
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(f) Except as otherwise provided, the Department may |
specify the manner in which all information required to be |
submitted under this Act is submitted.
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Section 1-20. Applicability. Except as provided in Section |
1-98 of this Act, this Act applies to all wells where high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations are planned, |
have occurred, or are occurring in this State. The provisions |
of this Act shall be in addition to the provisions of the |
Illinois Oil and Gas Act. However, if there is a conflict, the |
provisions of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act are superseded by |
this Act. |
Section 1-25. Setbacks and prohibitions. |
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, no well |
site where high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations are proposed, planned, or occurring may be located |
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as follows. Unless specified otherwise, all distances shall be |
measured from the closest edge of the well site:
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(1) within 500 feet measured horizontally from any |
residence or place of worship unless the owner of the |
residence or the governing body of the place of worship |
otherwise expressly agrees in writing to a closer well |
location;
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(2) within 500 feet measured horizontally from the edge |
of the property line from any school, hospital, or licensed |
nursing home facility;
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(3) within 500 feet measured horizontally from the |
surface location of any existing water well or developed |
spring used for human or domestic animal consumption, |
unless the owner or owners of the well or developed spring |
otherwise expressly agrees or agree in writing to a closer |
well location;
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(4) within 300 feet measured horizontally from the |
center of a perennial stream or from the ordinary high |
water mark of any river, natural or artificial lake, pond, |
or reservoir;
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(5) within 750 feet of a nature preserve or a site on |
the Register of Land and Water Reserves;
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(6) within 1,500 feet of a surface water or groundwater |
intake of a public water supply; the distance from the |
public water supply as identified by the Department shall |
be measured as follows:
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(A) For a surface water intake on a lake or |
reservoir, the distance shall be measured from the |
intake point on the lake or reservoir. |
(B) For a surface water intake on a flowing stream, |
the distance shall be measured from a semicircular |
radius extending upstream of the surface water intake. |
(C) For a groundwater source, the distance shall be |
measured from the surface location of the wellhead or |
the ordinary high water mark of the spring.
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The distance restrictions under this subsection (a) shall |
be determined as conditions exist at the time of the submission |
of the permit application under this Act. |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
the owner of a water source identified in paragraph (4) of |
subsection (a) of this Section that is wholly contained within |
the owner's property may expressly agree in writing to a closer |
well location.
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(c) It is unlawful to inject or discharge hydraulic |
fracturing fluid, produced water, BTEX, diesel, or petroleum |
distillates into fresh water.
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(d) It is unlawful to perform any high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations by knowingly or recklessly |
injecting diesel.
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Section 1-30. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit required. |
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(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a person |
may not drill, deepen, or convert a horizontal well where high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations are planned |
or occurring or convert a vertical well into a horizontal well |
where high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations |
are planned in this State, unless the person has been issued a |
permit by the Department under this Act and has obtained all |
applicable authorizations required by the Illinois Oil and Gas |
Act.
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(b) If multiple wells are to be stimulated using high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations from a |
single well site, then a separate permit shall be obtained for |
each well at the site.
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Section 1-35. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit application. |
(a) Every applicant for a permit under this Act shall first |
register with the Department at least 30 days before applying |
for a permit. The Department shall make available a |
registration form within 90 days after the effective date of |
this Act. The registration form shall require the following |
information:
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(1) the name and address of the registrant and any |
parent, subsidiary, or affiliate thereof;
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(2) disclosure of all findings of a serious violation |
or an equivalent violation under federal or state laws or |
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regulations in the development or operation of an oil or |
gas exploration or production site via hydraulic |
fracturing by the applicant or any parent, subsidiary, or |
affiliate thereof within the previous 5 years; and
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(3) proof of insurance to cover injuries, damages, or |
loss related to pollution or diminution in the amount of at |
least $5,000,000, from an insurance carrier authorized, |
licensed, or permitted to do this insurance business in |
this State that holds at least an A- rating by A.M. Best & |
Co. or any comparable rating service.
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A registrant must notify the Department of any change in |
the information identified in paragraphs (1), (2), or (3) of |
this subsection (a) at least annually or upon request of the |
Department.
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(b) Every applicant for a permit under this Act must submit |
the following information to the Department on an application |
form provided by the Department:
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(1) the name and address of the applicant and any |
parent, subsidiary, or affiliate thereof;
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(2) the proposed well name and address and legal |
description of the well site and its unit area;
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(3) a statement whether the proposed location of the |
well site is in compliance with the requirements of Section |
1-25 of this Act and a plat, which shows the proposed |
surface location of the well site, providing the distance |
in feet, from the surface location of the well site to the |
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features described in subsection (a) of Section 1-25 of |
this Act;
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(4) a detailed description of the proposed well to be |
used for the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations including, but not limited to, the following |
information:
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(A) the approximate total depth to which the well |
is to be drilled or deepened;
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(B) the proposed angle and direction of the well;
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(C) the actual depth or the approximate depth at |
which the well to be drilled deviates from vertical;
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(D) the angle and direction of any nonvertical |
portion of the wellbore until the well reaches its |
total target depth or its actual final depth; and
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(E) the estimated length and direction of the |
proposed horizontal lateral or wellbore;
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(5) the estimated depth and elevation, according to the |
most recent publication of the Illinois State Geological |
Survey of Groundwater for the location of the well, of the |
lowest potential fresh water along the entire length of the |
proposed wellbore;
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(6) a detailed description of the proposed high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations, including, but |
not limited to, the following:
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(A) the formation affected by the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations, including, |
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but not limited to, geologic name and geologic |
description of the formation that will be stimulated by |
the operation;
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(B) the anticipated surface treating pressure |
range;
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(C) the maximum anticipated injection treating |
pressure;
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(D) the estimated or calculated fracture pressure |
of the producing and confining zones; and
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(E) the planned depth of all proposed perforations |
or depth to the top of the open hole section;
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(7) plat showing all known previous well bores within |
750 feet of any part of the horizontal well bore that |
penetrated within 400 vertical feet of the formation that |
will be stimulated as part of the high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations;
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(8) unless the applicant documents why the information |
is not available at the time the application is submitted, |
a chemical disclosure report identifying each chemical and |
proppant anticipated to be used in hydraulic fracturing |
fluid for each stage of the hydraulic fracturing operations |
including the following:
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(A) the total volume of water anticipated to be |
used in the hydraulic fracturing treatment of the well |
or the type and total volume of the base fluid |
anticipated to be used in the hydraulic fracturing |
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treatment, if something other than water;
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(B) each hydraulic fracturing additive anticipated |
to be used in the hydraulic fracturing fluid, including |
the trade name, vendor, a brief descriptor of the |
intended use or function of each hydraulic fracturing |
additive, and the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS), if |
applicable;
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(C) each chemical anticipated to be intentionally |
added to the base fluid, including for each chemical, |
the Chemical Abstracts Service number, if applicable; |
and
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(D) the anticipated concentration in the base |
fluid, in percent by mass, of each chemical to be |
intentionally added to the base fluid;
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(9) a certification of compliance with the Water Use |
Act of 1983 and applicable regional water supply plans;
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(10) a fresh water withdrawal and management plan that |
shall include the following information:
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(A) the source of the water, such as surface or |
groundwater, anticipated to be used for water |
withdrawals, and the anticipated withdrawal location;
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(B) the anticipated volume and rate of each water |
withdrawal from each withdrawal location; |
(C) the anticipated months when water withdrawals |
shall be made from each withdrawal location;
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(D) the methods to be used to minimize water |
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withdrawals as much as feasible; and
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(E) the methods to be used for surface water |
withdrawals to minimize adverse impact to aquatic |
life. |
Where a surface water source is wholly contained |
within a single property, and the owner of the property |
expressly agrees in writing to its use for water |
withdrawals, the applicant is not required to include |
this surface water source in the fresh water withdrawal |
and management plan.
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(11) a plan for the handling, storage, transportation, |
and disposal or reuse of hydraulic fracturing fluids and |
hydraulic fracturing flowback. The plan shall identify the |
specific Class II injection well or wells that will be used |
to dispose of the hydraulic fracturing flowback. The plan |
shall describe the capacity of the tanks to be used for the |
capture and storage of flowback and of the lined reserve |
pit to be used, if necessary, to temporarily store any |
flowback in excess of the capacity of the tanks. |
Identification of the Class II injection well or wells |
shall be by name, identification number, and specific |
location and shall include the date of the most recent |
mechanical integrity test for each Class II injection well;
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(12) a well site safety plan to address proper safety |
measures to be employed during high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations for the protection of |
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persons on the site as well as the general public. Within |
15 calendar days after submitting the permit application to |
the Department, the applicant must provide a copy of the |
plan to the county or counties in which hydraulic |
fracturing operations will occur. Within 5 calendar days of |
its receipt, the Department shall provide a copy of the |
well site safety plan to the Office of the State Fire |
Marshal;
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(13) a containment plan describing the containment |
practices and equipment to be used and the area of the well |
site where containment systems will be employed, and within |
5 calendar days of its receipt, the Department shall |
provide a copy of the containment plan to the Office of the |
State Fire Marshal;
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(14) a casing and cementing plan that describes the |
casing and cementing practices to be employed, including |
the size of each string of pipe, the starting point, and |
depth to which each string is to be set and the extent to |
which each string is to be cemented;
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(15) a traffic management plan that identifies the |
anticipated roads, streets, and highways that will be used |
for access to and egress from the well site. The traffic |
management plan will include a point of contact to discuss |
issues related to traffic management. Within 15 calendar |
days after submitting the permit application to the |
Department, the applicant must provide a copy of the |
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traffic management plan to the county or counties in which |
the well site is located, and within 5 calendar days of its |
receipt, the Department shall provide a copy of the traffic |
management plan to the Office of the State Fire Marshal;
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(16) the names and addresses of all owners of any real |
property within 1,500 feet of the proposed well site, as |
disclosed by the records in the office of the recorder of |
the county or counties;
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(17) drafts of the specific public notice and general |
public notice as required by Section 1-40 of this Act;
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(18) statement that the well site at which the high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operation will be |
conducted will be restored in compliance with Section |
240.1181 of Title 62 of the Illinois Administrative Code |
and Section 1-95 of this Act;
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(19) proof of insurance to cover injuries, damages, or |
loss related to pollution in the amount of at least |
$5,000,000; and
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(20) any other relevant information which the |
Department may, by rule, require.
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(c) Where an application is made to conduct high volume |
horizontal fracturing operations at a well site located within |
the limits of any city, village, or incorporated town, the |
application shall state the name of the city, village, or |
incorporated town and be accompanied with a certified copy of |
the official consent for the hydraulic fracturing operations to |
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occur from the municipal authorities where the well site is |
proposed to be located. No permit shall be issued unless |
consent is secured and filed with the permit application. In |
the event that an amended location is selected, the original |
permit shall not be valid unless a new certified consent is |
filed for the amended location.
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(d) The hydraulic fracturing permit application shall be |
accompanied by a bond as required by subsection (a) of Section |
1-65 of this Act.
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(e) Each application for a permit under this Act shall |
include payment of a non-refundable fee of $13,500. Of this |
fee, $11,000 shall be deposited into the Mines and Minerals |
Regulatory Fund for the Department to use to administer and |
enforce this Act and otherwise support the operations and |
programs of the Office of Mines and Minerals. The remaining |
$2,500 shall be deposited into the Illinois Clean Water Fund |
for the Agency to use to carry out its functions under this |
Act. The Department shall not initiate its review of the permit |
application until the applicable fee under this subsection (e) |
has been submitted to and received by the Department.
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(f) Each application submitted under this Act shall be |
signed, under the penalty of perjury, by the applicant or the |
applicant's designee who has been vested with the authority to |
act on behalf of the applicant and has direct knowledge of the |
information contained in the application and its attachments. |
Any person signing an application shall also sign an affidavit |
|
with the following certification:
|
"I certify, under penalty of perjury as provided by law |
and under penalty of refusal, suspension, or revocation of |
a high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit, that |
this application and all attachments are true, accurate, |
and complete to the best of my knowledge.".
|
(g) The permit application shall be submitted to the |
Department in both electronic and hard copy format. The |
electronic format shall be searchable.
|
(h) The application for a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit may be submitted as a combined permit |
application with the operator's application to drill on a form |
as the Department shall prescribe. The combined application |
must include the information required in this Section. If the |
operator elects to submit a combined permit application, |
information required by this Section that is duplicative of |
information required for an application to drill is only |
required to be provided once as part of the combined |
application. The submission of a combined permit application |
under this subsection shall not be interpreted to relieve the |
applicant or the Department from complying with the |
requirements of this Act or the Illinois Oil and Gas Act.
|
(i) Upon receipt of a permit application, the Department |
shall have no more than 60 calendar days from the date it |
receives the permit application to approve, with any conditions |
the Department may find necessary, or reject the application |
|
for the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit. The |
applicant may waive, in writing, the 60-day deadline upon its |
own initiative or in response to a request by the Department.
|
(j) If at any time during the review period the Department |
determines that the permit application is not complete under |
this Act, does not meet the requirements of this Section, or |
requires additional information, the Department shall notify |
the applicant in writing of the application's deficiencies and |
allow the applicant to correct the deficiencies and provide the |
Department any information requested to complete the |
application. If the applicant fails to provide adequate |
supplemental information within the review period, the |
Department may reject the application.
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Section 1-40. Public notice. |
(a) Within 5 calendar days after the Department's receipt |
of the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
application, the Department shall post notice of its receipt |
and a copy of the permit application on its website. The notice |
shall include the dates of the public comment period and |
directions for interested parties to submit comments.
|
(b) Within 5 calendar days after the Department's receipt |
of the permit application and notice to the applicant that the |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit application |
was received, the Department shall provide the Agency, the |
Office of the State Fire Marshal, Illinois State Water Survey, |
|
and Illinois State Geological Survey with notice of the |
application.
|
(c) The applicant shall provide the following public |
notice: |
(1) Applicants shall mail specific public notice by |
U.S. Postal Service certified mail, return receipt |
requested, within 3 calendar days after submittal of the |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit |
application to the Department, to all persons identified as |
owners of real property within 1,500 feet of the proposed |
well site, as disclosed by the records in the office of the |
recorder of the county or counties, and to each |
municipality and county in which the well site is proposed |
to be located.
|
(2) Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (2) |
of subsection (c), applicants shall provide general public |
notice by publication, once each week for 2 consecutive |
weeks, beginning no later than 3 calendar days after |
submittal of the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit application to the Department, in a |
newspaper of general circulation published in each county |
where the well proposed for high volume hydraulic |
fracturing operations is proposed to be located.
|
If a well is proposed for high volume hydraulic |
fracturing operations in a county where there is no daily |
newspaper of general circulation, applicant shall provide |
|
general public notice, by publication, once each week for 2 |
consecutive weeks, in a weekly newspaper of general |
circulation in that county beginning as soon as the |
publication schedule of the weekly newspaper permits, but |
in no case later than 10 days after submittal of the high |
volume hydraulic fracturing permit application to the |
Department. |
(3) The specific and general public notices required |
under this subsection shall contain the following |
information:
|
(A) the name and address of the applicant;
|
(B) the date the application for a high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit was filed;
|
(C) the dates for the public comment period and a |
statement that anyone may file written comments about |
any portion of the applicant's submitted high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit application |
with the Department during the public comment period;
|
(D) the proposed well name, reference number |
assigned by the Department, and the address and legal |
description of the well site and its unit area;
|
(E) a statement that the information filed by the |
applicant in their application for a high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit is available |
from the Department through its website;
|
(F) the Department's website and the address and |
|
telephone number for the Department's Oil and Gas |
Division;
|
(G) a statement that any person having an interest |
that is or may be adversely affected, any government |
agency that is or may be affected, or the county board |
of a county to be affected under a proposed permit, may |
file written objections to a permit application and may |
request a public hearing.
|
(d) After providing the public notice as required under |
paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this Section, the applicant |
shall supplement its permit application by providing the |
Department with a certification and documentation that the |
applicant fulfilled the public notice requirements of this |
Section. The Department shall not issue a permit until the |
applicant has provided the supplemental material required |
under this subsection.
|
(e) If multiple applications are submitted at the same time |
for wells located on the same well site, the applicant may use |
one public notice for all applications provided the notice is |
clear that it pertains to multiple applications and conforms to |
the requirements of this Section. Notice shall not constitute |
standing for purposes of requesting a public hearing or for |
standing to appeal the decision of the Department in accordance |
with the Administrative Review Law.
|
Section 1-45. Public comment periods. |
|
(a) The public comment period shall begin 7 calendar days |
after the Department's receipt of the permit application and |
last for 30 calendar days.
|
(b) Where a public hearing is conducted under Section 1-50 |
of this Act, the Department may provide for an additional |
public comment period of 15 days as necessary to allow for |
comments in response to evidence and testimony presented at the |
hearing. The additional public comment period shall begin on |
the day after the public hearing.
|
(c) During any public comment period, any person may file |
written comments to the Department concerning any portion of |
the permit application and any issue relating to the |
applicant's compliance with the requirements of the Act and any |
other applicable laws.
|
(d) The Department may request that the applicant respond |
to any substantive public comments obtained during the public |
comment period.
|
Section 1-50. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit; hearing. |
(a) When a permit application is submitted to conduct high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations for the |
first time at a particular well site, any person having an |
interest that is or may be adversely affected, any government |
agency that is or may be affected, or the county board of a |
county to be affected under a proposed permit, may file written |
|
objections to the permit application and may request a public |
hearing during the public comment period established under |
subsection (a) of Section 1-45 of this Act. The request for |
hearing shall contain a short and plain statement identifying |
the person and stating facts demonstrating that the person has |
an interest that is or may be adversely affected. The |
Department shall hold a public hearing upon a request under |
this subsection, unless the request is determined by the |
Department to (i) lack an adequate factual statement that the |
person is or may be adversely affected or (ii) be frivolous.
|
(b) Prior to the commencement of a public hearing under |
this Section, any person who could have requested the hearing |
under subsection (a) of this Section may petition the |
Department to participate in the hearing in the same manner as |
the party requesting the hearing. The petition shall contain a |
short and plain statement identifying the petitioner and |
stating facts demonstrating that the petitioner is a person |
having an interest that is or may be adversely affected. The |
petitioner shall serve the petition upon the Department. Unless |
the Department determines that the petition is frivolous, or |
that the petitioner has failed to allege facts in support of an |
interest that is or may be adversely affected, the petitioner |
shall be allowed to participate in the hearing in the same |
manner as the party requesting the hearing.
|
(c) The public hearing to be conducted under this Section |
shall comply with the contested case requirements of the |
|
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The Department shall |
establish rules and procedures to determine whether any request |
for a public hearing may be granted in accordance with |
subsection (a) of this Section, and for the notice and conduct |
of the public hearing. These procedural rules shall include |
provisions for reasonable notice to (i) the public and (ii) all |
parties to the proceeding, which include the applicant, the |
persons requesting the hearing, and the persons granted the |
right to participate in the hearing pursuant to subsection (b) |
of this Section, for the qualifications, powers, and |
obligations of the hearing officer, and for reasonable |
opportunity for all the parties to provide evidence and |
argument, to respond by oral or written testimony to statements |
and objections made at the public hearing, and for reasonable |
cross-examination of witnesses. County boards and the public |
may present their written objections or recommendations at the |
public hearing. A complete record of the hearings and all |
testimony shall be made by the Department and recorded |
stenographically or electronically. The complete record shall |
be maintained and shall be accessible to the public on the |
Department's website until final release of the applicant's |
performance bond.
|
(d) At least 10 calendar days before the date of the public |
hearing, the Department shall publish notice of the public |
hearing in a newspaper of general circulation published in the |
county where the proposed well site will be located.
|
|
Section 1-53. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit; determination; judicial review. |
(a) The Department shall issue a high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing permit, with any conditions the |
Department may find necessary, only if the record of decision |
demonstrates that:
|
(1) the well location restrictions of Section 1-25 of |
this Act have been satisfied;
|
(2) the application meets the requirements of Section |
1-35 of this Act;
|
(3) the plans required to be submitted with the |
application under Section 1-35 of this Act are adequate and |
effective;
|
(4) the proposed hydraulic fracturing operations will |
be conducted in a manner that will protect the public |
health and safety and prevent pollution or diminution of |
any water source;
|
(5) the work plan required under Section 1-80 of this |
Act has been submitted to the Department;
|
(6) the applicant or any parent, subsidiary, or |
affiliate thereof has not failed to abate a violation of |
this Act or the Illinois Oil and Gas Act;
|
(7) the Class II injection wells to be used for |
disposal of hydraulic fracturing flowback comply with all |
applicable requirements for mechanical integrity testing, |
|
including that the well has been tested within the previous |
5 years; and
|
(8) there is no good cause to deny the permit under |
subsection (a) of Section 1-60 of this Act.
|
(b) For the purpose of determining whether to issue a |
permit, the Department shall consider and the Department's |
record of decision shall include:
|
(1) the application for the high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing permit, including all documentation |
required by Section 1-35 of this Act;
|
(2) all written comments received during the public |
comment periods and, if applicable, the complete record |
from the public hearing held under Section 1-50 of this |
Act;
|
(3) all information provided by the applicant in |
response to any public comments; and
|
(4) any information known to the Department as the |
public entity responsible for regulating high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations, including, but |
not limited to, inspections of the proposed well site as |
necessary to ensure adequate review of the application.
|
(c) The Department shall, by U.S. Mail and electronic |
transmission, provide the applicant with a copy of the high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit as issued or its |
final administrative decision denying the permit to the |
applicant and shall, by U.S. Mail or electronic transmission, |
|
provide a copy of the permit as issued or the final |
administrative decision to any person or unit of local |
government who received specific public notice under Section |
1-40 of this Act or submitted comments or participated in any |
public hearing under Section 1-50 of this Act.
|
(d) The Department's decision to approve or deny a high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit shall be |
considered a final administrative decision subject to judicial |
review under the Administrative Review Law and the rules |
adopted under that Law.
|
(e) Following completion of the Department's review and |
approval process, the Department's website shall indicate |
whether an individual high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit was approved or denied and provide a copy of |
the approval or denial.
|
Section 1-55. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit; conditions; restriction; modifications. |
(a) Each permit issued by the Department under this Act |
shall require the permittee to comply with all provisions of |
this Act and all other applicable local, State, and federal |
laws, rules, and regulations in effect at the time the permit |
is issued. All plans submitted with the application under |
Section 1-35 shall be conditions of the permit.
|
(b) A permit issued under this Act shall continue in effect |
until plugging and restoration in compliance with this Act and |
|
the Illinois Oil and Gas Act are completed to the Department's |
satisfaction. No permit may be transferred to another person |
without approval of the Department.
|
(c) No permit issued under this Act may be modified without |
approval of the Department. If the Department determines that |
the proposed modifications constitute a significant deviation |
from the terms of the original application and permit approval, |
or presents a serious risk to public health, life, property, |
aquatic life, or wildlife, the Department shall provide the |
opportunities for notice, comment, and hearing required under |
Sections 1-45 and 1-50 of this Act. The Department shall |
provide notice of the proposed modification and opportunity for |
comment and hearing to the persons who received specific public |
notice under Section 1-40 of this Act and shall publish the |
notice and the proposed modification on its website. The |
Department shall adopt rules regarding procedures for a permit |
modification.
|
Section 1-60. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
permit; denial, suspension, or revocation. |
(a) The Department may suspend, revoke, or refuse to issue |
a high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit under this |
Act for one or more of the following causes:
|
(1) providing incorrect, misleading, incomplete, or |
materially untrue information in a permit application or |
any document required to be filed with the Department;
|
|
(2) violating any condition of the permit;
|
(3) violating any provision of or any regulation |
adopted under this Act or the Illinois Oil and Gas Act;
|
(4) using fraudulent, coercive, or dishonest |
practices, or demonstrating incompetence, |
untrustworthiness, or financial irresponsibility in the |
conduct of business in this State or elsewhere;
|
(5) having a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit, or its equivalent, revoked in any other |
state, province, district, or territory for incurring a |
material or major violation or using fraudulent or |
dishonest practices; or
|
(6) an emergency condition exists under which conduct |
of the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations would pose a significant hazard to public |
health, aquatic life, wildlife, or the environment.
|
(b) In every case in which a permit is suspended or |
revoked, the Department shall serve notice of its action, |
including a statement of the reasons for the action, either |
personally or by certified mail, receipt return requested, to |
the permittee.
|
(c) The order of suspension or revocation of a permit shall |
take effect upon issuance of the order. The permittee may |
request, in writing, within 30 days after the date of receiving |
the notice, a hearing. Except as provided under subsection (d) |
of this Section, in the event a hearing is requested, the order |
|
shall remain in effect until a final order is entered pursuant |
to the hearing.
|
(d) The order of suspension or revocation of a permit may |
be stayed if requested by the permittee and evidence is |
submitted demonstrating that there is no significant threat to |
the public health, aquatic life, wildlife, or the environment |
if the operation is allowed to continue.
|
(e) The hearing shall be held at a time and place |
designated by the Department. The Director of the Department or |
any administrative law judge designated by him or her have the |
power to administer oaths and affirmations, subpoena witnesses |
and compel their attendance, take evidence, and require the |
production of books, papers, correspondence, and other records |
or information that he or she considers relevant or material.
|
(f) The costs of the administrative hearing shall be set by |
rule and shall be borne by the permittee.
|
(g) The Department's decision to suspend or revoke a high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit is subject to |
judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
|
Section 1-65. Hydraulic fracturing permit; bonds. |
(a) An applicant for a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit under this Act shall provide a bond, executed |
by a surety authorized to transact business in this State. The |
bond shall be in the amount of $50,000 per permit or a blanket |
bond of $500,000 for all permits. If the applicant is required |
|
to submit a bond to the Department under the Illinois Oil and |
Gas Act, the applicant's submission of a bond under this |
Section shall satisfy the bonding requirements provided for in |
the Illinois Oil and Gas Act. In lieu of a bond, the applicant |
may provide other collateral securities such as cash, |
certificates of deposit, or irrevocable letters of credit under |
the terms and conditions as the Department may provide by rule.
|
(b) The bond or other collateral securities shall remain in |
force until the well is plugged and abandoned. Upon abandoning |
a well to the satisfaction of the Department and in accordance |
with the Illinois Oil and Gas Act, the bond or other collateral |
securities shall be promptly released by the Department. Upon |
the release by the Department of the bond or other collateral |
securities, any cash or collateral securities deposited shall |
be returned by the Department to the applicant who deposited |
it.
|
(c) If, after notice and hearing, the Department determines |
that any of the requirements of this Act or rules adopted under |
this Act or the orders of the Department have not been complied |
with within the time limit set by any notice of violation |
issued under this Act, the permittee's bond or other collateral |
securities shall be forfeited. Forfeiture under this |
subsection shall not limit any duty of the permittee to |
mitigate or remediate harms or foreclose enforcement by the |
Department or the Agency. In no way will payment under this |
bond exceed the aggregate penalty as specified.
|
|
(d) When any bond or other collateral security is forfeited |
under the provisions of this Act or rules adopted under this |
Act, the Department shall collect the forfeiture without delay. |
The surety shall have 30 days to submit payment for the bond |
after receipt of notice by the permittee of the forfeiture.
|
(e) All forfeitures shall be deposited in the Mines and |
Minerals Regulatory Fund to be used, as necessary, to mitigate |
or remediate violations of this Act or rules adopted under this |
Act.
|
Section 1-70. Well preparation, construction, and |
drilling. |
(a) This Section shall apply to all horizontal wells that |
are to be completed using high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations under a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit. The requirements of this Section shall be in |
addition to any other laws or rules regarding wells and well |
sites.
|
(b) Site preparation standards shall be as follows: |
(1) The access road to the well site must be located in |
accordance with access rights identified in the Illinois |
Oil and Gas Act and located as far as practical from |
occupied structures, places of assembly, and property |
lines of unleased property. |
(2) Unless otherwise approved or directed by the |
Department, all topsoil stripped to facilitate the |
|
construction of the well pad and access roads must be |
stockpiled, stabilized, and remain on site for use in |
either partial or final reclamation. In the event it is |
anticipated that the final reclamation shall take place in |
excess of one year from drilling the well the topsoil may |
be disposed of in any lawful manner provided the operator |
reclaims the site with topsoil of similar characteristics |
of the topsoil removed. |
(3) Piping, conveyances, valves, and tanks in contact |
with hydraulic fracturing fluid, hydraulic fracturing |
flowback, or produced water must be constructed of |
materials compatible with the composition of the hydraulic |
fracturing fluid, hydraulic fracturing flowback, and |
produced water.
|
(4) The improvement, construction, or repair of a |
publicly owned highway or roadway, if undertaken by the |
owner, operator, permittee, or any other private entity, |
shall be performed using bidding procedures outlined in the |
Illinois Department of Transportation rules governing |
local roads and streets or applicable bidding requirements |
outlined in the Illinois Procurement Code as though the |
project were publicly funded. |
(c) Site maintenance standards shall be as follows: |
(1) Secondary containment is required for all fueling |
tanks. |
(2) Fueling tanks shall be subject to Section 1-25 of |
|
this Act. |
(3) Fueling tank filling operations shall be |
supervised at the fueling truck and at the tank if the tank |
is not visible to the fueling operator from the truck. |
(4) Troughs, drip pads, or drip pans are required |
beneath the fill port of a fueling tank during filling |
operations if the fill port is not within the secondary |
containment required by paragraph (1) of this subsection. |
(d) All wells shall be constructed, and casing and |
cementing activities shall be conducted, in a manner that shall |
provide for control of the well at all times, prevent the |
migration of oil, gas, and other fluids into the fresh water |
and coal seams, and prevent pollution or diminution of fresh |
water. In addition to any of the Department's casing and |
cementing requirements, the following shall apply: |
(1) All casings must conform to the current industry |
standards published by the American Petroleum Institute. |
(2) Casing thread compound and its use must conform to |
the current industry standards published by the American |
Petroleum Institute. |
(3) Surface casing shall be centralized at the shoe, |
above and below a stage collar or diverting tool, if run, |
and through usable-quality water zones. In non-deviated |
holes, pipe centralization as follows is required: a |
centralizer shall be placed every fourth joint from the |
cement shoe to the ground surface or to the bottom of the |
|
cellar. All centralizers shall meet specifications in, or |
equivalent to, API spec 10D, Specification for Bow-Spring |
Casing Centralizers; API Spec 10 TR4, Technical Report on |
Considerations Regarding Selection of Centralizers for |
Primary Cementing Operations; and API RP 10D-2, |
Recommended Practice for Centralizer Placement and Stop |
Collar Testing. The Department may require additional |
centralization as necessary to ensure the integrity of the |
well design is adequate. All centralizers must conform to |
the current industry standards published by the American |
Petroleum Institute. |
(4) Cement must conform to current industry standards |
published by the American Petroleum Institute and the |
cement slurry must be prepared to minimize its free water |
content in accordance with the current industry standards |
published by the American Petroleum Institute; the cement |
must also: |
(A) secure the casing in the wellbore; |
(B) isolate and protect fresh groundwater; |
(C) isolate abnormally pressured zones, lost |
circulation zones, and any potential flow zones |
including hydrocarbon and fluid-bearing zones; |
(D) properly control formation pressure and any |
pressure from drilling, completion and production; |
(E) protect the casing from corrosion and |
degradation; and |
|
(F) prevent gas flow in the annulus. |
(5) Prior to cementing any casing string, the borehole |
must be circulated and conditioned to ensure an adequate |
cement bond. |
(6) A pre-flush or spacer must be pumped ahead of the |
cement. |
(7) The cement must be pumped at a rate and in a flow |
regime that inhibits channeling of the cement in the |
annulus. |
(8) Cement compressive strength tests must be |
performed on all surface, intermediate, and production |
casing strings; after the cement is placed behind the |
casing, the operator shall wait on cement to set until the |
cement achieves a calculated compressive strength of at |
least 500 pounds per square inch, and a minimum of 8 hours |
before the casing is disturbed in any way, including |
installation of a blowout preventer. The cement shall have |
a 72-hour compressive strength of at least 1,200 psi, and |
the free water separation shall be no more than 6 |
milliliters per 250 milliliters of cement, tested in |
accordance with current American petroleum Institute |
standards. |
(9) A copy of the cement job log for any cemented |
casing string in the well shall be maintained in the well |
file and available to the Department upon request. |
(10) Surface casing shall be used and set to a depth of |
|
at least 200 feet, or 100 feet below the base of the |
deepest fresh water, whichever is deeper, but no more than |
200 feet below the base of the deepest fresh water and |
prior to encountering any hydrocarbon-bearing zones. The |
surface casing must be run and cemented as soon as |
practicable after the hole has been adequately circulated |
and conditioned. |
(11) The Department must be notified at least 24 hours |
prior to surface casing cementing operations. Surface |
casing must be fully cemented to the surface with excess |
cements. Cementing must be by the pump and plug method with |
a minimum of 25% excess cement with appropriate lost |
circulation material, unless another amount of excess |
cement is approved by the Department. If cement returns are |
not observed at the surface, the operator must perform |
remedial actions as appropriate. |
(12) Intermediate casing must be installed when |
necessary to isolate fresh water not isolated by surface |
casing and to seal off potential flow zones, anomalous |
pressure zones, lost circulation zones and other drilling |
hazards. |
Intermediate casing must be set to protect fresh water |
if surface casing was set above the base of the deepest |
fresh water, if additional fresh water was found below the |
surface casing shoe, or both. Intermediate casing used to |
isolate fresh water must not be used as the production |
|
string in the well in which it is installed, and may not be |
perforated for purposes of conducting a hydraulic fracture |
treatment through it. |
When intermediate casing is installed to protect fresh |
water, the operator shall set a full string of new |
intermediate casing at least 100 feet below the base of the |
deepest fresh water and bring cement to the surface. In |
instances where intermediate casing was set solely to |
protect fresh water encountered below the surface casing |
shoe, and cementing to the surface is technically |
infeasible, would result in lost circulation, or both, |
cement must be brought to a minimum of 600 feet above the |
shallowest fresh water zone encountered below the surface |
casing shoe or to the surface if the fresh water zone is |
less than 600 feet from the surface. The location and |
depths of any hydrocarbon-bearing zones or fresh water |
zones that are open to the wellbore above the casing shoe |
must be confirmed by coring, electric logs, or testing and |
must be reported to the Department. |
In the case that intermediate casing was set for a |
reason other than to protect strata that contains fresh |
water, the intermediate casing string shall be cemented |
from the shoe to a point at least 600 true vertical feet |
above the shoe. If there is a hydrocarbon bearing zone |
capable of producing exposed above the intermediate casing |
shoe, the casing shall be cemented from the shoe to a point |
|
at least 600 true vertical feet above the shallowest |
hydrocarbon bearing zone or to a point at least 200 feet |
above the shoe of the next shallower casing string that was |
set and cemented in the well (or to the surface if less |
than 200 feet). |
(13) The Department must be notified prior to |
intermediate casing cementing operations. Cementing must |
be by the pump and plug method with a minimum of 25% excess |
cement. A radial cement bond evaluation log, or other |
evaluation approved by the Department, must be run to |
verify the cement bond on the intermediate casing. Remedial |
cementing is required if the cement bond is not adequate |
for drilling ahead. |
(14) Production casing must be run and fully cemented |
to 500 feet above the top perforated zone, if possible. The |
Department must be notified at least 24 hours prior to |
production casing cementing operations. Cementing must be |
by the pump and plug method with a minimum of 25% excess |
cement. |
(15) At any time, the Department, as it deems |
necessary, may require installation of an additional |
cemented casing string or strings in the well. |
(16) After the setting and cementing of a casing |
string, except the conductor casing, and prior to further |
drilling, the casing string shall be tested with fresh |
water, mud, or brine to no less than 0.22 psi per foot of |
|
casing string length or 1,500 psi, whichever is greater but |
not to exceed 70% of the minimum internal yield, for at |
least 30 minutes with less than a 5% pressure loss, except |
that any casing string that will have pressure exerted on |
it during stimulation of the well shall be tested to at |
least the maximum anticipated treatment pressure. If the |
pressure declines more than 5% or if there are other |
indications of a leak, corrective action shall be taken |
before conducting further drilling and high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. The operator |
shall contact the Department's District Office for any |
county in which the well is located at least 24 hours prior |
to conducting a pressure test to enable an inspector to be |
present when the test is done. A record of the pressure |
test must be maintained by the operator and must be |
submitted to the Department on a form prescribed by the |
Department prior to conducting high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. The actual pressure must |
not exceed the test pressure at any time during high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(17) Any hydraulic fracturing string used in the high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations must be |
either strung into a production liner or run with a packer |
set at least 100 feet below the deepest cement top and must |
be tested to not less than the maximum anticipated treating |
pressure minus the annulus pressure applied between the |
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fracturing string and the production or immediate casing. |
The pressure test shall be considered successful if the |
pressure applied has been held for 30 minutes with no more |
than 5% pressure loss. A function-tested relief valve and |
diversion line must be installed and used to divert flow |
from the hydraulic fracturing string-casing annulus to a |
covered watertight steel tank in case of hydraulic |
fracturing string failure. The relief valve must be set to |
limit the annular pressure to no more than 95% of the |
working pressure rating of the casings forming the annulus. |
The annulus between the hydraulic fracturing string and |
casing must be pressurized to at least 250 psi and |
monitored. |
(18) After a successful pressure test under paragraph |
(16) of this subsection, a formation pressure integrity |
test must be conducted below the surface casing and below |
all intermediate casing. The operator shall notify the |
Department's District Office for any county in which the |
well is located at least 24 hours prior to conducting a |
formation pressure integrity test to enable an inspector to |
be present when the test is done. A record of the pressure |
test must be maintained by the operator and must be |
submitted to the Department on a form prescribed by the |
Department prior to conducting high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. The actual hydraulic |
fracturing treatment pressure must not exceed the test |
|
pressure at any time during high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations.
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(e) Blowout prevention standards shall be set as follows: |
(1) The operator shall use blowout prevention |
equipment after setting casing with a competent casing |
seat. Blowout prevention equipment shall be in good |
working condition at all times. |
(2) The operator shall use pipe fittings, valves, |
and unions placed on or connected to the blow-out |
prevention systems that have a working pressure |
capability that exceeds the anticipated pressures. |
(3) During all drilling and completion operations |
when a blowout preventer is installed, tested, or in |
use, the operator or operator's designated |
representative shall be present at the well site and |
that person or personnel shall have a current well |
control certification from an accredited training |
program that is acceptable to the Department. The |
certification shall be available at the well site and |
provided to the Department upon request. |
(4) Appropriate pressure control procedures and |
equipment in proper working order must be properly |
installed and employed while conducting drilling and |
completion operations including tripping, logging, |
running casing into the well, and drilling out |
solid-core stage plugs. |
|
(5) Pressure testing of the blowout preventer and |
related equipment for any drilling or completion |
operation must be performed. Testing must be conducted |
in accordance with current industry standards |
published by the American Petroleum Institute. Testing |
of the blowout preventer shall include testing after |
the blowout preventer is installed on the well but |
prior to drilling below the last cemented casing seat. |
Pressure control equipment, including the blowout |
preventer, that fails any pressure test shall not be |
used until it is repaired and passes the pressure test. |
(6) A remote blowout preventer actuator, that is |
powered by a source other than rig hydraulics, shall be |
located at least 50 feet from the wellhead and have an |
appropriate rated working pressure. |
Section 1-75. High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations. |
(a) General. |
(1) During all phases of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations, the permittee shall |
comply with all terms of the permit. |
(2) All phases of high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations shall be conducted in a manner that |
shall not pose a significant risk to public health, life, |
property, aquatic life, or wildlife. |
|
(3) The permittee shall notify the Department by phone, |
electronic communication, or letter, at least 48 hours |
prior to the commencement of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(b) Integrity tests and monitoring. |
(1) Before the commencement of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations, all mechanical integrity |
tests required under subsection (d) of Section 1-70 and |
this subsection must be successfully completed. |
(2) Prior to commencing high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations and pumping of hydraulic |
fracturing fluid, the injection lines and manifold, |
associated valves, fracture head or tree and any other |
wellhead component or connection not previously tested |
must be tested with fresh water, mud, or brine to at least |
the maximum anticipated treatment pressure for at least 30 |
minutes with less than a 5% pressure loss. A record of the |
pressure test must be maintained by the operator and made |
available to the Department upon request. The actual high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing treatment pressure |
must not exceed the test pressure at any time during high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(3) The pressure exerted on treating equipment |
including valves, lines, manifolds, hydraulic fracturing |
head or tree, casing and hydraulic fracturing string, if |
used, must not exceed 95% of the working pressure rating of |
|
the weakest component. The high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing treatment pressure must not exceed |
the test pressure of any given component at any time during |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(4) During high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations, all annulus pressures, the injection pressure, |
and the rate of injection shall be continuously monitored |
and recorded. The records of the monitoring shall be |
maintained by the operator and shall be provided to the |
Department upon request at any time during the period up to |
and including 5 years after the well is permanently plugged |
or abandoned. |
(5) High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations must be immediately suspended if any anomalous |
pressure or flow condition or any other anticipated |
pressure or flow condition is occurring in a way that |
indicates the mechanical integrity of the well has been |
compromised and continued operations pose a risk to the |
environment. Remedial action shall be undertaken |
immediately prior to recommencing high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. The permittee shall |
notify the Department within 1 hour of suspending |
operations for any matters relating to the mechanical |
integrity of the well or risk to the environment. |
(c) Fluid and waste management. |
(1) For the purposes of storage at the well site and |
|
except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection, |
hydraulic fracturing additives, hydraulic fracturing |
fluid, hydraulic fracturing flowback, and produced water |
shall be stored in above-ground tanks during all phases of |
drilling, high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing, and |
production operations until removed for proper disposal. |
For the purposes of centralized storage off site for |
potential reuse prior to disposal, hydraulic fracturing |
additives, hydraulic fracturing fluid, hydraulic |
fracturing flowback, and produced water shall be stored in |
above-ground tanks. |
(2) In accordance with the plan required by paragraph |
(11) of subsection (b) of Section 1-35 of this Act and as |
approved by the Department, the use of a reserve pit is |
allowed for the temporary storage of hydraulic fracturing |
flowback. The reserve pit shall be used only in the event |
of a lack of capacity for tank storage due to higher than |
expected volume or rate of hydraulic fracturing flowback, |
or other unanticipated flowback occurrence. Any reserve |
pit must comply with the following construction standards |
and liner specifications: |
(A) the synthetic liner material shall have a |
minimum thickness of 24 mils with high puncture and |
tear strength and be impervious and resistant to |
deterioration; |
(B) the pit lining system shall be designed to have |
|
a capacity at least equivalent to 110% of the maximum |
volume of hydraulic fracturing flowback anticipated to |
be recovered; |
(C) the lined pit shall be constructed, installed, |
and maintained in accordance with the manufacturers' |
specifications and good engineering practices to |
prevent overflow during any use; |
(D) the liner shall have sufficient elongation to |
cover the bottom and interior sides of the pit with the |
edges secured with at least a 12 inch deep anchor |
trench around the pit perimeter to prevent any slippage |
or destruction of the liner materials; and |
(E) the foundation for the liner shall be free of |
rock and constructed with soil having a minimum |
thickness of 12 inches after compaction covering the |
entire bottom and interior sides of the pit. |
(3) Fresh water may be stored in tanks or pits at the |
election of the operator. |
(4) Tanks required under this subsection must be |
above-ground tanks that are closed, watertight, and will |
resist corrosion. The permittee shall routinely inspect |
the tanks for corrosion. |
(5) Hydraulic fracturing fluids and hydraulic |
fracturing flowback must be removed from the well site |
within 60 days after completion of high volume horizontal |
fracturing operations, except that any excess hydraulic |
|
fracturing flowback captured for temporary storage in a |
reserve pit as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection |
must be removed from the well site within 7 days. |
(6) Tanks, piping, and conveyances, including valves, |
must be constructed of suitable materials, be of sufficient |
pressure rating, be able to resist corrosion, and be |
maintained in a leak-free condition. Fluid transfer |
operations from tanks to tanker trucks must be supervised |
at the truck and at the tank if the tank is not visible to |
the truck operator from the truck. During transfer |
operations, all interconnecting piping must be supervised |
if not visible to transfer personnel at the truck and tank. |
(7) Hydraulic fracturing flowback must be tested for |
volatile organic chemicals, semi-volatile organic |
chemicals, inorganic chemicals, heavy metals, and |
naturally occurring radioactive material prior to removal |
from the site. Testing shall occur once per well site and |
the analytical results shall be filed with the Department |
and the Agency, and provided to the liquid oilfield waste |
transportation and disposal operators. Prior to plugging |
and site restoration, the ground adjacent to the storage |
tanks and any hydraulic fracturing flowback reserve pit |
must be measured for radioactivity. |
(8) Hydraulic fracturing flowback may only be disposed |
of by injection into a Class II injection well that is |
below interface between fresh water and naturally |
|
occurring Class IV groundwater. Produced water may be |
disposed of by injection in a permitted enhanced oil |
recovery operation. Hydraulic fracturing flowback and |
produced water may be treated and recycled for use in |
hydraulic fracturing fluid for high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(9) Discharge of hydraulic fracturing fluids, |
hydraulic fracturing flowback, and produced water into any |
surface water or water drainage way is prohibited. |
(10) Transport of all hydraulic fracturing fluids, |
hydraulic fracturing flowback, and produced water by |
vehicle for disposal must be undertaken by a liquid |
oilfield waste hauler permitted by the Department under |
Section 8c of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act. The liquid |
oilfield waste hauler transporting hydraulic fracturing |
fluids, hydraulic fracturing flowback, or produced water |
under this Act shall comply with all laws, rules, and |
regulations concerning liquid oilfield waste. |
(11) Drill cuttings, drilling fluids, and drilling |
wastes not containing oil-based mud or polymer-based mud |
may be stored in tanks or pits. Pits used to store |
cuttings, fluids, and drilling wastes from wells not using |
fresh water mud shall be subject to the construction |
standards identified in (2) of this Section. Drill cuttings |
not contaminated with oil-based mud or polymer-based mud |
may be disposed of onsite subject to the approval of the |
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Department. Drill cuttings contaminated with oil-based mud |
or polymer-based mud shall not be disposed of on site. |
Annular disposal of drill cuttings or fluid is prohibited. |
(12) Any release of hydraulic fracturing fluid, |
hydraulic fracturing additive, or hydraulic fracturing |
flowback, used or generated during or after high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations shall be |
immediately cleaned up and remediated pursuant to |
Department requirements. Any release of hydraulic |
fracturing fluid or hydraulic fracturing flowback in |
excess of 1 barrel, shall be reported to the Department. |
Any release of a hydraulic fracturing additive shall be |
reported to the Department in accordance with the |
appropriate reportable quantity thresholds established |
under the federal Emergency Planning and Community |
Right-to-Know Act as published in the Code of Federal |
Regulations (CFR), 40 CFR Parts 355, 370, and 372, the |
federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, |
Compensation, and Liability Act as published in 40 CFR Part |
302, and subsection (r) of Section 112 of the Federal Clean |
Air Act as published in 40 CFR Part 68. Any release of |
produced water in excess of 5 barrels shall be cleaned up, |
remediated, and reported pursuant to Department |
requirements. |
(13) Secondary containment for tanks required under |
this subsection and additive staging areas is required. |
|
Secondary containment measures may include, as deemed |
appropriate by the Department, one or a combination of the |
following: dikes, liners, pads, impoundments, curbs, |
sumps, or other structures or equipment capable of |
containing the substance. Any secondary containment must |
be sufficient to contain 110% of the total capacity of the |
single largest container or tank within a common |
containment area. No more than one hour before initiating |
any stage of the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations, all secondary containment must be |
visually inspected to ensure all structures and equipment |
are in place and in proper working order. The results of |
this inspection must be recorded and documented by the |
operator, and available to the Department upon request. |
(14) A report on the transportation and disposal of the |
hydraulic fracturing fluids and hydraulic fracturing |
flowback shall be prepared and included in the well file. |
The report must include the amount of fluids transported, |
identification of the company that transported the fluids, |
the destination of the fluids, and the method of disposal. |
(15) Operators operating wells permitted under this |
Act must submit an annual report to the Department |
detailing the management of any produced water associated |
with the permitted well. The report shall be due to the |
Department no later than April 30th of each year and shall |
provide information on the operator's management of any |
|
produced water for the prior calendar year. The report |
shall contain information relative to the amount of |
produced water the well permitted under this Act produced, |
the method by which the produced water was disposed, and |
the destination where the produced water was disposed in |
addition to any other information the Department |
determines is necessary by rule. |
(d) Hydraulic fracturing fluid shall be confined to the |
targeted formation designated in the permit. If the hydraulic |
fracturing fluid or hydraulic fracturing flowback are |
migrating into the freshwater zone or to the surface from the |
well in question or from other wells, the permittee shall |
immediately notify the Department and shut in the well until |
remedial action that prevents the fluid migration is completed. |
The permittee shall obtain the approval of the Department prior |
to resuming operations. |
(e) Emissions controls. |
(1) This subsection applies to all horizontal wells |
that are completed with high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing. |
(2) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (8) of |
this subsection (e), permittees shall be responsible for |
managing gas and hydrocarbon fluids produced during the |
flowback period by routing recovered hydrocarbon fluids to |
one or more storage vessels or re-injecting into the well |
or another well, and routing recovered natural gas into a |
|
flow line or collection system, re-injecting the gas into |
the well or another well, using the gas as an on-site fuel |
source, or using the gas for another useful purpose that a |
purchased fuel or raw material would serve, with no direct |
release to the atmosphere. |
(3) If it is technically infeasible or economically |
unreasonable to minimize emissions associated with the |
venting of hydrocarbon fluids and natural gas during the |
flowback period using the methods specified in paragraph |
(2) of this subsection (e), the permittee shall capture and |
direct the emissions to a completion combustion device, |
except in conditions that may result in a fire hazard or |
explosion, or where high heat emissions from a completion |
combustion device may negatively impact waterways. |
Completion combustion devices must be equipped with a |
reliable continuous ignition source over the duration of |
the flowback period. |
(4) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (8) of |
this subsection (e), permittees shall be responsible for |
minimizing the emissions associated with venting of |
hydrocarbon fluids and natural gas during the production |
phase by: |
(A) routing the recovered fluids into storage |
vessels and (i) routing the recovered gas into a gas |
gathering line, collection system, or to a generator |
for onsite energy generation, providing that gas to the |
|
surface owner of the well site for use for heat or |
energy generation, or (ii) using another method other |
than venting or flaring; and |
(B) employing sand traps, surge vessels, |
separators, and tanks as soon as practicable during |
cleanout operations to safely maximize resource |
recovery and minimize releases to the environment. |
(5) If the permittee establishes that it is technically |
infeasible or economically unreasonable to minimize |
emissions associated with the venting of hydrocarbon |
fluids and natural gas during production using the methods |
specified in paragraph (4) of this subsection (e), the |
Department shall require the permittee to capture and |
direct any natural gas produced during the production phase |
to a flare. Any flare used pursuant to this paragraph shall |
be equipped with a reliable continuous ignition source over |
the duration of production. In order to establish technical |
infeasibility or economic unreasonableness under this |
paragraph (5), the permittee must demonstrate, for each |
well site on an annual basis, that taking the actions |
listed in paragraph (4) of this subsection (e) are not cost |
effective based on a site-specific analysis. Permittees |
that use a flare during the production phase for operations |
other than emergency conditions shall file an updated |
site-specific analysis annually with the Department. The |
analysis shall be due one year from the date of the |
|
previous submission and shall detail whether any changes |
have occurred that alter the technical infeasibility or |
economic unreasonableness of the permittee to reduce their |
emissions in accordance with paragraph (4) of this |
subsection (e). |
(6) Uncontrolled emissions exceeding 6 tons per year |
from storage tanks shall be recovered and routed to a flare |
that is designed in accordance with 40 CFR 60.18 and is |
certified by the manufacturer of the device. The permittee |
shall maintain and operate the flare in accordance with |
manufacturer specifications. Any flare used under this |
paragraph must be equipped with a reliable continuous |
ignition source over the duration of production. |
(7) The Department may approve an exemption that waives |
the flaring requirements of paragraphs (5) and (6) of this |
subsection (e) only if the permittee demonstrates that the |
use of the flare will pose a significant risk of injury or |
property damage and that alternative methods of collection |
will not threaten harm to the environment. In determining |
whether to approve a waiver, the Department shall consider |
the quantity of casinghead gas produced, the topographical |
and climatological features at the well site, and the |
proximity of agricultural structures, crops, inhabited |
structures, public buildings, and public roads and |
railways. |
(8) For each wildcat well, delineation well, or low |
|
pressure well, permittees shall be responsible for |
minimizing the emissions associated with venting of |
hydrocarbon fluids and natural gas during the flowback |
period and production phase by capturing and directing the |
emissions to a completion combustion device during the |
flowback period and to a flare during the production phase, |
except in conditions that may result in a fire hazard or |
explosion, or where high heat emissions from a completion |
combustion device or flare may negatively impact |
waterways. Completion combustion devices and flares shall |
be equipped with a reliable continuous ignition source over |
the duration of the flowback period and the production |
phase, as applicable. |
(9) On or after July 1, 2015, all flares used under |
paragraphs (5) and (8) of this subsection (e) shall (i) |
operate with a combustion efficiency of at least 98% and in |
accordance with 40 CFR 60.18; and (ii) be certified by the |
manufacturer of the device. The permittee shall maintain |
and operate the flare in accordance with manufacturer |
specifications.
|
(10) Permittees shall employ practices for control of
|
fugitive dust related to their operations. These practices |
shall include, but are not limited to, the use of speed |
restrictions, regular road maintenance, and restriction of |
construction activity during high-wind days. Additional |
management practices such as road surfacing, wind breaks |
|
and barriers, or automation of wells to reduce truck |
traffic may also be required by the Department if |
technologically feasible and economically reasonable to |
minimize fugitive dust emissions. |
(11) Permittees shall record and report to the |
Department on an annual basis the amount of gas flared or |
vented from each high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing well. Three years after the effective date of |
the first high-volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing well |
permit issued by the Department, and every 3 years |
thereafter, the Department shall prepare a report that |
analyzes the amount of gas that has been flared or vented |
and make recommendations to the General Assembly on whether |
steps should be taken to reduce the amount of gas that is |
being flared or vented in this State. |
(f) High volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations |
completion report. Within 60 calendar days after the conclusion |
of high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations, the |
operator shall file a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations completion report with the Department. A |
copy of each completion report submitted to the Department |
shall be provided by the Department to the Illinois State |
Geological Survey. The completion reports required by this |
Section shall be considered public information and shall be |
made available on the Department's website. The high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations completion report |
|
shall contain the following information: |
(1) the permittee name as listed in the permit |
application; |
(2) the dates of the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations; |
(3) the county where the well is located; |
(4) the well name and Department reference number; |
(5) the total water volume used in the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations of the well, |
and the type and total volume of the base fluid used if |
something other than water; |
(6) each source from which the water used in the high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations was |
drawn, and the specific location of each source, including, |
but not limited to, the name of the county and latitude and |
longitude coordinates; |
(7) the quantity of hydraulic fracturing flowback |
recovered from the well; |
(8) a description of how hydraulic fracturing flowback |
recovered from the well was disposed and, if applicable, |
reused; |
(9) a chemical disclosure report identifying each |
chemical and proppant used in hydraulic fracturing fluid |
for each stage of the hydraulic fracturing operations |
including the following: |
(A) the total volume of water used in the hydraulic |
|
fracturing treatment of the well or the type and total |
volume of the base fluid used in the hydraulic |
fracturing treatment, if something other than water; |
(B) each hydraulic fracturing additive used in the |
hydraulic fracturing fluid, including the trade name, |
vendor, a brief descriptor of the intended use or |
function of each hydraulic fracturing additive, and |
the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS), if applicable; |
(C) each chemical intentionally added to the base |
fluid, including for each chemical, the Chemical |
Abstracts Service number, if applicable; and |
(D) the actual concentration in the base fluid, in |
percent by mass, of each chemical intentionally added |
to the base fluid;
|
(10) all pressures recorded during the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations; and |
(11) any other reasonable or pertinent information |
related to the conduct of the high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations the Department may request |
or require by administrative rule. |
Section 1-77. Chemical disclosure; trade secret |
protection. |
(a) If the chemical disclosure information required by |
paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of Section 1-35 of this Act is |
not submitted at the time of permit application, then the |
|
permittee, applicant, or person who will perform high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations at the well shall |
submit this information to the Department in electronic format |
no less than 21 calendar days prior to performing the high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. The |
permittee shall not cause or allow any stimulation of the well |
if it is not in compliance with this Section. Nothing in this |
Section shall prohibit the person performing high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations from adjusting or |
altering the contents of the fluid during the treatment process |
to respond to unexpected conditions, as long as the permittee |
or the person performing the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations notifies the Department by electronic |
mail within 24 hours of the departure from the initial |
treatment design and includes a brief explanation of the reason |
for the departure.
|
(b) No permittee shall use the services of another person |
to perform high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations unless the person is in compliance with this |
Section.
|
(c) Any person performing high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations within this State shall:
|
(1) be authorized to do business in this State; and |
(2) maintain and disclose to the Department separate |
and up-to-date master lists of: |
(A) the base fluid to be used during any high |
|
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations |
within this State;
|
(B) all hydraulic fracturing additives to be used |
during any high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations within this State; and
|
(C) all chemicals and associated Chemical Abstract |
Service numbers to be used in any high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations within this |
State.
|
(d) Persons performing high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations are prohibited from using any base fluid, |
hydraulic fracturing additive, or chemical not listed on their |
master lists disclosed under paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of |
this Section.
|
(e) The Department shall assemble and post up-to-date |
copies of the master lists it receives under paragraph (2) of |
subsection (c) of this Section on its website in accordance |
with Section 1-110 of this Act.
|
(f) Where an applicant, permittee, or the person performing |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations |
furnishes chemical disclosure information to the Department |
under this Section, Section 1-35, or Section 1-75 of this Act |
under a claim of trade secret, the applicant, permittee, or |
person performing high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations shall submit redacted and un-redacted copies of the |
documents containing the information to the Department and the |
|
Department shall use the redacted copies when posting materials |
on its website.
|
(g) Upon submission or within 5 calendar days of submission |
of chemical disclosure information to the Department under this |
Section, Section 1-35, or Section 1-75 of this Act under a |
claim of trade secret, the person that claimed trade secret |
protection shall provide a justification of the claim |
containing the following: a detailed description of the |
procedures used by the person to safeguard the information from |
becoming available to persons other than those selected by the |
person to have access to the information for limited purposes; |
a detailed statement identifying the persons or class of |
persons to whom the information has been disclosed; a |
certification that the person has no knowledge that the |
information has ever been published or disseminated or has |
otherwise become a matter of general public knowledge; a |
detailed discussion of why the person believes the information |
to be of competitive value; and any other information that |
shall support the claim.
|
(h) Chemical disclosure information furnished under this |
Section, Section 1-35, or Section 1-75 of this Act under a |
claim of trade secret shall be protected from disclosure as a |
trade secret if the Department determines that the statement of |
justification demonstrates that:
|
(1) the information has not been published, |
disseminated, or otherwise become a matter of general |
|
public knowledge; and
|
(2) the information has competitive value. |
There is a rebuttable presumption that the information has |
not been published, disseminated, or otherwise become a matter |
of general public knowledge if the person has taken reasonable |
measures to prevent the information from becoming available to |
persons other than those selected by the person to have access |
to the information for limited purposes and the statement of |
justification contains a certification that the person has no |
knowledge that the information has ever been published, |
disseminated, or otherwise become a matter of general public |
knowledge.
|
(i) Denial of a trade secret request under this Section |
shall be appealable under the Administrative Review Law. |
(j) A person whose request to inspect or copy a public |
record is denied, in whole or in part, because of a grant of |
trade secret protection may file a request for review with the |
Public Access Counselor under Section 9.5 of the Freedom of |
Information Act or for injunctive or declaratory relief under |
Section 11 of the Freedom of Information Act for the purpose of |
reviewing whether the Department properly determined that the |
trade secret protection should be granted.
|
(k) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (l) and (m) |
of this Section, the Department must maintain the |
confidentiality of chemical disclosure information furnished |
under this Section, Section 1-35, or Section 1-75 of this Act |
|
under a claim of trade secret, until the Department receives |
official notification of a final order by a reviewing body with |
proper jurisdiction that is not subject to further appeal |
rejecting a grant of trade secret protection for that |
information.
|
(l) The Department shall adopt rules for the provision of |
information furnished under a claim of trade secret to a health |
professional who states a need for the information and |
articulates why the information is needed. The health |
professional may share that information with other persons as |
may be professionally necessary, including, but not limited to, |
the affected patient, other health professionals involved in |
the treatment of the affected patient, the affected patient's |
family members if the affected patient is unconscious, unable |
to make medical decisions, or is a minor, the Centers for |
Disease Control, and other government public health agencies. |
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, any recipient of |
the information shall not use the information for purposes |
other than the health needs asserted in the request and shall |
otherwise maintain the information as confidential. |
Information so disclosed to a health professional shall in no |
way be construed as publicly available. The holder of the trade |
secret may request a confidentiality agreement consistent with |
the requirements of this Section from all health professionals |
to whom the information is disclosed as soon as circumstances |
permit. The rules adopted by the Department shall also |
|
establish procedures for providing the information in both |
emergency and non-emergency situations.
|
(m) In the event of a release of hydraulic fracturing |
fluid, a hydraulic fracturing additive, or hydraulic |
fracturing flowback, and when necessary to protect public |
health or the environment, the Department may disclose |
information furnished under a claim of trade secret to the |
relevant county public health director or emergency manager, |
the relevant fire department chief, the Director of the |
Illinois Department of Public Health, the Director of the |
Illinois Department of Agriculture, and the Director of the |
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency upon request by that |
individual. The Director of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health, and the Director of the Illinois Environmental |
Protection Agency, and the Director of the Illinois Department |
of Agriculture may disclose this information to staff members |
under the same terms and conditions as apply to the Director of |
Natural Resources. Except as otherwise provided in this |
Section, any recipient of the information shall not use the |
information for purposes other than to protect public health or |
the environment and shall otherwise maintain the information as |
confidential. Information disclosed to staff shall in no way be |
construed as publicly available. The holder of the trade secret |
information may request a confidentiality agreement consistent |
with the requirements of this Section from all persons to whom |
the information is disclosed as soon as circumstances permit.
|
|
Section 1-80. Water quality monitoring. |
(a) Each applicant for a high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permit shall provide the Department with a work plan |
to ensure accurate and complete sampling and testing as |
required under this Section. The work plan shall ensure |
compliance with the requirements of this Section and include, |
at a minimum, the following: |
(1) information identifying all water sources within |
the range of testing under this Section; |
(2) a sampling plan and protocol, including |
notification to the Department at least 7 calendar days |
prior to sample collection; |
(3) the name and contact information of an independent |
third party under the supervision of a professional |
engineer or professional geologist that shall be |
designated to conduct sampling to establish a baseline as |
provided for under subsection (b) of this Section; |
(4) the name and contact information of an independent |
third party under the supervision of a professional |
engineer or professional geologist that shall be |
designated to conduct sampling to establish compliance |
with monitoring as provided within subsection (c) of this |
Section; |
(5) the name and contact information of an independent |
testing laboratory, certified to perform the required |
|
laboratory method, to conduct the analysis required under |
subsections (b) and (c) of this Section; |
(6) proof of access and the right to test within the |
area for testing prescribed within subsection (b) of this |
Section during the duration of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations covered under the permit |
application, and copies of any non-disclosure agreements |
made under subsection (d) of this Section; and |
(7) identification of practicable contingency |
measures, including provision for alternative drinking |
water supplies, which could be implemented in the event of |
pollution or diminution of a water source as provided for |
in Section 1-83. |
(b) Prior to conducting high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations on a well, a permittee shall retain an |
independent third party, as required within paragraph (3) of |
subsection (a) of this Section, and shall conduct baseline |
water quality sampling of all water sources within 1,500 feet |
of the well site prior to any fracturing activities. Where (i) |
there are no groundwater wells within 1,500 feet of a well |
site, or access to groundwater wells within 1,500 feet of the |
well site has been denied under subsection (d) of this Section, |
and (ii) the proposed well site is located within 1,500 feet |
horizontally from any portion of an aquifer, the permittee |
shall conduct sampling of the aquifer at the closest |
groundwater well with access to the aquifer to which the |
|
permittee has not been denied access under subsection (d) of |
this Section. Installation of a groundwater monitoring well is |
not required to satisfy the sampling requirements of this |
Section. The samples collected by the independent third party, |
under the supervision of a professional engineer or |
professional geologist, shall be analyzed by an independent |
testing laboratory in accordance with paragraph (4) of |
subsection (a) of this Section. Testing shall be done by |
collection of a minimum of 3 samples for each water source |
required to be tested under this Section. The permittee shall, |
within 7 calendar days after receipt of results of tests |
conducted under this subsection, submit the results to the |
Department or to the owner of the water source under a |
non-disclosure agreement under subsection (d) of this Section. |
The Department shall post the results on its website within 7 |
calendar days after receipt. The results shall, at a minimum, |
include a detailed description of the sampling and testing |
conducted under this subsection, the chain of custody of the |
samples, and quality control of the testing. |
(c) After baseline tests are conducted under subsection (b) |
of this Section and following issuance of a permit by the |
Department, the permittee shall have all water sources which |
are subjected to sampling under subsection (b) of this Section |
sampled and tested in the same manner 6 months, 18 months, and |
30 months after the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations have been completed. Sampling of a water source |
|
under this subsection is not required if the water source was |
sampled under this subsection or subsection (b) within the |
previous month. The permittee shall notify the Department at |
least 7 calendar days prior to taking the sample. The permittee |
shall, within 7 calendar days after receipt of results of tests |
conducted under this subsection (c), submit the results to the |
Department or to the owner of the water source pursuant to a |
non-disclosure agreement under subsection (d) of this Section. |
The results shall include, at a minimum, a detailed description |
of the sampling and testing conducted under this subsection, |
the chain of custody of the samples, and quality control of the |
testing. |
(d) Sampling of private water wells or ponds wholly |
contained within private property shall not be required where |
the owner of the private property declines, expressly and in |
writing, to provide access or permission for sampling. If the |
owner of the private property declines to provide proof of his |
or her refusal to allow access in writing, the operator shall |
provide the Department evidence as to the good faith efforts |
that were made to secure the required documentation. Permits |
issued under this Act cannot be denied if the owner of the |
private property declines to provide proof of his or her |
refusal to allow access in writing and the permittee provides |
evidence that good faith efforts were made to gain access for |
the purposes of conducting tests. The owners of private |
property may condition access or permission for sampling of a |
|
private water well or pond wholly within the property or a |
portion of any perennial stream or river that flows through the |
property under a non-disclosure agreement, which must include |
the following terms and conditions: |
(1) the permittee shall provide the results of the |
water quality testing to the property owners;
|
(2) the permittee shall retain the results of the water |
quality testing until at least one year after completion of |
all monitoring under this Section for review by the |
Department upon request;
|
(3) the permittee shall not file with the Department |
the results of the water quality testing, except under |
paragraph (4) of subsection (d) of this Section; and
|
(4) the permittee shall notify the Department within 7 |
calendar days of its receipt of the water quality data |
where any testing under subsection (c) of this Section |
indicates that concentrations exceed the standards or |
criteria referenced in the definition of pollution or |
diminution under Section 1-5 of this Act. |
(e) Each set of samples collected under subsections (b) and |
(c) of this Section shall include analyses for: |
(1) pH; |
(2) total dissolved solids, dissolved methane, |
dissolved propane, dissolved ethane, alkalinity, and |
specific conductance; |
(3) chloride, sulfate, arsenic, barium, calcium, |
|
chromium, iron, magnesium, selenium, cadmium, lead, |
manganese, mercury, and silver; |
(4) BTEX; and |
(5) gross alpha and beta particles to determine the |
presence of any naturally occurring radioactive materials.
|
Sampling shall, at a minimum, be consistent with the work |
plan and allow for a determination of whether any hydraulic |
fracturing additive or other contaminant has caused pollution |
or diminution for purposes of Sections 1-83 and 1-85 of this |
Act. |
Section 1-83. Order authority. |
(a) Any person who has reason to believe they have incurred |
pollution or diminution of a water source as a result of a high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing treatment of a well may |
notify the Department and request that an investigation be |
conducted. |
(b) Within 30 calendar days after notification, the |
Department shall initiate the investigation of the claim and |
make a reasonable effort to reach a determination within 180 |
calendar days after notification. The Department may contact |
the Agency to seek the Agency's assistance in water quality |
sampling. The Agency may seek cost recovery under subsection |
(e) of Section 1-87 of this Act and recover all costs for |
samples taken for the investigation under this Section. |
(c) Any person conducting or who has conducted high volume |
|
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations shall supply any |
information requested by the Department to assist the |
Department. The Department shall give due consideration to any |
information submitted during the course of the investigation. |
(d) If sampling results or other information obtained as |
part of the investigation or the results of tests conducted |
under subsection (c) of Section 1-80 of this Act indicate that |
concentrations exceed the standards or criteria referenced by |
pollution or diminution under Section 1-5 of this Act, the |
Department shall issue an order to the permittee as necessary |
to require permanent or temporary replacement of a water |
source. In addition to any other penalty available under the |
law and consistent with the Department's order, the permittee |
shall restore or replace the affected supply with an |
alternative source of water adequate in quantity and quality |
for the purposes served by the water source. The quality of a |
restored or replaced water source shall meet or exceed the |
quality of the original water source based upon the results of |
the baseline test results under subsection (b) of Section 1-80 |
for that water source, or other available information. The |
Department may require the permittee to take immediate action, |
including but not limited to, repair, replacement, alteration, |
or prohibition of operation of equipment permitted by the |
Department. The Department may issue conditions within any |
order to protect the public health or welfare or the |
environment. |
|
(e) Within 15 calendar days after a determination has been |
made regarding the pollution or diminution, the Department |
shall provide notice of its findings and the orders, if any, to |
all persons that use the water source for domestic, |
agricultural, industrial, or any other legitimate beneficial |
uses. |
(f) Upon issuance of an Order or a finding of pollution or |
diminution under subsection (d) of this Section, the Department |
shall contact the Agency and forward all information from the |
investigation to the Agency. The Agency shall investigate the |
potential for violations as designated within Section 1-87 of |
this Act. |
(g) Reports of potential cases of water pollution that may |
be associated with high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations may be submitted electronically. The Department |
shall establish a format for these reports to be submitted |
through the website developed under Section 1-110 of this Act. |
The Department shall electronically provide these reports to |
the Agency. |
(h) The Department shall publish, on its website, lists of |
confirmed cases of pollution or diminution that result from |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. This |
information shall be searchable by county. |
(i) Nothing in this Section shall prevent the Department |
from issuing a cessation order under Section 8a of the Illinois |
Oil and Gas Act. |
|
Section 1-85. Presumption of pollution or diminution. |
(a) This Section establishes a rebuttable presumption for |
the purposes of evidence and liability under State law |
regarding claims of pollution or diminution of a water source |
and for use regarding the investigation and order authority |
under Section 1-83. |
(b) Unless rebutted by a defense established in subsection |
(c) of this Section, it shall be presumed that any person |
conducting or who has conducted high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations shall be liable for pollution |
or diminution of a water supply if: |
(1) the water source is within 1,500 feet of the well |
site; |
(2) water quality data showed no pollution or |
diminution prior to the start of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations; and |
(3) the pollution or diminution occurred during high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations or no |
more than 30 months after the completion of the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(c) To rebut the presumption established under this |
Section, a person presumed responsible must affirmatively |
prove by clear and convincing evidence any of the following: |
(1) the water source is not within 1,500 feet of the |
well site; |
|
(2) the pollution or diminution occurred prior to high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations or more |
than 30 months after the completion of the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations; or |
(3) the pollution or diminution occurred as the result |
of an identifiable cause other than the high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. |
Section 1-87. Water quality investigation and enforcement. |
(a) No person shall cause or allow high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations permitted under this Act to |
violate Section 12 of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act |
or surface water or groundwater regulations adopted under the |
Illinois Environmental Protection Act. |
(b) The Agency shall have the duty to investigate |
complaints that activities under this Act have caused a |
violation of Section 12 of the Illinois Environmental |
Protection Act or surface or groundwater rules adopted under |
the Illinois Environmental Protection Act. Any action taken by |
the Agency in enforcing these violations shall be taken under |
and consistent with the Illinois Environmental Protection Act, |
including but not limited to, the Agency's authority to seek a |
civil or criminal cause of action under that Act. The test |
results under subsections (b) and (c) of Section 1-80 of this |
Act may be considered by the Agency during an investigation |
under this Section. |
|
(c) A person who has reason to believe they have incurred |
contamination of a water source as a result of high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing may notify the Agency and |
request an investigation be conducted. The Agency shall forward |
this request to the Department for consideration of an |
investigation under Section 1-83 of this Act. If the Agency is |
provided with notice under subsection (f) of Section 1-83, the |
Agency shall conduct an investigation to determine whether |
pollution or diminution is continuing to occur at the location |
subject to the order, as well as locations identified by the |
Department or at any other water source within 1,500 feet of |
the well site. Any person conducting or who has conducted high |
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations shall supply |
any information requested to assist the Agency in its |
investigation. The Agency shall give due consideration to any |
information submitted during the course of the investigation. |
(d) Pollution or diminution is a violation of this Act and |
may be pursued by the Department subject to the procedures and |
remedies under Sections 1-100 and 1-105 of this Act. |
(e) If an Agency investigation under Section 1-83 or |
subsection (c) of this Section confirms that the cause of the |
pollution, diminution, or water pollution is attributable to |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations, in |
addition to any other relief available under law, the permittee |
shall be required to reimburse the costs and reasonable |
expenses incurred by the Agency for all activities related to |
|
the investigation and cleanup. These costs shall include, but |
not be limited to, inspections, investigations, analyses, |
personnel, direct and indirect costs, studies, assessments, |
reports, and review and evaluation of that data, as well as |
costs under the Agency's review of whether the quality of a |
restored or replaced water supply meets or exceeds the quality |
of the water supply before it was affected by the permittee. |
Costs shall be reimbursed to the Agency by the permittee within |
30 calendar days after receipt of a written request for |
reimbursement by the Agency. For all costs that remain unpaid |
following 30 calendar days after receipt of a written request |
for reimbursement, the Agency may institute a civil action for |
cost recovery under subsection (e) of Section 1-101 of this |
Act. Failure to reimburse the Agency within 30 calendar days |
after receipt of the written request for reimbursement is a |
violation of this Act. Reimbursement of costs collected under |
this subsection shall be deposited by the Agency into the |
Illinois Clean Water Fund. |
Section 1-95. Plugging; restoration. |
(a) The permittee shall perform and complete plugging of |
the well and restoration of the well site in accordance with |
the Illinois Oil and Gas Act and any and all rules adopted |
thereunder. The permittee shall bear all costs related to |
plugging of the well and reclamation of the well site. If the |
permittee fails to plug the well in accordance with this |
|
Section, the owner of the well shall be responsible for |
complying with this Section. |
(b) Prior to conducting high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations at a well site, the permittee shall cause |
to be plugged all previously unplugged well bores within 750 |
feet of any part of the horizontal well bore that penetrated |
within 400 vertical feet of the formation that will be |
stimulated as part of the high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations. |
(c) For well sites where high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations were permitted to occur, the operator |
shall restore any lands used by the operator other than the |
well site and production facility to a condition as closely |
approximating the pre-drilling conditions that existed before |
the land was disturbed for any stage of site preparation |
activities, drilling, and high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing operations. Restoration shall be commenced within 6 |
months of completion of the well site and completed within 12 |
months. Restoration shall include, but is not limited to, |
repair of tile lines, repair of fences and barriers, mitigation |
of soil compaction and rutting, application of fertilizer or |
lime to restore the fertility of disturbed soil, and repair of |
soil conservation practices such as terraces and grassed |
waterways. |
(d) Unless contractually agreed to the contrary by the |
permittee and surface owner, the permittee shall restore the |
|
well site and production facility in accordance with the |
applicable restoration requirements in subsection (c) of this |
Section and shall remove all equipment and materials involved |
in site preparation, drilling, and high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations, including tank batteries, |
rock and concrete pads, oil field debris, injection and flow |
lines at or above the surface, electric power lines and poles |
extending on or above the surface, tanks, fluids, pipes at or |
above the surface, secondary containment measures, rock or |
concrete bases, drilling equipment and supplies, and any and |
all other equipment, facilities, or materials used during any |
stage of site preparation work, drilling, or hydraulic |
fracturing operations at the well site. Work on the removal of |
equipment and materials at the well site shall begin within 6 |
months after plugging the final well on the well site and be |
completed no later than 12 months after the last producing well |
on the well site has been plugged. Roads installed as part of |
the oil and gas operation may be left in place if provided in |
the lease or pursuant to agreement with the surface owner, as |
applicable. |
Section 1-96. Seismicity. |
(a) For purposes of this Section, "induced seismicity" |
means an earthquake event that is felt, recorded by the |
national seismic network, and attributable to a Class II |
injection well used for disposal of flow-back and produced |
|
fluid from hydraulic fracturing operations. |
(b) The Department shall adopt rules, in consultation with |
the Illinois State Geological Survey, establishing a protocol |
for controlling operational activity of Class II injection |
wells in an instance of induced seismicity. |
(c) The rules adopted by the Department under this Section |
shall employ a "traffic light" control system allowing for low |
levels of seismicity while including additional monitoring and |
mitigation requirements when seismic events are of sufficient |
intensity to result in a concern for public health and safety.
|
(d) The additional mitigation requirements referenced in |
subsection (c) of this Section shall provide for either the |
scaling back of injection operations with monitoring for |
establishment of a potentially safe operation level or the |
immediate cessation of injection operations. |
Section 1-97. Department mapping and reporting. On or |
before February 1, 2014, the Department shall, with the |
assistance of the Illinois State Geological Survey, submit a |
report to the General Assembly and Governor identifying the |
following in Illinois and include any recommendations for |
additional legislative or administrative action on these |
items: |
(a) the location of resources of shale gas and oil, |
conventional gas and oil, and process materials, including sand |
and other naturally occurring geologic materials used in high |
|
volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations;
|
(b) the potential impacts of high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations on:
|
(1) sites owned, managed or leased by the Department;
|
(2) nature preserves;
|
(3) sites on the Register of Land and Water Reserves;
|
(4) the availability of water for human consumption and |
general domestic use; and
|
(5) the potential for influencing natural seismic |
activity.
|
Two years after the effective date of the first high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit issued by the |
Department, and every 3 years thereafter, the Department shall |
prepare a report that examines the following:
|
(1) the number of high volume horizontal hydraulic |
fracturing permits issued by the Department, on an annual |
basis; |
(2) a map showing the locations in this State where |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations |
have been permitted by the Department; |
(3) identification of the latest scientific research, |
best practices, and technological improvements related to |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations and |
methods to protect the environment and public health; |
(4) any confirmed environmental impacts in this State |
due to high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
|
operations, including, but not limited to, any reportable |
release of hydraulic fracturing flowback, hydraulic |
fracturing fluid, and hydraulic fracturing additive; |
(5) confirmed public health impacts in this State due |
to high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations; |
(6) a comparison of the revenues generated under |
subsection (e) of Section 1-35 of this Act to the |
Department's costs associated with implementing and |
administering provisions of this Act; |
(7) a comparison of the revenues generated under |
subsection (e) of Section 1-87 of this Act to the Agency's |
costs associated with implementing and administering |
provisions of this Act; |
(7.5) a summary of revenues generated annually from |
income, ad valorem, sales, and any other State and local |
taxes applicable to activity permitted under this Act by |
the Department, including an estimate of the income tax |
generated from lease payments and royalty payments; |
(8) a description of any modifications to existing |
programs, practices, or rules related to high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations made by the |
Department; |
(9) any problems or issues the Department identifies as |
it implements and administers the provisions of this Act; |
(10) any recommendations for legislative action by the |
General Assembly to address the findings in the report; and |
|
(11) any other information the Department deems |
relevant regarding its specific experiences implementing |
and administering the provisions of this Act and, |
generally, high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations. |
The first report shall also examine any studies issued by |
the United States Environmental Protection Agency regarding |
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations. The |
report required by this Section shall be provided to the |
General Assembly and Governor. |
Section 1-98. Hydraulic fracturing completion reporting.
|
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "hydraulic fracturing |
operations" means all stages of a stimulation treatment of a |
horizontal well as defined by this Act by the pressurized |
application of more than 80,000 gallons but less than 300,001 |
gallons of hydraulic fracturing fluid and proppant to initiate |
or propagate fractures in a geologic formation to enhance |
extraction or production of oil or gas.
|
(b) Within 60 calendar days after the conclusion of |
hydraulic fracturing operations, the operator shall file a |
hydraulic fracturing operations completion report with the |
Department. The hydraulic fracturing operations completion |
report shall contain the following information:
|
(1) the name and location of the well;
|
(2) the total and per-stage gallons of hydraulic |
|
fracturing fluid used at the well;
|
(3) depth of the wellbore (including both total |
vertical depth and total measured depth);
|
(4) length of horizontal wellbore;
|
(5) the maximum surface treating pressure used;
|
(6) the formation targeted;
|
(7) the number of hydraulic fracturing stages; and
|
(8) total perforated interval and individual |
perforation intervals.
|
Section 1-99. Task Force on Hydraulic Fracturing |
Regulation.
|
(a) There is hereby created the Task Force on Hydraulic |
Fracturing Regulation.
|
(b) The task force shall consist of the following members |
as follows: |
(1) Four legislators, appointed one each by the |
President of the Senate, the Minority Leader of the Senate, |
the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the |
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives;
|
(2) The Governor, or his or her representative;
|
(3) The Director of the Illinois Environmental |
Protection Agency, or his or her representative;
|
(4) The Director of the Illinois Department of Natural |
Resources, or his or her representative;
|
(5) The Attorney General of the State of Illinois, or |
|
his or her representative;
|
(6) The Director of the Illinois State Geological |
Survey, or his or her representative;
|
(7) Four representatives from environmental |
organizations, at least one of whom shall be a national |
environmental organization, at least one of whom shall be a |
Midwest regional environmental organization, and at least |
one of whom shall be an Illinois-based environmental |
organization, appointed by the Director of the Illinois |
Department of Natural Resources; and
|
(8) Four representatives from entities representing |
the interests of the oil and gas industry, at least one of |
whom shall represent companies whose activities are |
national in scope, at least one of whom shall represent |
companies whose activities are primarily limited to this |
State, at least one of whom shall represent an industry |
trade association, and at least one of whom shall represent |
a statewide labor federation representing more than one |
international union, appointed by the Director of the |
Illinois Department of Natural Resources. |
(c) The Director of the Illinois Department of Natural |
Resources shall serve as chairperson of the task force, and the |
Department shall be responsible for administering its |
operations and ensuring that the requirements of this Section |
are met.
|
(d) The task force may consult with any persons or entities |
|
it deems necessary to carry out its mandate.
|
(e) Members of the task force shall be appointed no later |
than 90 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 98th General Assembly. The members of the task force shall |
receive no compensation for serving as members of the task |
force.
|
(f) The task force shall (1) prepare a report evaluating |
the scope of hydraulic fracturing activity in the State and (2) |
provide recommendations to the General Assembly as to whether |
further legislation is needed to regulate hydraulic fracturing |
in this State. In performing these tasks, the task force shall |
consider, at a minimum, the data collected by the Department |
under Section 1-98 of this Act and the Illinois Oil and Gas |
Act.
|
(g) The task force shall submit its report and |
recommendations specified in subsection (f) of this Section to |
the General Assembly on or before September 15, 2016.
|
(h) The task force, upon issuance of its report and |
recommendations, is dissolved and this Section is repealed. |
Section 1-100. Criminal offenses; penalties. |
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, it shall |
be a Class A misdemeanor to knowingly violate this Act, its |
rules, or any permit or term or condition thereof, or knowingly |
to submit any false information under this Act or regulations |
adopted thereunder, or under any permit or term or condition |
|
thereof. A person convicted or sentenced under this subsection |
(a) shall be subject to a fine of not to exceed $10,000 for |
each day of violation. |
(b) It is unlawful for a person knowingly to violate: |
(1) subsection (c) of Section 1-25 of this Act; |
(2) subsection (d) of Section 1-25 of this Act; |
(3) subsection (a) of Section 1-30 of this Act; |
(4) paragraph (9) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of |
this Act; or |
(5) subsection (a) of Section 1-87 of this Act. |
A person convicted or sentenced for any knowing violation |
of the requirements or prohibitions listed in this subsection |
(b) commits a Class 4 felony, and in addition to any other |
penalty prescribed by law is subject to a fine not to exceed |
$25,000 for each day of violation. A person who commits a |
second or subsequent knowing violation of the requirements or |
prohibitions listed in this subsection (b) commits a Class 3 |
felony and, in addition to any other penalties provided by law, |
is subject to a fine not to exceed $50,000 for each day of |
violation. |
(c) Any person who knowingly makes a false, fictitious, or |
fraudulent material statement, orally or in writing, to the |
Department or Agency as required by this Act, its rules, or any |
permit, term, or condition of a permit, commits a Class 4 |
felony, and each false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or |
writing shall be considered a separate violation. In addition |
|
to any other penalty prescribed by law, persons in violation of |
this subsection (c) is subject to a fine of not to exceed |
$25,000 for each day of violation. A person who commits a |
second or subsequent knowing violation of this subsection (c) |
commits a Class 3 felony and, in addition to any other |
penalties provided by law, is subject to a fine not to exceed |
$50,000 for each day of violation. |
(d) Any criminal action provided for under this Section |
shall be brought by the State's Attorney of the county in which |
the violation occurred or by the Attorney General and shall be |
conducted in accordance with the applicable provision of the |
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. For criminal conduct in |
this Section, the period for commencing prosecution shall not |
begin to run until the offense is discovered by or reported to |
a State or local agency having authority to investigate |
violations of this Act. |
Section 1-101. Violations; civil penalties and |
injunctions.
|
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, any |
person who violates any provision of this Act or any rule or |
order adopted under this Act or any permit issued under this |
Act shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $50,000 |
for the violation and an additional civil penalty not to exceed |
$10,000 for each day during which the violation continues. |
(b) Any person who violates any requirements or |
|
prohibitions of provisions listed in this subsection (b) is |
subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $100,000 for the |
violation and an additional civil penalty not to exceed $20,000 |
for each day during which the violation continues. The |
following are violations are subject to the penalties of this |
subsection (b): |
(1) subsection (c) of Section 1-25 of this Act; |
(2) subsection (d) of Section 1-25 of this Act; |
(3) subsection (a) of Section 1-30 of this Act;
|
(4) paragraph (9) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of |
this Act; or |
(5) subsection (a) of Section 1-87 of this Act. |
(c) Any person who knowingly makes, submits, causes to be |
made, or causes to be submitted a false report of pollution, |
diminution, or water pollution attributable to high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations that results in an |
investigation by the Department or Agency under this Act shall |
be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $1,000 for the |
violation. |
(d) The penalty shall be recovered by a civil action before |
the circuit court of the county in which the well site is |
located or in the circuit court of Sangamon County. Venue shall |
be considered proper in either court. These penalties may, upon |
the order of a court of competent jurisdiction, be made payable |
to the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be used in |
accordance with the provisions of the Environmental Protection |
|
Trust Fund Act.
|
(e) The State's Attorney of the county in which the |
violation occurred, or the Attorney General, may, at the |
request of the Department or on his or her own motion, |
institute a civil action for the recovery of costs, an |
injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to restrain violations |
of this Act, any rule adopted under this Act, the permit or |
term or condition of the permit, or to require other actions as |
may be necessary to address violations of this Act, any rule |
adopted under this Act, the permit or term or condition of the |
permit. |
(f) The State's Attorney of the county in which the |
violation occurred, or the Attorney General, shall bring |
actions under this Section in the name of the People of the |
State of Illinois. Without limiting any other authority that |
may exist for the awarding of attorney's fees and costs, a |
court of competent jurisdiction may award costs and reasonable |
attorney's fees, including the reasonable costs of expert |
witnesses and consultants, to the State's Attorney or the |
Attorney General in a case where he or she has prevailed |
against a person who has committed a knowing or repeated |
violation of this Act, any rule adopted under this Act, or the |
permit or term or condition of the permit. |
(g) All final orders imposing civil penalties under this |
Section shall prescribe the time for payment of those |
penalties. If any penalty is not paid within the time |
|
prescribed, interest on penalty at the rate set forth in |
subsection (a) of Section 1003 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, |
shall be paid for the period from the date payment is due until |
the date payment is received. However, if the time for payment |
is stayed during the pendency of an appeal, interest shall not |
accrue during stay.
|
Section 1-102. Other relief.
|
(a) Any person having an interest that is or may be |
adversely affected may commence a civil action on his or her |
own behalf to compel compliance with this Act against any |
governmental instrumentality or agency which is alleged to be |
in violation of the provisions of this Act or of any rule, |
order, or permit issued under this Act, or against any other |
person who is alleged to be in violation of this Act or of any |
rule, order, or permit issued under this Act. No action may be |
commenced under this subsection (a): (i) prior to 60 days after |
the plaintiff has given notice in writing of the alleged |
violation to the Department and to any alleged violator or (ii) |
if the State has commenced and is diligently prosecuting a |
civil action to require compliance with the provisions of this |
Act, or any rule, order, or permit issued under this Act. |
(b) Any person having an interest that is or may be |
adversely affected may commence a civil action against the |
Department on his or her own behalf to compel compliance with |
this Act where there is alleged a failure of the Department to |
|
perform any act or duty under this Act that is not |
discretionary with the Department. No action may be commenced |
under this subsection (b) prior to 60 days after the plaintiff |
has given notice in writing of the action to the Department, |
except that action may be brought immediately after the |
notification in the case where the violation or order |
complained of constitutes an imminent threat to the health or |
safety of the plaintiff or would immediately affect a legal |
interest of the plaintiff. |
(c) The court, in issuing any final order in any action |
brought under this Section, may award costs of litigation |
(including attorney and expert witness fees) to any party, on |
the basis of the importance of the proceeding and the |
participation of the parties to the efficient and effective |
enforcement of this Act. The court may, if a temporary |
restraining order or preliminary injunction is sought, require |
the filing of a bond or equivalent security in accordance with |
Part 1 of Article XI of the Code of Civil Procedure. |
(d) Any person who is injured in his or her person or |
property through the violation by any operator of any rule, |
order, or permit issued under this Act may bring an action for |
damages (including reasonable attorney and expert witness |
fees). Nothing in this subsection (d) shall affect any of the |
rights established by or limits imposed under the Workers' |
Compensation Act. |
(e) Any action brought under this Section may be brought |
|
only in the county in which the high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operation complained of is located.
|
(f) In any action under this Section, the Department shall |
have an unconditional right to intervene. |
(g) No existing civil or criminal remedy for any wrongful |
action shall be excluded or impaired by this Act. |
(h) Nothing in this Section shall restrict any right that |
any person (or class of persons) may have under any statute or |
common law to seek enforcement of any of the provisions of this |
Act and the rules adopted under this Act, or to seek any other |
relief (and including relief against the United States or the |
Department).
|
Section 1-105. Violations, complaints, and notice; |
website. |
The Department shall maintain a detailed database that is |
readily accessible to the public on the Department's website. |
The database shall show each violation found by the Department |
regarding high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing |
operations and the associated well owners, operators, and |
subcontractors. When the Department determines that any person |
has violated this Act, the Department shall provide notice by |
U.S. Postal Service certified mail, return receipt requested, |
of the Department's determination to all persons required to |
receive specific public notice under Section 1-40 of this Act |
within 7 calendar days after the determination. The Department |
|
shall also post the notice on the Department's website. The |
notice shall include a detailed, plain language description of |
the violation and a detailed, plain language description of all |
known risks to public health, life, property, aquatic life, and |
wildlife resulting from the violation. |
Section 1-110. Public information; website. |
(a) All information submitted to the Department under this |
Act is deemed public information, except information deemed to |
constitute a trade secret under Section 1-77 of this Act and |
private information and personal information as defined in the |
Freedom of Information Act. |
(b) To provide the public and concerned citizens with a |
centralized repository of information, the Department shall |
create and maintain a comprehensive website dedicated to |
providing information concerning high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations. The website shall contain, |
assemble, and link the documents and information required by |
this Act to be posted on the Department's or other agencies' |
websites. The Department shall also create and maintain an |
online searchable database that provides information related |
to high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations on |
wells that, at a minimum, include, for each well it permits, |
the identity of its operators, its waste disposal, its chemical |
disclosure information, and any complaints or violations under |
this Act. The website created under this Section shall allow |
|
users to search for completion reports by well name and |
location, dates of fracturing and drilling operations, |
operator, and by chemical additives. |
Section 1-120. Applicable federal, State, and local laws. |
Compliance with this Act does not relieve responsibility for |
compliance with the Illinois Oil and Gas Act, the Illinois |
Environmental Protection Act, and other applicable federal, |
State, and local laws. |
Section 1-123. Application of water well laws. Nothing in |
this Act shall be construed to affect the application of the |
Illinois Water Well Construction Code, the Illinois Water Well |
Pump Installation Code, the Water Well and Pump Installation |
Contractor's License Act, or any rules adopted thereunder to |
all water wells, closed loop wells, or monitoring wells, as |
those terms are defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Water Well |
Construction Code, that are located, drilled, constructed, or |
modified in connection with activities regulated by this Act. |
Section 1-125. Administrative review. All final |
administrative decisions, including issuance or denial of a |
permit, made by the Department under this Act are subject to |
judicial review under the Administrative Review Law and its |
rules. |
|
Section 1-130. Rules. The Department shall have the |
authority to adopt rules as may be necessary to accomplish the |
purposes of this Act. Any and all rules adopted under this Act |
by the Department are not subject to the review, consultation, |
or advisement of the Oil and Gas Board. |
Section 1-135. The Mines and Minerals Regulatory Fund. The |
Mines and Minerals Regulatory Fund is created as a special fund |
in the State treasury. All moneys required by this Act to be |
deposited into the Fund shall be used by the Department to |
administer and enforce this Act and otherwise support the |
operations and programs of the Office of Mines and Minerals.
|
Section 1-140. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes. |
ARTICLE 2. |
Section 2-5. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
"Illinois Hydraulic Fracturing Tax Act". |
Section 2-10. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, |
unless the context otherwise requires: |
"Barrel" for oil measurement means a barrel of 42 U.S. |
gallons of 231 cubic inches per gallon, computed at a |
temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
|
|
"Construction" means any constructing, altering, |
reconstructing, repairing, rehabilitating, refinishing, |
refurbishing, remodeling, remediating, renovating, custom |
fabricating, maintaining, landscaping, improving, drilling, |
testing, moving, wrecking, painting, decorating, demolishing, |
and adding to or subtracting from any building, structure, |
highway, roadway, street, bridge, alley, sewer, ditch, water |
works, parking facility, railroad, excavation or other |
structure, project, development, real property or improvement, |
or to do any part thereof, whether or not the performance of |
the construction involves the addition to, or fabrication into, |
any structure, project, development, real property or |
improvement herein described performed or done on behalf of an |
operator in connection with and at the location of a well site |
subject to the tax imposed by this Act.
|
"Construction worker" means a person performing |
construction.
|
"Department" means the Illinois Department of Revenue. |
"Fracturing" or "hydraulic fracturing" means the |
propagation of fractures in a rock layer, by a pressurized |
fluid used to release petroleum or natural gas (including shale |
gas, tight gas, and coal seam gas), for extraction. |
"Gas" means natural gas taken from below the surface of the |
earth or water in this State, regardless of whether the gas is |
taken from a gas well or from a well also productive of oil or |
any other product. |
|
"General prevailing rate of hourly wages" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 2 of the Prevailing Wage Act, as |
determined by the Director of the Department of Labor under |
Section 9 of the Prevailing Wage Act for the county in which |
the construction occurs.
|
"Illinois construction worker" means a construction |
worker, as defined in this Section, domiciled in Illinois for |
24 months prior to the date of the issuance of a high volume |
horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit for the well site on |
which the construction is performed.
|
"Lease number" means the number assigned by the purchaser |
to identify each production unit. |
"Oil" means petroleum or other crude oil, condensate, |
casinghead gasoline, or other mineral oil that is severed or |
withdrawn from below the surface of the soil or water in this |
State. |
"Operator" means the person primarily responsible for the |
management and operation of oil or gas productions from a |
production unit. |
"Person" means any natural individual, firm, partnership, |
association, joint stock company, joint adventure, public or |
private corporation, limited liability company, or a receiver, |
executor, trustee, guardian, or other representative appointed |
by order of any court. |
"Producer" means any person owning, controlling, managing, |
or leasing any oil or gas property or oil or gas well, and any |
|
person who severs in any manner any oil or gas in this State, |
and shall include any person owning any direct and beneficial |
interest in any oil or gas produced, whether severed by such |
person or some other person on their behalf, either by lease, |
contract, or otherwise, including working interest owners, |
overriding royalty owners, or royalty owners. |
"Production unit" means a unit of property designated by |
the Department of Natural Resources from which oil or gas is |
severed.
|
"Purchaser" means a person who is the first purchaser of a |
product after severance from a production unit. |
"Remove" or "removal" means the physical transportation of |
oil or gas off of the production unit where severed; and if the |
oil or gas is used on the premises where severed, or if the |
manufacture or conversion of oil or gas into refined products |
occurs on the premises where severed, oil or gas shall be |
deemed to have been removed on the date such use, manufacture, |
or conversion begins. |
"Severed" or "severing" means: (1) the production of oil |
through extraction or withdrawal of the same, whether such |
extraction or withdrawal is by natural flow, mechanical flow, |
forced flow, pumping, or any other means employed to get the |
oil from below the surface of the soil or water and shall |
include the withdrawal by any means whatsoever of oil upon |
which the tax has not been paid, from any surface reservoir, |
natural or artificial, or from a water surface; and (2) the |
|
production of gas through the extraction or withdrawal of the |
same by any means whatsoever, from below the surface of the |
earth or water. |
"Severance" means the taking of oil or gas from below the |
surface of the soil or water in any manner whatsoever. |
"Total workforce hours" means all hours worked by |
construction workers on a well site, beginning on the date an |
application for a permit to perform high volume horizontal |
hydraulic fracturing operations at the well is filed under |
Section 1-35 of the Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act and |
ending on the date of first production following initial |
drilling or any reworking of the well. |
"Value" means the sale price of oil or gas at the time of |
removal of the oil or gas from the production unit and if oil |
or gas is exchanged for something other than cash, or if no |
sale occurs at the time of removal, or if the Department |
determines that the relationship between the buyer and the |
seller is such that the consideration paid, if any, is not |
indicative of the true value or market price, then the |
Department shall determine the value of the oil or gas subject |
to tax based on the cash price paid to one or more producers |
for the oil or gas or based on the cash price paid to producers |
for like quality oil or gas in the vicinity of the production |
unit at the time of the removal of the oil or gas from the |
production unit.
|
"Well site" has the meaning ascribed to the term in Section |
|
1-5 of the Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act.
|
"Working interest" means any interest in or any right to |
the production of oil and gas, excluding royalty or overriding |
royalty interests.
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Section 2-15. Tax imposed. |
(a) For oil and gas removed on or after July 1, 2013, there |
is hereby imposed a tax upon the severance and production of |
oil or gas from a well on a production unit in this State |
permitted, or required to be permitted, under the Illinois |
Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act, for sale, transport, |
storage, profit, or commercial use. The tax shall be applied |
equally to all portions of the value of each barrel of oil |
severed and subject to such tax and to the value of the gas |
severed and subject to such tax. For a period of 24 months from |
the month in which oil or gas was first produced from the well, |
the rate of tax shall be 3% of the value of the oil or gas |
severed from the earth or water in this State. Thereafter, the |
rate of the tax shall be as follows: |
(1) For oil: |
(A) where the average daily production from the |
well during the month is less than 25 barrels, 3% of |
the value of the oil severed from the earth or water; |
(B) where the average daily production from the |
well during the month is 25 or more barrels but less |
than 50 barrels, 4% of the value of the oil severed |
|
from the earth or water; |
(C) where the average daily production from the |
well during the month is 50 or more barrels but less |
than 100 barrels, 5% of the value of the oil severed |
from the earth or water; or |
(D) where the average daily production from the |
well during the month is 100 or more barrels, 6% of the |
value of the oil severed from the earth or water. |
(2) For gas, 6% of the value of the gas severed from |
the earth or water. |
If a well is required to be permitted under the Illinois |
Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act, the tax imposed by this |
Section applies, whether or not a permit was obtained. |
(b) Oil produced from a well whose average daily production |
is 15 barrels or less for the 12-month period immediately |
preceding the production is exempt from the tax imposed by this |
Act.
|
(c) For the purposes of the tax imposed by this Act the |
amount of oil produced shall be measured or determined, in the |
case of oil, by tank tables, without deduction for overage or |
losses in handling. Allowance for any reasonable and bona fide |
deduction for basic sediment and water, and for correction of |
temperature to 60 degrees Fahrenheit will be allowed. For the |
purposes of the tax imposed by this Act the amount of gas |
produced shall be measured or determined, by meter readings |
showing 100% of the full volume expressed in cubic feet at a |
|
standard base and flowing temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit, |
and at the absolute pressure at which the gas is sold and |
purchased. Correction shall be made for pressure according to |
Boyle's law, and used for specific gravity according to the |
gravity at which the gas is sold and purchased. |
(d) The following severance and production of gas shall be |
exempt from the tax imposed by this Act: gas injected into the |
earth for the purpose of lifting oil, recycling, or |
repressuring; gas used for fuel in connection with the |
operation and development for, or production of, oil or gas in |
the production unit where severed; and gas lawfully vented or |
flared; gas inadvertently lost on the production unit by reason |
of leaks, blowouts, or other accidental losses. |
(e) All oil and gas removed from the premises where severed |
is subject to the tax imposed by this Act unless exempt under |
the terms of this Act.
|
(f) The liability for the tax accrues at the time the oil |
or gas is removed from the production unit.
|
Section 2-17. Local Workforce Tax Rate Reduction. |
(a) The rate of tax imposed on working interest owners of a |
well under Section 2-15 of this Act shall be reduced by 0.25% |
for the life of the well when a minimum of 50% of the total |
workforce hours on the well site are performed by Illinois |
construction workers being paid wages equal to or exceeding the |
general prevailing rate of hourly wages.
|
|
(b) When more than one well is drilled on a well site, |
total workforce hours shall be determined on a well-by-well |
basis.
|
(c) Any operator that intends to claim the reduction |
provided for in this Section on his or her behalf, or on the |
behalf of the working interest owners, shall be responsible for |
obtaining from all construction contractors working on a well |
site, records to document the claim for the reduction in tax |
rate. Operators shall, at a minimum, obtain from construction |
contractors, in writing, the total number of construction |
workers that performed work under the contract, the number of |
Illinois construction workers that performed work under the |
contract, whether oral or written, between the operator and the |
construction contractor, the hours worked by each construction |
worker and the wage paid to each construction worker for the |
hours of work performed on the well site. The operator shall |
obtain and retain any other records the Department determines |
are necessary to verify a claim for a reduction in the tax. The |
operator shall make the records available to the Department |
upon request.
|
For the purposes of this Section, each construction |
contractor, upon written request from the operator, shall |
retain the following records: each worker's name, address, and |
telephone number, if available, years of residency in Illinois, |
the type of work the worker performs, the hourly wages paid |
each worker, and the number of hours worked by each worker for |
|
the term of the contract. The construction contractor shall |
retain any other records the Department determines are |
necessary to verify a claim for a reduction in the tax. The |
construction contractor shall make the records available to the |
operator and Department upon request. The operator and |
construction contractors shall retain the records for 3 years.
|
No later than the 6 months after the date of the first |
purchase of oil or gas from a well, the operator shall file |
with the Department, in the form and manner required by the |
Department, a report and documentation to support that the |
working interest owners qualify for the reduction in the rate |
of tax provided for in this Section. The report shall be signed |
by the operator, or an officer, employee, or agent of the |
contractor, and state under oath that he or she has examined |
the report and documentation and the report and documentation |
are true and accurate. The Department shall keep the records |
submitted in accordance with this subsection for a period of |
not less than 3 years from the date of filing.
|
(d) The Department shall notify the first purchaser and the |
operator when the working interest owners qualify for a |
reduction in the tax under this Section and state the amount of |
the reduction. The reduction shall be effective the date of |
first production. The first purchaser or operator may take a |
credit for any retroactive reduction in the tax rate on a |
return filed under Sections 2-45 and 2-50 of this Act.
|
(e) Reports shall be filed on forms furnished and |
|
prescribed by the Department and shall contain any other |
information as the Department may reasonably require.
|
Section 2-20. Taxable value; method of determining. The |
Department may determine the value of products severed from a |
production unit when the operator and purchaser are affiliated |
persons, when the sale and purchase of products is not an arm's |
length transaction, or when products are severed and removed |
from a production unit and a value is not established for those |
products. The value determined by the Department shall be |
commensurate with the actual price received for products of |
like quality, character, and use which are severed in the same |
field or area. If there are no sales of products of like |
quality, character, and use severed in the same field or area, |
then the Department shall establish a reasonable value based on |
sales of products of like quality, character, and use which are |
severed in other areas of the State, taking into consideration |
any other relevant factors. |
Section 2-25. Withholding of tax. Any purchaser who makes |
a monetary payment to a producer for his or her portion of the |
value of products from a production unit shall withhold from |
such payment the amount of tax due from the producer. Any |
purchaser who pays any tax due from a producer shall be |
entitled to reimbursement from the producer for the tax so paid |
and may take credit for such amount from any monetary payment |
|
to the producer for the value of products. To the extent that a |
purchaser required to collect the tax imposed by this Act has |
actually collected that tax, such tax is held in trust for the |
benefit of the State of Illinois. |
Section 2-30. Payment and collection of tax. |
(a) For oil and gas removed on or after July 1, 2013, the |
tax incurred under this Act shall be due and payable on or |
before the last day of the month following the end of the month |
in which the oil or gas is removed from the production unit. |
The tax is upon the producers of such oil or gas in the |
proportion to their respective beneficial interests at the time |
of severance. The first purchaser of any oil or gas sold shall |
collect the amount of the tax due from the producers by |
deducting and withholding such amount from any payments made by |
such purchaser to the producers and shall remit the tax in this |
Act. |
In the event the tax shall be withheld by a purchaser from |
payments due a producer and such purchaser fails to make |
payment of the tax to the State as required herein, the first |
purchaser shall be liable for the tax. However, in the event a |
first purchaser fails to pay the tax withheld from a producer's |
payment, the producer's interest remains subject to any lien |
filed pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section. A producer |
shall be entitled to bring an action against such purchaser to |
recover the amount of tax so withheld together with penalties |
|
and interest which may have accrued by failure to make such |
payment. A producer shall be entitled to all attorney fees and |
court costs incurred in such action. To the extent that a |
producer liable for the tax imposed by this Act collects the |
tax, and any penalties and interest, from a purchaser, such |
tax, penalties, and interest are held in trust by the producer |
for the benefit of the State of Illinois. |
(b) For all production units a first purchaser begins to |
purchase oil or gas from on or after July 1, 2013, the first |
purchaser is required to withhold and remit the tax imposed by |
this Act to the Department from the oil and gas purchased from |
the production unit unless the first purchaser obtains from the |
operator an exemption certificate signed by the operator |
stating that the production unit is not subject to the tax |
imposed by this Act. The exemption certificate must include the |
following information: |
(1) name and address of the operator; |
(2) name of the production unit; |
(3) number assigned to the production unit by the first |
purchaser, if available; |
(4) legal description of the production unit; and |
(5) a statement by the operator that the production |
unit is exempt from the tax imposed by the Illinois |
Hydraulic Fracturing Tax Act. |
If a first purchaser obtains an exemption certificate that |
contains the required information and reasonably relies on the |
|
exemption certificate and it is subsequently determined by the |
Department that the production unit is subject to the tax |
imposed by this Act, the Department will collect any tax that |
is due from the operator and producers, and the first purchaser |
is relieved of any liability. |
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section, the tax |
is a lien on the oil and gas from the time of severance from the |
land or under the water until the tax and all penalties and |
interest are fully paid, and the State shall have a lien on all |
the oil or gas severed from the production unit in this State |
in the hands of the operator, any producer or the first or any |
subsequent purchaser thereof to secure the payment of the tax. |
If a lien is filed by the Department, the purchaser shall |
withhold from producers or operators the amount of tax, penalty |
and interest identified in the lien. |
Section 2-35. Registration of purchasers. A person who |
engages in business as a purchaser of oil or gas in this State |
shall register with the Department. Application for a |
certificate of registration shall be made to the Department |
upon forms furnished by the Department and shall contain any |
reasonable information the Department may require. Upon |
receipt of the application for a certificate of registration in |
proper form, the Department shall issue to the applicant a |
certificate of registration. |
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Section 2-40. Inspection of records by the Department; |
subpoena power, contempt. The Department shall have the power |
to require any operator, producer, transporter, or person |
purchasing any oil or gas severed from the earth or water to |
furnish any additional information deemed to be necessary for |
the purpose of computing the amount of the tax, and for such |
purpose to examine the meter and other charts, books, records, |
and all files of such person, and for such purpose the |
Department shall have the power to issue subpoenas and examine |
witnesses under oath, and if any witness shall fail or refuse |
to appear at the request of the director, or refuses access to |
books, records, and files, the circuit court of the proper |
county, or the judge thereof, on application of the Department, |
shall compel obedience by proceedings for contempt, as in the |
case of disobedience of the requirements of a subpoena issued |
from such court or a refusal to testify therein. |
Section 2-45. Purchaser's return and tax remittance. Each |
purchaser shall make a return to the Department showing the |
quantity of oil or gas purchased during the month for which the |
return is filed, the price paid therefore, total value, the |
name and address of the operator or other person from whom the |
same was purchased, a description of the production unit in the |
manner prescribed by the Department from which such oil or gas |
was severed and the amount of tax due from each production unit |
for each calendar month. All taxes due, or to be remitted, by |
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the purchaser shall accompany this return. The return shall be |
filed on or before the last day of the month after the calendar |
month for which the return is required. The Department may |
require any additional report or information it may deem |
necessary for the proper administration of this Act. |
Such returns shall be filed electronically in the manner |
prescribed by the Department. Purchasers shall make all |
payments of that tax to the Department by electronic funds |
transfer unless, as provided by rule, the Department grants an |
exception upon petition of a purchaser. Purchasers' returns |
must be accompanied by appropriate computer generated magnetic |
media supporting schedule data in the format required by the |
Department, unless, as provided by rule, the Department grants |
an exception upon petition of a purchaser. |
Section 2-50. Operator returns; payment of tax. |
(a) If, on or after July 1, 2013, oil or gas is transported |
off the production unit where severed by the operator, used on |
the production unit where severed, or if the manufacture and |
conversion of oil and gas into refined products occurs on the |
production unit where severed, the operator is responsible for |
remitting the tax imposed under subsections (a) of Section 15, |
on or before the last day of the month following the end of the |
calendar month in which the oil and gas is removed from the |
production unit, and such payment shall be accompanied by a |
return to the Department showing the gross quantity of oil or |
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gas removed during the month for which the return is filed, the |
price paid therefore, and if no price is paid therefore, the |
value of the oil and gas, a description of the production unit |
from which such oil or gas was severed, and the amount of tax. |
The Department may require any additional information it may |
deem necessary for the proper administration of this Act. |
(b) Operators shall file all returns electronically in the |
manner prescribed by the Department unless, as provided by |
rule, the Department grants an exception upon petition of an |
operator. Operators shall make all payments of that tax to the |
Department by electronic funds transfer unless, as provided by |
rule, the Department grants an exception upon petition of an |
operator. Operators' returns must be accompanied by |
appropriate computer generated magnetic media supporting |
schedule data in the format required by the Department, unless, |
as provided by rule, the Department grants an exception upon |
petition of a purchaser. |
(c) Any operator who makes a monetary payment to a producer |
for his or her portion of the value of products from a |
production unit shall withhold from such payment the amount of |
tax due from the producer. Any operator who pays any tax due |
from a producer shall be entitled to reimbursement from the |
producer for the tax so paid and may take credit for such |
amount from any monetary payment to the producer for the value |
of products. To the extent that an operator required to collect |
the tax imposed by this Act has actually collected that tax, |
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such tax is held in trust for the benefit of the State of |
Illinois. |
(d) In the event the operator fails to make payment of the |
tax to the State as required herein, the operator shall be |
liable for the tax. A producer shall be entitled to bring an |
action against such operator to recover the amount of tax so |
withheld together with penalties and interest which may have |
accrued by failure to make such payment. A producer shall be |
entitled to all attorney fees and court costs incurred in such |
action. To the extent that a producer liable for the tax |
imposed by this Act collects the tax, and any penalties and |
interest, from an operator, such tax, penalties, and interest |
are held in trust by the producer for the benefit of the State |
of Illinois. |
(e) When the title to any oil or gas severed from the earth |
or water is in dispute and the operator of such oil or gas is |
withholding payments on account of litigation, or for any other |
reason, such operator is hereby authorized, empowered and |
required to deduct from the gross amount thus held the amount |
of the tax imposed and to make remittance thereof to the |
Department as provided in this Section. |
(f) An operator required to file a return and pay the tax |
under this Section shall register with the Department. |
Application for a certificate of registration shall be made to |
the Department upon forms furnished by the Department and shall |
contain any reasonable information the Department may require. |
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Upon receipt of the application for a certificate of |
registration in proper form, the Department shall issue to the |
applicant a certificate of registration. |
(g) If oil or gas is transported off the production unit |
where severed by the operator and sold to a purchaser or |
refiner, the State shall have a lien on all the oil or gas |
severed from the production unit in this State in the hands of |
the operator, the first or any subsequent purchaser thereof, or |
refiner to secure the payment of the tax. If a lien is filed by |
the Department, the purchaser or refiner shall withhold from |
the operator the amount of tax, penalty and interest identified |
in the lien. |
Section 2-55. Tax withholding and remittance when title to |
minerals disputed. When the title to any oil or gas severed |
from the earth or water is in dispute and the purchaser of such |
oil or gas is withholding payments on account of litigation, or |
for any other reason, such purchaser is hereby authorized, |
empowered and required to deduct from the gross amount thus |
held the amount of the tax imposed and to make remittance |
thereof to the Department as provided in this Act. |
Section 2-60. Transporters. When requested by the |
Department, all transporters of oil or gas out of, within or |
across the State of Illinois shall be required to furnish the |
Department such information relative to the transportation of |
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such oil or gas as the Department may require. The Department |
shall have authority to inspect bills of lading, waybills, |
meter, or other charts, documents, books and records as may |
relate to the transportation of oil or gas in the hands of each |
transporter. The Department shall further be empowered to |
demand the production of such bills of lading, waybills, |
charts, documents, books, and records relating to the |
transportation of oil or gas at any point in the State of |
Illinois. |
Section 2-65. Rulemaking. The Department is hereby |
authorized to adopt any rules as may be necessary to administer |
and enforce the provisions of this Act. |
Section 2-70. Incorporation by reference. All of the |
provisions of Sections 4, 5, 5a, 5b, 5c, 5d, 5e, 5f, 5g, 5j, 6, |
6a, 6b, 6c, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 11a, 12, and 13 of the "Retailers' |
Occupation Tax Act" which are not inconsistent with this Act, |
and all provisions of the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act |
shall apply, as far as practicable, to the subject matter of |
this Act to the same extent as if such provisions were included |
herein. |
Section 2-75. Distribution of proceeds. All moneys |
received by the Department under this Act shall be paid into |
the General Revenue Fund in the State treasury.
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