Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB4835
Illinois General Assembly

  Bills & Resolutions  
  Compiled Statutes  
  Public Acts  
  Legislative Reports  
  IL Constitution  
  Legislative Guide  
  Legislative Glossary  

 Search By Number
 (example: HB0001)
Search Tips

Search By Keyword

Full Text of HB4835  103rd General Assembly

HB4835 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY

 


 
103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB4835

 

Introduced 2/7/2024, by Rep. Anna Moeller

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Safety Moratorium on Carbon Dioxide Pipelines Act. Establishes a temporary statewide moratorium on construction of carbon dioxide pipelines until the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has adopted revised federal safety standards for transportation of carbon dioxide and the State has commissioned and finalized a relevant study regarding the safety setbacks required in the event of pipeline rupture or leak. Requires the State study to include input from first responders, to analyze pipeline ruptures or leaks in a variety of settings, and to recommend setbacks and funding based on that analysis. Provides that pending applications for carbon dioxide pipelines shall be held in abeyance. Provides for expiration of the temporary moratorium after 4 years, or when new safety standards are established, or upon enactment of a law that meets certain criteria. Makes legislative findings. Defines terms. Effective immediately.


LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB4835LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1    AN ACT concerning utilities.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Safety
5Moratorium on Carbon Dioxide Pipelines Act.
 
6    Section 5. Legislative findings. The General Assembly
7finds and determines that:
8        (1) pipelines are being proposed in the State by
9    companies for the purposes of transportation of carbon
10    dioxide both from within the State and from locations
11    outside the State;
12        (2) the transport of carbon dioxide via pipelines
13    significantly affects landowners' rights to enjoy their
14    property; carbon dioxide pipelines may impede access to
15    property and fields, place permanent restrictions on the
16    use of land, reduce crop yield from construction
17    activities, and pose a risk of grave harm to humans,
18    livestock, and other animals if there is a release of
19    carbon dioxide;
20        (3) as specified in the Carbon Dioxide Transportation
21    and Sequestration Act, regulation of the construction,
22    maintenance, and operation of pipelines transporting
23    carbon dioxide is within the statutory and regulatory

 

 

HB4835- 2 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1    jurisdiction of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
2    Safety Administration (PHMSA) of the U.S. Department of
3    Transportation; and
4        (4) in response to a major carbon dioxide pipeline
5    failure in Satartia, Mississippi in 2020 that resulted in
6    local evacuations and caused almost 50 people to seek
7    medical attention, PHMSA conducted an investigation of the
8    risks to human health and the environment presented by
9    carbon dioxide pipelines; PHMSA announced, on May 26,
10    2022, that to strengthen CO2 pipeline safety and
11    oversight, PHMSA is initiating new rulemaking to update
12    standards for carbon dioxide pipelines, including
13    requirements related to improved safety, oversight, and
14    emergency preparedness and response.
 
15    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
16    "Carbon dioxide pipeline" or "pipeline" means the in-state
17portion of a pipeline, including appurtenant facilities,
18property rights, and easements, that are used exclusively for
19the purpose of transporting carbon dioxide to a point of sale,
20storage, or another carbon management application.
21    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
22    "Criteria pollutants" are the pollutants that have been
23identified as "criteria pollutants" by the United States
24Environmental Protection Agency under Section 108 of the Clean
25Air Act.

 

 

HB4835- 3 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1    "Hazardous air pollutants" are the pollutants that have
2been identified as "hazardous air pollutants" by the United
3States Environmental Protection Agency under Section 112 of
4the Clean Air Act.
5    "Sequester" has the meaning given to that term in Section
61-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
7    "Sequestration" means to sequester or be sequestered.
8    "Sequestration facility" means the carbon dioxide
9sequestration reservoir, underground equipment, and surface
10facilities and equipment used or proposed to be used in a
11geologic storage operation. "Sequestration facility" includes
12an injection well and equipment used to connect the surface
13facility and equipment to the carbon dioxide sequestration
14reservoir and underground equipment. "Sequestration facility"
15does not include pipelines used to transport carbon dioxide to
16a sequestration facility.
17    "Transportation" or "transport" means the physical
18movement of carbon dioxide by pipeline conducted for a
19person's or an entity's own use or account or the use or
20account of another person, persons, or entity.
 
21    Section 15. Temporary statewide moratorium on construction
22of carbon dioxide pipelines.
23    (a) No certificate of authority for the construction and
24operation of a pipeline intended for transport of carbon
25dioxide shall be issued by the Commission until:

 

 

HB4835- 4 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1        (1) the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
2    Administration has adopted revised federal safety
3    standards for transportation of carbon dioxide; and
4        (2) the State of Illinois has commissioned and
5    finalized a study, which shall be made available to the
6    public, determining how far carbon dioxide pipelines must
7    be separated from livestock, residences, hospitals,
8    schools, nursing homes, places of worship, jails, prisons,
9    businesses, industry, and other locations where people
10    congregate, in order to ensure adequate time for the safe
11    evacuation or rescue of people and animals in the event of
12    a pipeline rupture or leak; the study shall:
13            (A) include input from first responders, including
14        both voluntary and paid professionals; law enforcement
15        officials; medical and veterinary professionals;
16        transportation experts; carbon dioxide pipeline
17        engineers; meteorologists; geologists; persons trained
18        in computational fluid dynamic modeling and other
19        modeling of carbon dioxide plumes; the Illinois
20        Emergency Management Agency and Office of Homeland
21        Security; the Department of Public Health; County
22        emergency management agencies; township officials;
23        county boards; village boards; city councils; and the
24        general public;
25            (B) evaluate CO2 concentrations resulting from
26        pipeline ruptures or leaks in a variety of urban,

 

 

HB4835- 5 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1        suburban, and rural settings present in Illinois,
2        including concentrations resulting from leaks or
3        ruptures of carbon dioxide pipelines with varying
4        diameters and carbon dioxide flow rates, based on
5        predictions of the most precise available
6        computational fluid dynamic model of CO2 plume
7        movement;
8            (C) recommend setbacks for each such setting,
9        pipeline diameter, and flow rate, based on (i) the
10        concentrations of CO2 released in the event of a leak
11        or rupture, (ii) the time humans and, where
12        appropriate, livestock would be exposed to those
13        concentrations, and (iii) the ability to, and time
14        necessary to, self-evacuate or be rescued before
15        oxygen deprivation leads to serious health effects,
16        including, but not limited to, convulsions,
17        unconsciousness, coma, or death; among other
18        considerations, the study shall account for the
19        decreased mobility of elderly persons, young children,
20        persons who depend primarily on public transportation,
21        incarcerated persons, and persons gathered in spaces
22        where large numbers of people assemble, as well as the
23        availability of electric vehicles or other transport
24        options that do not use combustion engines; and
25            (D) recommend an initial amount of funding
26        sufficient to provide first responders, medical

 

 

HB4835- 6 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1        professionals, local governments, and other entities
2        involved in the evacuation or rescue of persons
3        potentially affected by a CO2 pipeline rupture with
4        the equipment, training, staffing, and other items
5        necessary to carry out safe and timely evacuations and
6        rescues in the event of a rupture; the study shall also
7        recommend fees to be required of pipeline operators to
8        ensure availability of the necessary sum, as well as a
9        method for updating the amount of funding and fee
10        changes to account for changing costs, inflation, and
11        other relevant factors.
12    (b) Any application for a certificate of authority to
13construct or operate a pipeline intended for transportation of
14carbon dioxide that, as of the effective date of this Act, is
15pending before the Commission shall (i) be held in abeyance,
16without prejudice, until the revised safety standards and
17study specified in subsection (a) have been finalized or the
18temporary moratorium has expired as provided in this Act, and
19(ii) be subject to any revised safety standards if adopted in
20legislation.
21    (c) The temporary moratorium will expire and this Act
22shall be repealed when any of the following occurs:
23        (1) 4 years have passed since this Act's effective
24    date;
25        (2) both the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
26    Administration's new safety standards and the study

 

 

HB4835- 7 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1    required by subdivision (a)(2) of this Section have been
2    finalized; or
3        (3) the State of Illinois has adopted comprehensive
4    legislation regulating the capture, transport, and
5    sequestration of carbon dioxide in Illinois, which
6    legislation includes, among other things:
7            (A) setbacks allowing for the safe evacuation or
8        rescue of persons and animals in the event of the
9        rupture or leak of a carbon dioxide pipeline;
10            (B) specifications limiting the use of eminent
11        domain for carbon dioxide pipelines and limiting the
12        use of property amalgamation for carbon dioxide
13        sequestration;
14            (C) the establishment and ongoing funding of an
15        emergency fund provided by entities that transport or
16        sequester CO2 to ensure first responders are able to
17        perform safe and timely evacuations, rescues, and
18        other emergency response actions in the event of a
19        carbon dioxide release from a pipeline or
20        sequestration site;
21            (D) mandatory financial assurance to cover the
22        cost of monitoring, corrective action, well-plugging,
23        and emergency response at sequestration sites, which
24        does not take the form of insurance, financial
25        guarantees, financial tests, or other self-bonding
26        mechanisms;

 

 

HB4835- 8 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1            (E) expanded monitoring of carbon sequestration
2        sites using more methods, and for longer duration,
3        than the monitoring required by the U.S. Environmental
4        Protection Agency;
5            (F) specifications concerning long-term liability
6        in the event of a release of brine or carbon dioxide
7        from a sequestration site;
8            (G) a ban on the use of captured carbon dioxide for
9        enhanced oil recovery in Illinois;
10            (H) emission limits that ensure that carbon
11        capture does not contribute to significant increases
12        in emissions of criteria pollutants or hazardous air
13        pollutants at facilities from which carbon is captured
14        or facilities that power capture;
15            (I) a mandate for a greenhouse gas life cycle
16        analysis for each facility from which carbon dioxide
17        is captured and a prohibition on carbon capture unless
18        the company seeking to capture carbon demonstrates
19        that the mass of carbon dioxide sequestered from the
20        project will be greater than the mass of greenhouse
21        gas emissions associated with the life cycle of
22        capture, transport, and storage of that carbon
23        dioxide;
24            (J) a mandate that alternatives to capture be
25        evaluated, including, but not limited to, renewable
26        energy, energy efficiency, and battery storage, when

 

 

HB4835- 9 -LRB103 38424 BDA 68560 b

1        the capture facility is a power plant; and
2        electric-battery powered vehicles when the capture
3        facility produces fuel; the evaluation of alternatives
4        shall compare the greenhouse gas pollution, water use
5        and water quality impacts, air pollution impacts, and
6        generation of waste of each alternative to those of
7        the proposed capture, transport, and sequestration of
8        the CO2;
9            (K) robust public participation opportunities for
10        all carbon capture, pipeline, and sequestration
11        projects in Illinois and public disclosure of all
12        documentation; and
13            (L) additional protections, potentially including
14        prohibition of CO2 pipelines and sequestration
15        proximate to drinking water aquifers designated as
16        sole source aquifers by the United States
17        Environmental Protection Agency.
 
18    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
19becoming law.