“This rulemaking gives Pennsylvania a more comprehensive and complete regulatory framework for Hazardous Liquid Public Utilities (HLPUs) necessary to limit the occurrence of subsidence events, pipeline accidents, and complaints,” noted PUC Chairman Stephen M. DeFrank.
“Throughout this rulemaking proceeding, the Commission received and considered extensive comments from a diverse cross-section of vested parties to include regulated industry, government officials, environmental advocates, and the general public,” Chairman DeFrank said. “In the end, we are pleased the final regulations have garnered widespread support to further enhance protection of public health, safety and the environment.”
There are two PUC certificated hazardous liquid public utilities involved in intrastate service in Pennsylvania – Sunoco Pipeline, L.P. (including the Mariner East Pipelines) and Laurel Pipe Line – and the new HVL regulations would apply to them, as well as any other future intrastate HVL public utilities.
The construction of the Mariner East Pipeline across Pennsylvania resulted in Sunoco/Energy Transfer Partners being convicted of criminal charges for environmental violations and resulted in an additional $31 million in penalties. Read more here.
Natural gas pipelines have been penalized over $71 million for environmental violations making them the most penalized industry in Pennsylvania. Read more here.
Natural gas pipelines have also been convicted of multiple criminal charges-- Mariner East & Revolution Pipelines, CNX Pipeline-- and charges against pipeline workers, Equitrans, and Shell Falcon Pipeline.
The Department of Environmental Protection published notice in the February 24 PA Bulletin the final technical guidance on using trenchless technology to construct natural gas, other pipelines and underground utilities is now available and effective. Read more here.
With this final rule, hazardous liquid public utilities will have Pennsylvania-specific standards to comply with, in addition to federal regulations currently administered by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) and enforced by the PUC.
Summary Of Changes
Chairman DeFrank added that the RFFRO builds upon the Commission’s Final Form Rulemaking Order previously adopted on Feb. 22, 2024 (FFRO) and focuses on the following key elements--
-- Improves communications among utilities and members of the public; local, county and state governments; and excavators, contractors, emergency responders, and school administrators.
-- Delegates authority to the PUC’s Pipeline Safety Section to make certain determinations and to request and receive key reports necessary for the Pipeline Safety Section to do its job of ensuring compliance with these standards.
-- Prevents construction, relocation, or conversion of existing pipelines under any buildings or dwellings except for repairs or replacement of existing pipelines.
-- Requires nondestructive tests of all girth welds with few exceptions.
-- Requires regular inspection and maintenance of proper depth of cover required by federal law for all pipe in use for transporting hazardous liquids, construction, and the maintenance of 12 inches clearance between the outside of the pipe and the extremity of other underground structures.
-- Requires geological and environmental impact studies regarding construction.
-- Requires the utility to be responsible for ensuring land agents interacting with the public regarding easements hold a valid PA license in law, real estate, engineering, land surveying, geology, or membership in good standing with the International Right of Way Association or its successor as the association has an ethics code of conduct.
-- Requires additional training of emergency personnel.
The PUC’s amendments to Chapter 59 of Title 52 of Pennsylvania’s Public Utility Code do not apply to pipelines covered under Act 127 of 2011, the Gas and Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Act.
Additionally, there are no retroactive design or construction regulations for those pipeline facilities that exist when the rule is made effective by operation of law.
However, the operations and maintenance, accident reporting, and public awareness regulations do apply to existing hazardous liquid pipeline facilities.
Click Here for the Final Form Rulemaking Order and rulemaking document..
Documents related to this rulemaking can be found at: Docket No.: L-2019-3010267.
Click Here for the complete PUC announcement.
NewsClip:
-- Marcellus Drilling News: Onerous New Regulations Approved For PA Liquids Pipelines, Landmen
Resource Links - Pipelines:
-- Bill Reported Out Of Senate Committee Would Allow Pipelines Like Mariner East To Apply For Waivers Of Any PUC Regulation, Law Or Policy [PaEN]
-- Spotlight PA: Little Information Made Public About Free Water Testing Ordered As Part Of Mariner East Natural Gas Liquids Pipeline Settlement Of Criminal Charges By Attorney General [PaEN]
PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:
-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - June 22 [PaEN]
-- DEP Posted 53 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In June 22 PA Bulletin [PaEN]
Related Articles This Week:
-- PUC: Act 13 Drilling Impact Fee Revenue Drops $100 Million From Last Year’s Record To $179.6 Million; Puts Hole In State, Local Budgets [PaEN]
-- PUC To Hold July 15 Prehearing Conference On Future Of Venango Water Company, Related Companies As Follow-Up To Conventional Oil Well Wastewater Spill In Venango County [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- Williamsport Sun: Mid State Trail Assn., Susquehanna Chapter Trout Unlimited Challenge PA General Energy Multiple Shale Gas Pipeline Plan In Northwestern Lycoming County
-- Marcellus Drilling News: Onerous New Regulations Approved For PA Liquids Pipelines, Landmen
-- Warren Times Guest Essay: Abandoned Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Still Pose A Threat - By Amanda Veazey, Geologist, CSR Services, LLC, Crawford County
-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Shale Gas Drilling Impact Fees Bring In $180 Million For 2023 On Lower Gas Price, Less Drilling
-- Observer-Reporter: Shale Gas Impact Fee Funds Plummet Due To Low Natural Gas Prices
-- The Energy Age Blog: Act 13 Shale Gas Impact Fee Drops $100 Million From Last Year’s Record, Even Though Gas Production Increased In 2023
-- TribLive: Natural Gas Well Impact Fee Allocations Drop; But ‘Every Little Bit Helps’
-- Marcellus Shale Coalition: Shale Gas Impact Fee Returns $180 Million [$100 Million Less Than Last Year]; Natural Gas Prices Drop $1.8 Billion In 2023, [Down From International Price Spikes Of 2022]
-- TribLive: North Huntingdon Twp Could Get Nearly $7,000 For Gas Rights Under Township Land In Westmoreland County
-- Kleinman Center For Energy Policy Podcast: How Potential For Global LNG Gas Oversupply Could Affect The Competitiveness Of The US Industry
-- The Allegheny Front - Reid Frazier: CNX Plan To Turn Mine Methane Gas Into Jet Fuel A ‘Win-Win’ Or Carbon Accounting ‘Gimmick’?
-- BeaverCountian.com: Shell Petrochemical Plant’s Sirens Caused Alarm In Beaver County; Company Took Nearly A Month To Address Middle-of-the-Night Alarms
-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Shell Petrochemical Plant Explains Nighttime Fire Alarms At Beaver County Plant, Warns Sirens Will Sound Later This Week
-- KDKA: Shell Petrochemical Plant Holding Emergency Drill TODAY In Beaver County
-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Will Creating Hydrogen Hubs In PA Get Us Away From Fossil Fuels? But How To Do It, And Whether It’s Possible Are Open Questions
-- CNHInews: Advocates Urge True Clean Energy Approach For Hydrogen, Others Pine For PA’s Natural Gas
-- Bloomberg: Cracks Appearing In LNG Gas Demand By China As Gas Supply Via Pipelines Grows
-- Reuters: Oil Companies Flare More Natural Gas, Defying Effort To Eliminate Practice
-- Reuters: Fossil Fuel Use, Emissions Hit Records In 2023, Report Says
[Posted: June 21, 2024] PA Environment Digest
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