Colorado Petroleum Industry Accepts Waste Disposal Rule

Colorado Petroleum Industry Accepts Waste Disposal Rule

DENVER, Colorado, April 7, 2011 (ENS) – The Colorado Petroleum Association Monday gave up its attempt to roll back a 2008 Colorado regulation requiring companies to dispose of used waste pit liners in accordance with state solid waste laws.

The Petroleum Association’s pit liner petition to repeal Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission Rule 905 was withdrawn at the commission’s regular meeting Monday.

The nonprofit public interest environmental law firm Earthjustice opposed the petition on behalf of the Colorado Environmental Coalition and other conservation and sportsmen’s groups.

Pit liners protect soil and groundwater from contamination. (Photo courtesy Inland Tarp and Liner)

Pit liners are large sheets of synthetic, impermeable material used to keep fluids and other mining waste products from seeping into the ground during drilling operations. Used pit liners are typically coated with a variety of chemicals and hydrocarbons.

Burying liners in the ground could lead to contamination of soil and groundwater.

CPA argued that pit liners are exempt from federal environmental law, which is incorporated into Colorado state law, as “exploration and production waste.”

In response, Earthjustice requested an opinion letter from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on that issue.

On September 15, 2010, EPA ruled that pit liners are not exempt as exploration and production, E&P, waste.

The agency rejected CPA’s argument stating, “the synthetic pit liners used in E&P operations are not covered by the E&P exemption.”

In announcing the withdrawal of its petition, CPA indicated that it is working to develop an approach with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment to address its pit liners under current Colorado solid waste laws that govern landfill permitting and waste disposal.

Earthjustice will continue to monitor that process to ensure that CPA identifies an environmentally sound solution.

“CPA should be commended for its willingness to work within existing state rules,” said Earthjustice staff attorney Michael Freeman. “Rule 905 simply requires oil and gas companies to play by the same rules that apply to other industries doing business in Colorado. Those environmental laws protect Colorado communities, our drinking water, and our land.”

New and more environmentally-protective oil and gas regulations were put into place in Colorado in 2008. CPA’s petition, filed in March 2010, represented the first major attempt to roll back one of the rules.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2011. All rights reserved.

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