As
I noted last week, Sen. Roberts (R,KS) introduced S
763, the Underground Gas Storage Facility Safety Act of 2013. This bill
establishes limited State authority to establish and enforce regulations
concerning the safe construction and operation of underground reservoirs for
the storage of gas or hazardous liquids.
Definitions
Section 2 of the bill amends the definitions found in 49
USC 60101(a). First it re-orders subparagraphs 20 thru 25 so that the terms
are in standard alphabetical order. It then adds definitions for the following
new terms:
• Underground gas storage wellbore;
and
• Underground hazardous liquid
storage wellbore.
State Authority
Section 3 amends 49
USC 60104(c) dealing with preemption. It rewrites paragraph (c) into three
sub-paragraphs and adds 49 USC 60104(c)(3)(B) that specifically allows a State
authority to “enforce a State requirement for the safe construction and
operation of underground gas storage wellbores and underground hazardous liquid
storage wellbores” under two conditions. The first condition is if the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) specifically approves the requirement. The
second condition is if FERC fails to act on a State petition for approval of a
requirement within 30 days of the request being submitted.
Moving Forward
This is a new piece of legislation without a history in
either the Senate or House. This makes it difficult to predict what actions
will be taken in either body. The bill has been referred to the Commerce
Science and Transportation Committee for consideration, but neither Roberts nor
his co-sponsor Sen. Moran (R,KS), serve on that Committee so it will be difficult
for them to convince Chairman Rockefeller (D,WV) to schedule the required
hearings to move the bill forward.
1 comment:
With or without regulations for the safe storage of chemicals underground, the companies that are in charge or intending to build such storage facilities should take the responsibilities upon themselves to ensure that such construction is safe and robust over time.
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