30 Tex. Admin. Code § 331.163

Current through Reg. 49, No. 50; December 13, 2024
Section 331.163 - Well Construction Standards
(a) Plans and specifications. Except as specifically required in the terms of the disposal well permit, drilling and completion of the well shall be done in accordance with all permit application plans and specifications. Any proposed changes to the plans and specifications must be approved in writing by the executive director that said changes provide protection standards equivalent to or greater than the original design criteria.
(b) Casing and cementing.
(1) All Class I salt cavern disposal wells shall be cased and all casings which extend to the surface shall be cemented to the surface to prevent the movement of fluids and waste into or between underground sources of drinking water (USDWs) or freshwater aquifers, and to prevent potential leaks of fluids and waste from the well. Cementing shall be by the pump and plug or other method approved by the commission, and cement circulated shall be of a volume equivalent to at least 120% of the calculated volume needed to fill the annular space between the hole and casing and between casing strings to the surface of the ground. Circulation of cement may be accomplished by staging. The executive director may approve an alternative method of cementing in cases where the cement cannot be recirculated to the surface, provided the owner or operator can demonstrate by using logs that the cement is continuous or does not allow any fluid and waste movement behind the well casings. Casing and cement used in the construction of each newly drilled well shall be designed for the life expectancy of the well, including the post-closure care period.
(A) Surface casing shall be set to a minimum subsurface depth, as determined by the executive director, which extends into a confining bed below the lowest formation containing a USDW or freshwater aquifer.
(B) At least one string of intermediate casing, using a sufficient number of centralizers, shall extend at least 100 feet into the salt stock.
(C) At least one long string casing, using a sufficient number of centralizers, shall extend into the salt stock, to the following depths, whichever is greater:
(i) 500 feet into the salt stock; or
(ii) 500 feet below any rock type of recognizable thickness as determined by logging, which is different from salt, and that is hydraulically connected to formations outside the salt stock. For the purposes of this rule, all rock types of recognizable thickness on logs which are different from salt shall be assumed to be in hydraulic connection unless demonstrated otherwise.
(2) In determining and specifying casing and cementing requirements, the following factors shall be considered:
(A) depth of lowermost USDW or freshwater aquifer;
(B) depth to the injection zone;
(C) injection pressure, external pressure, internal pressure, and axial loading;
(D) hole size;
(E) size and grade of all casing strings (wall thickness, diameter, nominal weight, length, joint specification, and construction material);
(F) the maximum burst and collapse pressures, and tensile stresses which may be experienced at any point along the length of the casings at any time during the construction, operation, and closure of the well;
(G) corrosive effects of injected materials, formation fluids, and temperatures;
(H) lithology of injection and confining zones;
(I) types and grades of cement;
(J) quantity and chemical composition of the injected fluid; and
(K) cement and cement additives which must, at a minimum, be of sufficient quality and quantity to maintain integrity over the design life of the well.
(c) Injection tubings. Except for circulation of drilling fluids during well construction, all injection activities for salt cavern construction and waste disposal in a salt cavern shall be performed using two concentric and removable injection tubings suspended from the wellhead.
(1) All injection activities during cavern construction shall be performed with the annulus between the tubing and long string casing filled with a noncorrosive fluid sufficient to protect the bond between salt, cement, and the long string casing seat.
(2) All injection of waste into a salt cavern shall be performed through the inner tubing with a packer to seal the annulus between the tubing and long string casing near the bottom of the long string casing.
(d) Well annulus system factors for consideration. All elements of the design of the well's tubing-long string casing annulus system, including the outer tubing and packer, shall be approved by permit or by the executive director's approval that any proposed modifications to the plans and specifications in the permit application will provide protection equivalent to or greater than the original plans and specifications. In determining and specifying requirements for a tubing and packer system, the following factors shall be considered:
(1) depth of setting;
(2) characteristics of injection fluid and waste;
(3) injection pressure;
(4) annular pressure;
(5) rate, temperature, and volume of injected fluid;
(6) size of casing; and
(7) tensile, burst, and collapse strengths of the tubing.
(e) Logs and tests.
(1) Geophysical logging. Appropriate logs and other tests shall be conducted during the drilling and construction phases of the well including drilling into the salt. All logs and tests shall be interpreted by the service company which processed the logs or conducted the test; or by other qualified persons. A minimum of the following logs and tests shall be conducted:
(A) deviation checks on all holes, conducted at sufficiently frequent intervals to assure that avenues for fluid migration in the form of diverging holes are not created during drilling;
(B) a spontaneous potential and resistivity log for all formations overlying the caprock;
(C) from the ground surface or from the base of conductor casing to the total investigated depth including all core hole or pilot hole:
(i) natural gamma ray log;
(ii) compensated density and neutron porosity logs;
(iii) acoustic or sonic log;
(iv) inclination (directional) survey; and
(v) caliper log (open hole);
(D) from the ground surface or from the base of conductor casing to the lowermost casing seat:
(i) cement bond with variable density log;
(ii) temperature log (cased hole); and
(iii) casing inspection log;
(E) fracture detector log from the base of the surface casing to the total investigated depth including all core hole or pilot hole; and
(F) a vertical seismic profile.
(2) Pressure tests.
(A) After installation and cementing of casings, and prior to drilling out the cemented casing shoe, surface casing shall be pressure tested at mill test pressure or 80% of the calculated internal pressure at minimum yield strength, and the intermediate and long string casing shall be tested to 1,500 pounds per square inch (psi) for 30 minutes, unless otherwise specified by the executive director.
(B) After drilling out the cemented long string casing shoe, and prior to drilling more than 100 feet of core hole or pilot hole below the long string casing shoe, the bond between the salt, cement, and casing shall be tested at a pressure of 0.8 psi per foot of depth.
(C) The pilot hole and/or core hole shall be tested between the long string casing shoe and the total investigated depth, at a casing seat pressure of 0.8 psi per foot of depth.
(3) Coring.
(A) Full-hole continuous cores shall be taken beginning at the top of the caprock, or if caprock is not encountered, from the top of the salt stock, to a total investigated depth of 1,000 feet below the intended cavern floor. Cores shall be analyzed at sufficient frequency to provide representative data for the caprock, salt cavern confining zone, and the salt cavern injection zone, including permeability, porosity, bulk density, compressive strength (uniaxial), shear strength (triaxial), water content, and compatibility with permitted waste material. The full-hole, continuous cores shall be photographed for permanent records. The photographs of the cores shall be submitted to the commission as a part of the well completion report as required by § 331.167(a)(1) of this title (relating to Reporting Requirements). The cores shall be archived at a facility approved by the executive director. The photos and cores will be maintained as public records.
(B) In situ permeability, lithostatic gradients, and fracture pressure gradients shall be determined in the core hole for the salt, within the cavern injection interval.
(C) Prior to commencement of injection for cavern construction, the pilot hole or core hole shall be filled with salt-saturated cement from total investigated depth back to the designed depth of the salt cavern floor.
(4) Well integrity testing. The mechanical integrity of a well must be demonstrated prior to initiation of injection activities. A mechanical integrity test shall consist of:
(A) a pressure test with liquid or gas;
(B) a temperature, noise log, or oxygen activation log;
(C) a casing inspection log, if required by the executive director; and
(D) any other test required by the executive director.
(f) Compatibility. All well materials must be compatible with formations and fluids with which the materials may be expected to come into contact. A well shall be deemed to have compatibility as long as the materials used in the construction of the well meet or exceed standards developed for such materials by the American Petroleum Institute (API), the American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM), or comparable standards acceptable to the executive director.
(g) Pre-injection units.
(1) The injection pump system shall be designed to assure that the surface injection pressure limitations authorized by the well permit shall not be exceeded.
(2) Instrumentation shall be installed to continuously monitor changes in annulus pressure and annulus fluid volume for the purpose of detecting well malfunctions.
(3) Pre-injection units, while allowing for pressure release, shall be designed to prevent the release of unauthorized cavern contents to the atmosphere.
(4) To protect the ground surface from spills and releases, the wellhead will have secondary containment in the form of a diked, impermeable pad or sump.
(h) Construction supervision. All phases of well construction and all phases of any well workover shall be supervised by a licensed professional engineer or licensed professional geoscientist, as appropriate, with current registration under the Texas Engineering Practice Act or Texas Geoscience Practice Act, who is knowledgeable and experienced in practical drilling engineering and who is familiar with the special conditions and requirements of injection well construction.
(i) Approval of completion of the well construction stage. Prior to beginning cavern construction, the permittee shall obtain written approval from the executive director which states that the well construction is in compliance with the applicable provisions of the permit. To obtain approval, the permittee shall submit to the executive director within 90 days of completion of well construction, including all logging, coring, and testing of the pilot hole, the following reports and certifications prepared and sealed by a licensed professional engineer or licensed professional geoscientist with current registration under the Texas Engineering Practice Act or Texas Geoscience Practice Act:
(1) final construction, "as-built" plans and specifications, reservoir data, and an evaluation of the considerations set out in § 331.45(2) of this title (relating to Executive Director Approval of Construction and Completion);
(2) certification that construction of the well has been completed in accordance with the provisions of the disposal well permit and with the design and construction specifications of the permittee's application; and
(3) certification that actual reservoir data obtained will not result in the need for a change in the operating parameters specified in the permit.

30 Tex. Admin. Code § 331.163

The provisions of this §331.163 adopted to be effective June 22, 1992, 17 TexReg 4097; amended to be effective January 2, 1995, 19 TexReg 10099; amended to be effective November 23, 2000, 25 TexReg 11433; amended to be effective May 30, 2002, 27 TexReg 4576; amended to be effective January 9, 2003, 28 TexReg 340; amended to be effective October 2, 2003, 28 TexReg 8367