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Montana Finalizes First Set Of Rules For Oil, Gas Waste Disposal

The confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers lies near an oil and gas development near the North Dakota/Montana border, May 31, 2014.
Chris Boyer of Kestrel Aerial Services, Inc./NPCA
/
FLICKR (CC BY-ND 2.0)
The confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers lies near an oil and gas development near the North Dakota/Montana border, May 31, 2014.

The State of Montana last week finalized its first set of comprehensive rules for disposal of oil and gas production waste.

The regulations for Technologically Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material, or TENORM, went through several rounds of public comment and revision before it reached its final form June 26. 

The new rules include the TENORM waste limit of 50 picocuries per gram. The rules also set up new criteria for limiting worker exposure to radiation and made it necessary for a third party to monitor possible groundwater contamination instead of the facility itself.

Many public commenters in Montana said it was important that the state maintain the same radioactivity waste limit as North Dakota to prevent businesses in the Bakken from dumping their waste in Montana.

Waste and Underground Tank Management Bureau Chief Ed Thamke with the Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) said that was input the DEQ listened to.

"What we really wanted to do is provide a level playing field. We didn’t want to create any incentives for ways to be transported across the border," Thamke said. 

TENORM is a byproduct of oil and gas operations like fracking. Every state defines and regulates it differently.

Up until now, Montana had maintained a radioactivity maximum of 50 picocuries per gram but had lacked comprehensive guidelines.

Oaks Disposal northwest of Glendive is the only facility in Montana currently accepting TENORM. 

Kayla writes about energy policy, the oil and gas industry and new electricity developments.