Ill. Admin. Code tit. 35, § 730.185 - Financial Responsibility
a) The
owner or operator of an injection well to which this Subpart H applies must
demonstrate and maintain financial responsibility that the Agency has
determined fulfills the following conditions:
1) The financial responsibility instruments
used must be from the following list of qualifying instruments:
A) A trust fund;
B) A surety bond;
C) A letter of credit;
D) Insurance;
E) Self insurance (i.e., the financial test
and corporate guarantee);
F) An
escrow account; or
G) Any other
instruments that the Agency determines are satisfactory.
2) The qualifying instruments must be
sufficient to cover the following costs:
A)
The costs of corrective action (that meets the requirements of Section
730.184
);
B) The costs of injection well
plugging (that meets the requirements of Section
730.192
);
C) The costs of post-injection
site care and site closure (that meets the requirements of Section
730.193
); and
D) The costs of emergency
and remedial response (that meets the requirements of Section
730.194
).
3) The financial
responsibility instruments must be sufficient to address endangerment of
underground sources of drinking water.
4) The qualifying financial responsibility
instruments must comprise protective conditions of coverage.
A) Protective conditions of coverage must
include, at a minimum, cancellation, renewal, and continuation provisions;
specifications on when the provider becomes liable following a notice of
cancellation if there is a failure to renew with a new qualifying financial
instrument, and requirements for the provider to meet a minimum rating, minimum
capitalization, and have the ability to pass the bond rating when applicable.
i) Cancellation. For purposes of this Subpart
H, the owner or operator must provide that its financial mechanism may not
cancel, terminate, or fail to renew, except for failure to pay that financial
instrument. If there is a failure to pay the financial instrument, the
financial institution may elect to cancel, terminate, or fail to renew the
instrument by sending notice by certified mail to the owner or operator and the
Agency. The cancellation must not be final for 120 days after receipt of
cancellation notice by the owner or operator and the Agency. The owner or
operator must provide an alternative financial responsibility demonstration
within 60 days after notice of cancellation, and if an alternate financial
responsibility demonstration is not acceptable (or possible), any funds from
the instrument being cancelled must be released within 60 days of notification
by the Agency.
ii) Renewal. For
purposes of this Subpart H, an owner or operator must renew all financial
instruments, if an instrument expires, for the entire term of the geologic
sequestration project. The instrument may be automatically renewed, as long as
the owner or operator has the option of renewal at the face amount of the
expiring instrument. The automatic renewal of an instrument must, at a minimum,
provide the holder with the option of renewal at the face amount of the
expiring financial instrument.
iii)
Cancellation, termination, or failure to renew may not occur and the financial
instrument will remain in full force and effect in the event that any of the
following occurs on or before the date of expiration: the Agency deems the
facility abandoned; or the permit is revoked or a new permit is denied; closure
is ordered by the Agency or a court of competent jurisdiction; the owner or
operator is named as debtor in a voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy proceeding
under Title 11 of the United States Code; or the amount due on the instrument
is fully paid.
B) This
subsection (a)(4)(B) would correspond with 40 CFR 706.85(a)(4)(ii) if such
existed. USEPA codified a paragraph (a)(4)(i) without a paragraph (a)(4)(ii).
Illinois codification requirements do not allow codification of a subsection
level unless multiple subsections exist at that level. This statement maintains
structural consistency with the corresponding federal rules.
5) The qualifying financial
responsibility instruments must be approved by the Agency.
A) The Agency must consider and approve the
financial responsibility demonstration for all the phases of the geologic
sequestration project prior to issuing a Class VI injection well permit
(Section
730.182
).
B) The owner or operator must
provide any updated information related to their financial responsibility
instruments on an annual basis and if there are any changes, the Agency must
evaluate, within a reasonable time, the financial responsibility demonstration
to confirm that the instruments used remain adequate for use. The owner or
operator must maintain financial responsibility requirements regardless of the
status of the Agency's review of the financial responsibility
demonstration.
C) The Agency must
disapprove the use of a financial instrument if the Agency determines that it
is not sufficient to meet the requirements of this Section.
6) The owner or operator may
demonstrate financial responsibility by using one or multiple qualifying
financial instruments for specific phases of the geologic sequestration
project.
A) In the event that the owner or
operator combines more than one instrument for a specific geologic
sequestration phase (e.g., well plugging), such combination must be limited to
instruments that are not based on financial strength or performance (i.e., self
insurance or performance bond), for example trust funds, surety bonds
guaranteeing payment into a trust fund, letters of credit, escrow account, and
insurance. In this case, it is the combination of mechanisms, rather than the
single mechanism, that must provide financial responsibility for an amount at
least equal to the current cost estimate.
B) When using a third-party instrument to
demonstrate financial responsibility, the owner or operator must provide a
proof that the third-party provider fulfills either of the following:
i) The provider must have passed financial
strength requirements of subsection (b)(6)(E) based on credit ratings;
or
ii) The provider must have met a
minimum rating, minimum capitalization, and have the ability to pass the bond
rating set forth in subsection (b)(6)(E), when applicable.
C) An owner or operator using certain types
of third-party instruments must establish a standby trust fund to enable the
Agency to be party to the financial responsibility agreement without the Agency
being the beneficiary of any funds. The standby trust fund must be used along
with other financial responsibility instruments (e.g., surety bonds, letters of
credit, or escrow accounts) to provide a location to place funds if
needed.
D) An owner or operator may
deposit money to an escrow account to cover financial responsibility
requirements. This account must segregate funds sufficient to cover estimated
costs for Class VI (geologic sequestration) financial responsibility from other
accounts and uses.
E) An owner or
operator or its guarantor may use self insurance to demonstrate financial
responsibility for geologic sequestration projects if the owner or operator or
its guarantor fulfill the following requirements:
i) The owner or operator or its guarantor
must meet a tangible net worth of an amount approved by the Agency;
ii) The owner or operator or its guarantor
must have a net working capital and tangible net worth each at least six times
the sum of the current well plugging, post-injection site care, and site
closure cost;
iii) The owner or
operator or its guarantor must have assets located in the United States
amounting to at least 90 percent of total assets or at least six times the sum
of the current well plugging, post injection site care, and site closure
cost;
iv) The owner or operator or
its guarantor must submit a report of its bond rating and financial information
annually; and
v) The owner or
operator or its guarantor must either have a bond rating test of AAA, AA, A, or
BBB, as issued by Standard & Poor's, or Aaa, Aa, A, or Baa, as issued by
Moody's, or meet all of the following five financial ratio thresholds: a ratio
of total liabilities to net worth less than 2.0; a ratio of current assets to
current liabilities greater than
1.5; a ratio of the sum of
net income plus depreciation, depletion, and amortization to total liabilities
greater than 0.1; a ratio of current assets minus current liabilities to total
assets greater than -0.1; and a net profit (revenues minus expenses) greater
than 0.
F) An owner or
operator that is not able to meet the corporate financial test criteria of
subsection (a)(6)(E) may arrange a corporate guarantee by demonstrating that
its corporate parent meets the financial test requirements on its behalf. The
corporate parent's demonstration that it meets the financial test requirement
is insufficient if it has not also guaranteed to fulfill the obligations for
the owner or operator.
G) An owner
or operator may obtain an insurance policy to cover the estimated costs of
geologic sequestration activities that require financial responsibility. This
insurance policy must be obtained from a third-party provider.
b) The requirement to
maintain adequate financial responsibility and resources is directly
enforceable regardless of whether the requirement is a condition of the permit.
1) The owner or operator must maintain
financial responsibility and resources until both of the following events have
occurred:
A) The Agency has received and
approved the completed post-injection site care and site closure plan;
and
B) The Agency has approved site
closure.
2) The owner or
operator may be released from a financial instrument in the following
circumstances:
A) The owner or operator has
completed the phase of the geologic sequestration project for which the
financial instrument was required, and the owner or operator has fulfilled all
of its financial obligations, as determined by the Agency, including obtaining
financial responsibility for the next phase of the geologic sequestration
project, if required; or
B) The
owner or operator has submitted a replacement financial instrument, and the
owner or operator has received written approval from the Agency that accepts
the new financial instrument and which releases the owner or operator from the
previous financial assurance instrument.
c) The owner or operator must have a detailed
written estimate, in current dollars, of the cost of performing corrective
action on wells in the area of review, plugging the injection wells,
post-injection site care, site closure, and emergency and remedial response.
1) The cost estimate must be performed for
each phase separately, and the cost estimate must be based on the costs to the
Agency of hiring a third party to perform the required activities. A third
party is a party who is not within the corporate structure of the owner or
operator.
2) During the active life
of the geologic sequestration project, the owner or operator must adjust the
cost estimate for inflation within 60 days prior to the anniversary date of the
establishment of the financial instruments used to comply with subsection (a),
and the owner or operator must provide this adjustment to the Agency. The owner
or operator must also provide to the Agency written updates of adjustments to
the cost estimate within 60 days after any amendments to the area of review and
corrective action plan (Section 730.184), the injection well plugging plan
(Section 730.192), the post-injection site care and site closure plan (Section
730.193), and the emergency and remedial response plan (Section
730.194).
3) The Agency must
approve any decrease or increase to the initial cost estimate. During the
active life of the geologic sequestration project, the owner or operator must
revise the cost estimate no later than 60 days after any of the following
events has occurred: the Agency has approved the request to modify the area of
review and corrective action plan (Section 730.184), the Agency has approved
the injection well plugging plan (Section 730.192), the Agency has approved the
post-injection site care and site closure plan (Section 730.193), or the Agency
has approved the emergency and response plan (Section 730.194), if the change
in the plan increases the cost. If the change to the plan decreases the cost,
any withdrawal of funds must be approved by the Agency. Any decrease to the
value of the financial assurance instrument must first be approved by the
Agency. The revised cost estimate must be adjusted for inflation as specified
at subsection (c)(2).
4) Within 60
days after an increase in the current cost estimate to an amount greater than
the face amount of a financial instrument currently in use, the owner or
operator must either cause the face amount to be increased to an amount at
least equal to the current cost estimate and submit evidence of that increase
to the Agency, or obtain other financial responsibility instruments to cover
the increase. Whenever the current cost estimate decreases, the owner or
operator may reduce the face amount of the financial assurance instrument to
the amount of the current cost estimate only in accordance with a written
approval from the Agency.
d) The owner or operator must notify the
Agency by certified mail of adverse financial conditions, such as bankruptcy,
that may affect the ability to carry out injection well plugging and
post-injection site care and site closure.
1)
In the event that the owner or operator or the third-party provider of a
financial responsibility instrument is going through a bankruptcy, the owner or
operator must notify the Agency of the proceeding by certified mail within 10
days after commencement of a voluntary or involuntary proceeding under Title 11
of the United States Code that names the owner or operator as debtor.
2) The guarantor of a corporate guarantee
must make the notification to the Agency required by this subsection (d)(2) if
the guarantor is named as debtor, as required under the terms of the corporate
guarantee.
3) An owner or operator
who fulfills the requirements of subsection (a) by obtaining a trust fund,
surety bond, letter of credit, escrow account, or insurance policy will be
deemed to be without the required financial assurance in the event of
bankruptcy of the trustee or issuing institution or a suspension or revocation
of the authority of the trustee institution to act as trustee of the
institution issuing the pertinent financial assurance instrument. The owner or
operator must establish other financial assurance within 60 days after such an
event.
e) The owner or
operator must provide an adjustment of the cost estimate to the Agency within
60 days after notification of an Agency determination during the annual
evaluation of the qualifying financial responsibility instruments that the most
recent demonstration is no longer adequate to cover the cost of corrective
action (as required by Section 730.184), injection well plugging (as required
by Section 730.192), post-injection site care and site closure (as required by
Section 730.193), and emergency and remedial response (as required by Section
730.194).
f) The Agency must
approve the use and length of pay-in-periods for trust funds or escrow
accounts.
Notes
Added at 36 Ill. Reg. 1661, effective January 20, 2012
BOARD NOTE: This Section corresponds with 40 CFR 146.85 (2017).
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