Bill Text: FL S0318 | 2016 | Regular Session | Comm Sub
Bill Title: Regulation of Oil and Gas Resources
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Failed) 2016-03-11 - Died in Appropriations [S0318 Detail]
Download: Florida-2016-S0318-Comm_Sub.html
Florida Senate - 2016 CS for SB 318 By the Committee on Environmental Preservation and Conservation; and Senator Richter 592-02111-16 2016318c1 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to the regulation of oil and gas 3 resources; amending s. 377.06, F.S.; preempting the 4 regulation of all matters relating to the exploration, 5 development, production, processing, storage, and 6 transportation of oil and gas; declaring existing 7 ordinances and regulations relating thereto void; 8 providing an exception for certain zoning ordinances; 9 amending s. 377.19, F.S.; applying the definitions of 10 certain terms to additional sections of ch. 377, F.S.; 11 revising the definition of the term “division”; 12 conforming a cross-reference; defining the term “high 13 pressure well stimulation”; amending s. 377.22, F.S.; 14 revising the rulemaking authority of the Department of 15 Environmental Protection; amending s. 377.24, F.S.; 16 requiring that a permit be obtained before the 17 performance of a high-pressure well stimulation; 18 specifying that a permit may authorize single or 19 multiple activities; deleting provisions that prohibit 20 the Division of Water Resource Management from 21 granting permits to drill gas or oil wells within the 22 limits of a municipality without approval of the 23 governing authority of the municipality; prohibiting 24 the department from approving permits for high 25 pressure well stimulation until certain rules are 26 adopted and take effect; requiring legislative 27 ratification of such rules; amending s. 377.241, F.S.; 28 requiring the Division of Water Resource Management to 29 give consideration to and be guided by certain 30 additional criteria when issuing permits; amending s. 31 377.242, F.S.; authorizing the department to issue 32 permits for the performance of a high-pressure well 33 stimulation; revising permit requirements that 34 permitholders agree not to prevent division 35 inspections; amending s. 377.2425, F.S.; requiring an 36 applicant or operator to provide surety that 37 performance of a high-pressure well stimulation will 38 be conducted in a safe and environmentally compatible 39 manner; creating s. 377.2436, F.S.; requiring the 40 department to conduct a study on high-pressure well 41 stimulation; providing study criteria; requiring the 42 study to be submitted to the Governor and Legislature 43 and posted on the department website; prohibiting the 44 department from adopting rules until the study has 45 been submitted to the Legislature; requiring the 46 department to adopt rules under certain conditions by 47 a specified date; amending s. 377.37, F.S.; increasing 48 the maximum amount of a civil penalty; creating s. 49 377.45, F.S.; requiring the department to designate 50 the national chemical disclosure registry as the 51 state’s registry; requiring service providers, 52 vendors, and well owners or operators to report 53 certain information to the department; requiring the 54 department to report certain information to the 55 national chemical registry; providing applicability; 56 requiring the department to adopt rules; amending ss. 57 377.07, 377.10, 377.243, and 377.244, F.S.; making 58 technical changes; conforming provisions to changes 59 made by the act; providing an appropriation; providing 60 an effective date. 61 62 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 63 64 Section 1. Section 377.06, Florida Statutes, is amended to 65 read: 66 377.06 Public policy of state concerning natural resources 67 of oil and gas; preemption.— 68 (1) It ishereby declaredthe public policy of this state 69 to conserve and control the natural resources of oil and gas in 70 this state, and the products made from oil and gas in this 71 state; to prevent waste of natural resources; to provide for the 72 protection and adjustment of the correlative rights of the 73 owners of the land in which the natural resources lie, of the 74 owners and producers of oil and gas resources and the products 75 made from oil and gas, and of others interested in these 76 resources and products; and to safeguard the health, property, 77 and public welfare of the residents of this state and other 78 interested personsand for all purposes indicated by the79provisions in this section. 80 (2)Further,It is the public policy of this statedeclared81 that underground storage of natural gas is in the public 82 interest because underground storage promotes conservation of 83 natural gas,;makes gas more readily available to the domestic, 84 commercial, and industrial consumers of this state,;and allows 85 the accumulation of large quantities of gas in reserve for 86 orderly withdrawal during emergencies or periods of peak demand. 87 It is not the intention of this section to limit, restrict, or 88 modify in any way the provisions of this law. 89 (3) The Legislature declares that all matters relating to 90 the regulation of the exploration, development, production, 91 processing, storage, and transportation of oil and gas are 92 preempted to the state, to the exclusion of all existing and 93 future ordinances or regulations relating thereto adopted by any 94 county, municipality, or other political subdivision of the 95 state. Any such existing ordinance or regulation is void. A 96 county or municipality may, however, enforce an existing zoning 97 ordinance adopted before January 1, 2015, if the ordinance is 98 otherwise valid. 99 Section 2. Section 377.19, Florida Statutes, is amended to 100 read: 101 377.19 Definitions.—As used in ss. 377.06, 377.07, and 102 377.10-377.45377.10-377.40, the term: 103 (1) “Completion date” means the day, month, and year that a 104 new productive well, a previously shut-in well, or a temporarily 105 abandoned well is completed, repaired, or recompleted and the 106 operator begins producing oil or gas in commercial quantities. 107 (2) “Department” means the Department of Environmental 108 Protection. 109 (3) “Division” means the Division of Water Resource 110 Management of the Department of Environmental Protection. 111 (4) “Field” means the general area that is underlaid, or 112 appears to be underlaid, by at least one pool. The term includes 113 the underground reservoir, or reservoirs, containing oil or gas, 114 or both. The terms “field” and “pool” mean the same thing if 115 only one underground reservoir is involved; however, the term 116 “field,” unlike the term “pool,” may relate to two or more 117 pools. 118 (5) “Gas” means all natural gas, including casinghead gas, 119 and all other hydrocarbons not defined as oil in subsection (16) 120(15). 121 (6) “High-pressure well stimulation” means all stages of a 122 well intervention performed by injecting fluids into a rock 123 formation at high pressure that exceeds the fracture gradient of 124 the rock formation in order to propagate fractures in such 125 formation to increase production at an oil or gas well by 126 improving the flow of hydrocarbons from the formation into the 127 wellbore. The term does not include well stimulation or 128 conventional workover procedures that may incidentally fracture 129 the formation near the wellbore. 130 (7)(6)“Horizontal well” means a well completed with the 131 wellbore in a horizontal or nearly horizontal orientation within 132 10 degrees of horizontal within the producing formation. 133 (8)(7)“Illegal gas” means gas that has been produced 134 within the state from any well or wells in excess of the amount 135 allowed by any rule, regulation, or order of the division, as 136 distinguished from gas produced within the State of Florida from 137 a well not producing in excess of the amount so allowed, which 138 is “legal gas.” 139 (9)(8)“Illegal oil” means oil that has been produced 140 within the state from any well or wells in excess of the amount 141 allowed by rule, regulation, or order of the division, as 142 distinguished from oil produced within the state from a well not 143 producing in excess of the amount so allowed, which is “legal 144 oil.” 145 (10)(9)“Illegal product” means a product of oil or gas, 146 any part of which was processed or derived, in whole or in part, 147 from illegal gas or illegal oil or from any product thereof, as 148 distinguished from “legal product,” which is a product processed 149 or derived to no extent from illegal oil or illegal gas. 150 (11)(10)“Lateral storage reservoir boundary” means the 151 projection up to the land surface of the maximum horizontal 152 extent of the gas volume contained in a natural gas storage 153 reservoir. 154 (12)(11)“Native gas” means gas that occurs naturally 155 within this state and does not include gas produced outside the 156 state, transported to this state, and injected into a permitted 157 natural gas storage facility. 158 (13)(12)“Natural gas storage facility” means an 159 underground reservoir from which oil or gas has previously been 160 produced and which is used or to be used for the underground 161 storage of natural gas, and any surface or subsurface structure, 162 or infrastructure, except wells. The term also includes a right 163 or appurtenance necessary or useful in the operation of the 164 facility for the underground storage of natural gas, including 165 any necessary or reasonable reservoir protective area as 166 designated for the purpose of ensuring the safe operation of the 167 storage of natural gas or protecting the natural gas storage 168 facility from pollution, invasion, escape, or migration of gas, 169 or any subsequent extension thereof. The term does not mean a 170 transmission, distribution, or gathering pipeline or system that 171 is not used primarily as integral piping for a natural gas 172 storage facility. 173 (14)(13)“Natural gas storage reservoir” means a pool or 174 field from which gas or oil has previously been produced and 175 which is suitable for or capable of being made suitable for the 176 injection, storage, and recovery of gas, as identified in a 177 permit application submitted to the department under s. 178 377.2407. 179 (15)(14)“New field well” means an oil or gas well 180 completed after July 1, 1997, in a new field as designated by 181 the Department of Environmental Protection. 182 (16)(15)“Oil” means crude petroleum oil and other 183 hydrocarbons, regardless of gravity, which are produced at the 184 well in liquid form by ordinary production methods, and which 185 are not the result of condensation of gas after it leaves the 186 reservoir. 187 (17)(16)“Oil and gas” has the same meaning as the term 188 “oil or gas.” 189 (18)(17)“Oil and gas administrator” means the State 190 Geologist. 191 (19)(18)“Operator” means the entity who: 192 (a) Has the right to drill and to produce a well; or 193 (b) As part of a natural gas storage facility, injects, or 194 is engaged in the work of preparing to inject, gas into a 195 natural gas storage reservoir; or stores gas in, or removes gas 196 from, a natural gas storage reservoir. 197 (20)(19)“Owner” means the person who has the right to 198 drill into and to produce from any pool and to appropriate the 199 production for the person or for the person and another, or 200 others. 201 (21)(20)“Person” means a natural person, corporation, 202 association, partnership, receiver, trustee, guardian, executor, 203 administrator, fiduciary, or representative of any kind. 204 (22)(21)“Pool” means an underground reservoir containing 205 or appearing to contain a common accumulation of oil or gas or 206 both. Each zone of a general structure which is completely 207 separated from any other zone on the structure is considered a 208 separate pool as used herein. 209 (23)(22)“Producer” means the owner or operator of a well 210 or wells capable of producing oil or gas, or both. 211 (24)(23)“Product” means a commodity made from oil or gas 212 and includes refined crude oil, crude tops, topped crude, 213 processed crude petroleum, residue from crude petroleum, 214 cracking stock, uncracked fuel oil, fuel oil, treated crude oil, 215 residuum, gas oil, casinghead gasoline, natural gas gasoline, 216 naphtha, distillate, condensate, gasoline, waste oil, kerosene, 217 benzine, wash oil, blended gasoline, lubricating oil, blends or 218 mixtures of oil with one or more liquid products or byproducts 219 derived from oil or gas, and blends or mixtures of two or more 220 liquid products or byproducts derived from oil or gas, whether 221 hereinabove enumerated or not. 222 (25)(24)“Reasonable market demand” means the amount of oil 223 reasonably needed for current consumption, together with a 224 reasonable amount of oil for storage and working stocks. 225 (26)(25)“Reservoir protective area” means the area 226 extending up to and including 2,000 feet surrounding a natural 227 gas storage reservoir. 228 (27)(26)“Shut-in bottom hole pressure” means the pressure 229 at the bottom of a well when all valves are closed and no oil or 230 gas has been allowed to escape for at least 24 hours. 231 (28)(27)“Shut-in well” means an oil or gas well that has 232 been taken out of service for economic reasons or mechanical 233 repairs. 234 (29)(28)“State” means the State of Florida. 235 (30)(29)“Temporarily abandoned well” means a permitted 236 well or wellbore that has been abandoned by plugging in a manner 237 that allows reentry and redevelopment in accordance with oil or 238 gas rules of the Department of Environmental Protection. 239 (31)(30)“Tender” means a permit or certificate of 240 clearance for the transportation or the delivery of oil, gas, or 241 products, approved and issued or registered under the authority 242 of the division. 243 (32)(31)“Waste,” in addition to its ordinary meaning, 244 means “physical waste” as that term is generally understood in 245 the oil and gas industry. The term “waste” includes: 246 (a) The inefficient, excessive, or improper use or 247 dissipation of reservoir energy; and the locating, spacing, 248 drilling, equipping, operating, or producing of any oil or gas 249 well or wells in a manner that results, or tends to result, in 250 reducing the quantity of oil or gas ultimately to be stored or 251 recovered from any pool in this state. 252 (b) The inefficient storing of oil; and the locating, 253 spacing, drilling, equipping, operating, or producing of any oil 254 or gas well or wells in a manner that causes, or tends to cause, 255 unnecessary or excessive surface loss or destruction of oil or 256 gas. 257 (c) The producing of oil or gas in a manner that causes 258 unnecessary water channeling or coning. 259 (d) The operation of any oil well or wells with an 260 inefficient gas-oil ratio. 261 (e) The drowning with water of any stratum or part thereof 262 capable of producing oil or gas. 263 (f) The underground waste, however caused and whether or 264 not defined. 265 (g) The creation of unnecessary fire hazards. 266 (h) The escape into the open air, from a well producing 267 both oil and gas, of gas in excess of the amount that is 268 necessary in the efficient drilling or operation of the well. 269 (i) The use of gas for the manufacture of carbon black. 270 (j) Permitting gas produced from a gas well to escape into 271 the air. 272 (k) The abuse of the correlative rights and opportunities 273 of each owner of oil and gas in a common reservoir due to 274 nonuniform, disproportionate, and unratable withdrawals, causing 275 undue drainage between tracts of land. 276 (33)(32)“Well site” means the general area around a well, 277 which area has been disturbed from its natural or existing 278 condition, as well as the drilling or production pad, mud and 279 water circulation pits, and other operation areas necessary to 280 drill for or produce oil or gas, or to inject gas into and 281 recover gas from a natural gas storage facility. 282 Section 3. Subsection (2) of section 377.22, Florida 283 Statutes, is amended to read: 284 377.22 Rules and orders.— 285 (2) The department shall issue orders and adopt rules 286 pursuant to ss. 120.536 and 120.54 to implement and enforcethe287provisions ofthis chapter. Such rules and orders shall ensure 288 that all precautions are taken to prevent the spillage of oil or 289 any other pollutant in all phases of the drilling for, and 290 extracting of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products, including 291 high-pressure well stimulations, or during the injection of gas 292 into and recovery of gas from a natural gas storage reservoir. 293 The department shall revise such rules from time to time as 294 necessary for the proper administration and enforcement of this 295 chapter. Rules adopted and orders issued in accordance with this 296 section are for, but not limited to, the following purposes: 297 (a) To require the drilling, casing, and plugging of wells 298 to be done in such a manner as to prevent the pollution of the 299 fresh, salt, or brackish waters or the lands of the state and to 300 protect the integrity of natural gas storage reservoirs. 301 (b) To prevent the alteration of the sheet flow of water in 302 any area. 303 (c) To require that appropriate safety equipment be 304 installed to minimize the possibility of an escape of oil or 305 other petroleum products in the event of accident, human error, 306 or a natural disaster during drilling, casing, or plugging of 307 any well and during extraction operations. 308 (d) To require the drilling, casing, and plugging of wells 309 to be done in such a manner as to prevent the escape of oil or 310 other petroleum products from one stratum to another. 311 (e) To prevent the intrusion of water into an oil or gas 312 stratum from a separate stratum, except as provided by rules of 313 the division relating to the injection of water for proper 314 reservoir conservation and brine disposal. 315 (f) To require a reasonable bond, or other form of security 316 acceptable to the department, conditioned upon properly 317 drilling, casing, producing, and operating each well and 318 properly pluggingthe performance of the duty to plug properly319 each dry and abandoned well and upon the full and complete 320 restoration by the applicant of the area over which geophysical 321 exploration, drilling, or production is conducted to the similar 322 contour and general condition in existence beforeprior tosuch 323 operation. 324 (g) To require and carry out a reasonable program of 325 monitoring and inspectingor inspection ofall drilling 326 operations, high-pressure well stimulations, producing wells,or327 injecting wells, and well sites, including regular inspections 328 by division personnel. Inspections are required during the 329 testing of blowout preventers, during the pressure testing of 330 the casing and casing shoe, and during the integrity testing of 331 the cement plugs in plugging and abandonment operations. 332 (h) To require the making of reports showing the location 333 of all oil and gas wells; the making and filing of logs; the 334 taking and filing of directional surveys; the filing of 335 electrical, sonic, radioactive, and mechanical logs of oil and 336 gas wells; if taken, the saving of cutting and cores, the cuts 337 of which shall be given to the Bureau of Geology; and the making 338 of reports with respect to drilling and production records. 339 However, such information, or any part thereof, at the request 340 of the operator, shall be exempt fromthe provisions ofs. 341 119.07(1) and held confidential by the division fora period of342 1 year after the completion of a well. 343 (i) To prevent wells from being drilled, operated, or 344 produced in such a manner as to cause injury to neighboring 345 leases, property, or natural gas storage reservoirs. 346 (j) To prevent the drowning by water of any stratum, or 347 part thereof, capable of producing oil or gas in paying 348 quantities and to prevent the premature and irregular 349 encroachment of water which reduces, or tends to reduce, the 350 total ultimate recovery of oil or gas from any pool. 351 (k) To require the operation of wells with efficient gas 352 oil ratio, and to fix such ratios. 353 (l) To prevent “blowouts,” “caving,” and “seepage,” in the 354 sense that conditions indicated by such terms are generally 355 understood in the oil and gas business. 356 (m) To prevent fires. 357 (n) To identify the ownership of all oil or gas wells, 358 producing leases, refineries, tanks, plants, structures, and 359 storage and transportation equipment and facilities. 360 (o) To regulate the “shooting,” perforating,andchemical 361 treatment, and high-pressure stimulations of wells. 362 (p) To regulate secondary recovery methods, including the 363 introduction of gas, air, water, or other substance into 364 producing formations. 365 (q) To regulate gas cycling operations. 366 (r) To regulate the storage and recovery of gas injected 367 into natural gas storage facilities. 368 (s) If necessary for the prevention of waste, as herein 369 defined, to determine, limit, and prorate the production of oil 370 or gas, or both, from any pool or field in the state. 371 (t) To require, either generally or in or from particular 372 areas, certificates of clearance or tenders in connection with 373 the transportation or delivery of oil or gas, or any product. 374 (u) To regulate the spacing of wells and to establish 375 drilling units. 376 (v) To prevent, so far as is practicable, reasonably 377 avoidable drainage from each developed unit which is not 378 equalized by counterdrainage. 379 (w) To require that geophysical operations requiring a 380 permit be conducted in a manner which will minimize the impact 381 on hydrology and biota of the area, especially environmentally 382 sensitive lands and coastal areas. 383 (x) To regulate aboveground crude oil storage tanks in a 384 manner which will protect the water resources of the state. 385 (y) To act in a receivership capacity for fractional 386 mineral interests for which the owners are unknown or unlocated 387 and to administratively designate the operator as the lessee. 388 (z) To evaluate the history of prior adjudicated, 389 uncontested, or settled violations committed by permit 390 applicants or the applicants’ affiliated entities of any 391 substantive and material rule or law pertaining to the 392 regulation of oil or gas. 393 Section 4. Subsections (1), (2), (4), and (5) of section 394 377.24, Florida Statutes, are amended, present subsections (6) 395 through (9) of that section are redesignated as subsections (5) 396 through (8), respectively, and a new subsection (9) and 397 subsection (10) are added to that section, to read: 398 377.24 Notice of intention to drill well; permits; 399 abandoned wells and dry holes.— 400 (1) Before drilling a well in search of oil or gas, before 401 performing a high-pressure well stimulation, or before storing 402 gas in or recovering gas from a natural gas storage reservoir, 403 the person who desires to drill for, store, or recover gas,or404 drill for oil or gas, or perform a high-pressure well 405 stimulation shall notify the division upon such form as it may 406 prescribe and shall pay a reasonable fee set by rule of the 407 department not to exceed the actual cost of processing and 408 inspecting for each well or reservoir. The drilling of any well, 409 the performance of any high-pressure well stimulation, and the 410 storing and recovering of gas are prohibited until such notice 411 is given, the fee is paid, and athepermit is granted. A permit 412 may authorize a single activity or multiple activities. 413 (2) An application for the drilling of a well in search of 414 oil or gas, for the performance of a high-pressure well 415 stimulation, or for the storing of gas in and recovering of gas 416 from a natural gas storage reservoir,in this state must include 417 the address of the residence of the applicant,or applicants, 418 which must be the address of each person involved in accordance 419 with the records of the Division of Water Resource Management 420 until such address is changed on the records of the division 421 after written request. 422 (4) Application for permission to drill or abandon any well 423 or perform a high-pressure well stimulation may be denied by the 424 division for only just and lawful cause. 425(5) No permit to drill a gas or oil well shall be granted426within the corporate limits of any municipality, unless the427governing authority of the municipality shall have first duly428approved the application for such permit by resolution.429 (9) The department may not approve a permit to authorize a 430 high-pressure well stimulation until the department adopts rules 431 for high-pressure well stimulations which are based upon the 432 findings of the study required pursuant to s. 377.2436 and such 433 rules take effect. 434 (10) The rules for high-pressure well stimulation shall be 435 submitted to the President of the Senate and Speaker of the 436 House of Representatives and such rules may not take effect 437 until they are ratified by the Legislature. 438 Section 5. Subsections (5) and (6) are added to section 439 377.241, Florida Statutes, to read: 440 377.241 Criteria for issuance of permits.—The division, in 441 the exercise of its authority to issue permits as hereinafter 442 provided, shall give consideration to and be guided by the 443 following criteria: 444 (5) For high-pressure well stimulations, whether the high 445 pressure well stimulation as proposed is designed to ensure 446 that: 447 (a) The groundwater near the well location, including 448 groundwater through which the well will be or has been drilled, 449 is not contaminated as a result of the high-pressure well 450 stimulation; and 451 (b) The high-pressure well stimulation is consistent with 452 the public policy of this state as specified in s. 377.06. 453 (6) As a basis for permit denial or imposition of specific 454 permit conditions, including increased bonding up to five times 455 the applicable limits and increased monitoring, the history of 456 prior adjudicated, uncontested, or settled violations committed 457 by the applicant or an affiliated entity of the applicant of any 458 substantive and material rule or law pertaining to the 459 regulation of oil or gas, including violations that occurred 460 outside the state. 461 Section 6. Section 377.242, Florida Statutes, is amended to 462 read: 463 377.242 Permits for drilling or exploring and extracting 464 through well holes or by other means.—The department is vested 465 with the power and authority: 466 (1)(a) To issue permits for the performance of a high 467 pressure well stimulation or the drilling for, exploring for, or 468 production of oil, gas, or other petroleum products thatwhich469 are to be extracted from below the surface of the land, 470 including submerged land, only through the well hole drilled for 471 oil, gas, and other petroleum products. 472 1. ANostructure intended for the drilling for, or 473 production of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products may not be 474 permitted or constructed on any submerged land within any bay or 475 estuary. 476 2. ANostructure intended for the drilling for, or 477 production of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products may not be 478 permitted or constructed within 1 mile seaward of the coastline 479 of the state. 480 3. ANostructure intended for the drilling for, or 481 production of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products may not be 482 permitted or constructed within 1 mile of the seaward boundary 483 of any state, local, or federal park or aquatic or wildlife 484 preserve or on the surface of a freshwater lake, river, or 485 stream. 486 4. ANostructure intended for the drilling for, or 487 production of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products may not be 488 permitted or constructed within 1 mile inland from the shoreline 489 of the Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic Ocean, or any bay or estuary 490 or within 1 mile of any freshwater lake, river, or stream unless 491 the department is satisfied that the natural resources of such 492 bodies of water and shore areas of the state will be adequately 493 protected in the event of accident or blowout. 494 5. Without exception, after July 1, 1989, anostructure 495 intended for the drilling for, or production of, oil, gas, or 496 other petroleum products may not be permitted or constructed 497 south of 26°00′00″ north latitude off Florida’s west coast and 498 south of 27°00′00″ north latitude off Florida’s east coast, 499 within the boundaries of Florida’s territorial seas as defined 500 in 43 U.S.C. s. 1301. After July 31, 1990, anostructure 501 intended for the drilling for, or production of, oil, gas, or 502 other petroleum products may not be permitted or constructed 503 north of 26°00′00″ north latitude off Florida’s west coast to 504 the western boundary of the state bordering Alabama as set forth 505 in s. 1, Art. II of the State Constitution, or located north of 506 27°00′00″ north latitude off Florida’s east coast to the 507 northern boundary of the state bordering Georgia as set forth in 508 s. 1, Art. II of the State Constitution, within the boundaries 509 of Florida’s territorial seas as defined in 43 U.S.C. s. 1301. 510 (b) Subparagraphs (a)1. and 4. do not apply to permitting 511 or construction of structures intended for the drilling for, or 512 production of, oil, gas, or other petroleum products pursuant to 513 an oil, gas, or mineral lease of such lands by the state under 514 which lease any valid drilling permits are in effect on the 515 effective date of this act. In the event that such permits 516 contain conditions or stipulations, such conditions and 517 stipulations shall govern and supersede subparagraphs (a)1. and 518 4. 519 (c) The prohibitions of subparagraphs (a)1.-4.in this520subsectiondo not include “infield gathering lines,” provided no 521 other placement is reasonably available and all other required 522 permits have been obtained. 523 (2) To issue permits to explore for and extract minerals 524 which are subject to extraction from the land by means other 525 than through a well hole. 526 (3) To issue permits to establish natural gas storage 527 facilities or construct wells for the injection and recovery of 528 any natural gas for storage in natural gas storage reservoirs. 529 530 Each permit shall contain an agreement by the permitholder that 531 the permitholder will not prevent inspection by division 532 personnel at any time, including during installation and 533 cementing of casing, during the testing of blowout preventers, 534 during the pressure testing of the casing and casing shoe, and 535 during the integrity testing of the cement plugs in plugging and 536 abandonment operations. The provisions of this section 537 prohibiting permits for drilling or exploring for oil in coastal 538 waters do not apply to any leases entered into before June 7, 539 1991. 540 Section 7. Subsection (1) of section 377.2425, Florida 541 Statutes, is amended to read: 542 377.2425 Manner of providing security for geophysical 543 exploration, drilling, and production.— 544 (1) BeforePrior togranting a permit for conductingto545conductgeophysical operations; drilling of exploratory, 546 injection, or production wells; producing oil and gas from a 547 wellhead; performing a high-pressure well stimulation; or 548 transporting oil and gas through a field-gathering system, the 549 department shall require the applicant or operator to provide 550 surety that these operations will be conducted in a safe and 551 environmentally compatible manner. 552 (a) The applicant for a drilling, production, high-pressure 553 well stimulation, or injection well permit or a geophysical 554 permit may provide the following types of surety to the 555 department for this purpose: 556 1. A deposit of cash or other securities made payable to 557 the Minerals Trust Fund. Such cash or securities so deposited 558 shall be held at interest by the Chief Financial Officer to 559 satisfy safety and environmental performance provisions of this 560 chapter. The interest shall be credited to the Minerals Trust 561 Fund. Such cash or other securities shall be released by the 562 Chief Financial Officer upon request of the applicant and 563 certification by the department that all safety and 564 environmental performance provisions established by the 565 department for permitted activities have been fulfilled. 566 2. A bond of a surety company authorized to do business in 567 the state in an amount as provided by rule. 568 3. A surety in the form of an irrevocable letter of credit 569 in an amount as provided by rule guaranteed by an acceptable 570 financial institution. 571 (b) An applicant for a drilling, production, high-pressure 572 well stimulation, or injection well permit, or a permittee who 573 intends to continue participating in long-term production 574 activities of such wells, has the option to provide surety to 575 the department by paying an annual fee to the Minerals Trust 576 Fund. For an applicant or permittee choosing this option the 577 following shall apply: 578 1. For the first year, or part of a year, of a drilling, 579 production, or injection well permit, or change of operator, the 580 fee is $4,000 per permitted well. 581 2. For each subsequent year, or part of a year, the fee is 582 $1,500 per permitted well. 583 3. The maximum fee that an applicant or permittee may be 584 required to pay into the trust fund is $30,000 per calendar 585 year, regardless of the number of permits applied for or in 586 effect. 587 4. The fees set forth in subparagraphs 1., 2., and 3. shall 588 be reviewed by the department on a biennial basis and adjusted 589 for the cost of inflation. The department shall establish by 590 rule a suitable index for implementing such fee revisions. 591 (c) An applicant for a drilling or operating permit for 592 operations planned in coastal waters that by their nature 593 warrant greater surety shall provide surety only in accordance 594 with paragraph (a), or similar proof of financial responsibility 595 other than as provided in paragraph (b). For all such 596 applications, including applications pending at the effective 597 date of this act and notwithstandingthe provisions ofparagraph 598 (b), the Governor and Cabinet in their capacity as the 599 Administration Commission, at the recommendation of the 600 departmentof Environmental Protection, shall set a reasonable 601 amount of surety required under this subsection. The surety 602 amount shall be based on the projected cleanup costs and natural 603 resources damages resulting from a maximum oil spill and adverse 604 hydrographic and atmospheric conditions that would tend to 605 transport the oil into environmentally sensitive areas, as 606 determined by the departmentof Environmental Protection. 607 Section 8. Section 377.2436, Florida Statutes, is created 608 to read: 609 377.2436 Study on high-pressure well stimulations.— 610 (1) The department shall conduct a study on high-pressure 611 well stimulations. The study must: 612 (a) Evaluate the underlying geologic features present in 613 the counties where oil wells have been permitted and analyze the 614 potential impact that high-pressure well stimulation and 615 wellbore construction may have on the underlying geologic 616 features. 617 (b) Evaluate the potential hazards and risks that high 618 pressure well stimulation poses to surface water or groundwater 619 resources. The study must assess the potential impacts of high 620 pressure well stimulation on drinking water resources and 621 identify the main factors affecting the severity and frequency 622 of impacts and must analyze the potential for the use or reuse 623 of recycled water in well stimulation fluids while meeting 624 appropriate water quality standards. 625 (c) Review and evaluate the potential for groundwater 626 contamination from conducting high-pressure well stimulation 627 under or near wells that have been previously plugged and 628 abandoned and identify a setback radius from previously plugged 629 and abandoned wells that could be impacted by high-pressure well 630 stimulation. 631 (d) Review and evaluate the ultimate disposition of high 632 pressure well stimulation fluids after use in high-pressure well 633 stimulation processes. 634 (2) The department shall continue conventional oil and gas 635 business operations during the performance of the study. There 636 may not be a moratorium on the evaluation and issuance of 637 permits for conventional drilling, exploration, conventional 638 completions, or conventional workovers during the performance of 639 the study. 640 (3) The study is subject to independent scientific peer 641 review. 642 (4) The department shall submit the findings of the study 643 to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of 644 the House of Representatives by June 30, 2017, and shall 645 prominently post the findings on its website. 646 (5) The department may not adopt rules for high-pressure 647 well stimulation until the findings of the study have been 648 submitted to the Legislature. However, by March 1, 2018, the 649 department must adopt rules to implement the findings of the 650 study, if such rules are warranted to protect public health, 651 safety, and the environment. 652 Section 9. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section 653 377.37, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 654 377.37 Penalties.— 655 (1)(a) AAnyperson who violates any provision of this 656 chapterlawor any rule, regulation, or order of the division 657 made under this chapter or who violates the terms of any permit 658 to drill for or produce oil, gas, or other petroleum products 659 referred to in s. 377.242(1) or to store gas in a natural gas 660 storage facility, or any lessee, permitholder, or operator of 661 equipment or facilities used in the exploration for, drilling 662 for, or production of oil, gas, or other petroleum products, or 663 storage of gas in a natural gas storage facility, who refuses 664 inspection by the division as provided in this chapter, is 665 liable to the state for any damage caused to the air, waters, or 666 property, including animal, plant, or aquatic life, of the state 667 and for reasonable costs and expenses of the state in tracing 668 the source of the discharge, in controlling and abating the 669 source and the pollutants, and in restoring the air, waters, and 670 property, including animal, plant, and aquatic life, of the 671 state. Furthermore, such person, lessee, permitholder, or 672 operator is subject to the judicial imposition of a civil 673 penaltyin an amountof not more than $25,000$10,000for each 674 offense. However, the court may receive evidence in mitigation. 675 Each day during any portion of which such violation occurs 676 constitutes a separate offense. This paragraph does notNothing677herein shallgive the department the right to bring an action on 678 behalf of aanyprivate person. 679 Section 10. Section 377.45, Florida Statutes, is created to 680 read: 681 377.45 High-pressure well stimulation chemical disclosure 682 registry.— 683 (1)(a) The department shall designate the national chemical 684 disclosure registry, known as FracFocus, developed by the Ground 685 Water Protection Council and the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact 686 Commission, as the state’s registry for chemical disclosure for 687 all wells on which high-pressure well stimulations are 688 performed. The department shall provide a link to FracFocus 689 through its website. 690 (b) In addition to providing the following information to 691 the department as part of the permitting process, a service 692 provider, vendor, or well owner or operator shall report, as 693 established by department rule, to the department, at a minimum, 694 the following information: 695 1. The name of the service provider, vendor, or owner or 696 operator. 697 2. The date of completion of the high-pressure well 698 stimulation. 699 3. The county in which the well is located. 700 4. The API Well Number. 701 5. The well name and number. 702 6. The longitude and latitude of the wellhead. 703 7. The total vertical depth of the well. 704 8. The total volume of water used in the high-pressure well 705 stimulation. 706 9. Each chemical ingredient that is subject to 29 C.F.R. s. 707 1910.1200(g)(2) and the ingredient concentration in the high 708 pressure well stimulation fluid by mass for each well on which a 709 high-pressure well stimulation is performed. 710 10. The trade or common name and the CAS Registry Number 711 for each chemical ingredient. 712 (c) The department shall report to FracFocus all 713 information received under paragraph (b), excluding any 714 information subject to chapter 688. 715 (d) If FracFocus cannot accept and make publicly available 716 any information specified in this section, the department shall 717 post the information on its website, excluding any information 718 subject to chapter 688. 719 (2) A service provider, vendor, or well owner or operator 720 shall: 721 (a) Report the information required under subsection (1) to 722 the department within 60 days after the initiation of the high 723 pressure well stimulation for each well on which such high 724 pressure well stimulation is performed. 725 (b) Notify the department if any chemical ingredient not 726 previously reported is intentionally included and used for the 727 purpose of performing a high-pressure well stimulation. 728 (3) This section does not apply to an ingredient that: 729 (a) Is not intentionally added to the high-pressure well 730 stimulation; or 731 (b) Occurs incidentally or is otherwise unintentionally 732 present in a high-pressure well stimulation. 733 (4) The department shall adopt rules to administer this 734 section. 735 Section 11. Section 377.07, Florida Statutes, is amended to 736 read: 737 377.07 Division of Water Resource Management; powers, 738 duties, and authority.—The Division of Water Resource Management 739 of the Department of Environmental Protection isherebyvested 740 with power, authority, and duty to administer, carry out, and 741 enforcethe provisions ofthis partlaw as directed in s.742370.02(3). 743 Section 12. Section 377.10, Florida Statutes, is amended to 744 read: 745 377.10 Certain persons not to be employed by division.—ANo746 person in the employ of, or holding any official connection or 747 position with any person, firm, partnership, corporation, or 748 association of any kind, engaged in the business of buying or 749 selling mineral leases, drilling wells in the search of oil or 750 gas, producing, transporting, refining, or distributing oil or 751 gas may notshallhold any position under, or be employed by, 752 the Division of Water Resource Management in the prosecution of 753 its duties under this partlaw. 754 Section 13. Subsection (1) of section 377.243, Florida 755 Statutes, is amended to read: 756 377.243 Conditions for granting permits for extraction 757 through well holes.— 758 (1) Before applyingPriorto the applicationto the 759 Division of Water Resource Management for the permit to drill 760 for oil, gas, and related products referred to in s. 377.242(1), 761 the applicant must own a valid deed, or other muniment of title, 762 or lease granting thesaidapplicant the privilege to explore 763 for oil, gas, or related mineral products to be extracted only 764 through the well hole on the land or lands included in the 765 application. However, unallocated interests may be unitized 766 according to s. 377.27. 767 Section 14. Subsection (1) of section 377.244, Florida 768 Statutes, is amended to read: 769 377.244 Conditions for granting permits for surface 770 exploratory and extraction operations.— 771 (1) Exploration for and extraction of minerals underand by772virtue ofthe authority of a grant of oil, gas, or mineral 773 rights, or which, subsequent to such grant, maybe interpreted774toinclude the right to explore for and extract minerals which 775 are subject to extraction from the land by means other than 776 through a well hole, that is by means of surface exploratory and 777 extraction operations such as sifting of the sands, dragline, 778 open pit mining, or other type of surface operation, which would 779 include movement of sands, dirt, rock, or minerals, shall be 780 exercised only pursuant to a permit issued by the Division of 781 Water Resource Management upon the applicant’s compliance 782applicant complyingwith the following conditions: 783 (a) The applicant must own a valid deed, or other muniment 784 of title, or lease granting the applicant the right to explore 785 for and extract oil, gas, and other minerals from thesaid786 lands. 787 (b) The applicant shall post a good and sufficient surety 788 bond with the division in such amount as the division determines 789may determineis adequate to afford full and complete protection 790 for the owner of the surface rights of the lands described in 791 the application, conditioned upon the full and complete 792 restoration, by the applicant, of the area over which the 793 exploratory and extraction operations are conducted to the same 794 condition and contour in existence beforeprior tosuch 795 operations. 796 Section 15. For the 2016-2017 fiscal year, the sum of $1 797 million in nonrecurring funds is appropriated from the General 798 Revenue Fund to the Department of Environmental Protection to 799 conduct a high-pressure well stimulation study pursuant to s. 800 377.2436, Florida Statutes. 801 Section 16. This act shall take effect July 1, 2016.