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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR
SCONC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3-8-07
3-9-07
HB
SHORT TITLE
PUBLIC PEACE, HEALTH, SAFETY & WELFARE
Declaration of Water From Deep Aquifer
SB
1219/SCONCS
ANALYST
Woods
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates SB 1169; Conflicts with HB 1122
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of the State Engineer (OSE)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resource Department (EMNRD)
No Responses Received From (requested 3-8-07)
Attorney General Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Conservation Committee Finance Committee Substitute to Senate Bill 1219 seeks to
change the provisions barring the state engineer from declaring an underground water basin that
includes non-potable water from deep aquifers; and allowing for the declaration of underground
water basins that include non-potable water from deep aquifers.
This legislation carries no appropriation; but does include emergency language.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Office of the State Engineer (OSE) states, “This bill amends 72-12-25, 26, & 28 and limits
their applicability to use only in connection with oil and gas exploration and protection. These
pg_0002
Senate Bill 1219/SCONCS – Page
2
are the main existing purposes for which these statutes have been utilized." OSE indicates no
fiscal implications.
The Energy, Minerals and Natural Resource Department (EMNRD) indicates that, “The
proposed substitute bill would reverse the effect of sections of the Water Code enacted in 1967
[Sections 72-12-25, 72-12-26 and 72-12-28, NMSA 1978] that exclude from the jurisdiction of
the State Engineer (OSE) aquifers the top of which is at a depth of 2,500 feet or more below the
surface, and which contain non-potable water. The bill would expressly include such waters in
OSE jurisdiction, except for diversions for “use in connection with oil and gas exploration and
production." EMNRD indicates no fiscal implications.
EMNRD notes that adoption of this bill could add confusion to the law governing "produced
water" (water produced in connection with oil and gas operations). Most produced water is
produced from aquifers below 2,500 feet and is non-potable. Although the exclusion for
appropriations for use in connection with oil and gas exploration and production may be intended
to avoid confusing, the produced water issue, it will actually further complicate the issue. It
could be argued that production of water with oil and gas is "appropriation [of the water] for use
in connection with oil and gas production," thus requiring publication of notice under the bill's
provisions for any oil or gas well. Furthermore, since the bill excludes only appropriations for
use in oil and gas exploration and production, and does not exclude use of produced water
(produced in connection with oil and gas production) for other purposes, it conflicts with the
existing statutory authority of the Oil Conservations Division (OCD) of EMNRD over produced
water. EMNRD states:
Water produced from these deep aquifers is generally so high in both mineral and
hydrocarbon content that it cannot be economically treated for beneficial use, even
when the water is already at the surface due to production from oil and gas wells. The
oil and gas operators must dispose of these waters by injection or evaporation to prevent
environmental damage. Improving technology will likely render some produced water
usable in the not too distant future. However, there is no immediate prospect that the
water in these deep water aquifers will become sufficiently valuable that people will
want to sustain the substantial cost of drilling wells to such depths in order to
appropriate the waters for use.
EMNRD adds that OCD has statutory responsibility under the Oil and Gas Act [Section 70-2-
12.B(15)] to supervise the disposition of produced water. In 2003, the Legislature amended this
provision of the Oil and Gas Act, and enacted Section 70-2-12.1, to clarify that OCD jurisdiction
over the disposition of produced water is exclusive of OSE jurisdiction.
Although Section 70-2-12.1 would preclude OSE jurisdiction over disposition and use of
produced water, the bill, by allowing OSE to assume jurisdiction over the aquifers where most
produced water is found, would raise questions, which the bill does not resolve, about whether
OSE would have any authority or duty to supervise the withdrawal of water from these aquifers
in connection with oil and gas operations, and how that authority would interface with OCD's
authority under the Oil and Gas Act. It is also unclear how OSE could effectively administer
water from these deep aquifers in view of the limitations on its authority to permit use provided
in Section 70-2-12.1, and in provisions of the bill excluding jurisdiction over withdrawals for use
in oil and gas operations.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 1219/SCONCS – Page
3
Furthermore, OCD's statutory duty to regulate the disposition of produced water involves the
authority to authorize re-injection of such water into the same or another aquifer. At the present
time, and for the immediate future, the preferred method of disposition of produced water is
injection. The authority of OCD to authorize injection into deep aquifers could interfere with
OSE supervision of such aquifers, and OSE jurisdiction over such aquifers could impair the
ability of OCD to provide for disposition of produced water by injection.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
EMNRD suggests that the bill would blur the lines between the respective responsibilities of
OSE and OCD, which could impair the effectiveness of both agencies in performing their
respective functions.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
EMNRD states:
The bill more or less duplicates SB 1169 which was defeated in the Senate earlier in this
session.
The bill conflicts with HB 1122 which provides tax credits for delivery of treated
produced water to the Pecos River. That bill limits the water eligible for the credit to
water produced from below 2,500 feet, reflecting the understanding that withdrawal of
water from those depths would not require an OSE permit.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
EMNRD suggests that aquifers the tops of which are at or below 2,500 feet beneath the surface,
and in which the water is non-potable, will continue to be excluded from OSE jurisdiction. Since
most, if not all, withdrawals from these deep aquifers are incidental to oil and gas operations,
they will continue to be regulated by OCD pursuant to its authority under the Oil and Gas Act to
regulate the disposition of produced water.
BFW/nt