Fla. Admin. Code R. 62-528.410
(1) General Design Considerations.
(e) All Class I injection wells, except those municipal wells (publicly or privately owned) injecting noncorrosive wastes, shall inject fluids through tubing with a packer set immediately above the injection zone, or tubing with an approved fluid seal as an alternative. All existing non-municipal wells constructed without tubing and packer or a fluid seal shall modify their design to incorporate a tubing and packer or fluid seal no later than July 1, 1997, or cease injection unless an alternative to a packer has been approved by the Department under subparagraph 1., below. Existing wells receiving non-municipal waste through a tubing and packer shall not be allowed to remove the tubing and packer as long as injection of non-municipal waste continues unless an alternative to a packer has been approved by the Department under subparagraph 1., below. The tubing, packer, and fluid seal shall be designed for the expected service.
1. The use of other alternatives to a packer shall be allowed with the written approval of the Department. To obtain approval, the applicant shall submit to the Department a written request which shall set forth the proposed alternative and all technical data supporting its use. The Department shall approve the request if the applicant demonstrates that the alternative method will reliably provide a comparable level of protection to underground sources of drinking water.
2. In determining and specifying requirements for tubing, packer, or alternatives, the following factors shall be considered:
a. Depth of setting;
b. Characteristics of injection fluid (chemical content, corrosiveness, and density);
c. Injection pressure;
d. Annular pressure;
e. Rate, temperature and volume of injected fluid; and
f. Size of casing.
(f) For Class I wells the following designs are not allowed:
1. Annuli between casings open to the land surface in any injection well, and
2. Monitoring tubes emplaced and cemented in the annulus adjacent to the innermost or injection string of casing.
(h) Department approval, as described in subsection 62-528.100(2), F.A.C., is required prior to any of the following:
1. Remedial procedures that alter the basic design specifications, materials, or character of a Class I or III well;
2. Any work requiring the complete removal of the wellhead; or
3. Any injection of fluids other than those authorized under the existing permit.
(2) Exploratory Pilot Hole.
The Department shall require an exploratory pilot hole in any Class I well, or for Class III wells, at any proposed injection well site, and shall require that the hole be drilled in stages. The Department shall waive the requirements of this subsection if the applicant can demonstrate that they are not needed to protect underground sources of drinking water and that waiving the requirements will not adversely affect the successful construction or operation of the well.
(3) Drilling.
A step-by-step drilling plan shall be included in the design specifications for Class I and III wells. The drilling plan shall specify the proposed drilling program, sampling, coring, and testing procedures, and is subject to Department approval.
(4) Casings.
(5) Cementing.
(a) The applicant shall submit the proposed cementing program with the design specifications for Class I or III wells. The cement used in the construction of each newly drilled well shall be designed for the life expectancy of the well. In determining and specifying casing and cementing requirements, the following factors shall be considered:
1. Depth to the injection zone;
2. Injection pressure, external pressure, internal pressure, and axial loading;
3. Hole size;
4. Size and grade of all casing strings (wall thickness, diameter, nominal weight, length, joint specification, and construction material);
5. Corrosiveness of injected fluid, formation fluids, and temperatures;
6. Lithology of injection and confining zones; and
7. Type or grade of cement.
(g) The applicant shall submit his cement testing program with the permit application. The purpose of the cement testing program is to ensure that the cement seal is adequate to prevent migration of fluids in channels, microannular space, or voids in the cement. The methods of testing include:
1. Temperature Survey – shall be run within forty-eight hours after cementing;
2. Cement Evaluation Survey.
(i) Class I wells.
1. The final string of casing shall have a nominal overdrill of ten inches unless the applicant can affirmatively demonstrate that an overdrill of not less than five inches is sufficient. The annulus surrounding the final string of casing shall have a nominal five inch cement thickness from the bottom of the casing to land surface. The Department recognizes that these design requirements may not be necessary in all cases. The Department shall modify these requirements in the construction permit if the applicant submits proof that such modification will not adversely affect the successful construction and future operation of the well in such a way as to threaten an underground source of drinking water with contamination.
2. The remaining casings shall have a minimum thickness of 2.500 inches of cement surrounding the casings with not less than five inches of overdrill. A nominal ten inch overdrill shall be required with any intermediate string of casing for which an annular monitor tube of up to 2.375 inches maximum outer diameter is to be emplaced. Commensurate increases in the overdrill shall be required for monitor tubes larger than 2.375 inches in outer diameter.
3. The applicant shall include with the cementing program a centralizing program for the purpose of centralizing the casing, to provide adequate annular space around the casing for proper cementing.
(6) Testing During Drilling and Construction of New Class I Wells.
(a) Geophysical surveys and other tests shall be conducted during the drilling and construction of new Class I wells. A descriptive report interpreting the results of such geophysical surveys and tests shall be presented to the Technical Advisory Committee during in-progress reviews, as part of periodic progress reports, or in letter form as appropriate. Such reports shall include field copies of the surveys and test data and analysis results at the level required to support field decisions made during drilling or proposed during in-progress reviews. Such surveys and tests shall include:
1. Deviation checks shall be in accordance with subsection 62-528.410(3), F.A.C. Such checks shall be at sufficiently frequent intervals to assure that vertical avenues for fluid migration in the form of diverging holes are not created during drilling.
2. Such other geophysical surveys and tests as are needed after taking into account the availability of similar data in the area of the drilling site, the construction plan, and the need for additional information that may arise as the construction of the well progresses. In determining which geophysical surveys and tests shall be required, the following geophysical surveys shall be considered for use in the following situations:
a. For surface casing intended to protect underground sources of drinking water a resistivity, sonic survey, gamma ray, spontaneous potential, and mechanical or sonar caliper surveys before the casing is installed, and a cement evaluation or temperature survey after the casing is set and cemented.
b. For intermediate and long strings of casing intended to facilitate injection a resistivity, spontaneous potential, porosity, fracture finder surveys and gamma ray surveys before the casing is installed, and a cement evaluation, temperature, or density survey after the casing is set and cemented.
c. For Class I wells in which an annular monitor tube is proposed for other than the final or innermost casing a caliper survey in the reamed hole which is to contain the monitor tube, and a temperature survey in the monitor tube after the monitor tube has been set and cemented.
(b) The following information concerning the injection formation shall be determined or calculated for new Class I wells:
1. Fluid pressure;
2. Temperature;
3. Fracture pressure;
4. Other physical and chemical characteristics of the injection matrix; and
5. Physical and chemical characteristics of the formation fluids.
(7) Testing of Completed Class I Wells.
Upon completion of construction, the completed wells shall be tested to assure that the wells will function as built. Tests to be performed include:
(8) Testing of Class III Wells.
(b) Where the injection zone is a water bearing formation, the following information concerning the injection zone shall be determined or calculated for new Class III wells:
1. Fluid pressure;
2. Temperature;
3. Fracture pressure;
4. Other physical and chemical characteristics of the injection zone;
5. Physical and chemical characteristics of the formation fluids; and
6. Compatibility of injected fluids with formation fluids.
(9) Environmental Concerns During Construction.
Specific Authority 373.309, 403.061, 403.087 FS. Law Implemented 373.308, 403.021, 403.061, 403.062, 403.087 FS. History–New 4-1-82, Amended 5-8-85, Formerly 17-28.22, 17-28.220, 62-28.220, Amended 8-10-95, 6-24-97.