OPW has addressed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Underground Storage Tank (UST) Regulations at the National Association of Convenience Stores Trade Show and Petroleum Equipment Institute Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada. The new UST regulations entered into full effect on October 13.

On July 15, 2015, the EPA published an update to the UST regulation and the state program approval regulation in the Federal Register. The revisions strengthened the 1988 federal UST regulations by increasing the emphasis on properly operating and maintaining UST equipment.

There are four major regulatory requirements that all U.S. stations must be prepared for pertaining to new and existing UST systems.

  1. Testing of sumps and under-dispenser containment systems must be performed every three years if the system uses interstitial monitoring of the piping as its primary form of leak deterrence.
  2. Spill-bucket testing will be required every three years, unless the UST system is outfitted with double-wall spill buckets where the interstitial space is tested regularly. Some states already require spill-bucket testing every year.
  3. Compliance testing of repaired components: Whenever any component in the spill-protection, overfill-containment and secondary-containment areas of the UST system needs to be repaired, compliance testing of the repaired system must be completed within 30 days, regardless of whether or not an actual product release occurred.
  4. Overfill-prevention equipment inspections will be required every three years, except in states where they are already required annually.

“It’s important for each site owner to get their site compliant as soon as possible,” said Ed Kammerer, Director of Marketing and Global Product Strategy. “Not just for the safety of their customers and our environment, but for their business as non-compliance penalties are fierce.”

For more information visit: opwglobal.com/epa-regulations

16th October 2018

16th October 2018