Public Act 104-0390
 
SB1697 EnrolledLRB104 09225 AAS 19282 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Carbon Dioxide Transportation and
Sequestration Act is amended by adding Section 22 as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 75/22 new)
    Sec. 22. Compensation for damages to the surface.
    (a) An affected landowner is entitled to reasonable
compensation from an applicant who has been granted a
certificate of authority under this Act for damages resulting
from access to the landowner's property for required
activities taken to construct the pipeline, including, but not
limited to, the following:
        (1) compensation for damage to growing crops, trees,
    shrubs, fences, roads, structures, improvements, personal
    property, and livestock thereon and compensation for the
    loss of the value of a commercial crop impacted by
    pipeline installation; the value of the crop shall be
    calculated based on local market price by:
            (A) determining the average per acre yield for the
        same crop on comparable adjacent acreage;
            (B) determining the price received for the sale of
        the same crop on comparable adjacent acreage;
            (C) determining the acreage of the area impacted
        by pipeline activities and applying the determined
        price; and
            (D) making an initial determination of the value
        of the crop, which shall be determined by the affected
        landowner and submitted to the applicant who has been
        granted a certificate of authority under this Act;
        (2) compensation to return the surface estate,
    including soil conservation practices, such as terraces,
    grassed waterways, and other conservation practices, to
    the condition of the surface prior to accessing the
    property;
        (3) compensation for damage to the productive
    capability of the soil resulting from compaction or
    rutting if the parties are incapable of reaching
    resolution for such issues under the mitigation agreement
    detailed in paragraph (6) of subsection (b) of Section 20.
    An applicant shall not access a property where excessively
    wet soil conditions would not allow normal farming
    operations due to increased risk of soil erosion, rutting,
    or compaction. The Department of Agriculture may
    temporarily halt construction or any other activities on a
    proposed pipeline upon a finding of an applicant's
    noncompliance with this paragraph. If there is a dispute
    between the applicant who has been granted a certificate
    of authority under this Act and the landowner regarding
    the value of the damage to the productive capability of
    the soil, the applicant who has been granted a certificate
    of authority under this Act and the landowner shall
    consult with a representative of the soil and water
    conservation district in the respective county where the
    parcel of property is located for recommendations to
    restore the productive capability of the soil; and
        (4) compensation for damage to surface and subsurface
    drainage, including, but not limited to:
            (A) compensation in that the applicant who has
        been granted a certificate of authority under this Act
        shall perform immediate and temporary repairs for
        damage that occurs to subsurface drainage tiles that
        have water actively flowing through them at the time
        of damage; and
            (B) compensation such that the applicant who has
        been granted a certificate of authority under this Act
        shall compensate the affected landowner to permanently
        restore drainage to the condition of the drainage
        prior to accessing the property.
    (b) The compensation for damages required by subsection
(a) shall be paid in any manner mutually agreed upon by the
applicant who has been granted a certificate of authority
under this Act and the affected landowners. Unless otherwise
agreed, the applicant who has been granted a certificate of
authority under this Act shall tender to the landowner payment
by check or draft no later than 60 days after completing the
required activities under the application if the occurrence or
value of damages is not disputed. The landowner's remedy for
unpaid or disputed compensation shall be an action for damages
in any court of competent jurisdiction for the parcel of
property or the greater part thereof on which the activities
were conducted, and the landowner shall be entitled to recover
reasonable damages and attorney's fees if the landowner
prevails.
    (c) If any landowner prevails in litigation seeking
compensation for damages under this Section, the applicant who
has been granted a certificate of authority under this Act
shall be responsible for such reasonable attorney's fees and
costs as the court may allow and a judgment may be entered
therefor in favor of the plaintiff if the attorney's fees and
costs are not paid as provided by the court.
    (d) Nothing in this Section shall have any impact on an
applicant's fulfillment of the requirement to enter into an
agreement with the Department of Agriculture that governs the
mitigation of agricultural impacts associated with the
construction of the proposed pipeline as detailed in paragraph
(6) of subsection (b) of Section 20. An applicant shall comply
with the requirements of the agreement that governs the
mitigation of agricultural impacts as detailed in paragraph
(6) of subsection (b) of Section 20.
 
    Section 10. The Safety and Aid for the Environment in
Carbon Capture and Sequestration Act is amended by changing
Section 15 as follows:
 
    (415 ILCS 185/15)
    Sec. 15. Integration and unitization of ownership
interests.
    (a) If at least 2 pore space owners own pore space located
within a proposed sequestration facility, the owners may agree
to integrate the owners' interests to develop the pore space
as a proposed sequestration facility for the underground
sequestration of carbon dioxide.
    (b) If all of the pore space owners within a proposed or
permitted sequestration facility do not agree to integrate the
pore space owners' interests, the sequestration operator may
petition the Department of Natural Resources to issue an order
requiring the pore space owners to integrate their interests
and authorizing the sequestration operator or sequestration
facility permit holder to develop and use the integrated pore
space as a sequestration facility for carbon sequestration.
Such an order for unitization and integration of pore space
may only be issued if the sequestration operator has obtained
the rights from pore space owners of pore space underlying at
least 75% of the surface area above the proposed sequestration
facility. The petition shall include, but is not limited to:
        (1) the name and address of the petitioners;
        (2) the property index numbers or legal descriptions
    for the parcels of property and a geologic description of
    the pore space within the proposed or permitted
    sequestration facility;
        (3) a disclosure of any parcels of property overlying
    the pore space to be integrated, identified by property
    index numbers or legal descriptions, in which the
    applicant, any of its owners, officers, corporate
    subsidiaries, or parents, sister companies, or affiliates,
    at the time of submission of the application or within 10
    years prior to the submission of the application, have or
    had any real or personal interest, whether direct or
    indirect;
        (4) the names and addresses of all pore space owners
    owning property within the proposed or permitted
    sequestration facility as disclosed by the records of the
    office of the recorder for the county or counties in which
    the proposed or permitted sequestration facility is
    situated and a list of consenting and nonconsenting pore
    space owners, as well as a list of all properties for which
    a pore space owner is unknown or nonlocatable;
        (5) a statement that the petitioner has exercised due
    diligence to locate each pore space owner and to seek an
    agreement with each for pore space rights for the
    sequestration facility, including a description of the
    good faith efforts taken to identify, contact, and
    negotiate with each nonconsenting pore space owner;
        (6) a statement of the type of operations for the
    proposed or permitted sequestration facility;
        (7) a plan for determining the quantity of pore space
    sequestration capacity to be assigned to each separately
    owned parcel of property based on the surface area acreage
    overlying the proposed or permitted sequestration facility
    and for using the surface for Class VI well permit
    required activities under Section 35;
        (8) the method by which pore space owners will be
    compensated for use of the pore space, and a copy of all
    agreements entered into with consenting pore space owners
    regarding the compensation paid to a consenting pore space
    owner;
        (9) the method by which nonconsenting pore space
    owners will receive just compensation; and
        (10) a nonrefundable application fee of $250,000.
    The application fee shall be deposited into the Oil and
Gas Resource Management Fund for the Department of Natural
Resources' costs related to administration of this Act.
    (c) If the petition for a unitization order concerns
unknown or nonlocatable pore space owners, the applicant shall
provide public notice once a week for 2 consecutive weeks in
the newspaper of the largest circulation in each county in
which the proposed sequestration facility is located within 30
days prior to submission of the petition for a unitization and
integration order. The petitioner shall file proof of such
notice with the Department of Natural Resources with the
petition. The petitioner shall also provide public notice of
the public hearing described in subsection (d) in the same
manner within 30 days prior to the hearing on the petition for
a unitization order. The petitioner shall also send notice of
the filing of the petition and the notice of the public hearing
via certified mail to the last known address of each
nonlocatable pore space owner and provide copies of those
notices to the Department of Natural Resources. The notice
shall:
        (1) state that a petition for a unitization and
    integration order has been filed with the Department of
    Natural Resources;
        (2) describe the formation or formations and pore
    space proposed to be unitized;
        (3) in the case of an unknown pore space owner,
    indicate the name of the last known pore space owner;
        (4) in the case of a nonlocatable pore space owner,
    identify the pore space owner and the owner's last known
    address; and
        (5) state that any person claiming an interest in the
    properties proposed to be unitized should notify the
    operator of the proposed sequestration facility at the
    published address within 20 days of the publication date.
    Unknown or nonlocatable pore space owners that have not
claimed an interest by the time of the Department of Natural
Resources' public notice in subsection (d) shall be deemed to
have consented to unitization and integration of their pore
space.
    (d) Prior to issuing an order to unitize and integrate
pore space, the Department of Natural Resources shall issue a
public notice of the petition and shall hold a public hearing
on the petition. The public notice shall include copies of the
petition and all included attachments that are not protected
under the Freedom of Information Act. The public notice shall
include an opportunity for public comments and shall contain
the date, time, and location of the public hearing as decided
by the Department. At the public hearing, the Department shall
allow interested persons to present views and comments on the
petition. The hearings must be open to the public and recorded
by stenographic or mechanical means. The Department of Natural
Resources will make available on its website copies of all
comments received.
    (e) The Department of Natural Resources shall issue an
order unitizing and integrating pore space under subsection
(b) within 60 days after the hearing upon a showing that:
        (1) the petitioner has obtained a Class VI well permit
    or, if the well permit application is still pending at
    least one year from the date the petition has been filed,
    that the petitioner has received a Finding of
    Administrative Completeness from the United States
    Environmental Protection Agency;
        (2) the petitioner has made a good faith effort to
    seek an agreement with all pore space owners located
    within the proposed or permitted sequestration facility;
        (3) the petitioner has obtained the rights from pore
    space owners of at least 75% of the surface area above the
    proposed sequestration facility; and
        (4) all nonconsenting pore space owners have received
    or will receive just compensation for use of the pore
    space and use of the surface for Class VI well permit
    required activities. Additionally, a nonconsenting pore
    space owner's such compensation shall be no less than the
    average total payment package, considered as a whole with
    respect to an individual owner, provided in agreements
    during the previous 365 days to similarly situated
    consenting pore space owners for use of their pore space
    by the same sequestration operator for the same
    sequestration project. The nonconsenting pore space
    owner's compensation shall include just compensation and
    any operations term or injection term payments made upon
    or after the initiation of injection provided to
    consenting pore space owners in consideration of allowing
    use of their pore space for sequestration of carbon
    dioxide, but Such compensation shall exclude any
    incentives, such as signing bonuses, provided to
    consenting pore space owners prior to the initiation of
    injection. Such compensation shall include any operations
    term or injection term payments made upon or after the
    initiation of injection provided to consenting pore space
    owners in consideration of allowing use of their pore
    space for sequestration of carbon dioxide. In determining
    if pore space owners are similarly situated, the
    Department of Natural Resources shall take into account:
    the size, location, and proximity of the pore space; the
    geologic characteristics of the pore space; the
    restrictions on the use of the surface; the actual use of
    the surface; the relevant law applicable at the time the
    consenting pore space agreement was signed; title defects
    and title warranties; the proximity of the pore space
    owners' property to any carbon sequestration
    infrastructure on the surface; whether the injection
    interferes with any known mineral rights; and the fair
    market value of pore space when entering into a commercial
    contract. When evaluating the compensation provided to a
    similarly situated pore space owner, the Department of
    Natural Resources shall exclude any compensation provided
    to a pore space owner of a property identified by the
    applicant in paragraph (3) of subsection (b) and any
    compensation that was not provided as part of an arm's
    length transaction.
        Unknown or nonlocatable pore space owners shall also
    receive just compensation in the same manner as provided
    to the other nonconsenting pore space owners that must be
    held in a separate escrow account for 20 years for future
    payment to the previously unknown or nonlocatable pore
    space owner upon discovery of that owner. After 20 years,
    the compensation shall be transferred to the State
    Treasurer under the Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property
    Act.
    (f) The Department of Natural Resources' order for
unitization and integration of pore space under this Section
is not effective until the petitioner has been issued a Class
VI well permit from the United States Environmental Protection
Agency and the carbon sequestration permit from the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency.
    (g) An order for integration and unitization under this
Section shall: provide for the unitization of the pore space
identified in the petition; authorize the integration of pore
space of nonconsenting pore space owners in the pore space
identified; provide for who may unitize the pore space to
establish a sequestration facility to be permitted by the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency; and make provision
for payment of just compensation to nonconsenting pore space
owner under the integration order.
    (h) A petitioner shall provide a copy of any order for
unitization and integration of pore space to the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency.
    (i) If groundwater monitoring required by a Class VI
permit indicates that the source of drinking water has been
rendered unsafe to drink or to provide to livestock, the
sequestration operator shall provide an alternate supply of
potable drinking water within 24 hours of the monitoring
results becoming available and an alternate supply of water
that is safe for other uses necessary within 30 days of the
monitoring results becoming available. The alternate supplies
of both potable water and water that is safe for other uses
shall continue until additional monitoring by the
sequestration operator shows that the water is safe for
drinking and other uses.
    (j) After an order for unitization and integration of pore
space is issued, the petitioner shall request that the
Department of Natural Resources issue separate orders
establishing the amount of just compensation to be provided to
each nonconsenting pore space owner. When submitting this
request, the petitioner shall provide information
demonstrating the good faith efforts taken to negotiate an
agreement with the nonconsenting pore space owner, including,
but not limited to, the number and extent of the petitioner's
contacts with the pore space owner, whether the petitioner
explained the compensation offer to the pore space owner,
whether the compensation offer was comparable to similarly
situated pore space owners, what efforts were made to address
the pore space owner's concerns, and the likelihood that
further negotiations would be successful. All orders requiring
the provision of just compensation shall be made after notice
and hearing in which the Department of Natural Resources shall
determine the appropriate amount of just compensation to be
provided to each nonconsenting pore space owner as described
in this Section. The Department shall adopt reasonable rules
governing such hearings as may be necessary. In such a
hearing, the burden shall be on the petitioner to prove the
appropriate amount of just compensation consistent with this
Section. Both the petitioner and the pore space owner shall be
permitted to provide testimony and evidence regarding the
appropriateness of the amount of just compensation proposed by
the sequestration operator. An order by the Department of
Natural Resources establishing the appropriate amount of just
compensation to be provided to a nonconsenting pore space
owner shall be a final agency decision subject to judicial
review under the Administrative Review Law. Such proceedings
for judicial review may be commenced in the circuit court of
the county in which any part of the pore space is situated. The
Department of Natural Resources shall not be required to
certify any record to the court or file any answer in court or
otherwise appear in any court in a judicial review proceeding,
unless there is filed in the court with the complaint a receipt
from the Department of Natural Resources acknowledging payment
of the costs of furnishing and certifying the record. Failure
on the part of the plaintiff to file such receipt in court
shall be grounds for dismissal of the action.
(Source: P.A. 103-651, eff. 7-18-24.)