Texas 2025 - 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2790 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/13/2025

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                            89R10869 MZM-F
 By: Darby H.B. No. 2790




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to liability for capturing and storing carbon dioxide.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Title 4, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 100B to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 100B.  LIMITED LIABILITY FOR CAPTURING AND STORING CARBON
 DIOXIDE
 Sec. 100B.001.  DEFINITIONS.  In this chapter:
 (1)  "Captured carbon dioxide" means carbon dioxide
 from any source that, through human effort or means, is seized for
 the purpose of sequestering the carbon dioxide with the intent of
 permanently preventing the carbon dioxide from being released into
 the atmosphere, including carbon dioxide that is:
 (A)  captured from the atmosphere;
 (B)  stripped, segregated, or divided from a fluid
 stream; or
 (C)  captured from an emissions source, including
 from:
 (i)  an advanced clean energy project as
 defined by Section 382.003, Health and Safety Code;
 (ii)  an electric generation facility; or
 (iii)  an industrial source of emissions.
 (2)  "Carbon dioxide" means the chemical compound
 composed of one carbon and two oxygen atoms. The term includes:
 (A)  anthropogenic carbon dioxide;
 (B)  naturally occurring carbon dioxide;
 (C)  carbon dioxide captured from the atmosphere;
 and
 (D)  phases, mixtures, and combinations of carbon
 dioxide that include:
 (i)  a substance incidentally derived from
 the source materials for or process of capturing the carbon
 dioxide;
 (ii)  a substance added to the carbon
 dioxide stream to enable or improve storage of the carbon dioxide;
 and
 (iii)  a substance incidentally captured
 with carbon dioxide captured from the atmosphere.
 (3)  "Claimant" means a party seeking relief, including
 a plaintiff, counterclaimant, or cross-claimant, in an action
 described by this chapter and who is a land or mineral owner and
 party to a written agreement with the defendant related to the
 party's land or minerals and the defendant's activities regarding
 captured or stored carbon dioxide.
 (4)  "Defendant" means a person against whom an action
 described by this chapter is brought and who is:
 (A)  an owner or operator of:
 (i)  a facility used to store carbon
 dioxide; or
 (ii)  a mechanism or instrumentality being
 used to transport captured carbon dioxide, including a pipeline or
 a tank or vessel carried by motor vehicle, watercraft, or rail; or
 (B)  a producer of captured carbon dioxide.
 (5)  "Geologic storage" means the underground storage
 of carbon dioxide in a reservoir.
 (6)  "Geologic storage facility" means the underground
 reservoir, underground equipment, injection wells, and surface
 buildings and equipment used or to be used for the geologic storage
 of carbon dioxide and all surface and subsurface rights and
 appurtenances necessary to the operation of a facility for the
 geologic storage of carbon dioxide.  The term includes any
 reasonable and necessary areal buffer and subsurface monitoring
 zones, pressure fronts, and other areas as may be necessary for this
 state to receive delegation of any federal underground injection
 control program relating to the storage of carbon dioxide.
 (7)  "Legal requirement" means a statute, regulation,
 rule, order, judgment, or permit controlling or directing conduct
 or the design, construction, or use of a facility or equipment that
 was enacted, adopted, promulgated, or issued by the federal
 government, an agency of the federal government, a federal court,
 this state, an agency or court of this state, or a local government
 in this state.
 (8)  "Reservoir" has the meaning assigned by Section
 27.002, Water Code.
 (9)  "Stored carbon dioxide" means captured carbon
 dioxide that is being transported or temporarily or permanently
 stored.
 Sec. 100B.002.  CAPTURED OR STORED CARBON DIOXIDE NOT
 ACTIONABLE AS NUISANCE.  A claimant may not bring an action against
 a defendant on the basis that captured carbon dioxide, stored
 carbon dioxide, or a process associated with capturing or storing
 carbon dioxide:
 (1)  is a pollutant;
 (2)  constitutes a nuisance, including a public
 nuisance, under common law or the laws of this state, including
 Chapter 125; or
 (3)  has caused a nuisance-related injury.
 Sec. 100B.003.  LIMITED LIABILITY FOR INJECTION, MIGRATION,
 AND RELEASE OF CAPTURED CARBON DIOXIDE.  (a)  This section applies
 to a civil action for damages for injury to a person or property,
 including for interference with a possessory interest or an
 ownership right or an injury to crops or an animal:
 (1)  arising from an event governed by a legal
 requirement enacted, adopted, promulgated, or issued for the
 purpose of controlling or directing the transportation, capture, or
 storage of carbon dioxide to permanently prevent it from being
 released into the atmosphere; and
 (2)  resulting from:
 (A)  the transmission or injection of captured
 carbon dioxide into a geologic storage facility, including an
 action for damages caused by seismic activity;
 (B)  subsurface migration of stored carbon
 dioxide, including a claim for trespass or conversion arising from
 the subsurface migration of stored carbon dioxide into a pore
 space, geologic formation, cavity, void, reservoir, aquifer,
 mineral deposit, or other geologic formation; or
 (C)  captured or stored carbon dioxide being
 inadvertently released, including an action alleging environmental
 damage caused by the inadvertent release of captured or stored
 carbon dioxide into the air or surface water.
 (b)  A claimant may not recover noneconomic damages in a
 civil action described by Subsection (a) unless the claimant
 establishes, in addition to other requirements of law, actual
 damages and one of the following:
 (1)  that:
 (A)  the defendant concealed, withheld, or
 misrepresented information relevant to a permitting authority's
 decision to grant the defendant a permit to:
 (i)  transport, capture, or store carbon
 dioxide; or
 (ii)  conduct the process or operate the
 equipment or facility being used to transport, capture, or store
 carbon dioxide;
 (B)  the information described by Paragraph (A),
 as applicable:
 (i)  relates to the safety or propriety of
 injecting carbon dioxide into the geologic storage facility; or
 (ii)  is relevant to determining whether the
 stored carbon dioxide could migrate or escape in the manner in which
 it migrated or escaped;
 (C)  the permitting authority, in granting the
 defendant's permit:
 (i)  reasonably relied on the information
 provided by the defendant; and
 (ii)  did not receive the relevant accurate
 information from another source before granting the defendant's
 permit;
 (D)  the information described by Paragraph (A) is
 of sufficient importance that a reasonable person with the
 permitting authority's knowledge and experience would consider the
 information material to the permitting authority's decision to
 grant the permit; and
 (E)  the permit was granted not more than five
 years before the date the carbon dioxide was injected, migrated, or
 escaped;
 (2)  that:
 (A)  at the time of the event that caused the
 damage that is the basis of the action, the defendant was not in
 compliance with a legal requirement that governs an aspect of the
 defendant's conduct, including conduct regarding the defendant's
 equipment or facility, relevant to the event;
 (B)  the legal requirement is intended to protect
 a person or property from the kind of damage that occurred in the
 event; and
 (C)  if the defendant had been in compliance with
 the legal requirement, the event would not have occurred; or
 (3)  that, only if the aspect of the defendant's
 conduct, including conduct regarding the defendant's equipment or
 facility, that is the basis of the action was not subject to a
 permitting process described by Subdivision (1) or a legal
 requirement described by Subdivision (2):
 (A)  the defendant's actions or omissions were
 contrary to a standard industry practice for the conduct relevant
 to the damage-causing event;
 (B)  the defendant chose not to comply with the
 standard industry practice solely for an economic reason; and
 (C)  if the defendant had acted in accordance with
 the standard industry practice, the damage-causing event would not
 have occurred.
 Sec. 100B.004.  LIMITED LIABILITY FOR INTERFERENCE WITH
 ACCESS TO UNDERGROUND MINERALS AND WATER DUE TO STORAGE OF CAPTURED
 CARBON DIOXIDE.  (a)  A claimant may not recover noneconomic damages
 in a civil action for a claim that a defendant prevented or impeded
 access to, or interfered with the production of, underground
 minerals or water due to the storage of captured carbon dioxide in a
 geologic storage facility unless the claimant establishes, in
 addition to other requirements under the law, actual damages and
 that:
 (1)  the defendant withheld from or misrepresented to
 the permitting authority information relevant to the authority
 determining if storage of captured carbon dioxide in the geologic
 storage facility would prevent or impede the claimant's access to
 underground minerals or water or interfere with the claimant's
 production of the minerals or water;
 (2)  the permitting authority, in granting the
 defendant's permit:
 (A)  reasonably relied on the information
 provided by the defendant described by Subdivision (1); and
 (B)  did not receive the relevant accurate
 information from another source before granting the defendant's
 permit;
 (3)  the claimant did not know or receive notification
 of the proceeding in which the defendant obtained a permit to
 establish the geologic storage facility; and
 (4)  the information described by Subdivision (1) is of
 sufficient importance that a reasonable person with the permitting
 authority's knowledge and experience would consider the
 information material to the permitting authority's decision to
 grant the permit.
 (b)  A claimant who receives compensation, including through
 a lease payment, a royalty payment, or the purchase of an easement,
 in consideration of the possibility that a geologic storage
 facility may prevent or impede access to or interfere with the
 production of the claimant's underground minerals or water is not
 entitled to recover damages from the owner or operator of the
 facility if the facility prevents or impedes access to or
 interferes with the production of the claimant's minerals or water.
 (c)  The economic damages available under this section to a
 claimant not barred from recovering damages under Subsection (b)
 are limited to:
 (1)  if the defendant's geologic storage facility
 prevents or impedes access to the claimant's underground minerals
 or water, the increased cost to access the minerals or water that
 results from penetrating or circumventing the geologic storage
 facility;
 (2)  if the defendant's geologic storage facility
 interferes with the production of the claimant's underground
 minerals or water, the:
 (A)  increased cost to produce the minerals or
 water; and
 (B)  present value of the minerals or water that
 the claimant cannot with reasonable probability produce because of
 the interference; or
 (3)  if the defendant's geologic storage facility
 prevents access to and the production of the claimant's underground
 minerals or water, the present value of the minerals or water that
 the claimant cannot with reasonable probability produce because of
 the geologic storage facility.
 Sec. 100B.005.  EXEMPLARY DAMAGES.  In a civil action to
 which Section 100B.003 or 100B.004 applies, a claimant may not
 recover exemplary damages unless the claimant:
 (1)  proves the elements described by Section 100B.003
 or 100B.004, as applicable; and
 (2)  meets the requirements for recovery of exemplary
 damages under Chapter 41.
 Sec. 100B.006.  AGREEMENTS NOT IMPAIRED; WAIVABLE BY
 AGREEMENT.  (a)  This chapter may not be construed to impair, amend,
 alter, negate, or otherwise affect any right, obligation, or other
 term of an agreement.
 (b)  The provisions of this chapter may be voluntarily waived
 by agreement.
 SECTION 2.  Chapter 100B, Civil Practice and Remedies Code,
 as added by this Act, is an exercise of authority under Section
 66(c), Article III, Texas Constitution, and takes effect only if
 this Act receives a vote of three-fifths of all the members elected
 to each house, as provided by Subsection (e) of that section.
 SECTION 3.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only to
 a cause of action that accrues on or after the effective date of
 this Act.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.