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OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
ABOVE GROUND OIL TANK INSPECTIONS
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
  THE RISK
  LEAK REPORTING
  EVIDENCE OF BURIED
  REPORT LANGUAGE
  TEST THE TANK
  FAILURE MECHANISMS
  REMOVAL ABANDONMENT
BURIED TANKS, FINDING
  SITE INSPECTION
  SIGNS OF BURIED OIL TANKS
  INSPECT THE GROUNDS
  REVIEW TANK HISTORY
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
PIPING DEFECTS - OIL TANKS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK INSPECTION REPORTS
  BURIED OIL TANKS
  OIL TANK IN GARAGE
  OIL TANK NEAR WATER
  TANK CLOSE TO FURNACE
  TANK EXPOSED TO WEATHER
  TANK LEAKY/PATCHED
  TANK PIPING DEFECTS
    OIL LINE EXPOSED
    SINGLE HIGH OIL LINE
    OIL LINE LEAKS
    SINGLE LINE BURIED TANK
    DUAL LINE 2 VALVES
    HEAT TAPE HAZARD
    CAULK PIPE ENTRANCES
    NO OIL TANK VENT PIPE
    OIL FILL PIPE EXPOSED
  OIL FILTER - NONE
  FIRE SAFETY VALVE
  TANK SUPPORT
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LIFE
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK INSPECTION REPORTS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
TANK TESTING COs
WATER in OIL TANKS
More Information

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Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing Water Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
More Information
Contact Us


Heating Oil Underground & Above ground Oil Storage Tank Leaks, Testing, Problems & Solutions, Home Buyer's / Home Owner's Guide
OilTankAPedia ©

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  • Oil Storage Tank Information Website
  • What to do if you have an underground or above ground oil tank
  • Oil tank life expectancy
  • Cause & prevention of leaky oil tanks
  • Oil tank abandonment, replacement options
  • Oil tank leak testing procedures, companies
  • Oil storage tank regulations
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest. We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices, false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.

These online articles answer most questions about above ground or buried oil storage tanks. Extensive free un-biased oil storage tank inspection and testing advice for property buyers and owners. This document lets you know what to ask about oil storage tanks, what oil tank leak tests to order, how to interpret oil tank testing results, what to do if there is a buried fuel or petroleum storage tank at a property, what to do if there is or was a leaky oil storage tank or petroleum storage tank, and how to reduce the chances of an oil leak or oil spill in the future.

We include detailed information about underground (buried) oil storage tanks (USTs), aboveground oil storage tanks (ASTs), above ground fuel storage tanks, reporting and cleaning up oil tank leaks, and choosing among oil tank leak testing methods. We discuss how to find buried oil tanks, how to remove or abandon oil tanks and how to recognize evidence that there was a previous oil tank at a property even if the oil tank may have been removed (or perhaps left buried in place). We discuss what to do if an oil tank has already been removed or abandoned.

We provide links to every U.S. state regulatory agency concerned with oil and other storage tanks and to regulatory agencies in Canada and other countries. Environmental damage from oil leaks, oil spill cleanup, are also discussed. We discuss oil spill cleanup, oil spill and odor remediation, and bioremediation, for fuel oil or heating oil. LP Gas tanks are also addressed. Home heating oil tank leak and environmental contamination risks are important concerns for building owners and home buyers as major cleanup and tank replacement costs can be involved. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. New York State License # 16000005303. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Resources. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.

Home Buyers' Guide to Oil Storage Tanks

Home buyers should be sure to review the following articles:

  1. Tank Testing - Leaky Heating Oil Tanks - How Oil Tanks are Tested for Evidence Leaks, of Current or Previous Oil Spills
  2. Tank Legal Issues - Home Buyers and Home Owners Guide to Leaky Heating Oil Tanks - What to Do About &
  3. Leaky Heating Oil Tanks - When to Report Oil Tank Leaks.
  4. Tank Abandoning Home owners who have old oil tanks above ground or any age oil tank below ground should also be sure to review these procedures and regulations for Abandoning Commercial vs. Residential Underground Oil Storage Tanks (UST)
  5. Septic Tanks can present potentially fatal collapse hazards as well as expensive surprises.

GOT AN OIL TANK ? - What if an oil storage tank is or was installed at your property?

Buried oil tanks raise increasing environmental, safety, legal and economic concerns for home owners and home buyers because oil leaks underground or even within buildings can lead to both environmental damage and very costly cleanup operations.

Having to install a new above ground indoor oil storage tank involves significant expense, perhaps $2000. to $4000. to remove the old tank and install the new one. Removing or abandoning a buried oil tank is more costly. If an oil tank has leaked the cost to clean up contaminated soils can be very significant, so much so that a property buyer should not complete the purchase before questions about the condition of oil tanks, past or present at the property, and the chances of leaks from buried oil storage tanks have been answered satisfactorily.

Home heating oil tanks are excluded from Federal Regulations about oil storage tank reporting and monitoring, but in almost every U.S. state or Canadian province, storage tanks are addressed by state or local DEP/DNR/DEC agencies and regulations. For example, in New York, even residential storage sites must be reported to the state DEC if more than 1100 gallons are stored at a single site. (A few U.S. states specifically exclude the regulation of storage tanks when used for home heating oil.)

In any case, should a home heating oil tank causes a release of oil into the environment, at that point the owner of the tank is not exempt from the other provisions of the State or Federal Regulations: the leak needs to be reported (often within two hours of observation), the source of leak/spill would have to be stopped, a site characterization would have to be completed, and appropriate corrective action (cleanup) would have to initiated, and the incident would have to be reported.

Above ground oil tanks and clues for the presence of buried oil tanks are not usually examined during a pre-purchase home or building inspection unless specific prior test arrangements have been made. Oil tank inspection, other than casual visual inspection for obvious leaks is not performed by such inspectors. Oil tank tests for leaks, soil tests for oil contamination, soil tests for corrosivity, screening for evidence of prior or abandoned oil storage tanks, as well as oil storage tank removal or abandonment require that you use an appropriate expert. However articles at this website outline easy on-site visual observations that any thoughtful observer can make to spot evidence of a present or previous buried tank and to spot evidence of leaks or other problems with above ground storage tanks.

From a previous use, a buried oil tank may be present or may have been present at a property now served by an indoor, above ground oil tank or even by LP or natural gas. So don't assume that because you don't see a tank that none was ever used or present at a property.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
  OIL TANK LIFE
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAKY FILLER PIPES
  LEAK TESTING
  WATER in OIL TANKS
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
  OIL LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

Tank Removal Funding Assistance is available in some municipalities. See TANK REGULATIONS at page-left to find individual state or provincial agencies concerned with oil storage tanks.

Before completing purchase of a property that has or had a buried oil tank you need to have either had the tank removed, abandoned in place, or tested.

At end of the day, you need reliable documentation that shows that either there has been no leakage and a proper tank abandonment has been performed, or if there was leakage, that a proper cleanup has been performed.

If the oil storage tank is a newer buried model (perhaps a fiberglass or multi-walled oil storage tank) and if the oil tank is in good condition it may not need to be abandoned.

But if older oil storage tanks were used, were removed, or remain abandoned at the property you still need to satisfy the requirements of this paragraph. The discussion which follows explains the risks and gives detailed advice about what to do about buried or above ground oil tanks and tank leaks.

OIL TANK LIFE - Life Expectancy of Buried or Underground Oil Tanks

While we've found them lasting longer, a common life expectancy of buried oil tanks is 10-15 years. At about 20 years, the risk of leaks from buried steel oil tanks becomes significant. Leaks can occur earlier if a tank was damaged at installation or was not properly piped.

Even if you think the tank is ok, young, and not leaking, buried oil tanks, should be tested for water in the tank bottom. Water should be pumped out since it corrodes the tank and leads to leaks. Oil tank leaks can also be due to damage at time of installation, improper installation, corrosive soils, or piping defects. If the tank is to remain in use, ask your fuel supplier about using an additive or other methods to help remove water.

In New England for a two year period [1984-5] among customers who have buried heating oil tanks (16% of total customers) surveyors found an average of 1.7 tank leaks per thousand customers. They also found 2.5 fuel line leaks per 1000 customers. (Fuel Oil and Oil Heat magazine, August 1985 p.18.) We do not have similar data for buried gas tanks in residential application.

More Reading:

See OIL TANK LIFE for details about the life expectancy of oil tanks.

The rate or frequency of oil tank leaks or oil storage tank failures, focused on underground storage tanks or USTs, is discussed in detail at TANK FAILURE RATES Oil Tank Failure Data - Oil Tank Failure Rates - Oil Tank Leak Probability as a Function of Tank Age, Location, Condition, Soil Conditions and Other Factors.

TANK REGULATIONS outlines who, when, and how oil leaks and spills must be reported to environmental authorities.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
OIL TANK LIFE
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAK TESTING
  WATER in OIL TANKS
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
  OIL LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

LEAK CAUSES - Oil Tank Leak Failure Causes

Below we present a summary of this topic. Details about the causes of oil tank leaks can be read at LEAK CAUSES

In-Tank corrosion of oil storage tanks: Underground fuel or heating oil storage tanks usually fail from rust perforation due to several effects of water inside the tank including, in the case of heating oil, combination of water with sulphur in the fuel, bacterial action, and other factors.

External rust on oil tanks, unless very heavy, isn't highly correlated with internal rust. Leaks can occur due to tank damage or at piping connections.

Oil Tanks in Corrosive Soils: Oil storage tank leaks are more likely if a steel tank has been buried in corrosive soil or if the tank was damaged during installation, such as gouging it or bouncing it off of a rock as it was placed into a hole for burying.

Oil Tank Piping Leaks: Oil tank leaks may occur at buried piping connections as well.

Delivery Oil Spills: occur around the tank fill pipe and range from trivial to more extensive requiring soil removal and cleaning. These leaks are usually obvious at the ground surface around the oil tank or tank filler.

Inadequate fill or vent pipe diameter is blamed by some for leaks at buried or above ground oil tanks, asserting that because oil tanks are filled under pressure from the oil delivery pumper-truck, a corroded, damaged, or poorly-plumbed oil storage tank, or one with a too-small vent opening, may not withstand the pressure of the filling process.

Indoor oil spills during tank fill or later from a leaky oil tank range from trivial local cleanup and deodorizing efforts to very serious contamination problems if an oil tank bursts during oil delivery (which I suspect is rare) and on occasions when an indoor oil tank has been removed but someone (some fool) has left the oil filler pipe installed on the building, and when subsequently an oil delivery is mistakenly made through the filler pipe onto the empty basement or crawl space floor. This may sound crazy but it actually happens.

More Reading:

OIL TANK LIFE their life expectancy and life factors

TANK FAILURE CAUSES discusses the causes of oil storage tank leaks in more detail.

The rate or frequency of oil tank leaks or oil storage tank failures, focused on underground storage tanks or USTs, is discussed in detail at TANK FAILURE RATES provides Oil Tank Failure Data - Oil Tank Failure Rates - Oil Tank Leak Probability as a Function of Tank Age, Location, Condition, Soil Conditions and Other Factors.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
OIL TANK LIFE
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAKY FILLER PIPES
  WATER in OIL TANKS
  TANK TESTING
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
  OIL LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

TANK TESTING - Oil Tank Inspection and Oil Leak Testing Choices

Below we present a summary of this topic. Details about oil tank testing procedures and choices can be read at TANK TESTING

Look at the oil tank and site for yourself: Before deciding to hire a tank testing company for professional inspection and testing, some basic information such as the age (property and tank), tank location, and type of oil tank, and for above-ground tanks, a simple visual inspection of the tank and its piping, can give you and idea of the risks involved. Look for obvious leaks such as oil stains on the ground or floor under or around the tank and around the oil fired equipment. Remember to look under the oil tank at its bottom, as most leaks occur in the lower portion of the tank.

Hire an expert: Specialty companies and some oil companies have equipment to test buried tanks for leaks. Soil testing, simple low-psi pressure-testing and sophisticated electronic testing are commonly used. I advise home buyers to have a soil test performed rather than a pressure test of an existing oil tank, since even if the tank is not currently leaking we would prefer an assurance that it didn't leak before, say from a plumbing connection that was repaired.

In addition to oil tank inspection, oil piping inspection, and oil tank testing to "pass" or "fail" an oil storage tank, more sophisticated tests are available to assess the chances that an existing heating oil storage tank has leaked or is likely to have a serious leak soon. These include a oil tank corrosion analysis which adds to the basic tank inspection and tests an assessment of the level of corrosion of the tank walls and thus the chances of its leaking or failure, and soil corrosion or soil corrosivity evaluation which includes an evaluation of soil samples collected from around the tank in order to assess the degree to which the soil in which the oil tank has been buried will contribute to the process of corrosion of the (presumably steel) buried oil tank.

More Reading:

TANK TESTING

OIL TANK LIFE their life expectancy and life factors

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
OIL TANK LIFE
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAKY FILLER PIPES
  TANK TESTING
  WATER in OIL TANKS
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
  OIL LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

Testing Oil Storage Tanks for Water Contamination

Below we present a summary of this topic. Details about handling water in oil tanks can be read at WATER in OIL TANKS

Photograph of an oil tank filler flush with the ground.

Testing for water in an oil tank (above ground oil tanks whether inside or outdoors, or buried oil tanks) is simple and can be done by any service person or even a homeowner. Tank testing methods vary in risk to the tank, cost, invasiveness, length of time to complete, and more.

Since water in a heating oil tank can lead to loss of heat and related building damage we want to know if in-tank water is a problem at a given property. There are several steps and test methods for finding water in an oil tank and for determining how much of a problem it is.

Water can enter a heating oil storage tank by several means

  • Water enters a buried or above ground tank by condensation: as temperatures vary moisture-containing air may be drawn into and then out of an oil tank. Air leaves the tank as oil is consumed; air enters and leaves the oil tank through the oil tank vent. Moist air entering the tank from outside can bring water which, on entering the cooler tank interior, condenses out of vapor form into water droplets which can, over time accumulate.
  • Water enters a tank filler pipe: from roof spillage onto the tank or filler top (particularly and obviously if the filler cap is left off), or from ground or surface runoff entering the oil storage tank (particularly and obviously if the filler cap is near, at, or below ground surface level). Leaving off an outside filler cap for a few days is not itself a likely source of a problem unless the filler was exposed to heavy rain, roof runoff spillage onto the open filler pipe, or surface runoff entering the tank (such as for a filler pipe flush with the ground).
  • Water leaks into a buried oil tank from an actual tank perforation that admits ground water, or from a bad plumbing fitting on the tank.
  • Water is delivered to the oil tank along with the heating oil fuel: This is not common, but it is possible to get a delivery of "bad" heating oil that is water contaminated, especially if the oil truck happens to fill-up at the oil storage depot when an oil barge is unloading oil since during that operation water which is normally kept in the bottom of oil depot storage tanks may be stirred-up. Most oil companies know to avoid this problem and some also have water filters installed at their oil trucks. No oil company is going to admit that they picked up and delivered water-contaminated oil to your home so don't waste time asking them if they are guilty of this crime.

More Reading and advice about oil storage tank leak testing

ABOVE GROUND OIL TANK INSPECTIONS - "Visual Inspection of Above Ground Residential Heating Oil Storage Tanks - ASTs" provides photos of common and easily seen tank leaks and defects, and a description of some easy visual checks of the condition of a visible oil tank, things that you can do yourself
TANK TESTING Oil Tank Testing Methods & Choices
BURIED TANKS, FIND How to Find Buried Oil Tanks
TANK FAILURE CAUSES Oil Tank Leaks or Oil Tank Failure Causes - oil tank leaks are caused by corrosion, damage, soil conditions, other factors
TANK FAILURE RATES Oil Tank Failure Rates - Oil Tank Leak Probability as a Function of Tank Age, Location, Condition, Soil Conditions and Other Factors
WATER in OIL TANKS - how to find out if there is problematic water in an oil tank and how to get water out of an oil tank are explained

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAK CLEANUP
  LEAK TESTING
  LEAKY FILLER PIPES
OIL TANK LIFE
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
WATER in OIL TANKS
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

TESTING COs / REMOVAL COs - Oil Tank Testing, Removal, Consulting Environmental Service Companies

Below we present a summary of this topic. For details see


TANK TESTING COs


TANK REMOVAL COs


TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID links here or at page left to see our most current list of companies providing oil tank testing or oil tank removal/abandonment services.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

 


OIL TANK HOME
  HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
OIL TANK LIFE
  LEAK CAUSES
  LEAKY FILLER PIPES
  LEAK TESTING
  WATER in OIL TANKS
TANK TESTING COs
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
  LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Environment
Contact Us

Oil Spill Oil Tank LEAK CLEANUP - Oil Leak/Spill Cleanup Companies Listing

Below we present a summary of this topic. For details see LEAK CLEANUP

  • Bioremediation resources on Internet
  • Environmental and Information Resources, Inc. markets a low cost way of cleaning up petroleum hydrocarbon releases called bioremediation using naturally occurring soil microbes. EIR also performs biologically based cleanups of inorganic contamination such as heavy metals and radio nuclides using phytoremediation to uptake contamination from soil or groundwater.
  • Government Contacts - Contact the DEC/DEP/DNR office in your state
  • Listing submissions welcome, there is no listing fee. Contact Us.

Oil Tank Removal or Abandonment Methods

Below we present a summary of this topic. For details see TANK ABANDONING

There are also proper methods of "abandoning" old unused buried tanks without actually excavating and removing them (provided there is not evidence of leakage). If a tank is not to be used, can involve significant expense. A proper abandonment procedure involves pumping out remaining fuel, confirming that there has been no leakage, cleaning the tank, and filling the tank with an approved filler, or removing it entirely. These measures, if required, involve significant expense.

Buried tank removal is handled by environmental services companies. Usually the specialist arranges testing, excavation, and disposal. Or tanks can be abandoned in place.

More Reading:
TANK ABANDONING - Abandoning Oil Tanks - provides a detailed discussion of Abandoning Commercial vs. Residential Underground Oil Storage Tanks (UST) - Procedures & Regulations

Environmental Issues & Regulations for Oil Tanks

Below we present a summary of this topic. For details see TANK REGULATIONS

In the U.S. and many other countries state DEP/DEC/DNR (Departments of Environmental Conservation or similar agencies) have programs for registering buried tanks at any site storing (typically) more than 1100 gallons of heating oil. Requirements for gas (auto fuel), or other fuels may be different. Eventually this concern may spread to smaller residential tanks. The concern is for leaks which contaminate the environment. Tanks located where they may leak into a local waterway or into the water supply are a special environmental concerns. (C)trap DJ Friedman.

More Reading:
TANK REGULATIONS U.S. State and Federal environmental regulations regarding oil leak reporting, oil and other storage tank registration, oil tank abandonment, tank removal, tank testing, and other storage tanks, U.S. state regulations, and regulations in other countries are discussed in detail at this link where we also give contact information for various federal and state agencies.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left.




OIL TANK HOME
ABOVE GROUND OIL TANK INSPECTIONS
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
REPORT LANGUAGE
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing Water Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us

More Information About Buried and Above Ground Oil Storage Tanks, Tank References & More Information on USTs

goto InspectAPedia.com - authoritative, in-depth Building Diagnostic and Repair Information for building buyers, owners, inspectorsInspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map - Building Inspection, Diagnosis, & Repair, Environmental Inspection & Testing - Research Website

GO TO the MOLD and INDOOR ENVIRONMENT INFORMATION CENTER for in-depth advice on avoiding testing for or cleaning up mold and other indoor environmental hazards, odors, gases, contaminantsThe Mold Information Center: What to Do About Mold in Buildings, When and How to Inspect for Mold, Clean Up Mold, or Avoid Mold Problems

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CONTACT Daniel Friedman - Dan is a senior ASHI home inspector, nationally recognized expert on building inspection, building failures, and sick building investigationContact Daniel Friedman for website content suggestions or for fee-paid consulting

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05/05/2008 - 01/24/1995 File: www.inspect-ny.com/oiltanks/tanks.htm -- Web page design & content production © Copyright 2008-1995 Dan Friedman All Rights Reserved