H2S Monitoring Requirements in Texas: A Complete Guide
Updated March 2026 · 10 min read
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is one of the most dangerous hazards in Texas oil and gas operations. This colorless gas — recognizable by its distinctive rotten egg smell at low concentrations — is immediately lethal at concentrations above 500-700 ppm and can cause olfactory fatigue (loss of smell) at much lower levels, making it an insidious threat.
Texas has some of the most detailed H2S regulations in the country, driven by the prevalence of sour crude and sour gas production across the Permian Basin, Eagle Ford, and other producing regions. This guide covers every H2S monitoring requirement that Texas operators need to know.
Regulatory Framework
H2S monitoring in Texas oil and gas is governed by multiple agencies:
- RRC Statewide Rule 36: Requires H2S contingency plans and public notification for wells and facilities in H2S areas
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1000: Sets workplace exposure limits for H2S
- TCEQ: Regulates H2S emissions under air quality permits and ambient air quality standards
RRC Statewide Rule 36
Statewide Rule 36 is the primary Texas regulation governing H2S safety at oil and gas operations. It applies to any drilling, workover, or production operation where H2S concentrations could reach 100 ppm or more in the gas stream.
Radius of Exposure
Operators must calculate a "radius of exposure" — the distance from the well or facility at which the H2S concentration could reach 100 ppm in the event of an uncontrolled release. If any public area (residence, business, road, etc.) falls within this radius, the operator must file an H2S contingency plan with the RRC and notify the public.
Contingency Plan Requirements
The H2S contingency plan must include procedures for detecting and monitoring H2S, alerting personnel and the public, evacuating the area if needed, controlling the source, and coordinating with emergency responders. The plan must be kept on-site and all personnel must be trained on its contents.
OSHA Exposure Limits
OSHA sets the following workplace exposure limits for H2S:
- General Industry Ceiling Limit: 20 ppm (29 CFR 1910.1000)
- Peak Limit: 50 ppm for a maximum of 10 minutes if no other measurable exposure occurs
- NIOSH REL: 10 ppm (10-minute ceiling) — while not enforceable, OSHA often references NIOSH recommendations
- IDLH (Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health): 100 ppm
Operators must ensure that worker exposure does not exceed these limits through engineering controls, work practices, and when necessary, respiratory protection.
Monitoring Equipment Requirements
Personal Monitors
Every worker in an H2S area should carry a personal H2S monitor (single-gas or multi-gas detector). These monitors should have audible and visual alarms set at 10 ppm (low alarm) and 20 ppm (high alarm). Monitors must be bump-tested before each use and calibrated according to the manufacturer's specifications — typically monthly.
Fixed/Area Monitors
Facilities with continuous H2S exposure risk should install fixed-point gas detection systems at critical locations — wellheads, separator areas, tank batteries, loading racks, and enclosed spaces. Fixed monitors should be connected to audible and visual alarm systems that can be heard and seen throughout the facility.
Wind Direction Indicators
All H2S facilities must have wind direction indicators (windsocks) visible from the facility entrance and key work areas. Wind direction determines evacuation routes and the direction of potential gas migration.
Training Requirements
All personnel working in H2S areas must receive H2S safety training that covers the physical properties and health effects of H2S, recognition of exposure symptoms, proper use and maintenance of monitoring equipment, emergency response procedures including self-rescue and buddy rescue, proper use of respiratory protection (SCBA and escape packs), and the facility-specific H2S contingency plan.
Training must be documented and refreshed annually. Many operators also require contractors and visitors to complete H2S awareness training before entering the facility.
Emergency Equipment
H2S facilities must maintain the following emergency equipment: self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) units at strategic locations, escape-only respirators (5-minute and 10-minute escape packs) for all personnel, a communication system to alert all workers and the public, and first aid equipment including resuscitation equipment.
Stay on Top of H2S Compliance
H2S compliance involves equipment maintenance schedules, training renewals, contingency plan updates, and coordination with multiple agencies. CompliantIntel helps operators track all H2S-related obligations alongside their broader compliance program.
Track every compliance obligation in one place
14-day free trial. No credit card required.
Start Free Trial →