Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
The American Petroleum Institute’s Publication 1628E-1996 scan (commonly referred to as API Publ 1628E-1996 scan) is a critical reference document for environmental professionals involved in the management, assessment, and remediation of underground storage tanks (USTs). This scanned edition preserves the original 1996 guidance and remains widely cited for its systematic approach to evaluating and cleaning up UST releases. The following article provides a detailed technical review of the standard’s scope, key requirements, implementation highlights, and compliance considerations.
API Publ 1628E-1996 scan is intended to assist owners, operators, consultants, and regulators in planning and executing corrective actions for UST sites. The publication covers the entire lifecycle of UST remediation—from initial site assessment through closure. It is applicable to sites where petroleum products have been released from UST systems, including gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and other hydrocarbons. The guide emphasizes risk-based decision making and site-specific cleanup goals rather than prescriptive, one-size-fits-all standards. Key elements include:
While the publication is not a regulation itself, it has been widely adopted by state regulatory agencies as a technical basis for UST corrective action programs. The 1996 scan version remains useful because it provides a consistent methodology before many newer risk-based standards emerged.
Thorough site characterization is the cornerstone of any successful remediation effort. API Publ 1628E-1996 scan specifies a phased approach to data collection that balances depth with cost. Initial investigations (Phase I and Phase II) must identify the source, extent, and nature of contamination. The guide recommends:
The publication advocates a tiered risk evaluation process to determine urgency and remediation goals. A simplified exposure assessment considers:
Based on risk levels, sites are categorized as “No Further Action (NFA) with monitoring,” “Active Remediation,” or “Long-Term Monitoring/Containment.”
API Publ 1628E-1996 scan describes several proven remediation technologies and provides metrics for selection. The table below summarizes typical technologies covered in the guide.
| Technology | Contaminant Phase | Typical Application | Performance Metrics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soil Vapor Extraction (SVE) | Vadose zone vapor | Volatile petroleum hydrocarbons | Effluent concentration, radius of influence |
| Air Sparging | Dissolved & vapor | Groundwater plumes | Dissolved oxygen increase, concentration reduction |
| Bioremediation (aerobes) | Dissolved & soil‑bound | Moderate TPH concentrations | Degradation rate, nutrients & O₂ demand |
| Excavation/Disposal | Source removal | Small hot spots near receptors | Mass removed, final soil concentrations |
| Monitored Natural Attenuation (MNA) | Dissolved plume | Low‑risk sites with stable plumes | BTEX trends, geochemical indicators |
The guide emphasizes that remediation should be tailored to site conditions and often uses a combination of these technologies in a sequenced or simultaneous manner.
Implementing the recommendations of API Publ 1628E-1996 scan requires careful planning and documentation. The following alerts highlight key aspects for practitioners.
For compliance purposes, the following documentation is typically required when using API Publ 1628E-1996 scan as a reference:
API Publ 1628E-1996 scan remains a valuable resource for UST management, offering a logical, risk‑based framework that balances environmental protection with economic practicality. While newer editions and supplemental guidance have been released, the core principles of phased site characterization, tiered risk assessment, and flexible remediation selection continue to underpin modern corrective action practice. Environmental professionals who master the methodologies in this publication will be well‑equipped to handle the majority of conventional petroleum release sites. As always, practitioners should confirm that their approach aligns with current local regulations and incorporate any subsequent updates from API that refine the 1996 guidance.
API Publ 1628E-1996 scan — Technical Article © 2026