Rules Are an Improvement But Further Local Action Will Be Essential
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Sharon Donovan
Communications Director, Earth Island Institute
(510) 859-9161, sharondonovan@earthisland.org
Berkeley, CA (June 13, 2023) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a long-awaited final rule governing oil spill response that may better safeguard the health of millions of people living on United States coastlines, rivers, and even highways where oil spills occur. Prompted by a lawsuit filed in 2020 by Earth Island Institute, the ALERT Project, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, Cook Inletkeeper, the Center for Biological Diversity, an Alaskan Native health aide, and a Gulf Coast commercial fisher, the EPA was compelled by court order to update its antiquated regulations that govern the use of chemical products in oil spill response. Plaintiffs’ concern about the toxicity of these products was the primary motivation for their demand that the EPA revisit its decades-old “National Contingency Plan” for oil spills.
The Clean Water Act (CWA) directs EPA to develop a National Contingency Plan (NCP) that includes: (1) a schedule identifying what products may be used during oil spill response; (2) the waters where these products may be used; and (3) what quantities can be used safely in specific local contexts. EPA last revised the NCP in 1994—i.e., nearly 30 years ago—without the benefit of long-term lessons learned from the Exxon Valdez and BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill tragedies and associated response efforts. Plaintiffs successfully sued EPA on the grounds that the CWA requires periodic updates to the NCP to keep it current with scientific and technical developments, including, increased understanding of the dangers of chemical methods of addressing spilled oil through broad scale use of dispersants.
EPA’s newly announced regulatory revisions, published in the Federal Register on June 12, 2023 and effective six months later (December 11, 2023) — are a welcome improvement in critical respects. The NCP will now provide, on a nationwide basis:
- Improved testing of the efficacy and toxicity of dispersants before they are listed on the NCP “product schedule” as permissible for use in oil response efforts;
- Public notification of when chemical and biological agents are deployed in emergency response situations;
- Significantly greater public disclosure of data relevant to dispersants’ chemical constituents, environmental fate, intended uses, and health and safety effects by prohibiting manufacturers from withholding this as “proprietary business information.”
- Removal of products based on misleading, inaccurate, outdated, or incorrect statements regarding product composition or use, including advertisements, technical literature, electronic media, and more.
The new NCP continues to sanction broad scale use of chemical dispersants, but now it also requires that the decision to use dispersants in any specific setting be addressed by local, state, and regional planners as well as the responders. The NCP devolves considerable authority to the entities involved in regional and area planning for oil spill response, including that of making more conservative decisions as they see fit. This means it will be critical for these many bodies to be kept scientifically informed and resourced nationwide to ensure least-toxic responses to future oil spills. The plaintiffs in the NCP lawsuit thus regard the new regulations as a mixed result that will require ongoing, intensive civic engagement at the sub- national level.
Dr. Riki Ott, director of Earth Island Institute’s ALERT Project, the lead plaintiff in the case, witnessed first-hand as a commercial fisher and marine toxicologist the long-term health and environmental impacts of the nation’s two largest maritime oil disasters. “Dispersants will now have to pass much more stringent testing protocols to be listed for use. And misinformation in any communication about dispersants is now grounds for product delisting under the new rules,” Dr. Ott said. “The new rules authorize state and regional planners to obtain the quality information they need to make informed decisions about whether dispersants can be used safely in any waters.” However, Dr. Ott also shares some plaintiffs’ concerns that the new rules do not prevent the ongoing use of potentially harmful chemical dispersants, especially in coastal waters near populated areas.
Kindra Arnesen, a plaintiff and community activist in Louisiana, expressed concerns about the new rule. “Dispersant use in the wake of the BP disaster took a huge toll on my community. It’s hard to explain to my community that these new rules are good when they allow for a repeat of the same mistakes that were made during BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster.”
“It is good that EPA has heard us on so many issues, but the allowance of products of concern for oil spill response continues to leave our communities and their members at risk,” said plaintiff Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, an Iñupiat tribal leader and activist who lives in the now oil industrialized zone of the North Slope in Alaska. “Further, although the new rule requires that people be notified when these products are used during an oil spill, the complex terminology may prevent clear transfer and understanding of the information.” Ahtuangaruak has worked with Tribal councils to pass resolutions banning dispersant use in Arctic waters where Alaskan Natives hunt and fish. She is currently the Mayor of Nuiqsut, Alaska. The opinions she expresses are her own.
Existing and expanding oil and gas operations in U.S. waters increase the ongoing risk of an oil spill. This is particularly concerning in Cook Inlet and the Arctic, where ice and cold water may further reduce the effectiveness of dispersants, and where geographic remoteness makes manual oil removal difficult. “Oil corporations and shipping companies can’t clean up oil with traditional tools in Alaska’s cold, dark and unforgiving waters,” said Sue Mauger, with plaintiff Cook Inletkeeper. “We are pleased that the new rules make it more difficult to use dispersants since testing will now be required to prove they work at cold temperatures. They don’t, and we’ve known this for a long time. This raises the question of whether oil drilling or increased shipping traffic can be allowed in Alaskan waters, or other areas like deep waters in the Gulf of Mexico, where oil spills can’t be cleaned up.”
Pamela Miller, executive director of plaintiff Alaska Community Action on Toxics, agreed that the new rule has many positive features. “This final rule gives us access to the tools and information we need to protect the health and well-being of our waters, wildlife, and people from exposure to dispersants that make oil spills even more toxic. It increases transparency and accountability. It requires complete disclosure of all the ingredients in a product. I can’t imagine why people would allow dispersants when they learn that some of the ingredients are carcinogens or teratogens that kill or deform developing embryos, including human babies.” Miller remained concerned, however, about the lack of health and safety monitoring protocols for response workers and the public. “These rules do not address any of the updated science showing long-term harm to people from oil spill exposure. Instead, EPA deferred to OSHA standards for worker protection. But these rules also need to be updated to better protect the people from our communities when they are needed to work oil spill response.”
Sumona Majumdar, CEO for Earth Island Institute, noted that the new NCP, though imperfect, creates important structural improvements irrespective of its specific terms. “EPA’s final rule addressed two key concerns. First, it clarifies the authority of state and regional planners to determine what and how products can be used safely in specific regions and areas. This provides an opportunity for civic engagement with our local and state government. Second, the final rule requires that the local area and regional plans are updated regularly to keep them aligned with current science and technology. Both were needed.”
UC Berkeley Environmental Law Clinic (ELC) served as lead counsel in this matter and represented most plaintiffs. Said Claudia Polsky, ELC director and lead counsel: “The human health toll of dispersant-intensive spill response is now well known, as is the long-term harm to marine life. Although it’s unfortunate that EPA did not issue a more substantively robust rule, we’re hopeful that improved toxicity testing protocols and greater public availability of information about the constituents of chemical dispersants — if combined with ongoing civic engagement around this issue—will spur development of safer methods for oil spill response.”
The Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) served as co-counsel in the NCP litigation, and represented itself. Kristen Monsell, oceans program legal director at CBD, agreed that the revised rule represents a notable improvement on the prior NCP. “This EPA rule on dumping toxic dispersants into the ocean isn’t going to make oil spills safer or less likely to happen, so we need bolder action. We can’t seem to clean up oil spills without sickening wildlife and workers, so the only reasonable response is to phase out offshore drilling.”
Individuals whose health and lives have been severely impacted by the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill exposures are available for interview upon request. A backgrounder with more detail is also available upon request and will be posted on www.alertproject.org.
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