The Spill Prevention, Control and Countermeasure (SPCC) program requirements are among the most intricate yet key facets of running a Clean Water Act-compliant facility. The EPA issued the first SPCC regulations in 1974 followed by substantial amendments and increased costs in 2002. Unlike similar regulations that are delegated to state and local governments to enforce, SPCC enforcement is managed federally by the EPA’s ten regional offices which oversee approximately 670,000 facilities, with one 2011 study finding 55% of those out of compliance. !
As a refresher, SPCC applies to non-transportation related onshore facilities engaged in the “drilling, producing, gathering, storing, refining, distributing, or consuming [of] oil or oil products”. The EPA broadly defines what is considered an oil product . Facilities involved with “fats, greases, and oils with animal, fish, vegetable, mineral, or synthetic origin” most likely need an SPCC plan. The current requirement for facilities needing to develop a plan include those with a minimum of 1,320-gallon above-ground oil storage capacity (or 42,000 gallons in underground) or even with a “reasonable expectation of oil discharge to waterway”. Typical SPCC plans require facilities to adopt mitigation measures including descriptions of drainage control devices, equipment preventing discharge, and adequate secondary containment (such as trays, berms, or dikes) around holding tanks to prevent a release to the environment in the event of a spill. Further, plans require approval from a professionally licensed civil engineer and must contain provisions that address issues such as training, preventative maintenance, and facility security. The only industries not required to have an SPCC plan include those far removed from large bodies of water, facilities with equipment that is already controlled by another regulatory program, and those that store less than 43,320 gallons in combined tank volume. Among the nearly 700,000 regulated facilities, a small portion (<1%) of higher-risk facilities determined to “reasonably cause substantial harm to the environment” are required to prepare and submit Facility Response Plans which involve extra guidelines that undergo EPA review. Additionally, all facilities must self-certify whether the FRP applies to them based on spill history, lack of adequate secondary containment, and proximity to drinking water intakes and/or environmentally sensitive habitats.
Failure to follow all steps can result in facilities paying over $32,000 a day with total penalties adding up to $40,000 if proper corrective actions are not taken. While it is fairly obvious that not having an SPCC plan at all constitutes a major noncompliance, failure to review your plan after 3 years, modify your plan with each facility upgrade, or certify amendments can be grounds for fines that can start at $1,500 – even if no spill has occurred! Clean Water Act Section 311(j) outlines the process of determining the seriousness of the risk posed to the environment as the result of a violating spill. Risk of a potential violation is determined by the extent of the violation, likelihood of a spill, and sensitivity of the environment. The severity of a violation is dependent on the storage capacity of the violator’s facility, existence, and adequacy of secondary containment and duration of the violation. One 2013 study determined that facilities were most frequently fined by the EPA for failure to keep 3 year’s worth of SPCC records, failure to train personnel on their facility’s plan, and inadequate mechanical inspections. In cases where a spill results from gross negligence or willful misconduct (B.P. Oil Spill – lest we forget), a type of judicial forum is required with the minimum penalty starting at a hefty $100,000.
Being unaware of the nuances within SPCC requirements could add headaches and costly litigation. In Pepperell Assocs. v. United States EPA, 246 F.3d 15 (2001) for example, the Environmental Appeals Board held that Pepperell could not be excused from failing to have a spill control plan while installing an oil storage tank. Pepperell was fined for spilling 300-400 gallons of oil from one of its textile mills into the navigable waters of the Androscoggin waters near Lewiston, Maine. Pepperrell argued that the discharge of oil was not “reasonably foreseeable” and thus outside the purview of the SPCC regulations. On review, the Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit denied Pepperell’s petition on the basis that it was, in fact, “foreseeable” for oil to leak in multiple possible pathways, not just one path that Pepperell relied on. The EAB found Pepperell ultimately liable to pay a $44,000 penalty and ruled that an SPCC plan must be amended within 6 months whenever existing facilities are modified. In another case, United States v. Jones, 267 F.Supp.2d 1349 (2003) summary judgment was granted in favor of the EPA on the claim against oil processing facility owners (Jones) for failing to have an SPCC plan, resulting in discharges in violation of the Oil Pollution Act (OPA). There, the facility owners failed to periodically test above-ground tanks nor followed proper containment protocol for tank loading and unloading. But for a minor inconsistency, the facility owners narrowly escaped paying $2.5 million dollars incurred by the government clean up of the spill because each party responsible for an oil discharge is obligated under the OPA for removal costs. More recently, in API v. Johnson, 541 F.Supp.2d 165 (2008) plaintiff oil companies sued the EPA under the Clean Water Act and Administrative Procedure Act for promulgating (establishing) overly broad revisions of “navigable waters”, which resulted in them having to suddenly pay millions to enhance their SPCC plans around their facilities. The court sided in favor of the oil companies on the basis that the EPA violated the APA for failing to provide sufficiently clear and supported explanations for its expansions. The outcomes in Pepperell, Jones, and API represent both the ever-expanding complexity of SPCC regulations and how misinterpreting SPCC regulation implementation can result in thousands of dollars in penalties and legal fees.
If you need help navigating SPCC regulations, Mapistry offers a digital SPCC platform to keep manufacturers in compliance with minimal effort.