United States                   Office of Solid Waste                          540-F-09-002
              Environmental Protection         and Emergency Response                        March 2010
              Agency                                                       www.epa.gov/emergencies


Oil Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure (SPCC) Program:

                                 Information  for Farmers

This fact sheet will assist you, as a farmer, in understanding your obligations under the SPCC Program.

What is SPCC?
The goal of the SPCC program is to prevent oil spills into waters of the United States and adjoining shorelines. Oil
spills can cause injuries to people and damage to the environment. A key element of this program calls for farmers
and other facilities to have an oil spill prevention plan, called an SPCC Plan. These Plans can help farmers
prevent oil  spills which can damage water resources needed for farming operations.

What is considered a farm under SPCC?
Under SPCC, a farm is: "a facility on a tract of land devoted to the production of crops or raising of animals,
including fish, which produced and sold, or normally would have produced and sold, $1,000 or more of agricultural
products during a year."

Is my farm covered by SPCC?
SPCC applies to a farm which:
•   Stores, transfers, uses, or consumes oil or oil products, such as diesel fuel, gasoline, lube oil, hydraulic oil,
    adjuvant oil, crop oil, vegetable oil, or animal fat; and
•   Stores more than 1,320 US gallons in aboveground containers or more than 42,000 US gallons in completely
    buried  containers; and
•   Could reasonably be expected to discharge oil to waters of the US or adjoining shorelines, such as
    interstate waters, intrastate lakes, rivers, and streams.

              If your farm meets all of these criteria,  then your farm is covered by SPCC.
 TIPS:
 * Count only containers of oil that have a storage capacity of 55 US gallons and above.

 * Adjacent or non-adjacent parcels, either leased or owned, may be considered separate facilities for SPCC
 purposes.  Containers on separate parcels (that the farmer identifies as separate facilities based on how they
 are operated) do not need to be added together in determining whether the 1,320-gallon applicability threshold
 is met.
If my farm is covered by SPCC. what should I do?
The SPCC program requires you to prepare and implement an SPCC Plan. If you already have a Plan, maintain
it.  If you do not have a Plan, you should prepare and implement one. Many farmers will need to have their Plan
certified by a Professional Engineer ("PE").  However, you may be eligible to self-certify your amended Plan if:

•  Your farm has a total oil storage capacity between 1,320 and 10,000 gallons in aboveground containers, and
   the farm has a good spill history (as described in the SPCC rule), you may prepare and self-certify your own
   Plan. (However, if you decide to use certain alternate measures allowed by the federal SPCC Rule, you will
   need a PE.)
•  Your farm has storage capacity of more than 10,000 gallons, or has had an oil spill you may need to prepare an
   SPCC Plan certified by a PE.
  TIP: If you are eligible to self certify your Plan, and no aboveground container at your farm is greater than
  5,000 gallons in capacity, then you may use the Plan template that is available to download from EPA's Web
  site at: http://www.epa.gov/oem/content/spcc/tier1temp.htm
Office of Emergency Management

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SPCC Rule Amendments Overview                                                          March 2010

When should I prepare and implement a Plan?
Farms in operation on or before August 16, 2002, must maintain or amend their existing Plan by November 10,
2010. Any farm that started operation after August 16, 2002, but before November 10, 2010, must prepare and use
a Plan on or before November 10, 2010.

Note: If your farm was in operation before August 16, 2002, and you do not already have a Plan, you must prepare
a Plan now. Do not wait until November 10, 2010.

What information will I need to prepare an SPCC Plan for my farm?
    •   A list of the oil containers at the farm by parcel (including the contents and location of each container);
    •   A brief description of the procedures that you will use to prevent oil spills.  For example, steps you use to
       transfer fuel from a storage tank to your farm vehicles that reduce the possibility of a fuel spill;
    •   A brief description of the measures you installed to prevent oil from reaching water (see next section);
    •   A brief description of the measures you will use to contain and cleanup an  oil spill to water; and
    •   A list of emergency contacts and first responders.

What spill prevention measures should I  implement and include in my SPCC Plan?
    •    Use containers suitable for the oil stored. For example, use a container designed for flammable liquids to
       store gasoline;
    •    Identify contractors or other local personnel who can  help you clean up an oil spill;
    •    Provide overfill prevention for your oil storage containers. You could use a high-level alarm, or audible
       vent, or establish a procedure to fill containers;
    •    Provide effective, sized secondary containment for bulk storage containers, such as a dike or a remote
        impoundment.  The containment must be able to hold  the full capacity of the container plus possible
        rainfall.  The dike may be constructed of earth or concrete. A double-walled tank may also suffice;
    •    Provide effective, general secondary containment  to address the most likely discharge where you
       transfer oil to and from containers and for mobile refuelers, such as fuel nurse tanks mounted on trucks or
       trailers. For example, you may use sorbent materials,  drip pans or curbing for these areas; and
    •    Periodically inspect and test pipes and containers. You should visually inspect aboveground pipes and
        inspect aboveground containers following industry standards. You must "leak test" buried pipes when they
       are installed or repaired.  EPA recommends you keep a written record of your inspections.

How and when do I maintain my SPCC Plan?
Amend and update your SPCC Plan when changes are made  to the farm, for example, if you add new storage
containers (e.g. tanks) that are 55 gallons or larger, or if you purchase or lease parcels with containers that are 55
gallons or larger.  You must review your Plan every five years  to make sure it includes any changes in oil storage at
your farm.

What should I do if I have an oil spill?
    •   Activate your SPCC Plan procedures to prevent the oil spill from reaching a creek or river.
    •    Implement spill cleanup and mitigation procedures outlined in your Plan.
    •    Notify the National Response Center (NRC) at 800-424-8802 if you have an oil discharge to waters or
       adjoining shorelines.
    •    If the amount of oil spilled to water is more that 42 gallons on two different occasions within a 12-month period or
        more than 1,000 gallons to water in a single spill event, then notify your EPA  Regional office in writing.
                                      For More Information

  Read the SPCC rule and additional resources:
  http://www.epa.gov/emergencies/spcc

  Call or send an e-mail to the EPA Ag Compliance Assistance Center: 1-888-663-2155
  http://www.epa.gov/agriculture/agctr.html

  Call the Superfund, TRI, EPCRA, RMP, and Oil Information Center:
  (800) 424-9346 or (703) 412-9810
  TDD (800) 553-7672 or (703) 412-3323
  http://www.epa.gov/superfund/resources/infocenter
Office of Emergency Management

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