v»EPA
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Preamble to 40 CFR Parts
280 and 281
Underground Storage Tanks
Containing Petroleum
Financial Responsibility Requirements and
State Program Approval Objective

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FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR PETROLEUM UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANKS
PREAMBLE
OCTOBER 1988
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 280 and 281
[FRL-UST-3]
Underground Storage Tanks Containing Petroleum - Financial Responsibility Requirements and
State Program Approval Objective
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION: Final Rule.
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the Agency) is promulgating financial
responsibility requirements applicable to owners and operators of underground storage tanks containing
petroleum under §§9003(c) and (d) of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended
by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (HSWA) and the Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA). This rule establishes requirements for demonstrating financial
responsibility for taking corrective action and compensating third parties for bodily injury and property
damage caused by sudden and nonsudden accidental releases arising from the operation of underground
storage tanks containing petroleum.
Today EPA is also promulgating, for purposes of state program approval, a federal technical objective for
financial responsibility of owners and operators of petroleum UST systems. Subtitle I of RCRA allows
EPA to approve state programs to operate in place of the federal UST requirements if those state
programs have standards that are no less stringent than the federal requirements, and also provide
adequate enforcement of compliance with those standards.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule becomes effective on (insert date 90 days after publication in the
FEDERAL REGISTER).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The RCRA/Superfund Hotline at (800) 424-9346 (toll
free) or (202) 382-3000 in Washington, D.C.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The contents of today's preamble are listed in the following
outline:
I.	Authority	1
II.	Background	1
A.	Legislative and Regulatory Background of the Rule	1
B.	The Comprehensive Federal UST Regulatory Program	2
C.	Program Objectives and Summary of Today's Rule	3
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1.	Program Objectives and Major Changes in the Final Rule	
2.	Summary of Today's Rule	
D. Availability of Mechanisms	
III. Section-by-Section Analysis	
A.	Applicability (§280.90)	
1.	Owners and Operators (§280.90(a))	
2.	Tanks Taken Out of Operation Before the Date for Compliance (§280.90(b))
3.	Applicability to State and Federal Government Entities (§280.90(c))	
4.	Applicability to Local Government Entities	1
5.	Applicability to Indian Tribes	
6.	Deferrals and Exclusions (§280.90(d))	
B.	Compliance Dates (§280.91)	
C.	Definition of Terms (§280.92)	
1.	Accidental Release and Occurrence	
2.	Bodily Injury	
3.	Director of the Implementing Agency	
4.	Petroleum Marketing Facilities	
5.	Petroleum Marketing Firms	
6.	Property Damage	
7.	Additional Definitions	
D.	Amount and Scope of Required Financial Responsibility	
1.	Per-Occurrence Amount	
2.	Aggregate Amounts	
3.	Apportionment of Costs and Levels of Coverage Under Separate Mechanisms	
E.	Allowable Mechanisms and Combinations (§280.94)	
1.	Mechanisms Allowed	
2.	Combinations of Mechanisms	
3.	Attorney General Certification (§280.94(b))	
4.	New Mechanisms	
5.	Specification of Tanks in Financial Assurance Instruments	
F.	Financial Test of Self-Insurance (§280.95)	
1.	Proposed Financial Test	
2.	Comments on the Proposed Financial Test	
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3. Summary of Changes in the Financial Test	46
G.	Guarantee (§280.96) and Indemnity Contract	47
H.	Insurance and Risk Retention Group Coverage (§280.97)	49
1.	Availability	49
2.	Insurance Cost and Its Impact	51
3.	Viability of Risk Retention Groups	52
4.	Specific Requirements for Insurance and Risk Retention Group Coverage	53
I.	Surety Bond (§280.98)	63
J. Letter of Credit (§280.99)	63
K. Use of State-Required Mechanisms (§280.100)	64
L. State Fund or Other State Assurance (§280.101)	65
M. Trust Fund (§280.102)	66
N. Standby Trust Fund (§280.103)	67
O. Substitution of Financial Assurance Mechanisms by an Owner or Operator (§280.104)	69
P. Cancellation or Nonrenewal by a Provider of Financial Assurance (§280.105)	69
1.	Length of Notice Period	69
2.	Termination for Non-Payment of Premium	70
Q. Reporting by Owner or Operator (§280.106)	71
R. Recordkeeping (§280.107)	73
S. Drawing on Financial Assurance Mechanisms (§280.108)	75
T. Release From the Requirements (§280.109)	78
U. Bankruptcy or Other Incapacity of Owner or Operator or Provider of Financial Assurance
(§208.110)	79
V. Provisions Pertaining to Other Instruments (§280.Ill)	79
1.	Maintaining Other Instruments at Required Levels of Coverage	79
2.	Exclusionary Language for Other Instruments	80
W. Suspension of Enforcement (§280.112)	81
1.	Statutory Authority	81
2.	Suspension of Enforcement Process	82
IV.	Integration with Other EPA Programs	82
A.	Other Subtitle I Rulemakings	82
B.	Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) Trust Fund and Response Program	85
V.	State Program Approval	87
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A.	Background	87
B.	Financial Responsibility Objective (§281.37)	87
VI.	Compliance Monitoring and Enforcement	90
VII.	Economic and Regulatory Impacts	91
A.	Regulatory Impact Analysis	91
1.	Compliance with Executive Order 12291	91
2.	Integration of the Financial Responsibility and Technical Standards Regulatory Impact Analyses
	92
3.	The Regulated Community	93
4.	Assumptions and Methodology Used in the RIA	94
5.	Annual Real Resource Costs	94
6.	Economic Impacts	95
7.	Benefits	96
B.	Regulatory Flexibility Act	97
C.	Paperwork Reduction Act	98
VIII.	List of Subjects in 40 CFR Parts 280 and 281	98
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I. Authority
These regulations are issued under the authority of Sections 2002, 9001, 9002, 9003, 9004, 9005, 9006,
9007, and 9009 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended. The principal amendments to this Act have
been under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, the Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments of 1984 (Public Law 98-616) and the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of
1986 (Public Law 99-499) (42 U.S.C. 6921, 6691, 6991(a), 6991(b), 6991(c), 6991(d), 6991(e), 6991(f),
and 6991(h)).
II. Background
This section provides the legislative and regulatory background for the final rule, describes the
comprehensive underground storage tank (UST) regulatory program, and summarizes today's financial
responsibility rulemaking.
A. Legislative and Regulatory Background of the Rule
The Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (HSWA) extended and strengthened the provisions
of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). HSWA created Subtitle I, which provides for
the development and implementation of a regulatory program for underground storage tanks (USTs) 1
containing regulated substances, including petroleum2 and other regulated substances3 (such
nonpetroleum regulated substances are hereinafter referred to as hazardous substances). Section 9003(a)
of Subtitle I requires the EPA Administrator to promulgate requirements for release detection, prevention
and correction as necessary to protect human health and the environment. These technical standards were
promulgated at (53 FR 37082, September 23, 1988).
The Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA) amended Sections 9003(c) and (d)
of Subtitle I to mandate that the Agency establish financial responsibility requirements for UST owners
and operators to assure the costs of corrective action and third-party liability caused by sudden and
nonsudden accidental releases from USTs. SARA made other changes to Subtitle I affecting financial
responsibility.
(1)	It established $1 million per occurrence and an appropriate annual aggregate as the minimum
assurance levels for USTs at facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing, and for
USTs which handle substantial amounts of petroleum; the Administrator may set lower per-occurrence
limits for USTs at other types of facilities.
(2)	It authorized the Administrator to suspend enforcement of the financial responsibility requirements if
financial assurance for a particular class or category of USTs is "not generally available" and steps are
being taken to either form a risk retention group (RRG) or establish a state fund pursuant to §9004(c)(l).
(3)	It created a $500 million Leaking UST Trust Fund to fund certain corrective action costs for
petroleum releases (including the costs of cleanup, enforcement and cost recovery).4 Before the effective
date of today's rule, Trust Fund monies can be used whenever the Administrator or state under
cooperative agreement determines that such action is necessary to protect human health and the
environment and when there is no owner or operator capable or willing to undertake proper action.
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Priority must be given to cases posing the greatest threat to human health and the environment. After the
effective date of today's rule, the circumstances under which Trust Fund monies may be used are more
restricted (see Section IV.B).
On April 17, 1987, the Agency proposed financial responsibility requirements for USTs containing
petroleum (52 FR 12786). The Agency provided a 60-day comment period and extended it for an
additional 30 days. In addition, the Agency published two Supplemental Notices modifying the initial
proposal (52 FR 48638, December 23, 1987, and 53 FR 10401, March 31, 1988). Based on EPA's
analysis of the comments, EPA has revised the rule and is today promulgating a final rule, which is
summarized in Section C below.
EPA has also issued an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) on financial responsibility
requirements for USTs containing hazardous substances (53 FR 3818, February 9, 1988).
B. The Comprehensive Federal UST Regulatory Program
In addition to this financial responsibility rule for USTs containing petroleum, the Agency has
promulgated technical standards for USTs containing petroleum and hazardous substances (53 FR 37082,
September 23, 1988) and procedures for approval of state UST programs (53 FR 37212, September 23,
1988). The three rulemakings together establish a comprehensive program to regulate USTs, as required
by Subtitle I of RCRA.
The technical standards require UST owners and operators to meet standards for tank operation and
design, release detection and reporting, corrective action, and closure. The operation and design standards
require that USTs be protected from corrosion and equipped with devices to prevent spills and overfills.
The release detection and reporting standards require owners and operators to install leak detection
systems and report actual and suspected releases. These requirements pertain to new USTs on the
effective date of the rule. Some operational requirements pertain to USTs currently in use on the effective
date. USTs currently in use become subject to the tank operation and design requirements over a ten-year
phase-in period and the release detection requirements over a two to five-year phase-in period. The
corrective action standards, which apply to all tanks on the effective date, require owners and operators to
clean up releases from UST systems. In the short run, one effect of the technical standards will be to
increase detection of releases; over the long run, the standards will reduce the likelihood that new releases
will occur.
The financial responsibility rule requires that UST owners or operators demonstrate financial
responsibility for the costs of corrective action and compensation of third parties arising from release of
petroleum from underground storage tanks. The financial responsibility requirements will help ensure that
owners and operators can respond promptly to clean up releases and to compensate third parties for any
injuries or damages associated with the releases. Because the providers of financial assurance
mechanisms may require UST owners and operators to install leak detection and corrosion protection
systems as a condition of coverage, the financial responsibility requirements may accelerate compliance
with the technical standards.
The state program approval objectives (53 FR 37212, September 23, 1988) enable states whose programs
are no less stringent than the federal program and which provide for adequate enforcement of compliance
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to administer the UST regulatory program. EPA has designed the approval criteria to provide flexibility
consistent with statutory requirements to encourage states to adopt the UST program. EPA believes that
regulation of the large and varied UST population is best implemented by state and local agencies, which
can oversee and enforce the UST program more effectively than EPA.
Finally, the last major component of the federal UST regulatory program, establishing financial
responsibility requirements for USTs containing hazardous substances, will be proposed in the future.
C. Program Objectives and Summary of Today's Rule
1. Program Objectives and Major Changes in the Final Rule
The Agency had three guiding objectives in considering the comments received on the proposed rule and
in adopting the changes for the final rule. First, the financial responsibility program for petroleum USTs
must require adequate and reliable financial assurance for the costs of UST releases, based on the
following considerations:
1)	the certainty that funds will be available;
2)	the sufficiency of funds to cover the costs of releases; and
3)	the availability of funds for corrective action and third-party liability.
Second, while requiring adequate and reliable financial assurances, the rule must provide flexibility,
where possible, to increase the feasibility of compliance by the regulated community. Subtitle I
specifically allows flexibility in establishing per-occurrence levels of assurance for USTs at facilities not
engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing, and for aggregate levels of assurance. The
Agency has carefully considered where to allow flexibility in the financial responsibility program while
ensuring adequate protection for covering the costs of petroleum UST releases.
Finally, to the extent possible, this rule should promote expansion of existing assurance mechanisms and
development of new ones to achieve maximum compliance by UST owners and operators. The Agency
recognizes the current limited availability of financial assurance mechanisms and the difficulty many
owners and operators will have in complying with the requirements, at least initially. However, insurance
coverage is available now to some UST owners and operators, and a number of states have either adopted
or are taking steps to adopt state funds. The Agency has constructed the final rule to promote timely
compliance by all owners and operators and to encourage development of additional assurance
mechanisms.
The major changes in the rule and the way in which they further these objectives are summarized below:
- Phased schedule of compliance. The final rule phases in compliance in four stages for different
categories of UST owners. The Agency has adopted this approach to allow adequate time for compliance
and to promote development of financial assurance mechanisms in the following ways:
-- Owners most able to comply, based on financial strength, must do so 3 months after the promulgation
date.
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-- Most owners in the next two groups have or can obtain insurance. The phase-in allows time for
processing insurance applications (which may take several months per application). It also provides time
for insurance providers to conform their policies to the requirements of this rule, as well as to decide
whether to extend their policies to new segments of the regulated community. Some owners in these
groups may also be able to rely on state funds.
-- Owners scheduled for compliance 24 months after the date of promulgation of the rule, e.g., single
station owners and non-marketers, will rely primarily on state funds and expansion of insurance and
RRGs beyond currently available programs. The schedule provides time for these mechanisms to become
available.
-- Phasing in compliance also provides UST owners and operators time to invest in technical
improvements or replacement of tanks to make them insurable, as well as to comply with the UST
technical standards.
-	$500,000 per occurrence level of assurance allowed for non-marketers with monthly throughput of
10,000 gallons of gasoline or less. The Agency has determined that this amount should be sufficient to
cover about 99 percent of all claims at these facilities ~ a key criterion in deciding the coverage amounts.
At the same time, this lower coverage amount reduces the burden on individual owners or operators. In
addition, allowing a lower level of assurance may increase the number of policies insurers are able to
write and may provide an incentive to extend coverage to non-marketers.
-	Lower aggregate level of assurance. The final rule requires a maximum aggregate of $2 million and
raises the number of tanks qualifying for the $1 million aggregate to 100. These aggregate levels achieve
the Agency's goal that releases at UST facilities not exceed the aggregate more than one percent of the
time. At the same time, the lower levels significantly reduce the burden on owners and operators. More
firms will be able to use existing insurance programs (which currently provide maximum aggregate
coverage of $2 million). The lower aggregate will also make it easier to capitalize RRGs and state funds.
-	Suspension of enforcement. Today's rule does not contain suspension of enforcement procedures. The
Agency has chosen to defer the promulgation of these procedures. The Agency hopes to gain experience
with implementation of the program on which to base a process that minimizes the administrative burden
of suspension of enforcement on owners and operators as well as on the Agency.
2. Summary of Today's Rule
This section briefly summarizes EPA's financial responsibility rule for petroleum USTs. Section III of this
preamble describes the final rule, some of the major comments that were made on the proposed rule, and
the rationale for the changes. The Comment/Response Document ("Summary of Comments and EPA's
Response to Comments on the April 17, 1987, Proposed Financial Responsibility Rule for Petroleum
Underground Storage Tanks") in the docket contains a detailed summary of all comments on the proposed
rule and the Agency's response to those comments.
Today's financial responsibility requirements are applicable to owners or operators of "petroleum UST
systems" with the following exceptions: (1) federal or state entities that own or operate USTs containing
petroleum; and (2) owners and operators of USTs excluded from the technical standards (Section III. A.6
below). For purposes of covering costs of corrective action and third-party liability, EPA requires all
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owners or operators of petroleum USTs at facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or
marketing and owners or operators of USTs with an average monthly throughput of more than 10,000
gallons to obtain financial assurance of at least $1 million per occurrence. Owners or operators of USTs at
facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing with an average monthly
throughput of 10,000 gallons or less must maintain financial assurance of at least $500,000 per
occurrence. All owners or operators must maintain an annual aggregate of $1 million or $2 million,
depending on the number of USTs assured.
UST owners or operators may satisfy the requirements using the following mechanisms: insurance or risk
retention group coverage, surety bond, guarantee, letter of credit, financial test of self-insurance, trust
fund, a state-required mechanism, or a state fund or other state assurance. Mechanisms can be used alone
or in combination to cover the costs of taking corrective action and compensating third parties as long as a
mechanism or combination of mechanisms provides the appropriate amount of assurance. The only
combination of mechanisms that is not allowed is the financial test of self-insurance and a guarantee
where the financial statements of the owner or operator and the guarantor are consolidated.
The final rule does not contain procedures for obtaining a suspension of enforcement of the requirements.
The Agency will promulgate suspension of enforcement procedures at a later date.
The final rule requires owners or operators to submit documentation of financial responsibility to the
implementing agency after a known or suspected release occurs; when a provider becomes incapable of
providing assurance; and when a provider revokes a mechanism and the owner or operator is unable to
obtain alternate coverage. Owners or operators must also submit documentation of financial responsibility
if requested by the implementing agency. In addition, UST owners or operators must notify the
implementing agency of their methods of demonstrating financial responsibility upon installation of new
tanks. Owners or operators must maintain records of the financial assurance mechanisms used to satisfy
these requirements on-site or at their place of business.
The final rule also requires that UST owners or operators receive a notice of cancellation before
terminating coverage to allow them sufficient time to procure alternate assurance and to determine
whether there are existing releases.
Owners and operators must comply with these financial responsibility requirements over a phased-in
compliance period lasting up to 24 months from the promulgation date of this rule.
The state program approval objective for financial responsibility of owners and operators of petroleum
UST systems is also promulgated today. This objective outlines the financial responsibility requirements
that owners and operators of petroleum UST systems must meet in order to be "no less stringent" than the
corresponding federal technical standard, and to demonstrate adequate enforcement of compliance.
D. Availability of Mechanisms
The Agency received many comments suggesting that the mechanisms allowed to demonstrate
compliance with today's rule are generally unavailable. The Agency recognizes that, for several reasons,
including cost, company size, or lack of qualified providers, some of the mechanisms proposed in the rule
might have a limited availability at this time. Some mechanisms, such as surety bonds and letters of
credit, are likely to be available and affordable to only a few owners and operators. However, in deciding
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to allow a wide variety of mechanisms to be used to demonstrate financial responsibility, the Agency did
not want to preclude the use of any mechanism that might be used and that would provide an adequate
degree of assurance that funds will be available if needed. The guarantee, for example, was included
because some UST owners and operators have business relationships with firms who might be willing and
able to provide them guarantees. Not all owners and operators, however, will have that option.
The Agency recognizes that insurance and state financial assurance programs are likely to be the most
feasible mechanisms for most owners and operators to comply with today's rule. Currently, however,
pollution liability insurance for USTs is not widely available for a number of reasons. Foremost is the fact
that such pollution liability insurance is now and is likely to continue to be offered by a limited number of
specialized providers. Second is the unpredictability of the risks involved for unprotected tanks that have
not been subject to regular leak detection. In addition, it is unclear to insurers how the new UST technical
requirements, especially for corrective action, may change the number and cost of claims. This current
uncertainty also affects the amount of reinsurance that is available for insurance policies written for USTs
and thereby limits the number of policies that insurers are able to issue.
Despite its limited availability, a number of UST owners and operators have been able to find coverage.
Commenters indicated that several insurers are already covering some USTs or are planning to offer such
coverage in the future. While a substantial number of petroleum marketers are currently insured, the
Agency recognizes that many smaller motor fuel marketers and UST owners not engaged in motor fuel
marketing have had difficulty in obtaining coverage.
Implementation of the technical standards rule is likely to increase the availability of insurance over the
long term. As old, unprotected tanks are removed and/or fitted with release detection systems, the number
of leaks that are detected should increase significantly. As these leaks are detected and corrected, the
requirements for upgrading or replacing tanks, combined with regular monitoring, should significantly
reduce both the occurrence of leaks and their duration prior to detection. Over the long term,
implementation of the technical standards should make UST risks more predictable and, therefore,
insurers should be more willing to provide coverage.
Owners and operators who cannot secure traditional insurance coverage may also have alternatives. For
some owners and operators, RRGs will offer an alternative to insurance. One such RRG has been formed
and offers coverage to petroleum marketers. Several other commenters indicated an interest in forming
RRGs.
State funds may also be available to UST owners and operators. In fact, Congress specifically recognized
the important role that state funds may play in providing financial assurance by including attempts to
form a state fund as a basis for suspension of enforcement and by explicitly allowing such funds to meet
financial responsibility requirements for state program approval under RCRA Section 9004(c)(1).
Although not widely available at present, state funds have already been established in several states. The
Agency recognizes that, in most cases, state funds may only supply a portion of the financial assurance
required. Some currently available funds cover corrective action but not third-party liability costs; others
cover both. Generally, these funds do not supply coverage in the full amount required in today's rule.
State funds may need to be used in combination with other mechanisms to meet the requirements of
today's rule. Depending on their structure, state funds can provide an important means for compliance
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with financial responsibility requirements at the onset of the program and encourage development of
insurance and RRGs over the longer term.
The Agency realizes that the mechanisms allowed in today's rule may be difficult to obtain at present.
However, the phased-in schedule for compliance with the rule will provide insurers more time to develop
and expand lines of insurance and states more time to establish state funds. In addition, the Agency
expects to promulgate final procedures for suspension of enforcement in the near future. Following
promulgation of that rule, those owners and operators unable to obtain a financial assurance mechanism
by their compliance date may form classes and apply for a suspension of enforcement.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
A. Applicability (§280.90)
The rule promulgated today applies to owners and operators of all underground storage tank systems
containing petroleum, with certain exemptions or deferrals. Commenters raised several issues concerning
the applicability of this rule.
1. Owners and Operators (§280.90(a))
The final rule applies to owners and operators of all petroleum UST systems (as defined in §280.12 of the
technical standards rule). If the owner and operator are separate persons, only one person is required to
demonstrate financial responsibility although the Agency will hold each responsible if the financial
responsibility requirements are not complied with by either party. While the Agency's intention with
respect to this issue was explicitly stated in the preamble to the proposed rule (52 FR 12795, April 17,
1987), the rule also conveyed the Agency's intention by using the phrase "owner or operator" instead of
"owner and operator" in all but the applicability section.
The Agency retains this approach and explicitly states it in the rule, as well as in the preamble, to avoid
possible confusion. For this reason, the Agency has added the following language to §280.90
Applicability:
If the owner and operator of a petroleum UST system are separate persons, only one person is required to
demonstrate financial responsibility.
Some commenters supported the Agency's approach to applicability when the owners and operators are
separate persons; however, other commenters believed that EPA should designate which person should
comply with the rules. Of these commenters, some supported a rule that required only the owners to
comply with the requirements while other commenters believed only operators should be held
responsible. Some commenters suggested that the person with responsibility for a particular activity, e.g.
tank installation, maintenance or daily operation, should demonstrate financial responsibility.
The commenters who urged EPA to designate only one responsible person when the owners and operators
are separate persons believed that the proposal left owners and operators to "fight it out" to determine
who will demonstrate financial responsibility and that problems would occur when they do not agree who
should obtain coverage. The commenters who urged EPA to hold only operators responsible pointed out
that in many cases owners will have only minimal or nominal control over the operation of the tanks (e.g.,
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passive lessors of property such as oil jobbers or marketers ordinarily do not control day-to-day tank
operations). On the other hand, one commenter who supported holding only owners responsible pointed
out that, when oil jobbers and marketers own tanks, they have usually assumed responsibility for tank
replacement and maintenance.
The Agency has decided not to designate a single party, either the owner or operator, as responsible for
compliance with the rules because the statute requires the UST standards to be applicable to "all owners
and operators," and a determination of which person should assume these costs could only be made on a
case by case basis. Under the technical requirements, both persons are responsible for corrective action;
however, the liability of owners and operators to third-party claimants will vary depending on the
circumstances of each case and on the applicable state law. Making financial assurance the responsibility
of only the person engaged in a particular activity would also be inappropriate because the liability of an
owner or operator is not limited to the results of particular activities. In some cases the person responsible
for one activity may have allowed a release to occur and therefore incur liability to third parties, while in
another case, the person responsible for a different activity may be liable. Under theories of strict liability
and negligence, even passive lessors could be liable for third-party damages in some situations.
Moreover, the person responsible for maintenance and installation will vary depending on the individual
arrangements between owner and operator.
The Agency recognizes that in some instances owners and operators will have difficulty agreeing which
one of them will comply with the rules. Nonetheless, the Agency believes that owners and operators are
in the best position to decide between themselves, as part of their ongoing business relationships, which
one of them should demonstrate financial responsibility. Owners and operators may decide that the person
most responsible for particular activities should obtain financial assurance, or they may decide that the
person most able to demonstrate financial responsibility should do so. EPA believes this approach will
allow for greater flexibility, yet avoids the considerable expense of requiring both parties to secure
financial assurance.
Other commenters expressed concern about other applicability issues. Some commenters objected to
requiring current owners and operators to obtain financial assurance when past owners and operators
might be responsible for contamination. Another commenter pointed out that tank testers may be
responsible for releases and urged that they should be subject to financial responsibility requirements.
Current owners and operators are responsible under the regulation for obtaining financial assurances for
their tanks even if previous owners or operators are responsible for contamination. In situations where a
current owner or operator is faced with claims for contamination that occurred under a previous owner or
operator, he may pursue appropriate legal remedies against the previous owner or operator. Similarly,
damage to tanks and releases which result from tank testing activity are subject to tort claims under
applicable state law. Moreover, the statute does not authorize the imposition of financial responsibility
requirements on tank testers, only UST owners and operators.
Finally, one commenter requested that the Agency clearly define owners and operators to exclude
corporate parents or affiliates. Parents and affiliates generally would not be subject to today's rule.
Parents, for example, may serve as guarantors for owners and operators, thereby enabling the owner or
operator to satisfy financial responsibility requirements, but would not be directly responsible themselves
for complying with these requirements. The Agency might, however, hold parents or affiliates subject to
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these requirements in certain situations. For example, if an owner or operator attempted to circumvent
today's requirements through the creation of a sham subsidiary or through other arrangements, the Agency
could in appropriate circumstances hold a parent or affiliate responsible for compliance with these rules.
Thus, a definition of owners and operators which excludes corporate parents or affiliates in all situations
is not appropriate. The Agency does not expect, however, that parents or affiliates will generally be
subject to these financial responsibility requirements.
2. Tanks Taken Out of Operation Before the Date for Compliance (§280.90(b))
The preamble to the proposed rule stated EPA's intention to make the rule applicable to tanks taken out of
operation before the effective date of the rule. The language of the proposed rule, however, did not state
specifically that it would apply to such tanks.
The Agency received a number of comments on this provision. One commenter questioned the Agency's
authority under Subtitle I to apply financial responsibility requirements retroactively to owners of tanks
taken out of operation before Subtitle I was enacted in 1984.
The statutory definition of "owner" in RCRA Section 9001(3)(A) and (B) includes owners of tanks taken
out of operation before enactment of HSWA, as well as owners of tanks in use on the date of enactment.
RCRA Section 9003(a) further authorizes EPA to promulgate regulations, including financial
responsibility regulations, applicable to all owners and operators of USTs. Therefore, the Agency has
authority to regulate tanks taken out of operation before the enactment of Subtitle I and to impose
financial responsibility requirements on owners and operators of such tanks where necessary to protect
human health or the environment.
Some commenters, while not questioning the Agency's statutory authority, urged the Agency to exempt
tanks taken out of operation before the effective date of the rule or before November 8, 1985 (one year
after enactment of HSWA). Commenters gave the following reasons for such an exemption:
-	Providers of financial assurance are not likely to offer assurance for tanks taken out of operation unless
it can be proven that there is no contamination present.
-	Because so many tanks have been taken out of operation in recent years, it would be extremely difficult
to identify these tanks and inform former owners and operators of their obligations.
One commenter recommended that if the requirement for such tanks is retained, owners and operators of
tanks that are properly closed should not be required to maintain financial assurance if they can
demonstrate that no contamination is present.
At the time the Agency proposed to require owners or operators of tanks taken out of operation before the
effective date to obtain financial assurance, it also proposed in the technical rule to require these tanks to
comply with closure requirements (§280.80). The Agency reasoned that, because non-operational tanks
were subject to the closure and corrective action requirements under Subparts F and H of the technical
standards, requiring financial assurance was necessary to ensure that closure was undertaken properly and
quickly.
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Since that time, the Agency has decided to eliminate the requirement that all USTs taken out of operation
before the effective date for the technical rule undergo closure. The rule does provide, however, that
implementing agencies may require owners or operators to close these tanks properly if there is a reason
to believe that they may pose a threat to human health and the environment. The preamble to the technical
standards rule discusses the reasons for this change.
Based on comments on the proposed financial responsibility rule and the revisions to the technical
standards, the Agency has decided not to require owners or operators of USTs taken out of operation
before the compliance dates in this rule to obtain financial assurance. The Agency recognizes that for
many owners and operators of USTs, insurance will be the only feasible financial assurance mechanism
available. The Agency agrees with commenters, among them insurance companies, that insurance
providers would be extremely reluctant to assure tanks taken out of operation because of the perceived
greater uncertainty associated with them.
Even if providers of assurance would assure these tanks, it is unlikely that they would cover leaks which
occurred before the effective date of the policy. For example, based on standard insurance industry
practice, owners and operators applying for coverage must meet certain pre-conditions which may include
tank tightness testing and a determination that there are no existing releases. If releases are discovered,
insurance policies probably would not cover them, because the insurance industry's practice is to exclude
pre-existing releases from coverage. In addition, as a condition for coverage of a tank not in operation, an
insurer might require proper closure in order to minimize the risk of a release of material which might
remain in the tank. Such an insurance policy would be of little value in protecting human health and the
environment since it would not cover pre-existing conditions and would only cover tanks that have been
emptied of their contents. The Agency believes that the owners' and operators' resources would be better
spent in closure and corrective action than in attempting to procure this type of insurance. Nevertheless,
owners and operators of tanks taken out of operation before the effective date remain responsible for the
costs of releases associated with them.
3. Applicability to State and Federal Government Entities (§280.90(c))
The final rule, like the proposed rule, is not applicable to state and federal government entities whose
debts and liabilities are the debts and liabilities of a state or the United States. Several commenters argued
that state and federal government entities should not be exempt from the financial responsibility
requirements. Their reasons included the following:
-	Such an exemption conflicts with Congressional intent to have all tanks assured.
-	The exemption will discourage sound tank management practices on the part of state and federal
governments.
-	The exemption would provide state-owned transit agencies with unfair advantages over private owners.
The Agency does not interpret the Congressional intent of Subtitle I to preclude exempting any class of
USTs from otherwise applicable requirements when the Agency has determined that such requirements
are not necessary to protect human health or the environment. See RCRA §9003(a). With respect to
financial responsibility, such requirements need not be imposed where the owners or operators will
consistently be able to cover the costs of releases in a timely fashion. The purpose of these financial
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responsibility requirements is to ensure that funds will be available in a timely manner to cover the costs
of corrective action and compensation of third parties arising from UST releases. While the Agency
recognizes that these requirements may provide an incentive for sound tank management practices, this is
not their primary purpose.
No commenters disputed the Agency's opinion that federal and state governments have the requisite
financial strength and stability to fulfill their financial assurance obligations. In addition, exemption from
the requirements will not discourage sound tank management practices by state and federal government
entities, because they remain responsible for the cost of corrective action associated with the releases.
The Agency concedes that not having to pay the costs of procuring a financial assurance mechanism may
result in a slight competitive advantage for state-owned transit agencies. Such an advantage is not likely
to be significantly greater than advantages already enjoyed by state-owned transit systems (e.g., through
government subsidies). In addition, the financial advantage of the state-owned agency is comparable to
the position of any firm which can rely on a guarantee provided by a parent or related firm, and merely
reflects the difference between large and small businesses. If releases occur, state-owned agencies may
rely on state assistance to pay the costs of damages. Privately-owned transit agencies, however, would
have to rely on their own funds to pay these costs. Thus, even without today's rule, private transit agencies
have a financial incentive to purchase insurance coverage not shared by the state-owned agency.
4. Applicability to Local Government Entities
While the proposed rule exempted from the requirements those government entities whose debts and
liabilities are the debts and liabilities of federal or state governments, local government entities were
required to provide financial assurance for USTs that they own or operate. The final rule remains
applicable to local government entities. However, under the Agency's schedule for phased compliance
with the rule, local government entities have 24 months from the promulgation date to comply. EPA also
intends to develop a financial test in the interim that will allow local governments that can demonstrate
the requisite financial strength and stability to cover the costs associated with UST releases to self-insure.
Local government entities include both general purpose local governments and special purpose local
entities. General purpose local government entities include municipalities, counties, townships, towns,
villages, parishes and New England towns. Special purpose local governments perform a single function
or a limited range of functions. Special purpose governments are generally designated as either public
authorities or special districts such as school districts, water and sewer authorities, transit authorities or
power authorities. All local governments, both general and special purpose, are subject to this rule.
One commenter supported application of the financial responsibility requirements to local government
entities. However, many commenters stated that the proposed exemption for federal and state
governments from demonstration of financial responsibility should be extended to local government
entities. The major arguments in favor of such an exemption focused on three areas: (1) the permanence
and stability of local governments; (2) the incentives for local governments to provide funds in a timely
manner; and (3) the financial strength and capability to raise funds in a timely manner.
First, several commenters maintained that the permanence and stability that the Agency attributes to
federal and state governments also apply to local governments; local governments are unalterably
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attached to their particular location. Moreover, commenters asserted that cities almost never go bankrupt,
and when they are unable to meet their financial obligations over the short-term, their debts are not
forgiven under the bankruptcy laws but are extended until they can be satisfied. Therefore, unlike private
firms, local governments do not disappear even if they file bankruptcy.
Second, commenters stated that local governments have the same incentives as federal and state
governments to meet their UST obligations in a timely manner. Local governments exist to safeguard
public health and welfare, and local officials have voter accountability that helps assure an immediate and
effective response to an UST release. One commenter, an association of city governments, stated that
cities have consistently demonstrated an ability to respond to UST leaks in a timely manner and have
taken prompt action to ensure that leaks do not recur in the future by either upgrading or removing failed
USTs.
Third, commenters claimed that local governments have the requisite financial strength to meet potential
UST obligations in a timely manner. One commenter representing city governments pointed out that cities
are accustomed to addressing emergencies such as natural disasters and routinely establish contingency
funds of a size that could easily cover the costs associated with most UST leaks. Another commenter
noted that local appropriation procedures often are structured so that officials may take funds originally
intended for one purpose and divert them to a more pressing need related to USTs.
Finally, one commenter argued that for UST releases in excess of fund reserves, many local government
entities ~ like states ~ have the ability to raise funds through taxes and debt issues. The commenter stated
that the delays involved with tax and bond initiatives are unlikely to affect the timeliness of an UST
cleanup because cities tend to be excellent credit risks and can often have contracted work performed in
an emergency without having to provide funds until after the emergency is remedied or use their own
personnel to respond.
The Agency believes that there is merit in many of the points commenters raised as applied to particular
municipalities. However, for several reasons, the Agency is unwilling to exempt all local government
entities from these requirements. There is substantial variability in local governments in terms of size,
financial capacity, and functions. A number of commenters urged that the financial test should be
modified so that local government entities could use it. The corporate financial test is not applicable to
most government entities because it contains a net worth indicator, a financial measure that is either
unavailable to many local governments or does not measure financial strength in the same way it does for
private firms. It requires reporting to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or to Dun and
Bradstreet, which is also not applicable to government entities. Accordingly, the Agency is taking steps to
develop a financial test that will allow local governments meeting the test criteria to self-insure like
private companies that use the corporate financial test. Local governments which pass this financial test
will not be required to obtain other financial assurance mechanisms to comply with the requirements of
this rule. In the interim as discussed in Section III.B, under the phased schedule of compliance, the
compliance date for local government entities is 24 months after promulgation. The Agency anticipates
that the final financial test for local government entities will be promulgated before their scheduled
compliance date.
Some commenters on the proposed rule suggested that particular special purpose local governments such
as public power entities or airports should be exempt from the financial responsibility requirements. The
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Agency sees no reason to treat particular special purpose local government entities differently from all
other local governments. All local governments remain subject to the rule and may be able to meet the
local government financial test under development.
Some commenters suggested a change to the corporate financial test so that power authorities meeting the
other criteria in the test could use it. Specifically, they suggested that the Agency accept reports to the
Rural Electrification Administration and the Energy Information Administration, as an alternative to
filing with the SEC or Dun and Bradstreet. Their comments indicated that other than filing annual
statements with a different Agency, they could use the Subtitle I corporate financial test. This change has
been made to the corporate financial test so that power authorities meeting the criteria in the test may use
it.
5.	Applicability to Indian Tribes
The proposed rule did not address the applicability of the financial responsibility requirements to Indian
tribes. Indian tribes are included in the statutory definition of municipalities in RCRA §1004(13).
Accordingly, under the phased schedule of compliance, Indian tribes will be required to comply with
financial responsibility requirements on the last compliance date, 24 months after the promulgation date
of the rule, similar to municipalities. However, in the proposed financial test for local government
entities, the Agency will specifically request comments on whether this test should apply to Indian tribes.
The Agency intends to finalize this proposed rule before the compliance date for local government
entities and Indian tribes.
6.	Deferrals and Exclusions (§280.90(d))
Under the proposed rule, EPA would have deferred from the financial responsibility requirements certain
categories of tanks that the Agency also was proposing to defer under the technical requirements. The
Agency proposed to defer the regulation of these categories of USTs because it had limited information
about these USTs or was otherwise uncertain about the need to regulate them. Several commenters
addressed these and other categories of tanks that they believed should be deferred or exempted from the
final rule.
The proposed technical requirements deferred the following categories of tanks from all of their
requirements (except the requirements for corrective action and notification and the prohibition of bare
steel UST installation requirements): (1) wastewater treatment tanks, (2) sumps, (3) underground bulk
storage tanks, (4) USTs containing radioactive waste and other radioactive materials, (5) UST systems
containing electrical equipment, (6) hydraulic lift tanks, and (7) UST systems containing used oil.
In the final technical standards rule (53 FR 37082, September 23, 1988), the Agency has excluded some
of these categories of USTs from the technical requirements. Some of the other categories of USTs that
the Agency proposed to defer from regulation are now regulated. The Agency continues to defer
regulating certain categories of USTs (except from corrective action requirements and prohibition of bare
steel UST installation).
The financial responsibility rule tracks the final technical standards rule with respect to exclusions and
deferrals from the requirements. All USTs excluded from regulation are excluded from these financial
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responsibility requirements. All USTs that are deferred from regulation also are not subject to these
financial responsibility requirements. Because the Agency is uncertain about the need to regulate deferred
categories of USTs, or has limited information about them, the application of financial responsibility
requirements to the deferred categories of USTs is inappropriate at this point. The Agency's decision
about the regulation of each of the categories of excluded or deferred tanks is summarized below. The
preamble to the final technical standards rule contains a thorough discussion of the Agency's rationale for
each decision.
-	UST Systems Containing Hazardous Waste and Regulated Substances. The Agency has excluded these
tank systems from regulation under Subtitle I.
-	UST Systems Containing Electrical Equipment and Hydraulic Lifts. Equipment or machinery using
regulated substances for operational purposes are now excluded from regulation.
-	Wastewater Treatment USTs. Wastewater treatment tanks regulated under the Clean Water Act are
excluded from regulation. Wastewater treatment USTs that are not regulated under the Clean Water Act
are deferred from regulation.
-	Tanks Containing De Minimis Quantities of Regulated Substances. The Agency is excluding the
following categories of USTs:
-	USTs with a capacity of less than 110 gallons;
-- USTs holding a de minimis concentration of regulated substances; and
-- USTs that serve as emergency backup tanks, hold regulated substances for only a short period of time,
and are expeditiously emptied after use.
-	Sumps. Sumps are not excluded or deferred as a separate category; however, many sumps may be
excluded under the de minimis exclusions, the wastewater treatment exclusion, and the statutory
exclusion for storm water and wastewater collection systems. Other sumps may be deferred under the
"field-constructed tank" deferral.
-	Field-Constructed Tanks. Field-constructed tanks, which include many tanks that were classified as
underground bulk storage tanks in the proposal, are deferred from regulation.
-UST Systems that Contain Radioactive Wastes and Other Radioactive Materials. The Agency is
deferring UST systems that contain radioactive materials from regulation.
-	Backup Diesel Tanks at Nuclear Facilities. These USTs are deferred from regulation.
-	Airport Hydrant Fueling Systems. These USTs are deferred from regulation.
-	Used Oil. Tanks containing used oil, including crankcase oil, are no longer deferred. They are now
subject to the final technical rule, and are also subject to the financial responsibility requirements.
For each of the following categories of tanks, the Agency received comments supporting a deferral or
exemption of these requirements from the financial responsibility requirements (see also the preamble to
the technical standards rule for a more thorough discussion):
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-	Small Capacity Tanks. One commenter urged "special consideration" for small capacity users. One
commenter suggested that petroleum USTs containing under 5,000 gallons should be exempt. Another
commenter suggested 4,000 gallons as a cutoff. As noted above, the Agency has decided on a de minimis
exclusion for tanks with a capacity of less than 110 gallons.
-	Small Business. One commenter requested a small business cutoff for the final rules because insurance
may be offered only at unaffordable rates. Other commenters requested an exemption for small businesses
not engaged in petroleum marketing. The Agency has not exempted small businesses from the final
financial responsibility requirements because the costs of corrective action and third-party claims will not
be different for small businesses than for other owners and operators. The specific concerns of small
businesses and businesses not engaged in petroleum marketing are addressed in establishing a phased
compliance schedule (Section III.B in the preamble) and a lower per- occurrence amount for certain
facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining or marketing (Section III.D. 1).
-	Tanks Containing Heating Oil. Based on experience with releases in New Jersey, one commenter urged
that heating oil for on-site consumption should not be excluded from the requirements. Because heating
oil tanks are excluded from regulation by statute, EPA cannot require these USTs to obtain coverage.
-	Small Throughput Tanks. One commenter supported exempting a system with small throughput volume.
According to this commenter, this exemption is appropriate because most leaks are associated with
piping. The Agency recognizes that a large number of releases are associated with piping; however, the
Agency does not believe an exclusion for these tanks is appropriate. Releases may still occur from tanks
with small throughput and owners or operators should obtain coverage for releases that do occur.
However, the Agency has taken these concerns into account in establishing a lower per-occurrence
amount of financial assurance for tanks at certain facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining
or marketing.
-	Tanks Owned by Small, Rural Telephone Systems. One commenter urged EPA to consider exempting
small, rural telephone systems from these requirements for the following reasons: (1) the unavailability of
pollution insurance, (2) the high net worth requirement for self-insurance, and (3) the high per-occurrence
and aggregate coverage levels. Although EPA recognizes owners and operators of these USTs may have
difficulty obtaining financial assurances, releases from these USTs may still require corrective action and
cause bodily injury and property damage to third-party claimants. For these reasons, EPA has not
exempted these categories of USTs.
-	Aircraft Owners. One commenter supported an exemption for aircraft owners, comparing these USTs to
motor fuel tanks with a capacity less than 110 gallons. All tanks with a capacity of less than 110 gallons
are now excluded from these requirements. Thus, many aircraft owners with USTs that contain a capacity
of less than 110 gallons are excluded under the de minimis exclusion. In addition, EPA has deferred
regulation of airport hydrant systems. The Agency is not aware of any evidence to support an additional
exemption for these categories of USTs that contain more than 110 gallons.
B. Compliance Dates (§280.91)
Today's rule is effective on (insert date 90 days after date of publication in the FEDERAL REGISTER).
However, UST owners are required to comply with this regulation by the date assigned to their
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appropriate compliance category in the rule. The composition of the compliance categories and the
compliance dates for each of these categories is summarized in Table 1. As Table 1 shows, EPA has
designated UST ownership as the factor determining compliance categories. The rationale for this
decision is explained below.
UST owners in Category I are required to comply on the effective date three months after the rule's
promulgation. UST owners in Category I include all petroleum marketing firms that own 1,000 or more
USTs and all other UST-owning entities that report a tangible net worth of $20 million or more to the
SEC, Dun and Bradstreet, the Energy Information Administration, or the Rural Electrification
Administration.
UST owners in Category II are required to comply by 12 months after the rule's promulgation date. UST
owners in Category II include all petroleum marketing firms owning 100 to 999 USTs.
UST owners in Category III are required to comply by 18 months after the rule's promulgation date. UST
owners in Category III include all petroleum marketing firms owning 13 to 99 USTs at more than one
facility.
Table 1. Compliance Dates For And Composition Of Compliance Categories
Category and compliance date
	for this category	
Composition of category
Petroleum marketing firms Nonpetroleum marketing firms
I. 3 months after promulgation
date of rule on the effective
date.
All petroleum marketing firms
owning 1,000 or more USTs.
All UST-owning non-petroleum
marketing firms that report a
tangible net worth of $20 million
or more to the SEC, Dun and
Bradstreet, the Energy
Information Administration, or
the Rural Electrification
Administration.
II.	12 months after
promulgation date of rule.
III.	18 months after-
promulgation date of rule.
IV. 24 months after
promulgation date of rule.
All petroleum marketing firms
owning 100-999 USTs.
All petroleum firms owning 13-
99 USTs at more than one
facility.
None.
Do.
All petroleum firms owning 1-12
USTs or owning only one facility
with fewer than 100 USTs.
All UST-owning non-petroleum
marketing firms that do not
report a tangible net worth of $20
million or more to the SEC, Dun
and Bradstreet, the Energy
Information Administration, or
the Rural Electrification
Administration, including all
local government entities.
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UST owners in Category IV are required to comply by 24 months after the rule's promulgation date. UST
owners in Category IV include all petroleum marketing firms owning 1-12 USTs or those owning only
one facility with fewer than 100 USTs. (For example, a petroleum marketing firm owning 13 USTs at one
facility would be classified by EPA in Category IV.) Category IV also includes all UST-owning firms not
engaged in petroleum marketing but having tangible net worth of less than $20 million and all local
government entities.
In §280.92 of the final rule, the Agency defines petroleum marketing firms as all firms owning facilities
engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing. These include all facilities at which petroleum is
produced and all facilities from which petroleum is sold or transferred to other petroleum marketers or to
the public. Petroleum production facilities include all refineries and all facilities engaged in producing
petroleum products from purchased materials. Facilities from which petroleum is sold or transferred to
other petroleum marketers or to the public include all wholesale petroleum marketing facilities, such as
bulk terminals and bulk plants, and all retail petroleum marketing facilities, such as automobile service
stations, marine service stations, truck stops, convenience stores selling gasoline, etc. The Agency
considers all facilities selling petroleum products to the public to be retail petroleum marketing facilities,
even if the amount of petroleum sold is minimal. Facilities that store petroleum products in underground
storage tanks only to refuel their own vehicles (e.g., establishments owning fleets of vehicles) are not
considered facilities that are engaged in petroleum marketing. Establishments that store fuel to refuel
vehicles rented to the public (e.g., rental car facilities) are not considered facilities engaged in petroleum
marketing as long as the fuel is not sold to the public at large.
The Agency considers firms owning both petroleum marketing facilities and other types of facilities that
are not engaged in petroleum marketing to be petroleum marketing firms. The compliance date for such
firms is based on the total number of USTs owned at their petroleum marketing facilities and at their other
facilities.
Many commenters on EPA's proposed rules suggested that the Agency delay the effective date of the rule
because pollution liability insurance for USTs and other financial assurance mechanisms would not be
available to a large number of UST owners and operators by the rule's effective date. Although EPA has
decided not to delay the effective date of this rule, the Agency is concerned about the unavailability of
financial assurance mechanisms for a large portion of the regulated community. On March 31, 1988, EPA
published a supplement to the proposed rule (53 FR 10401) in which the Agency explained that it was
considering a phase-in of the financial responsibility regulations to allow different categories of owners
and operators to come into compliance at different times after publication of the final rules. The principal
reason for the phase-in was to provide sufficient time for owners and operators to obtain financial
assurance in accordance with the rules. Additional reasons for the proposed phase-in included:
-	the time necessary for providers of financial assurance mechanisms to conform them to EPA's
requirements;
-	the time necessary to provide assistance and outreach programs for portions of the regulated community;
-	the administrative difficulties of trying to implement this regulation for such a large and diverse
regulated community; and
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-	the unavailability of mechanisms to large portions of the regulated community.
The Agency received a large number of comments in response to this notice. Although the majority of
commenters generally agreed with the phase-in strategy, many suggested an across-the-board delay and
still others were concerned about the possible negative consequences of any type of delay (including a
phase-in) to the implementation of the financial responsibility rules. The Agency agrees with many
commenters who pointed out that the relative unavailability of financial responsibility mechanisms
(primarily insurance, the financial test of self-insurance, or state funds) presents a problem for some
members of the regulated community and that a phase-in may help to alleviate this problem. However, the
Agency recognizes that the problem of the unavailability of mechanisms for some members of the
regulated community may not be resolved before the compliance date for the requirements for those
owners. The Agency retains its discretion to use the suspension of enforcement authority provided in
§9003(d)(5)(D) to address the problem of unavailability in the future. EPA expects that implementation of
the rule during the phase-in period will enable the Agency to develop appropriate suspension of
enforcement procedures based on this experience tailored to the numbers and types of facilities for which
assurance remains unavailable.
Many commenters opposed a phase-in or any type of delay in the implementation of these rules. Their
arguments included:
-	Delaying implementation of financial responsibility rules will not increase the availability of insurance
and may even further delay any response from the insurance marketplace.
-	Delaying the implementation of financial responsibility rules removes a strong incentive to replace or
upgrade substandard USTs quickly.
-	Delaying implementation of the financial responsibility rules may delay the establishment of state funds.
-	Delaying implementation of the financial responsibility rules will not eliminate the need for regulated
entities to apply for a suspension of enforcement.
In deciding that a phase-in is the best regulatory strategy, the Agency has attempted to establish
compliance dates which are as early as possible considering the type of assurance different types of
facilities are likely to obtain. The use of an approach involving different compliance dates for different
compliance categories is designed to achieve the maximum balance between the need to ensure financial
capability for UST releases and the necessary time for owners and operators to obtain assurance
mechanisms. For example, EPA believes that almost all firms in Category I will be able to comply with
these requirements using the financial test of self-insurance or a guarantee. Chapter 2 of an EPA-
sponsored study, entitled "Financial Responsibility for Underground Storage Tank Releases: Financial
Profile of Retail Motor Fuel Marketing Firms," shows that all but one of the firms for whom data were
collected that own 1,000 or more USTs (assuming that there are 4.1 USTs per outlet) have over $20
million in tangible net worth. Firms in other industry sectors with at least $20 million in tangible net
worth will be able to pass the financial test of self-insurance as long as they file financial statements with
the SEC, the Energy Information Administration, or the Rural Electrification Administration, or they
report their tangible net worth to Dun and Bradstreet and Dun and Bradstreet assigns them a financial
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strength rating of 4A or 5A. The Agency sees no reason why such firms should not be required to comply
with this regulation by the effective date of the requirements.
Further, almost all firms in Category II either have insurance now or can buy it from providers already in
the marketplace, on the condition that they upgrade their tanks to meet insurers' criteria. These firms have
12 months from the promulgation date to apply for insurance and to upgrade their tanks. This period also
gives insurance providers time to conform their pollution liability or environmental impairment policies
to EPA's regulatory requirements and to raise the necessary capital or reinsurance to offer the limits of
liability required in today's rules.
The Agency recognizes that the smaller petroleum marketing firms in Category III are less likely than
firms in Category II to have insurance and therefore need additional time for processing of their insurance
applications and upgrading their USTs to meet insurers' requirements. These firms have 18 months from
the promulgation date to comply with the regulations.
The Agency expects that regulated entities in Category IV (which includes the smallest petroleum
marketing firms, general industry firms with tangible net worth under $20 million, local government
entities, etc.) will have the most difficulty obtaining financial assurance. Most of these entities cannot
pass the financial test of self-insurance included in today's rule, and pollution liability insurance has not
generally been available to them. EPA expects that the majority of these regulated entities will have to
rely on state funds for assurance. Many commenters responding to the Supplemental Notice (53 FR
10401) stressed that EPA's estimate of 18 months for state funds to form was overly optimistic. Today's
rule would give those entities relying on a state fund for financial assurance 24 months from the rule's
promulgation date to come into compliance.
In the absence of a phase-in, the Agency does not believe that most entities in the regulated community
would have adequate time to comply with the financial responsibility regulations, because only the self-
insurance mechanism can be implemented immediately by those firms able to use it. Those firms able to
use insurance will probably not be able to comply by the effective date of the regulations. Even those
firms that already have UST pollution liability policies probably do not have policies that conform to
EPA's requirements or that have sufficient limits of liability. These policies will have to be changed or
augmented to comply with today's financial responsibility regulation.
It will be even more difficult for those firms that may be able to obtain insurance but have not yet done so
to comply by the effective date of the regulations. One current insurer of USTs commented that some type
of phase-in is "imperative" because the administrative capacity of UST insurers is not sufficient to
accommodate all tank owners and operators who want to purchase insurance. In addition, most of the
pollution liability insurance currently being offered to petroleum marketers contains preconditions with
respect to the age of the USTs insured and leak detection methods. Firms with older USTs or inadequate
leak detection methods will need time to comply with these insurer requirements. It would be impossible
for all firms not already meeting these requirements to comply with them by the effective date of the
regulations. Finally, as pointed out by many commenters, the development of state funds can take a
considerable amount of time. Thus, the Agency concludes that it would be impossible for most of the
regulated community to comply with today's financial responsibility requirements within 90 days of the
promulgation of the regulations.
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At the same time, the discretionary authority to suspend enforcement of the rules is not an adequate
substitute for the phase-in because suspension does not serve the same purpose as a phase-in. The Agency
believes that human health and the environment will be better protected by establishing reasonable
compliance dates than by requiring large portions of the regulated community to devote their immediate
compliance efforts to petitioning for a suspension of enforcement. During the phase-in period, the
resources of the regulated community can be devoted to obtaining financial assurance mechanisms, and
the resources of the states, EPA, and the regulated community can be devoted to developing and
encouraging the development of mechanisms such as state funds and RRGs. Inclusion of a phase-in will
restrict the use of the suspension of enforcement mechanism to those situations where compliance
difficulties have to do with things other than inadequate time to complete administrative activities and to
meet insurers' preconditions.
The Agency also does not believe that deferral of the requirements is a useful substitute for a phase-in. A
phase-in has two advantages over a deferral. First, a phase-in is more protective of human health and the
environment than a deferral in that it requires those who can obtain financial responsibility mechanisms to
do so. Second, when the deferral period is ended, there is likely to be a last-minute rush of activity that
could overwhelm the insurance industry's administrative capacity and the capacity of those businesses
providing tank replacement, upgrading, and release-detection services.
Furthermore, the Agency does not think this relatively short phase-in will delay the entry of new insurers
into the marketplace. If the rule did not include a phase-in of compliance dates, any new insurer would
have to (1) develop and announce a new program that would comply with EPA's requirements and (2)
process and accept applications for this program within 90 days to allow the regulated community to
comply by the effective date of the regulations. EPA believes it would be extremely difficult for UST
owners and operators to get pollution liability insurance conforming to the requirements of this rule from
new insurers within 90 days of the rule's effective date. The phase-in establishes the necessary time for
new insurance programs to develop, publicize their operations, and process applications. With the phase-
in, a new program would have 1 year to carry out these steps for its first customers and an additional year
to process applications for other members of the regulated community. Furthermore, the regulated
community still has a strong incentive to purchase insurance prior to the required compliance dates. The
phase-in of compliance with the financial responsibility requirements does not relieve the regulated
community of liability for corrective action and third-party liability. Thus, many in the regulated
community will attempt to obtain insurance as soon as it becomes available.
Nor does the Agency believe that the phase-in will remove incentives for regulated entities to replace or
upgrade substandard USTs or to initiate leak detection. If the rule had only one compliance date, it would
be impossible for the existing tank replacement and leak detection industries to provide adequate
professional service to the many firms that may need their services. The technical standards rule phases in
leak detection and tank upgrading and replacement requirements for the same reason.
Finally, the Agency does not believe that the phase-in will delay the implementation of state funds. None
of the state representatives who commented on the Supplemental Notice (53 FR 10401) were of the
opinion that the phase-in would delay the implementation of state funds. They explained that states would
need time to pass laws authorizing the establishment of a fund, to develop regulations specifying how the
fund would be implemented, and to develop revenue sources and capitalize the fund. In fact, EPA views
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the phase-in as the only way to allow states adequate time to develop thoughtful, sound, and adequately-
funded programs. The Agency believes it is more protective of human health and the environment to
allow time for the development of well-thought-out programs than to create a situation that will result in
the development of state funds that have not been properly designed.
In the example given in the Supplemental Notice (53 FR 10401), the phase-in categories were set up
based on the number of tanks owned or operated as an indicator of financial strength and thus the time
needed to comply with the rule. In today's rule, the phase-in categories are set up based on UST
ownership for petroleum marketing firms and on net worth for non-petroleum marketing firms. One
commenter requested that EPA clarify, both for the purpose of the phase-in and for the rule in general,
that "individual persons controlling separately operated facilities may... treat themselves either as a single
owner or operator or as several independent operators." Although this interpretation reflects EPA's
intention with regard to most provisions of the final rule being promulgated today (see Section III.A.l.
above), it is not the basis for the final rule's phase-in provision. Instead, the phase-in is based on the total
number of USTs owned to make clear at what time USTs that are owned and operated by different entities
are required to be in compliance with the final rule. UST ownership is a better indicator of both ability to
comply with the financial test and to obtain insurance. If the Agency adopted the commenter's suggestion,
many more owners or operators of USTs at more than one facility could qualify for a later compliance
date. EPA has designated UST ownership, rather than UST operation, as the factor determining the
compliance category so that earlier compliance dates will be required for most USTs (since UST-owning
firms tend to be larger than UST-operating firms).
The majority of commenters agreed that the number of tanks is the most reasonable basis on which to
predicate a compliance date phase-in. The reasons for the choice of the number-of-tanks criterion
included:
-	The number of tanks reflects a firm's financial strength and its ability to get insurance (and thus to
comply with the rule);
-	The number of tanks is a partial measure of the risk of release; and
-	The number of tanks is easy to determine for compliance purposes and easy to verify for enforcement
purposes.
Other phase-in criteria suggested by commenters included measures that were more reflective of risk
(e.g., age, storage capacity, or location of tanks), financial strength, and type of industry. One commenter
suggested that the basis for compliance should be the ability of owners or operators to self-insure or to
obtain insurance from private or public sources. In essence, this is the strategy the Agency has adopted: it
involves separating the regulated community into two groups, petroleum marketing firms and other
regulated entities. For petroleum marketing firms, the number of tanks owned acts as a reasonable proxy
for the ability of a firm to self-insure or to obtain insurance. For other regulated entities, the $20 million
in tangible net worth requirement is a good proxy for firms that will be able to use the financial test
because almost all firms with $20 million in tangible net worth should be able to use the financial test,
irrespective of how many tanks that they own. (Entities with less than $20 million in tangible net worth
may not be able to self-insure and insurance has not been available to such firms up to now.)
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The Agency rejected basing the phase-in on risk-related measures because a schedule designed to require
the highest risk USTs to comply first would not further the Agency's objective in phasing in compliance
with the rules. The Agency's objective for phasing in compliance is to give the regulated community the
time it will need to obtain assurance. For this reason, in developing the phase-in the Agency considered
only those factors (e.g., financial strength) related to the ability of various segments of the regulated
community to obtain assurance.
The Agency also notes that requiring high-risk USTs to comply first could have a negative impact on the
availability of financial assurance mechanisms. If high-risk USTs were required to comply first (as some
commenters suggested), insurers already in the market would be reluctant to insure additional USTs and
new insurers would be reluctant to enter the market. Therefore, this would act as a disincentive to a
gradual increase in the availability of insurance.
In the example described in the March 1988 FEDERAL REGISTER notice, EPA set up compliance
categories and compliance dates as follows:

Number of tanks
Compliance date
owned or operated
Effective date of rule	
1,500 or more.
6 months after effective date	
50 to 1,499.
12 months after effective date	
6 to 49.
18 months after effective date	
1 to 5.
For reasons already discussed, EPA decided to base the phase-in on the number of USTs owned and to
develop different compliance categories for petroleum marketing firms and for non-petroleum marketing
firms to reflect the time necessary for regulated entities to comply with this regulation. The Agency
decided to give firms in the second category more time to comply and to change the number of tanks
owned (for petroleum marketing firms) in each category so that the categories would more accurately
reflect this objective. In making these changes, the Agency was aided by information provided by
commenters with regard to the availability of assurance to various segments of the regulated community.
Petroleum marketing firms owning 1,000 or more USTs (as opposed to 1,500 or more USTs) are in
Category I because the Agency believes that such firms can almost always use the financial test of self-
insurance. 5 Petroleum marketing firms owning between 100 and 999 USTs (as opposed to 50 to 1,499
USTs) are in Category II because the Agency believes this UST ownership spread more accurately
represents the UST-owning firms that have insurance now or can obtain it most easily. Petroleum
marketing firms owning between 13 and 99 USTs at more than one facility (as opposed to 6 to 49 USTs)
are in Category III because this range more accurately represents UST-owning firms that are eligible for
insurance but may need more time to obtain it than firms in Category II. In addition, because insurance
has not been available to petroleum marketing firms owning only one facility in the past, such facilities
have been moved to Category IV.
Category IV was expanded to include firms owning 1 to 12 USTs or, as noted above, only one facility
with fewer than 100 USTs (as opposed to 1 to 5 USTs). This expansion of the upper limit of the category
from 5 to 12 USTs allows additional time for compliance for the smallest rural jobbers. These firms may
have older USTs and greater difficulty obtaining insurance than other petroleum marketers. All non-
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petroleum marketing firms which cannot self-insure, including local government entities, have also been
included in Category IV because pollution liability insurance has not been available to these entities in the
past.
C. Definition of Terms (§280.92)
In the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency discussed definitions for several terms used in the rule.
With the exception of "occurrence," the Agency is adopting the definitions as proposed. This discussion
addresses only those terms for which the Agency received comment.
1. Accidental Release and Occurrence
In the April 17, 1987, proposal, the Agency defined "accidental release" as
"any sudden or nonsudden release of petroleum arising from operating an underground storage tank that
results in a need for corrective action, bodily injury or property damage neither expected nor intended by
the tank owner or operator" (§280.91).
This definition incorporates both sudden and nonsudden releases, as required by RCRA §9003(c)(6). In
addition, the Agency proposed to define "occurrence" as "an accident, including continuous or repeated
exposure to conditions, which results in a release from an underground storage tank."
Two commenters asserted that the proposed definitions of occurrence and accidental release do not reflect
standard insurance definitions. The commenters noted that the comprehensive general liability (CGL)
form issued by the Insurance Service Office (ISO) defines "occurrence" as "an accident, including
continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same generally harmful conditions." They also noted
that the ISO's pollution liability coverage form does not define "occurrence" or "release." Instead, the
policy uses the term "pollution incident." These commenters urged EPA to remove the definitions of
"occurrence" and "accidental release" from the rule and the certificate and endorsement forms, and to
replace them with the term "pollution incident." Another commenter argued that the definition of
"occurrence" should be changed to reflect the ISO's newest CGL form.
Commenters warned that if the definitions in the regulation remain at variance with those in use in the
ISO's pollution liability coverage form, courts will have to review more than one definition of key policy
terms during litigation. Insurers indicated that EPA's use of non-standard definitions in today's rule would
reduce the range of predictability in UST coverage and expose insurers to an uncertain amount of
liability. Such conditions, they argued, would seriously impair the insurance industry's willingness to
provide liability insurance required by today's rule.
In specifying the language in the certificate of insurance and endorsement, the Agency does not intend to
modify contractual obligations regarding the extent of coverage under insurance policies used to satisfy
the liability coverage requirement. In response to the problems cited by commenters, the Agency has
retained the definition of "occurrence" but added clarifying language to the rule. The rule now allows
insurance policies containing alternate definitions of "occurrence" or standard terms other than
"occurrence," such as "pollution incident," to be used to satisfy the UST liability coverage requirements.
This definition of occurrence is included in today's rule to assist in the understanding of the financial
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assurance requirements, i.e., to clarify the scope of coverage required under the rule. It is not intended to
limit the meaning of "occurrence" in a way that conflicts with general insurance industry usage.
The Agency prefers not to require that policies incorporate a specific definition of "occurrence" because
of the wide range of definitions currently in use and because insurance practices may change over time.
However, the Agency has the authority under RCRA Section 9003(d)(1) to specify acceptable and
unacceptable liability insurance policy terms and the Agency may need to specify such terms in the
future. In addition, policies employing unsatisfactory definitions of "occurrence" or unsatisfactory terms
other than "occurrence" may not provide liability protection in accordance with today's rule.
In addition, the Agency has made a minor change to the definition of "accidental release" simply to
capture the meaning more precisely. The modified definition, with the modification in italics, is as
follows:
"any sudden or nonsudden release of petroleum arising from operating an underground storage tank that
results in a need for corrective action and/or compensation for bodily injury or property damage neither
expected nor intended by the tank owner or operator" (§280.92(a)).
The Agency received two comments arguing that the definitions of "occurrence" and "accidental releases"
should include releases that are caused intentionally (e.g., sabotage, vandalism). EPA believes that an
explicit inclusion is unnecessary. Since "accidental release" is defined as a release resulting in "a need for
corrective action and/or compensation for bodily injury or property damage, neither expected nor
intended by the tank owner or operator," the relevant determinants of coverage are the intentions and
expectations of the insured. Thus, damage resulting from sabotage or vandalism is accidental if the
insured party had no intention or expectation of such damage.
Finally, a commenter also suggested that vague terms like "intended" or "expected" in the definition of
accidental release be defined in the rule. However, as discussed above, EPA intends to allow insurers
flexibility in writing policy language by not defining every policy term explicitly. The Agency recognizes
that such terms are open to interpretation, but also realizes that because they are common in insurance
industry usage, defining them in the rule is not necessary and may limit availability. Therefore, the
Agency believes that it is appropriate to leave interpretation of such terms to private insurance law.
2. Bodily Injury
In the proposal and in the final rule, the Agency defines "bodily injury" as having the meaning given to it
by applicable state law. In addition, the definition excludes those liabilities that, consistent with standard
industry practice, are excluded from coverage in liability insurance policies for "bodily injury."
The Agency received several comments in favor of the proposed definition and some comments opposed.
Commenters opposed to the definition maintained that it would create inconsistent definitions, and thus
varying scopes of coverage, from state to state. One commenter proposed that EPA define "bodily injury"
as "any damage to a third party which the tank owner or operator is legally liable for causing due to
negligence."
The Agency is reluctant to adopt a standard definition for a number of reasons. First, the Agency fears
that any attempt to redefine "bodily injury" will result in a more tightly limited insurance market.
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Comments received from the insurance industry strongly urged EPA to retain the approach in the
proposed rule, and predicted that insurers might exit the market if the term is given a standard definition.
Second, EPA recognizes that third parties will generally bring liability claims pursuant to state law.
Because the definition of "bodily injury" and the treatment of bodily injury claims differ from state to
state, the Agency believes that mandating a nationwide definition would promote confusion in state
courts, which would be required to review two definitions of "bodily injury" (i.e., a definition pursuant to
state law and a standard definition) during litigation.
Third, the Agency prefers the definitions of terms used in the liability insurance requirements to be
consistent with their common meanings within the insurance industry. Since the definition of "bodily
injury" often varies from state to state, mandating a standard definition would establish definitions of
terms inconsistent with their common meanings.
Consequently, EPA has retained the proposed definition of "bodily injury" in today's final rule.
3.	Director of the Implementing Agency
This term refers to the person responsible for implementing the UST program under Subtitle I of RCRA.
For USTs in authorized states, this person is the Director of the state agency; for USTs in states without
approved programs, this person is the EPA Regional Administrator.
In today's rule, this term replaces the term "Regional Administrator," a term used in the proposed rule,
wherever appropriate.
4.	Petroleum Marketing Facilities
This definition was not in the proposed rule. It has been added to the final rule to assist in understanding
the phased schedule for compliance and to define per-occurrence levels of assurance for USTs. The
definition closely follows the statutory language of RCRA §9003(d)(5)(A) and (B). "Petroleum marketing
facilities" are all facilities at which petroleum is produced or refined and all facilities from which
petroleum is sold or transferred to other petroleum marketers or to the public.
5.	Petroleum Marketing Firms
These are all firms owning petroleum marketing facilities. Firms owning other types of facilities with
USTs, as well as petroleum marketing facilities, are considered to be petroleum marketing firms. This
definition also was not in the proposed rule. It has been added to the final rule to assist in understanding
the phased schedule for compliance.
6.	Property Damage
In the proposed rule and in the final rule, the Agency defines property damage as having the meaning
given it by applicable state laws. In addition, the term excludes those liabilities which, consistent with
standard industry practice, are excluded from coverage in liability insurance policies.
One commenter agreed with the Agency's approach, while other commenters suggested that the definition
be modified to cover an intentional act (e.g., sabotage). Including intentional acts in the definition, the
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commenters argued, would ensure that owners or operators will be financially responsible for all leaks
and spills, not just those that are accidental or unintentional.
As noted above, the relevant intentions and expectations of damage or injury are those of the insured.
Thus, damage resulting from sabotage would be considered accidental if the insured party did not intend
or expect such damage.
Consequently, EPA has decided that including intentional acts in the definition of "property damage" is
unnecessary.
7. Additional Definitions
One commenter suggested that EPA use the broad term "financial assurance" to designate all acceptable
methods of satisfying the financial responsibility requirements, and proposed a definition of the term.
EPA uses the term "financial assurance" to designate all acceptable methods of satisfying the financial
responsibility requirements, but is not defining the term in today's rule. Because the rule clearly delineates
all financial assurance mechanisms by which owners or operators may satisfy these requirements, the
Agency believes that defining the term is unnecessary.
D. Amount and Scope of Required Financial Responsibility
(§280.93)
The rule promulgated today requires that owners or operators of petroleum USTs that are located at
facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing or that handle more than 10,000 gallons
of petroleum per month demonstrate evidence of financial responsibility in the minimum amount of $1
million per occurrence to cover corrective action and third-party compensation costs for accidental
releases from their tanks. The minimum per-occurrence amount of assurance required for owners or
operators of USTs that are not located at facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or
marketing and that handle 10,000 gallons or less of petroleum per month is $500,000. In addition, the
Agency is establishing requirements for annual aggregate levels of assurance, based on the number of
USTs to be assured. Today's rule also includes a paragraph (§280.90(e)) that explicitly states that if the
owner and the operator of a tank are separate persons, only one person must demonstrate financial
responsibility. The Agency's reason for adding this paragraph is discussed in Section III.A.l, Owners and
Operators.
The rationale for determining the amount and scope of required assurance is discussed below, as it
pertains to the following topics:
(1)	Per-Occurrence Amounts
(2)	Aggregate Amounts
(3)	Apportionment of Costs and Level of Assurance under Separate Mechanisms.
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1. Per-Occurrence Amount
Section 280.93(a) of today's rule establishes $1 million per occurrence as the minimum amount of
required financial assurance for owners or operators of petroleum USTs located at facilities engaged in
petroleum production, refining, or marketing and for owners or operators of petroleum USTs that handle
more than 10,000 gallons of petroleum per month. The minimum amount of required assurance for USTs
that handle 10,000 or less gallons of petroleum per month and are located at facilities that are not engaged
in petroleum production, refining, or marketing is $500,000. The proposed rule required that all owners or
operators of petroleum-containing USTs provide assurance in the minimum amount of $1 million.
EPA received numerous comments on the subject of the required per-occurrence amount of assurance.
Arguments for lowering this amount of assurance included:
-	The costs of almost all UST releases are far lower than $1 million;
-	Small businesses cannot afford to obtain $1 million in per-occurrence coverage;
-	The money required to pay insurance premiums would be better spent on upgrading tanks;
-	Insurance coverage for $1 million per-occurrence is not available; and
-	A lower per-occurrence limit would encourage insurers and reinsurers to offer UST pollution liability
coverage.
Several commenters pointed out that EPA had required the same per-occurrence limit of $ 1 million for all
USTs even though Subtitle I clearly allows the Agency to set limits lower than $1 million for USTs at
facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing and that are not used to handle large
amounts of petroleum. The reasons given in support of a lower per-occurrence limit for USTs at these
facilities included many of the same arguments presented above and additional reasons specific to
facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing. Some of these additional reasons
included:
-	Low-volume facilities are less likely to have catastrophic-failure-induced large releases;
-	Low-throughput facilities will have smaller releases from their underground pipes; and
-	Low-throughput facilities can be monitored more accurately.
Finally, several commenters argued that $1 million in per-occurrence coverage might be too low. They
explained that past claims data underestimate future claims and that both corrective action and third-party
liability awards will be more costly in the future than they have been in the past because of corrective
action regulations that impose minimum cleanup standards.
As explained in the proposal, the minimum $ 1 million per-occurrence level required for owners or
operators of USTs at facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing was based on the
provisions of §9003(d)(5)(A) and (B) of Subtitle I of RCRA. These sections state:
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(5)(A) The Administrator, in promulgating financial responsibility regulations under this section, may
establish an amount of coverage for particular classes or categories of underground storage tanks
containing petroleum which shall satisfy such regulations and which shall not be less than $1,000,000 for
each occurrence with an appropriate aggregate requirement.
(B) The Administrator may set amounts lower than the amounts required by subparagraph (A) of this
paragraph for underground storage tanks containing petroleum which are at facilities not engaged in
petroleum production, refining, or marketing and which are not used to handle substantial quantities of
petroleum.
The Agency's interpretation of these provisions is confirmed by the discussion of this amendment to
Subtitle I, §205 of SARA, in the Conference Report accompanying SARA. The Report states that "The
Administrator cannot set a minimum financial responsibility requirement of less than $ 1 million for tanks
which are engaged in petroleum production, refining or marketing...." (House Report 99-962, 99th
Congress, 2nd Session, p. 264.)
Therefore, absent further instruction from Congress, EPA's per-occurrence requirement for USTs at
facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, and marketing must be at least $1,000,000.
The Agency shares the concern expressed by commenters that releases may be more expensive in the
future, and performed an analysis of this issue. The model developed to aid in this analysis estimates both
the costs and frequency of UST-related corrective actions. It takes into account both the more stringent
cleanup standards that will prevail under the technical standards being imposed by EPA and the fact that
releases will be detected sooner, when they are smaller, once the regulations have been promulgated. This
analysis showed that the average costs of UST-related corrective actions will be lower rather than higher
in the future (see Appendix A of the Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Financial Responsibility
Requirements for Underground Storage Tanks Containing Petroleum and Chapter 7 of the Regulatory
Impact Analysis of the Technical Standards for Underground Storage Tanks). Because the number of
UST-related releases and the extent of the damage associated with these releases will not increase in the
future, the Agency is confident that corrective action and third-party liability costs will also not increase
in the years after promulgation of these requirements.
In the final rule, EPA allows owners or operators of petroleum underground storage tanks that are not
located at facilities engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing and that handle an average of
10,000 gallons or less of petroleum per month (based on annual throughput for the previous calendar
year) to provide a minimum of $500,000 in per-occurrence assurance. As indicated above, section
9003(d)(5)(B) authorizes the Administrator of EPA to set per-occurrence amounts lower than $ 1 million
for petroleum USTs located at facilities that are not engaged in petroleum production, refining, or
marketing and that are not used to handle substantial quantities of petroleum.
Section 9003(d)(5)(C) of Subtitle I lists the factors that the Administrator may consider in setting an
amount of assurance lower than $1 million for certain classes and categories of USTs:
- The size, type, location, storage, and handling capacity of underground storage tanks in the class or
category and the volume of petroleum handled by such tanks;
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-	The likelihood of release and the potential extent of damage from any release from underground storage
tanks in the class or category;
-	The economic impact of the limits on the owners and operators of each such class or category,
particularly relating to the small business segment of the petroleum marketing industry;
-	The availability of methods of financial responsibility in amounts greater than the amount established by
this paragraph; and
-	Such other factors as the Administrator deems pertinent.
When the Agency considered these factors for the proposed rule, it concluded that a $1 million per-
occurrence level of assurance for all USTs was appropriate and would achieve EPA's goal, which was to
set a per-occurrence level high enough to cover the costs of 99 percent of UST release occurrences.
The Agency still believes that this goal is appropriate. Material submitted to the docket in response to the
proposed rule has enabled the Agency to perform a more refined analysis of the frequency of per-
occurrence claims at various levels. From this analysis, the Agency concludes that a $500,000 level of
assurance is adequate to assure the costs of approximately 99 percent of per-occurrence claims for USTs
with throughputs no greater than the throughputs characteristic of USTs at retail motor fuel marketing
facilities. (This analysis is provided in Appendix B to the Regulatory Impact Analysis.) Thus, the Agency
has revised the final rule to provide a lower per-occurrence level for such facilities, and has limited
facilities qualifying for this lower per-occurrence amount to those with UST throughputs no greater than
retail motor fuel marketing facilities (i.e., 10,000 gallons per month).
In responding to comments on the proposal and revising the rule, the Agency considered each of the
criteria in Section 9003(d)(5)(C), both when evaluating a per-occurrence limit of $500,000 and when
identifying the class of USTs that would be allowed to use this lower per-occurrence limit. The Agency
decided to use monthly throughput as the measure that best distinguishes USTs used in petroleum
producing, refining, and marketing, for which Congress mandated a minimum per-occurrence limit of
$1,000,000, from USTs used in other industries that might appropriately be assigned a lower per-
occurrence limit. As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, factors such as age of tank, material
of construction, and the presence of a secondary containment are not critical in determining a per-
occurrence limit:
Although such factors do affect a tank's propensity to leak, there is no evidence to suggest that any of
these factors affects the costs related to a release. The setting of an appropriate per-occurrence level
depends on the costs of individual releases rather than on the probability that a release will occur, and
there is therefore no reason why the factors mentioned above should have a bearing on the per-occurrence
level of coverage required. For example, a release from a 1-year-old tank can be just as expensive to
address as a release from a 20-year-old tank.
The Agency based its decision to allow a lower per-occurrence limit for facilities that are not engaged in
petroleum production, refining, or marketing and that have a monthly throughput of 10,000 gallons or less
primarily on the extent of the potential damage associated with releases from these tanks. The Agency
also carefully analyzed the extensive UST claims record submitted by the largest insurer of service station
USTs and found that this record provided statistically significant evidence that releases costing more than
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$500,000 occur less than 1 percent of the time. The Agency has concluded that coverage of $500,000 will
assure that the per-occurrence limit is exceeded less than 1 percent of the time. These same data show that
a per-occurrence limit set below the $500,000 level would be exceeded more than 1 percent of the time.
For this reason, the final rule rejects those suggestions of commenters that low-throughput USTs be
exempted or that the per-occurrence limit for such USTs be set below $500,000.
The choice of 10,000 gallons per month as the definition of "substantial quantities of petroleum" is also
consistent with Congressional intent as expressed in the Conference Report accompanying SARA. It
states that the Administrator cannot:
set a minimum financial responsibility requirement of less than $1 million...for tanks that dispense very
large volumes, for instance tanks at airports, (p. 264)
The 10,000-gallon-per-month throughput limit for USTs qualifying for the $500,000 minimum per-
occurrence amount is far lower than the volume of fuel dispensed monthly at typical airports.
EPA has not considered economic impact to be a primary factor in determining the appropriate per-
occurrence limits. The Agency's regulatory impact analysis found that the cost of insurance premiums
would have relatively minor impacts on most smaller firms that are not engaged in retail motor fuel
marketing. Further, the threat to human health and the environment posed by releases from USTs is the
same, in terms of severity, whether the leaking tank is owned by a small firm or a large firm.
The Agency agrees with those commenters who suggested that facilities outside the retail motor fuel
marketing industry may have difficulty obtaining financial assurance mechanisms. The Agency has found
that no insurer offering policies to facilities not engaged in petroleum production, refining, or marketing
meets these coverage requirements. Lowering the per-occurrence limit may serve to increase the
availability of financial assurance mechanisms. A lower per-occurrence limit will make it easier for
insurers with limited reserves to offer these policies, will ease the capitalization of RRGs, and will allow
states to set up state funds with less commitment of funds.
2. Aggregate Amounts
Section 9003(d)(5)(A) of Subtitle I grants the Administrator discretion to set "an appropriate aggregate
requirement" for financial responsibility for petroleum USTs. In §280.92(b) of the proposed rule issued
on April 17, 1987, owner s or operators of petroleum USTs were required to demonstrate evidence of
financial responsibility in annual aggregate amounts that varied from $ 1 million to $6 million, depending
on the number of USTs assured (see Table 2) by the mechanism or combination of mechanisms. [For the
purposes of determining required aggregate levels of coverage only, any reference to tanks means only
individual containment units and does not include combinations of these units. See §280.93(c).]
Table 2. Proposed Aggregate Schedule
Number of Tanks
Annual Aggregate Amount
1-12 tanks
$1,000,000
13-60 tanks
$2,000,000
61-140 tanks
$3,000,000
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141-250 tanks
$4,000,000
251-340 tanks
$5,000,000
341 or more tanks
$6,000,000
The Agency considered this appropriate because the aggregates were set at a sufficiently high level that
corrective action and third-party liability costs incurred in any one year from releases from petroleum
USTs would not be exceeded more than one percent of the time. The aggregate amounts were derived
from an analysis of the probability and magnitude of corrective action and third-party liability costs
during the first five years after the technical standards were promulgated. EPA's analysis used an annual
probability of 11.8 percent that a tank would experience a release during these years.
The Agency received numerous comments on the proposed aggregate schedule, many of which called for
lower aggregate levels. Commenters justified their requests for lower aggregates on the grounds that
insurers reported no release costs exceeding $2 million and that the Agency had based its proposed
aggregate schedule on an unrealistically high (11.8 percent) release probability rate. They also pointed out
that aggregate insurance coverage over $2 million was unavailable, higher aggregate levels would cause
correspondingly higher insurance premium costs, and the money needed for higher premium costs would
be better spent on upgrading tanks. The two largest insurers of USTs noted that an aggregate of
$2,000,000 had never been exceeded on any of their policies.
The Agency continues to find that the aggregate is most appropriately set on the basis of the number of
USTs covered by a financial mechanism, and that an aggregate should generally provide adequate
funding 99 percent of the time. However, the Agency agrees with those commenters who argued that
EPA's initial estimates, both of the costs and probabilities of releases, were too high, especially for those
firms that will actually be able to obtain insurance. In addition, the Agency recognizes that both the
availability of financial mechanisms and economic impacts should be considered in determining classes
and categories with respect to aggregate limits, as authorized under section 9003(d)(5)(C). As a result of
these considerations, the Agency has revised its aggregate schedule so that the maximum aggregate is
$2,000,000 (the maximum aggregate currently available), and mechanisms covering 100 USTs or less
may use an aggregate of $1,000,000. Table 3 presents the aggregate schedule included in the final rule.
Table 3. Aggregate Schedule
Number of Tanks
Annual Aggregate Amount
1-100 tanks
$1,000,000
101 or more tanks
$2,000,000
This revised aggregate schedule assures that most firms will not exceed the aggregate more than 1 percent
of the time, given the Agency's revised estimates of the risk of UST releases. (See Appendix B of the
Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Financial Responsibility Requirments for Underground Storage Tanks
Containing Petroleum.) The revised aggregate schedule also has a number of important advantages over
the proposed schedule. First, insurance programs do not currently provide coverage for aggregates higher
than $2 million. Thus, under the revised schedule, which caps aggregates at $2 million, firms will be able
to use existing insurance programs. Also, the lowered aggregates should encourage greater availability of
mechanisms other than insurance and thus enable more owners or operators to utilize alternate
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mechanisms. For example, by reducing the amount of capitalization required, the revised schedule will
make it easier to capitalize RRGs and state funds that form to provide UST pollution liability insurance.
In addition, firms that already have pollution liability insurance for their USTs at the $1 million and $2
million aggregate levels will not be required to find methods of meeting the balance of their financial
responsibility obligations. Given that these aggregate levels ensure that most UST owners and operators
will not exceed the aggregate more than 1 percent of the time, EPA believes that the cost of requiring
such additional assurance would be unnecessary.
Under the revised aggregate schedule, there are two categories of firms that may exceed the aggregate
more than 1 percent of the time. The first category includes firms with more than 500 USTs. (These firms
also could have exceeded the aggregate more than 1 percent of the time under the proposed aggregate
schedule.) The Agency has not extended the aggregate schedule for firms owning more than 500 USTs
because these firms are large and usually have more than $1 billion in net worth. Such firms can easily
meet their financial obligations for UST corrective action and third-party liability, even if these
obligations exceed $2 million. Further, these firms tend to have good leak prevention programs and
consequently have lower risks of UST releases than most smaller firms.
The second category of firms that may have more than a 1 percent chance of exceeding the aggregate are
firms with between 40 and 100 USTs that do not have sufficient leak detection programs. However, most
firms with between 40 and 100 USTs are currently insured and meet insurers' leak detection requirements.
Because the small number of firms with between 40 and 100 USTs that do not have sufficient leak
detection programs will have to meet EPA's UST leak detection technical standards within 5 years, the
Agency has decided not to set a higher aggregate for these firms on the basis of their temporarily higher
risks.
The Agency received a number of comments suggesting that a lower aggregate level for owners or
operators of upgraded tanks could provide an incentive for other owners or operators to upgrade their
systems ~ in essence a "credit system." EPA agrees with these suggestions, but because the Agency has
lowered the maximum aggregate level of required assurance from $6 million to $2 million and has raised
the number of tanks qualifying for the $1 million aggregate from 12 to 100, much of the incentive to
upgrade tanks and qualify for a lower level of required assurance has effectively been eliminated. Given
that few owners or operators would be able to upgrade tanks to a level that would qualify for a lower
amount of assurance, EPA believes that the complexity of developing, implementing, and administering
such a program far outweighs its potential benefits. Therefore, the Agency still believes that it is
appropriate to continue to use the number of tanks owned or operated, rather than tank characteristics, as
the basis for determining aggregate levels.
During the comment period, a number of questions were raised regarding the effective date for increases
in an aggregate level when an owner or operator acquires or installs additional tanks. The Agency agrees
that it could prove awkward to change an aggregate level in midyear and took that factor into
consideration in determining when financial assurance levels should be updated. Financial assurance
mechanisms such as insurance policies and letters of credit are generally written for one year, and the
final rule is consistent with this practice. Thus, an owner or operator who is using a single mechanism to
assure his tanks and who has increased the number of tanks for which he is providing financial assurance
is required to update the level of assurance (i.e., the aggregate level) on the anniversary date of the
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financial assurance mechanism. If this same owner or operator is using a combination of mechanisms to
provide financial assurance for his tanks, the level of assurance must be updated by the first-occurring
anniversary of any of the mechanisms being used (excluding a financial test or guarantee) (see
§280.93(f)).
The question of tank numbers also arose in the context of determining the appropriate aggregate amount
when a firm is acting as a self-insurer, guarantor, and/or indemnitor (however, indemnities are not an
allowable mechanism under the final rule, as discussed in Section III.G of the preamble). By aggregate
amount, EPA means the total of all costs potentially incurred within a given year for all releases from
petroleum USTs for which evidence of financial responsibility is being demonstrated by a single
mechanism or a combination of mechanisms. If an owner or operator uses different financial assurance
mechanisms to cover different USTs, the appropriate aggregate amount is based on the number of tanks
covered by each separate mechanism or combination of mechanisms. One commenter recommended that,
for the purpose of determining whether a firm passes the financial test, the aggregate level of coverage be
"based on the total number of tanks for which a firm is responsible by self-insurance, indemnity, or
guaranty." Because this was EPA's intention at the time of the proposal, the Agency recognizes that the
explanation in the preamble to the proposed rule confused some commenters. By stating that the
aggregate amount is based on the number of tanks for which a single mechanism or combination of
mechanisms is being used to demonstrate evidence of financial responsibility the Agency means:
1.	If an owner or operator self-insures his own tanks and guarantees tanks belonging to a different owner
or operator, the owner must pass the financial test based on the total number of tanks self-insured and
guaranteed. Two different examples follow:
-	If an owner is self-insuring 60 tanks and guaranteeing 60 tanks, the amount of annual aggregate
assurance to be demonstrated to use the financial test to self-insure and guarantee these tanks is $2
million. The guarantee must be issued for an aggregate amount of $1 million.
-	If a guarantor guarantees 60 tanks for each of three different owners, the amount of annual aggregate
assurance to be demonstrated to use the financial test to guarantee these 180 tanks is $2 million. Each of
the three guarantees, however, must be issued for an aggregate amount of $1 million.
2.	If an owner or operator uses a combina-tion of mechanisms (e.g., insurance and surety bond) to
demonstrate evidence of financial responsibility, the aggregate amounts provided by these mechanisms
added together must equal the required aggregate amount for the number of tanks for which these
mechanisms are demonstrating financial responsibility. For example, if an owner with 200 tanks has
insurance with a $1 million aggregate, aggregates of additional mechanisms for these tanks must equal at
least $1 million, for a total of $2 million in aggregate coverage.
3.	If an owner or operator uses one financial mechanism to demonstrate evidence of financial
responsibility for one set of tanks and another mechanism to demonstrate evidence of financial
responsibility for a different set of tanks, each mechanism must have an aggregate amount appropriate to
the separate set of tanks assured. For example, an owner has a total of 300 tanks: 140 tanks in one state
and 160 tanks in another state. The 140 tanks are assured at the $2 million aggregate level by a mandatory
participation state fund that only assures tanks in that state. The owner must provide additional financial
assurance at the $2 million aggregate level for the other 160 tanks located elsewhere.
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3. Apportionment of Costs and Levels of Coverage Under Separate Mechanisms
Several commenters questioned the provision that separate mechanisms (or combinations of mechanisms)
obtained for corrective action and third-party liability must each be at the full amount of required
assurance. The commenters believed that this provision would be prohibitively expensive. The Agency
has retained this provision in the final rule despite the added costs of providing coverage under this
approach. As explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency decided not to apportion costs
between third-party liability and corrective action because apportionment limits the amount of funds that
are available for either type of cost. Thus, mechanisms covering these costs separately cannot be set at
amounts less than the full amount of required assurance.
Owners or operators may use a combination of mechanisms to obtain a total of $ 1 million per occurrence
and appropriate aggregates, as long as both corrective action and third-party compensation are fully
covered. For example, an owner or operator may obtain insurance coverage for the first $100,000 of
corrective action and third-party liability costs and use an approved state fund to cover corrective action
and third-party liability costs in excess of $100,000 up to $1,000,000. In another example, an owner or
operator could obtain insurance coverage for the first $100,000 of corrective action and $300,000 of
liability costs and use an approved state fund to assure corrective action costs above $100,000 and third-
party liability costs above $300,000, up to $1 million.
E. Allowable Mechanisms and Combinations (§280.94)
1. Mechanisms Allowed
The proposed rule allowed a variety of mechanisms to be used to demonstrate financial responsibility,
including: a financial test of self-insurance, guarantee contract, indemnity contract, insurance, RRG
coverage, surety bond, letter of credit, state-required mechanisms, or a state fund or other state
assumption of responsibility. In general, commenters supported the range of allowable mechanisms
proposed by the Agency. As discussed below, the final rule authorizes the use of each of the proposed
mechanisms, with the exception of the indemnity contract, and an additional mechanism, a fully-funded
trust fund.
The preamble to the proposed rule stated that three mechanisms were considered but not included in the
set of allowable mechanisms: trust funds, security agreements, and lines of credit. One commenter
explicitly supported the Agency's rationale for excluding trust funds and security agreements. The
Agency rejected security agreements because of three concerns with respect to the adequacy of the
assurance such agreements would provide: 1) the liquidity of the collateral subject to the agreement; 2)
the procedural requirements to establish and maintain a security agreement; and 3) the ability of the
implementing agency to seize and sell the collateral.
One commenter urged the agency to allow lines of credit, stating that lines of credit could be used for
UST purposes as well as for other business purposes. The Agency believes, however, that its basis for
rejecting lines of credit (i.e., that they are conditional on the current financial standing of the borrower
and therefore do not represent a substitution of the issuer's credit for the borrower's) continues to be valid
and, thus, that lines of credit should not be an allowable mechanism.
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Another commenter advocated the inclusion of trust funds in the set of allowable mechanisms, claiming
that large firms may want to use a trust fund to cover multiple tanks if other mechanisms are not
available. The commenter recommended allowing either a fully funded trust fund or partial funding
combined with additional coverage from another instrument.
The Agency has decided to include the trust fund as an allowable financial assurance mechanism. (See
also Section III.M of this preamble.) For reasons cited in the preamble to the proposed rule, a trust fund
with a build-up period does not provide adequate financial assurance for corrective action and third-party
liability which could be incurred at any time in the future. However, the Agency will allow a trust fund
that is immediately funded at the full amount of coverage, or partially funded and combined with another
mechanism to provide full coverage. Although such a trust fund will be costly compared to other
mechanisms, the Agency decided to allow it as another option to the coverage requirements.
The Agency has also removed indemnities from allowable mechanisms. In order to cover third-party
liability, indemnities so closely duplicate the structure and operation of a guarantee contract that there was
little to be gained by including it, and including it as a separate mechanism might create unnecessary
confusion. Indemnities would generally be provided by the same firms that provide guarantees and thus
their inclusion in the rule would not increase the number of potential providers of assurance.
2. Combinations of Mechanisms
Under the proposed rule, any combination of allowable financial assurance mechanisms could be used to
demonstrate financial responsibility for corrective action and third-party compensation. Commenters in
general supported this approach.
In the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency discussed a "double-counting" problem that may arise
when a financial test is combined with a guarantee provided by a corporate parent. In many cases, the
reported net worth of a corporate parent includes the net worth of its subsidiaries. If a subsidiary uses the
financial test (based on its own net worth) in combination with a parent guarantee (based on the parent's
net worth), the subsidiary's assets available to cover UST obligations will be double counted. This double-
counting will exaggerate the reserves available to the subsidiary and the parent to cover UST obligations
and thus may provide inadequate financial assurance. To avoid this problem, the Agency suggested that,
in cases where a financial test is combined with a guarantee, the financial information supporting the two
instruments cannot be drawn from consolidated statements.
One commenter objected to the Agency proposal on two counts. First, the commenter pointed out that the
Agency did not include the prohibition against consolidated financial statements in cases of a combined
financial test and guarantee in the proposed rule itself, but only in the preamble. Second, the commenter
stated that preparing unconsolidated financial statements would be costly for many firms and would
effectively require firms to reveal generally confidential, unconsolidated data. The commenter
recommended that some other means be found to address the double-counting problem of a combined
financial test and guarantee.
Despite this last objection, the Agency has decided to incorporate in the final rule (§280.94(c)) the
restriction on the use of consolidated financial statements in support of a financial test and guarantee
combination. While the Agency acknowledges that this provision may impose costs on those financial test
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users that do not routinely prepare statements that are not consolidated with those of their guarantors,
commenters have not suggested an alternative and the Agency sees no other simple way to ensure that a
combined financial test and guarantee offers the full amount of net worth coverage that the Agency is
requiring. If the costs of preparing unconsolidated statements and of revealing confidential business
information outweigh the benefits of using a combined financial test and guarantee, then owners or
operators have other financial assurance mechanisms available.
EPA does agree, however, that the restriction on the use of consolidated financial statements should be
formalized in the rule itself and has accordingly added this provision at §280.94(c).
3.	Attorney General Certification (§280.94(b))
The proposed rule required that a guarantee, indemnity contract, or surety bond have a certification by the
Attorney General of any state where the tanks being assured are located that the mechanism is valid and
enforceable in that state. This provision was designed to ensure that the mechanisms satisfy necessary
contractual formalities or requirements of a state's laws.
Several commenters objected to the requirement for an Attorney General's certification. They maintained
that state Attorneys General will find the "valid and enforceable" standard unacceptable and that they do
not possess the statutory authority to issue such a certification. Another commenter claimed that the
certification is unnecessary because the "ultra vires" defense is essentially untenable and the right of third
parties to enforce such instruments is a commonly accepted legal principle.
The Agency disagrees with the commenters' concern over the certification issue. First, state Attorneys
General have indicated their willingness to provide "valid and enforceable" certifications required for the
RCRA Subtitle C corporate guarantee for liability coverage (40 CFR 264.147(g) and 265.147(g)). Of a
group of state Attorneys General surveyed regarding the Subtitle C corporate guarantee for liability
coverage, no responding Attorney General refused to issue a certification for this corporate guarantee
based on a lack of statutory authority. However, several Attorneys General indicated that such a request
could only be made through a state agency.
Second, the surety bond and guarantee authorized in today's rule may be subject to the insurance laws and
regulations of certain states. Although the "ultra vires" defense is generally no longer considered tenable,
the Attorney General certification requirement ensures that any contractual formalities unique to a
particular state have been addressed in the contractual agreement and that questions concerning the
validity of the agreement will not delay the provision of funding for corrective action. The Agency
recognizes that some states may require minor changes to the wording of the instruments to ensure that
they are valid and enforceable under the laws of the state. The final rule requires submission of a letter by
the Attorney General of a state verifying the validity and enforceability of the guarantee and surety bond
before these mechanisms may be used to demonstrate financial responsibility.
4.	New Mechanisms
Many commenters advocated adding a mechanism under which the federal government provides some
form of financial assurance. The suggested forms for this mechanism ranged from a federal fund to some
form of federal insurance pool.
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Several commenters advocated a federal insurance program to offer liability insurance at a reasonable
price. One commenter supported a program similar to the federally-run Flood Insurance Program under
which premiums are paid by member corporations. However, another commenter said this approach
would not work, because insured parties would not want to subsidize other parties with USTs installed
over vulnerable ground-water areas.
Several other commenters advocated various forms of federal funds. One suggested approach was to
establish a loan fund from which owners or operators could borrow at no interest and repay over a 25-year
period. Another suggestion was to establish a fund to cover events that cost between some established
amount that reflects average remedy costs and one million dollars. Under this approach, the fund would
only be available to owners and operators who demonstrate responsible monitoring and leak prevention
practices.
In the SARA amendments to Subtitle I, Congress has established a $500 million Leaking Underground
Storage Tank (LUST) Trust Fund for addressing releases from petroleum USTs. However, after the
effective date of the technical standards, use of the Trust Fund is authorized by RCRA §9003(h) only in
the following limited circumstances: (1) a responsible owner or operator capable of taking prompt and
appropriate corrective action cannot be identified; (2) prompt action is required to protect human health
and the environment; (3) the cost of the corrective action exceeds the financial responsibility requirements
established under this rule and expenditure of additional funds is necessary; and (4) the owner or operator
has failed or refused to comply with a corrective action order. (Uses of the Fund are discussed in more
detail in Section IV.B.) The Fund may not be used for the purposes suggested by the commenters. Nor is
EPA authorized under Subtitle I to develop another fund for any of the purposes suggested by the
commenters.
In addition, one of the Agency's major goals reflected throughout the entire UST regulatory program is to
encourage development of the UST program as a state-implemented program. EPA encourages states to
consider developing the type of funds that commenters urged should be undertaken by the federal
government. Several different types of state funds or state-backed insurance programs can serve as
assurance mechanisms to allow owners and operators to comply with the financial responsibility rule. In
addition, state funds may provide valuable assistance and incentives to the regulated community to
comply with the new tank performance standards.
5. Specification of Tanks in Financial Assurance Instruments
In the proposed rule, the Agency required that the financial assurance instruments list by identification
number the specific tanks that they cover. Many commenters addressing specific mechanisms argued that
this requirement is unnecessary and could in fact limit coverage or delay payment from the assurance
mechanism. They felt that listing tanks individually could lead to contention as to which tank was the
source of release.
This final rule requires the listing of facilities where assured tanks are located rather than the tanks
themselves. The Agency has concluded that listing of tanks at a facility where all tanks are assured under
a single mechanism is unnecessary. A listing by facility should also provide greater certainty concerning
which tanks at a given location are covered by the policy. Moreover, listing tanks by facility also prevents
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delays in payment that might arise if coverage were triggered only after identification of the particular
tank that had caused the damage.
In today's rule the language of the assurance instruments is amended to strike the requirement for tank
identification numbers and add a statement indicating that the required aggregate coverage levels have
been purchased. Each instrument must identify each facility covered by the mechanism and the number of
tanks at each facility. If separate mechanisms are used to cover different USTs at one location, the tanks
covered by each mechanism must be identified in the wording of the mechanism.
F. Financial Test of Self-Insurance (§280.95)
1. Proposed Financial Test
As part of the underground storage tank requirements proposed on April 17, 1987, EPA included a
financial test that could be used by owners and operators to self-insure. UST owners or operators able to
meet the proposed financial test criteria would not be required to obtain insurance or another financial
assurance mechanism to demonstrate evidence of their financial responsibility for corrective action and
third-party claims arising from UST releases. The financial test of self-insurance was also proposed as a
means to qualify guarantors and indemnitors of firms owning or operating USTs.
As originally proposed, the Subtitle I financial test consisted of the following criteria:
a.	The firm must have a tangible net worth equal to at least 10 times the amount of aggregate assurance
required for UST financial assurance. The proposed amount of required aggregate assurance ranged from
$ 1 million to $6 million, depending on the number of tanks the owner or operator, guarantor, or
indemnitor was assuring for EPA or an authorized state. If the firm was also using a financial test to meet
the financial responsibility requirements for the costs of closure, post-closure care, liability coverage,
and/or corrective action at a Subtitle C facility, or for the costs of plugging and abandonment at a Class I
Hazardous Waste Injection Well, the firm was required to have a tangible net worth equal to at least 10
times the sum of these costs plus the required aggregated coverage for its USTs.
b.	The firm must have a tangible net worth of at least $10 million.
c.	The firm must either file annual financial statements with the SEC or annually report the firm's tangible
net worth to Dun & Bradstreet (D&B), which must have assigned the firm a financial strength rating of
4A or 5A.
d.	The firm's year-end financial statements, if independently audited, could not include an adverse
auditor's opinion or a disclaimer of opinion.
In addition to these financial test criteria, the proposed requirements included procedures for financial test
reporting and certification. Within 90 days after the close of each fiscal year, the chief financial officer of
the firm owning, operating, guaranteeing, or indemnifying had to sign a letter reporting the year-end
financial information supporting the firm's use of the financial test. If an owner or operator, guarantor, or
indemnitor found at the end of the fiscal year that he was no longer eligible to use a financial test, the
owner or operator was required to obtain an alternate mechanism within 120 days of the end of the fiscal
year. Finally, the proposed rule authorized the Regional Administrator to disqualify a firm's use of the
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financial test if he found, based on reports of the firm's financial condition, that the firm no longer met the
financial test requirements. The owner or operator would have 30 days after notification of such a finding
to obtain another financial assurance mechanism.
The criteria for the proposed Subtitle I test reflected several key Agency objectives. First, the reliance of
the test principally on a net worth measure was intended to keep the test relatively simple to administer
and monitor, in view of the large number of firms to be regulated under Subtitle I requirements. At the
same time, the net worth criteria were designed to ensure that virtually all firms able to pass the test
would also be able to meet their UST obligations. In particular, the requirement that firms demonstrate a
level of net worth 10 times the size of their potential UST obligations was based on an Agency analysis of
failure rates among firms classified on the basis of their ratios of UST liabilities to net worth. The Agency
found that, for those firms with UST liabilities equal to 10 percent or less of their net worth, the
associated probability of bankruptcy was approximately one percent. Therefore, to achieve a level of
assurance such that no more than one percent of financial test users would go bankrupt as a result of their
UST obligations, the Agency decided to require that financial test users maintain their net worth at a level
at least 10 times their environmental obligations.
By requiring that other environmental obligations assured by a financial test be aggregated with the
required UST assurance when determining the amount of net worth to require, the Agency wished to
prevent financial test users from diluting the degree of assurance provided by the test. Similarly, the
requirement that there be no auditor's disclaimer of opinion or adverse opinion was also intended to
increase the margin of security provided by the test. A disclaimer of opinion or an adverse opinion
indicates that the auditor has found material uncertainties regarding the firm's valuation of its assets,
current litigation or tax liabilities, or changes in accounting method. Therefore, because these opinions
indicate that the reported net worth of a firm may be greater than its actual net worth, there is considerable
doubt as to whether a firm receiving a disclaimer of opinion or an adverse opinion has sufficient resources
to meet its UST obligations.
Finally, the requirement that firms either file their financial statements with the SEC or report to D&B
and obtain a D&B financial strength rating of 4A or 5A was meant to ensure that the information used to
support a financial test would be publicly available and therefore easily verified by EPA or state
regulators. At the same time, by allowing a D&B rating as an alternative to filing with the SEC, the
Agency wished to make the test available to the large number of privately-held UST owners and operators
who would not otherwise be submitting their financial statements to the SEC.
2. Comments on the Proposed Financial Test
EPA received comments on its proposed Subtitle I financial test from a wide representation of firms and
entities that will be affected by the UST requirements. These included both publicly-and privately-held
firms, municipalities, trade associations, environmental groups, state regulatory agencies, and firms
representing all aspects of UST ownership: owners of a single tank or many tanks, petroleum refiners and
marketers, and firms engaged in businesses other than petroleum production, refining, or marketing. The
majority of comments focused on (1) the net worth criteria of the financial test; (2) requirements for
financial test certification and reporting; and (3) the ability of municipalities to use the test. Comments
were also received on a number of miscellaneous issues, such as the aggregation of other environmental
costs with the required level of UST coverage; the use of a binding guarantee to support the financial test;
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and the extension of the aggregate schedule for owners or operators using a financial test to assure a larg e
number of USTs. The substance of the major comments received is briefly summarized below, followed
by the Agency's rationale for accepting or rejecting commenters' recommendations in the final financial
test requirements.
a. Net Worth Criteria of the Financial Test. Many commenters objected that the proposed financial test
would not be available to any but the largest petroleum distributors or refiners and therefore
recommended that the net worth criteria of the test be relaxed to allow smaller businesses to use the test.
Other commenters argued that a lower net worth multiple was appropriate in view of the fact that the
proposed per-occurrence and aggregate amounts of coverage were much higher than the average costs of
UST releases. Commenters also questioned why a 10 times net worth multiple was proposed for Subtitle
I, when a six times net worth multiple is required for the Subtitle C test for closure and post-closure care
and liability coverage.
The Agency agrees that the availability of the financial test will be limited to larger firms in the regulated
community; nevertheless, EPA also believes that this restriction is necessary to increase the likelihood
that a financial test user will be able to pay for its potential UST obligations. Because the incidence of
bankruptcy among firms with less than $10 million in tangible net worth is approximately two times as
great as the bankruptcy rate among firms with more than $10 million in tangible net worth, the Agency
has decided to retain the minimum $10 million tangible net worth requirement in the final rule.
For similar reasons, the Agency has also decided to retain the requirement that tangible net worth be at
least 10 times the required UST aggregate for any firm using the financial test. Lowering the net worth
multiple would mean that more than one percent of financial test users would be predicted to fail without
funding their UST obligations ~ a risk that the Agency does not believe should be accepted among
financial test users, particularly since owners or operators who use any of the other financial assurance
mechanisms allowable under Subtitle I (insurance, surety bond, etc.) pose little risk of incurring unfunded
UST obligations.
Other changes are, however, being made in the final UST rule that should make the 10 times level of net
worth somewhat less restrictive to potential financial test users. First, the schedule of required annual
aggregates has been modified (see Section III.D), so that the maximum annual aggregate to be assured is
$2 million rather than $6 million as originally proposed. Thus, without changing the net worth
requirement, the corresponding level of required net worth will nevertheless be lower for many firms
owning and operating large numbers of USTs.
Second, the Agency has incorporated into the final rule (§280.95(c)) a second set of financial test criteria
that may be used instead of the originally proposed "net worth" test. Owners or operators may now
choose to use the financial test criteria of the Subtitle C test for liability coverage, as specified in
§§264.147(f)(1) or 265.147(f)(1), to demonstrate their ability to pay for their UST obligations. These
criteria are included in the final rule as Alternative II, while the originally proposed financial test is
retained as Alternative I. As a result of this addition, firms with a tangible net worth of $10 million and
six times their UST obligations will be able to use a financial test under Alternative II, as long as they
also have:
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-	At least 90 percent of their assets in the United States, or U.S. assets at least six times their UST
obligations; and
-	Net working capital at least six times the required amount of UST aggregate coverage; or
-	A current Standard and Poor's bond rating of AAA, AA, A, or BBB, or a current Moody's bond rating of
Aaa, Aa, A, or Ba.
As with Alternative I of the Subtitle I financial test, if the firm is using a financial test to assure the costs
of closure, post-closure care, corrective action, liability coverage, and/or plugging and abandonment costs
at a Class I Hazardous Waste Injection Well, then the multiple requirements of Alternative II must be
applied to the sum of these costs plus the UST-required annual aggregate. EPA believes the two tests
provide equivalent assurances of financial strength.
EPA has decided to adopt this Alternative II financial test in addition to Alternative I as a way of
increasing the availability of the financial test without jeopardizing the level of assurance provided by the
test. As designed for the Subtitle C liability test, and now for the UST Alternative II test, the requirement
that either 90 percent of a firm's assets be in the United States or that U.S. assets be at least six times its
UST obligation is intended to ensure the accessibility of these assets, should the firm require them to meet
its UST costs. The net working capital requirement is designed to measure the adequacy of a firm's liquid
resources, given the potential level of its environmental obligations. Because, however, the level of net
working capital can vary significantly by industry, the Agency allows firms to meet the bond rating
requirement as an alternative to the net working capital requirement. Thus, financially healthy firms that
typically maintain relatively low levels of working capital due to the nature of their business can
nevertheless use the bond rating alternative to demonstrate that they have adequate liquid resources to
meet their obligations.
The Agency decided to use the financial test criteria of the Subtitle C test for liability coverage for the
UST financial test because they were specifically designed for assurance of possible, rather than certain,
costs. For this reason, these criteria are somewhat less stringent than the standards of the Subtitle C
closure and post-closure test where future costs that are certain to be incurred are being assured.
Furthermore, the criteria selected for the Alternative II test have the advantage of being easily obtained
from public sources even for those firms that do not have audited financial statements or do not report to
the SEC.
b. Requirements for Certification and Reporting. EPA received two comments endorsing the Agency's
proposal not to require firms using the financial test to obtain a special auditor's report verifying the
financial test information contained in the chief financial officer's report. Other commenters, however,
objected to the proposed requirements for financial test certification and reporting on the grounds that
such requirements were unnecessarily burdensome and restrictive. Specific objections to the reporting and
certification requirements are summarized below, followed by the Agency's response to each of these
objections.
-	The requirement that the chief financial officer list in his annual letter every tank being assured by the
financial test would be especially time-consuming for owners and operators of a large number of tanks.
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EPA agrees that the requirement for individual tank listing in the chief financial officer's letter may
impose an unnecessary recordkeeping burden on firms with many USTs or on firms that frequently
change their inventory of USTs. The Agency has therefore adopted in the final rule the suggestion that
financial test users list the sites or facilities where their tanks are located, rather than each tank. (This
same suggestion has been adopted for all the financial assurance mechanisms in the final rule; see Section
III.E.5.) If, however, separate mechanisms or combina tions of mechanisms are used to assure different
sets of USTs at a location, individual tanks must still be identified.
-	Other ratings, such as a Moody's or a Standard & Poor's rating, should be allowed as a substitute for a
D&B rating as part of the financial test criteria.
EPA has decided not to allow a bond rating from Moody's or Standard & Poor (S&P) as part of the
Alternative I test, because these ratings cannot be used in the same way as D&B ratings or SEC reports ~
namely, to verify that a firm has at least $10 million in net worth. The Agency has, nevertheless,
incorporated requirements for a Moody's or S&P bond rating in the Alternative II test: under
§280.95(c)(1), a financial test user may either demonstrate that it has net working capital at least six times
the required amount of UST aggregate coverage or that its most recent bond issue has received an
investment grade bond rating from Moody's or S&P. As such, the bond ratings are intended to increase
the availability of the test to those firms that are financially strong, but because of the nature of their
business, do not routinely maintain high levels of working capital. The bond ratings are not, however,
intended to provide evidence of the level of a firm's net worth. In the Alternative II test, this purpose is
instead accomplished by the requirement that a firm either report to the SEC, the Energy Information
Administration, or the Rural Electrification Administration, in which case its net worth can be easily
verified in the reports publicly available from these agencies, or submit a special auditor's report,
corroborating the firm's declaration that it has at least $10 million in tangible net worth.
-	The annual reports filed by utilities with the Energy Information Administra-tion and by rural electric
cooperatives with the Rural Electrification Administration are publicly available. The Agency should
allow reporting to one of these agencies as a substitute for reporting to the SEC.
The Agency agrees with these commenters. Because the annual reports filed by utilities with the Energy
Information Administration and by rural electric cooperatives with the Rural Electrification
Administration are publicly available and equivalent to annual reports filed with the SEC, the Agency will
allow an annual report to one of these two agencies to substitute for reporting to the SEC.
-	The 90-day deadline for filing financial test information after the firm's fiscal year end is inconvenient in
view of other deadlines for filing with public agencies.
EPA recognizes that filing with the SEC is a time-consuming process, involving the compilation and
verification of large amounts of financial data. Because the UST financial test relies on the same
information that is reported to the SEC, many firms will not be able to prepare their financial test
submission until they have first completed the SEC filing. Furthermore, the deadline for the annual
reports filed by utilities with the Energy Information Administration is April 30 (i.e., 119 days after the
end of the calendar year), whereas there is no strict deadline for filing with the Rural Electrification
Administration. In view of these considerations, the Agency has decided to extend the deadline for
completing the UST financial test by an additional 30 days. This means that the financial test information
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is now required to be completed 120 days after the end of the firm's reporting year, rather than 90 days, as
originally proposed. With this change, the preparation of the UST financial test information should not
add significantly to the reporting burden of firms.
Giv en this extension of the reporting deadline, the Agency has also decided to extend the deadline for
obtaining a new financial assurance mechanism for those firms that find that they can no longer use a
financial test. The final rule now requires that firms must obtain alternative coverage within 150 days of
the end of the year reported in their annual financial statements if these statements indicate that they no
longer meet the financial test criteria (280.95(e)). This 150-day period is based on the expectation that
firms will need up to 120 days after the close of their reporting year to compile their financial information
and an additional 30 days to find an alternate mechanism if this information does not support renewing
their financial test.
-	The proposed rule did not clearly define the authority given to the Regional Administrator to request
further information from financial test users.
EPA has retained in the final rule the proposed provision authorizing the Director of the implementing
agency to require reports of financial condition at any time from a financial test user and to disallow use
of the financial test if these reports demonstrate that the financial test criteria are no longer being met
(§280.95(f)). In response to commenters' concern that such authority could be used arbitrarily to
disqualify the use of the test by some firms, the Agency emphasizes that the information requested by the
Director of the Implementing Agency could be used only to verify compliance with the financial test
requirements as they are promulgated under §280.95(b) or (c) and (d). Generally, such information would
include unaudited interim financial statements (such as 10-Qs submitted to the SEC) or mid-year
restatements of financial information (such as 8-Ks submitted to the SEC). Any information not bearing
on the requirements specified in the financial test would not be used to disqualify an owner or operator.
The Agency has modified the wording of this provision to make its intention clearer in this respect.
-	Reporting of financial information to EPA could result in anti-competitive activity because EPA is
under no obligation to keep such information confidential.
EPA does not believe that the financial test reporting requirements will in any way violate a financial test
user's interest in keeping information confidential, because the test relies only on information that is
already reported to other organizations that make this information publicly available. Furthermore, the
financial assurance rules do not require regular reporting of information to EPA, but instead require that
owners or operators maintain a record of this information at their place of business.
In summary, the Agency emphasizes that the reporting and certification requirements for the Alternative I
financial test are designed to be minimally burdensome to firms, while still ensuring that financial test
information can be verified through sources other than the owner or operator. Because firms will be
allowed to meet the test requirements by reporting their net worth to Dun & Bradstreet as an alternative to
reporting to the SEC, the Energy Information Administration, or the Rural Electrification Administration,
financial test users will not necessarily be required to have audited financial statements. For owners and
operators who opt for the Alternative II financial test, however, the reporting and certification
requirements are stricter. Specifically, Alternative II requires that the financial statements of an owner or
operator using the financial test be independently audited. EPA considers this requirement to be necessary
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in the case of Alternative II because of the type of information called for by the test ~ namely, the level of
net working capital and the level of U.S. assets. The measurement of these variables can differ
substantially according to the accounting method used to prepare financial statements. By requiring that
the financial statements of Alternative II test users be independently audited, EPA has, at a minimum, the
assurance that these variables will be measured in a relatively consistent and conservative fashion and in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Furthermore, in the final rule, Alternative II requires a special auditor's report from those firms that do not
file their statements with the SEC, the Energy Information Administration, or the Rural Electrification
Administration. The reason for this requirement is to provide the Agency with some objective measure of
the validity of the information reported by those firms whose financial information may not otherwise be
publicly available. Thus, this requirement serves the same basic purposes as the D&B rating that is
included as part of the Alternative I financial test.
c.	Availability of the Financial Test to Municipalities. Many commenters on EPA's proposed financial test
requirements pointed out that the test was designed for use by private corporations and not by
municipalities or other governmental entities. In particular, the reliance of the test on measures of net
worth makes it inappropriate for use by most municipalities since net worth is generally not a meaningful
or readily measurable indicator of a government entity's ability to meet its obligations. Only for those
special purpose municipalities, whose operations and accounting procedures are similar to those of a
privately owned firm, is "net worth" a meaningful indicator of financial condition. Commenters also
noted that the proposed financial test reporting requirements were inapplicable to those municipalities that
do not file financial statements with the SEC or report their net worth to D&B.
As discussed in Section III.A.4., the Agency intends to propose a financial test for local government
entities. Under this test, qualifying local government entities would be able to demonstrate that they are
capable of self-insuring the costs of cleanup and third-party liability associated with UST releases, and
thus do not need to obtain a separate financial assurance mechanism.
d.	Miscellaneous Issues Concerning the Proposed Financial Test. In the preamble to the April 17, 1987,
proposed Subtitle I financial test, EPA requested comments on two requirements under consideration for
inclusion in the final rule: (1) a requirement that firms issue a binding written guarantee that they will pay
for the corrective action and third-party obligations that they were assuring with a financial test or through
provision of a guarantee or indemnity contract; and (2) a requirement extending the aggregate schedule
beyond the required maximum for financial test users.
One commenter objected to the proposal to incorporate a binding written guarantee into the financial test
criteria on the grounds that it could result in lower bond ratings for firms and increased interest costs on
their debt, which in turn would impair firms' abilities to demonstrate financial assurance. Commenters
also questioned whether such a guarantee would materially improve EPA's ability to obtain the required
funding for UST obligations in the event of a firm's bankruptcy. In view of these comments, EPA has
decided not to incorporate a requirement for a binding guarantee in the financial test provisions of the
final rule.
With respect to extending the aggregate schedule for financial test users, some commenters considered
that this provision would be unfair to large, financially viable firms who seek to assure their obligations
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with a financial test. The Agency's original intention in making such a suggestion was to limit the ability
of financial test users to assure thousands of tanks on the strength of a limited net worth. Because the
required aggregate is capped, it would be possible for a firm to add to the number of tanks it was assuring
by means of the financial test without having to increase its required level of net worth. The Agency,
however, has decided that extending the aggregate schedule is not necessary for financial test users
assuring large numbers of USTs. As indicated above in discussing the aggregate schedule, those few
firms that assure hundreds or thousands of USTs are also firms with resources that are substantial and
more than sufficient to cover their obligations. Moreover, these same firms are likely to have good loss
prevention programs to limit their potentially large liability.
Other comments received on the proposed financial test criteria included objections to the Agency's
proposal to require, for purposes of the Subtitle I financial test, that an owner or operator add to the
required UST aggregate any other environmental costs for which a financial test is used to demonstrate
financial assurance. Commenters questioned why a ten times net worth multiple would be applied to the
sum of these costs under Subtitle I, while under the provisions of the Subtitle C test, a six times net worth
multiple is required for coverage of all costs being assured by a financial test.
The Agency believes that this addition of costs is necessary to ensure that an UST owner or operator can
meet all of its environmental obligations without jeopardizing the financial health of the firm. The
financial tests used for closure and post-closure care, liability coverage, and corrective action all rely on a
measure of a firm's net worth relative to the costs being assured. If, therefore, these costs were not added
together in the UST financial test for purposes of determining the required amount of net worth, UST
owners or operators would, in effect, be "double pledging" their financial resources, thereby reducing the
likelihood that UST obligations could be met if they were also faced with other environmental costs.
One commenter recommended that a firm owning or operating USTs and using a financial test to assure
Subtitle C obligations should be required to have a tangible net worth equal to the sum of 10 times the
applicable UST aggregate plus six times the applicable Subtitle C costs, rather than a tangible net worth
equal to 10 times the sum of all costs assured by a financial test, as the Agency proposed. It was argued
that this procedure for determining the magnitude of net worth coverage for multiple environmental
obligations was more consistent with the Subtitle C financial test requirements, which use a six times net
worth multiple. However, for reasons discussed in Section III.F.2.a. above, the Agency continues to
believe that, for the purposes of the Alternative I financial test, a requirement that net worth coverage be
fully 10 times all costs being assured by a financial test is necessary to maintain the level of protection
that the Agency has set as the standard for the Subtitle I test. The Alternative II financial test, by contrast,
requires that net worth coverage be at least six times all environmental costs being assured by a financial
test. This lower net worth coverage is acceptable in the context of the Alternative II test because the test
requires firms to meet other criteria indicative of financial strength that are not included in the Alternative
I test.
Another set of recommendations received by EPA urged the Agency to make the Subtitle I test more
consistent with the Subtitle C financial test. In one case, a commenter recommended that the Subtitle I
test adopt the same procedure for calculating tangible net worth as is currently used for the Subtitle C test
for closure and post-closure care (§264.151(f) and (g)). Under this procedure, any of the costs being
assured by the test that have been incorporated in the measure of a firm's liabilities can be subtracted from
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the liability total and added to net worth. Because generally accepted accounting principles require that
firms accrue as liabilities those future costs that are reasonably certain and measurable, those firms with
known future environmental obligations are required to count these obligations as part of their liabilities.
The net worth (or difference between total assets and total liabilities) of such firms will be decreased
correspondingly by the amount of the accrued liability. Thus, generally accepted accounting procedures
measure net worth as if known future obligations had already been paid for or discharged. However, the
purpose of the net worth criteria in a financial test is to measure the net worth resources available to a
firm before it incurs an environmental cost, and thereby to determine whether the firm can meet this cost
without jeopardizing its ability to meet other unanticipated obligations. For the Subtitle C test, EPA
therefore believed that the appropriate procedure for measuring a firm's available resources was to
compute net worth before adjusting for those liabilities that the test is being used to assure. EPA believes
that the same reasoning is applicable to the Subtitle I test and, therefore, allows in the final rule any UST
costs that have been accrued as part of total liabilities to be subtracted from the sum of total liabilities and
added back to net worth. The Agency has adopted this procedure for purposes of both the Alternative I
and the Alternative II UST financial tests.
3. Summary of Changes in the Financial Test
As discussed in Section 2 above, the Agency has made a number of changes to the Subtitle I financial
test, proposed on April 17, 1987, largely in response to the comments received on the proposal. These
changes are briefly summarized below.
a. Alternative Financial Test Option. In addition to the originally proposed Subtitle I test, the Agency is
allowing UST owners and operators who wish to use a financial test to meet the criteria of the Subtitle C
test for liability coverage. Under this option, owners or operators, and/or guarantors, would be required to
demonstrate the following:
-	A tangible net worth of at least $10 million;
-	A tangible net worth of at least six times the amount of the applicable UST aggregate;
-	U.S. assets at least 90 percent of total assets, or U.S. assets at least six times the amount of the
applicable UST aggregate; and either:
-	Net working capital at least six times the applicable UST aggregate, or
-	A current bond rating for the most recent bond issue of AAA, AA, A, or BBB as issued by Standard and
Poor's, or Aaa, Aa, A, or Baa as issued by Moody's.
In addition, firms using this alternative must have independently audited financial statements and cannot
have an auditor's adverse opinion, disclaimer of opinion, or going concern qualification. For those firms
that do not file their financial statements with the SEC, the Energy Information Administration or the
Rural Electrification Administration, a special auditor's report, which compares the financial information
reported in the test submission to the firm's financial statements and certifies that there are no material
differences between the two, is also required.
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b.	Disallowance of a Financial Test if a "Going Concern" Qualification Is Received on a Firm's Financial
Statements. In the proposal, the Agency stipulated that, if the financial statements of a financial test user
had been independently audited, they could not carry an adverse opinion by an independent certified
public accountant or a disclaimer of opinion. In the final rule, the Agency has decided to add a "going
concern" qualification to the types of auditor's opinions that will disqualify a firm from using a financial
test. Because a "going concern" qualification indicates that there is a question about the ability of a firm
to stay in business, the Agency does not believe such firms should be allowed to rely on their own
resources to cover their UST obligations.
c.	Reporting to the Energy Information Administration or the Rural Electrification Administration. The
final rule allows utilities filing annual reports with the Energy Information Administration and rural
electric cooperatives filing annual reports with the Rural Electrification Administration to use the
financial test.
d.	Listing of Locations of Covered USTs. The financial test, like all of the financial assurance
mechanisms in the final rule, does not require identification of individual tanks at the locations assured by
the financial test unless the financial test is only being used to cover some of the USTs at one location.
e.	Extending the Deadline for Preparing the Financial Test. The final rule allows firms using a financial
test 120 days from the end of their reporting year to prepare their UST financial test. In EPA's original
proposal, the chief financial officer of the firm had to sign the financial test documentation within 90 days
of the close of the fiscal year. The final rule also allows owners or operators who can no longer use a
financial test 150 days from the end of the reporting year to obtain alternative means of financial
assurance. In the event that an owner or operator fails to obtain alternative assurance, he must notify the
Director of the implementing agency within 10 days. In the proposed rule, only 120 days were allowed to
obtain an alternative mechanism.
f.	Procedures for Determining Tangible Net Worth. In the final rule, the Agency has adopted the
procedure for calculating a firm's tangible net worth from the Subtitle C financial test for closure and
post-closure care. With this procedure, firms are allowed to deduct from their total liabilities any accruals
for costs that are being assured by the financial test. This deduction can then be added to the measure of
tangible net worth.
G. Guarantee (§280.96) and Indemnity Contract
The final rule, unlike the proposed rule, allows only one form of financial assurance by which a firm
promises to pay the specified amounts for corrective action or third-party liability for another firm: a
guarantee (§280.96). Indemnities, which were included in the proposed rule, are not authorized in the
final rule. EPA based its decision not to authorize the indemnity on the following rationale.
Many commenters on the proposed rule noted that authorization of an indemnity as an allowable
mechanism to provide financial assurance in this regulatory context would seem to endorse practices
which, in the past, required some petroleum product marketers to indemnify their suppliers. Although the
Agency's proposed authorization was not intended to endorse any other use of indemnities, the Agency
believes that dropping the indemnity will prevent any possible misunderstanding.
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Moreover, in order to cover third-party liability, indemnities duplicate so closely the structure and
operation of a guarantee contract that, in effect, no additional financial assurance option is added by
including indemnities. In fact, their inclusion may create unnecessary confusion because, in the petroleum
marketing industry, indemnities have been used in a very different context. Commenters on the proposal
indicated that, in the past, petroleum product marketers have often been required by their contracts to
indemnify their suppliers, rather than looking to them for indemnities and guarantees. Finally, because the
same kinds of firms are likely to be guarantors and indemnitors, indemnities do not provide the regulated
community with an additional group of potential financial assurance providers. For these reasons, the
Agency authorizes guarantees in today's rule but not indemnities.
A guarantee is a promise by one party (the guarantor) to pay specified debts or satisfy the specified
obligations of another party (the principal) in the event the principal fails to satisfy the debts or
obligations. Under the final rule, a guarantee may be provided by related firms or by unrelated firms that
have a substantial business relationship with the owner or operator. The obligation between the owner or
operator (the principal), the implementing agency, or third parties rests on regulatory requirements and
potential tort liability. If the owner or operator fails to perform corrective action or satisfy certified third-
party claims, the guarantor agrees to fund a standby trust from which the implementing agency will direct
the payment of corrective action costs or third-party claims.
Guarantors must demonstrate that they are qualified to provide financial assurance by satisfying the
Alternative I or Alternative II financial test under §280.95, described in Section III.F. Also, to ensure that
state insurance laws do not call into question the enforceability or validity of the mechanism, the
guarantee can be used only if it is certified as valid and enforceable by the Attorney General of the state
where the USTs covered by the mechanism are located.
Many commenters questioned the availability of the guarantee, particularly to small and medium-size
firms. These commenters were concerned that such firms would not have the required relationship with a
potential guarantor or that a potential provider would be unable to satisfy the financial test requirements.
EPA's proposed rule included guarantees among a variety of alternative mechanisms to provide owners
and operators a number of compliance options. Although some segments of the regulated community will
be unable to use the guarantee because of the rule's business relationship and financial test requirements,
the Agency continues to believe these requirements are necessary to ensure that the guarantee provides
adequate financial assurance. These provisions, therefore, remain unchanged in today's rule.
The proposed rule allowed firms to provide a guarantee if they were related firms that own a controlling
interest in the owner or operator (parent firms), firms that own a controlling interest in a parent firm of the
owner or operator (grandparent firms), or affiliated firms that are controlled by a parent that also owns a
controlling interest in the owner or operator. As defined in §280.92(c), "controlling interest" means direct
ownership of at least 50 percent of the voting stock. The proposal also allowed a firm engaged in a
"substantial business relationship" with the owner or operator to provide a guarantee as an act incidental
to that business relationship. These firms were included to increase the number of potential financial
assurance providers without sacrificing the validity or enforceability of the instrument. Section 280.91(j)
of the proposed rule defined a "substantial business relationship" to mean the business relationship
necessary under applicable state law to make a guarantee issued incident to the relationship valid and
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enforceable. A guarantee is considered incident to such a relationship if it arises from and depends on
existing economic transactions between the guarantor and the owner or operator.
These required relationships between owners or operators and providers of guarantees were the subject of
many comments. Several commenters praised the Agency for expanding the number and kinds of
corporate affiliates that are authorized to provide guarantees of financial assurance and urged even further
broadening in recognition of the variety of corporate structures that exist within some sectors of the
regulated community such as electric utilities. One commenter suggested the broader definition of
corporate affiliates used in federal securities law, which would include any firm that, directly or
indirectly, through one or more intermediaries, controls, or is controlled by, or is under common control
with, the owner or operator.
EPA's concern is to ensure that guarantees from corporate affiliates are valid under appropriate state law
and that sufficient unity of interest exists between the guarantor and the owner or operator to provide
adequate assurance of financial responsibility. The proposed relationship requirements are those that seem
most likely to result in adequate assurance. A firm engaged in a substantial business relationship with the
owner or operator can, however, provide a guarantee regardless of its position within the corporate
structure. Thus, the Agency will allow affiliates, such as those enumerated in the securities definition, that
satisfy this criterion to provide financial assurance as guarantors.
The proposed rule required providers to use the contractual language specified in the rule for the
guarantee. Some commenters expressed concern that the proposed wording of the guarantee instrument
did not sufficiently limit the providers' liability, particularly in the event of the bankruptcy of the owner or
operator. The Agency believes that the required language explicitly limits the obligation of the provider to
the per-occurrence and aggregate amounts for corrective action and third-party liability as stated on the
face of the instrument and that the wording, therefore, need not be modified. In addition, as discussed in
Section III.V.2 of this preamble, the Agency is incorporating certain exclusionary language into the terms
of the guarantee to more clearly limit the type and circumstances of third-party liability for which this
mechanism can be used. A provider may, however, have incurred obligations outside those of the
guarantee contract, under state law or other contractual agreements with the owner or operator. Such legal
obligations will not be changed by the limitations in the guarantee.
H.	Insurance and Risk Retention Group Coverage (§280.97)
I.	Availability
Today's rule allows UST owners and operators to demonstrate financial responsibility through the
purchase of insurance. The Agency believes that for many owners and operators, insurance will be the
private mechanism of choice because it will be less costly and more available to most owners and
operators than the other commercial mechanisms. Many commenters expressed concern, however, that
insurance would not be readily available, and many felt that coverage, if available, would not be offered
at the levels required by EPA and that it would not be available to particular groups of owners and
operators.
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The Agency recognizes that the liability insurance market, particularly the market for pollution liability
coverage, has become restricted in recent years. As many commenters pointed out, a number of factors
have contributed to the current limited availability of liability insurance.
The Agency also believes that despite the tight market, some insurance is available for USTs and more
may become available in the near future. Evidence from the commenters suggests that UST coverage is
currently available from a small number of specialty insurers, although some policies do not provide the
level and scope of coverage required in the rule. One major provider of UST coverage insures over
80,000 tanks at 25,000 locations. A major insurance broker has obtained coverage for over 1,500
petroleum marketers with more than 90,000 tanks at over 26,000 locations. Effective July 1, 1987, the
company that wrote policies for this broker stopped writing new policies or renewing existing policies.
However, the broker is continuing to offer coverage through a RRG which has recently become licensed
and which is currently offering policies. In addition to the petroleum marketers currently covered through
existing policies, the RRG intends to extend coverage eventually to many of the 78,000 open dealers who
currently find it difficult to obtain insurance.
Although UST insurance is most readily available to petroleum wholesalers and distributors, some non-
marketers (e.g., auto dealers) have also been able to purchase coverage. Many insurance companies that
do not specialize in pollution insurance nevertheless offer UST coverage to their policyholders who
purchase other lines of commercial liability coverage. A major supplier of insurance to petroleum
marketers also issues policies to non-marketers purchasing other liability lines. Three other major insurers
also reported that they provide UST coverage to some non-marketers.
The market for UST coverage has improved somewhat since the financial responsibility regulations were
proposed on April 17, 1987. Two new UST insurers have entered the market (one of whom offers
coverage to non-marketers) and an existing insurer, who had provided coverage in only a few states, has
expanded to offer coverage in all fifty states. This insurer also offers coverage to single station owners.
Two insurers already offering other pollution liability lines have indicated that they are considering
offering UST coverage as well.
The Agency is aware that the availability of coverage at the per-occurrence limits required in the statute
and today's rule is limited. Recently, one major insurer lowered its per-occurrence limits from $1 million
to $500,000. Its aggregate coverage levels remain at $2 million, enough aggregate coverage for owners
and operators with any number of tanks to meet the aggregate requirement in the rule. The RRG discussed
above has begun offering policies with $750,000 per-occurrence limits and plans to offer $1 million limits
when it becomes sufficiently capitalized. In addition, a number of insurers not specializing in pollution
liability coverage continue to offer coverage with $1 million per-occurrence limits. While some of these
insurers offer aggregate limits of only $ 1 million, in most cases these insurers provide coverage to owners
or operators with fewer tanks for whom $ 1 million would be adequate to meet the Agency's requirement.
In some cases, owners and operators may have to combine policies and other mechanisms to obtain the
required coverage.
While the current insurance supply is inadequate to cover all members of the regulated community, the
Agency hopes that the supply will expand in the months between the promulgation of the regulations and
the compliance dates for the majority of unassured USTs. As noted above, a slight expansion has already
occurred. The requirement to demonstrate financial responsibility should significantly increase the
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demand by owners and operators for UST insurance. At the same time, promulgation of UST technical
standards should increase the ability of the insurance industry to predict its risk in offering UST coverage.
These two factors may increase the certainty of the profitability of insuring USTs and should encourage
new entrants into the marketplace.
The Agency further believes that 12 to 18 months is a reasonable time in which to expect the insurance
industry to respond to the increased demand for coverage and for alternatives to conventional insurance,
like RRGs or state funds, to develop. Estimates of the time frames for establishing new insurance
programs and RRGs range from 12 to 36 months. Commenters on the Supplemental Notice generally
agreed with the estimates, with only one commenter suggesting that it might take as long as 5 years for a
RRG to form.
Nevertheless, the Agency recognizes that some owners and operators may have difficulty obtaining
insurance after the date set for compliance with the rule. In particular, individual service station dealers
who are not part of an industry association may face such difficulties because UST policies are often sold
through such associations, making it difficult for unaffiliated owners or operators to obtain insurance on
their own. Individual service station dealers and other UST owners and operators not currently members
of larger groups or trade associations may have to form or join a group to facilitate purchase of UST
coverage or the formation of a RRG. Alternatively they may be able to rely on a state fund.
2. Insurance Cost and Its Impact
Many commenters felt that the cost of insurance for USTs would be prohibitively high and suggested that
in considering the impact of the rule, the Agency had underestimated the cost of UST pollution liability
policy premiums. Other commenters addressed issues concerning the high cost of insurance in general
and felt that particular groups of owners and operators, especially small businesses and local
governments, would be adversely affected by the regulations.
The Agency believes that its projection of average premium costs of $2,000 to $4,000 per facility is
accurate. The estimate was developed based on current and projected premiums using data supplied by
insurers. The information received in the comments supports this estimate. The proposed RRG noted
above reported that its average premium for $1 million per-occurrence coverage is expected to be $2,000
per site. Other current providers reported premiums of $500 to $2,000 for coverage of one to twelve
tanks. The largest average premiums were reported by the National Association of Convenience Stores
(NACS) and the Society of Independent Gasoline Marketers of America (SIGMA). These trade
associations reported average premiums of $13,600 and $32,000 per member respectively. NACS and
SIGMA members tend to own several locations, however, and there is likely to be more than one tank at
each location. Forty percent of NACS members own more than 10 stores, while 47 percent of SIGMA
members own 11 to 50 outlets and 39 percent own 51 or more. Given the large numbers of sites covered,
the high NACS and SIGMA average premiums are also in line with the Agency's original estimate.
Reported claims data suggest that UST claims have been predictable and not extremely costly. Most
claims have been under $100,000. In addition, insurers can expect the risks of UST coverage to become
more predictable in the future. While the cost of insurance for USTs could be relatively high initially,
particularly when the regulations first go into effect, the increased predictability and decreased risk that
the technical regulations are likely to promote should help to limit costs.
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The Agency recognizes that the cost of liability insurance in general may pose a hardship upon some
members of the regulated community. However, average premiums of about $2,000 are small compared
to the costs of corrective action which, if incurred, would certainly pose a much greater economic
hardship.
The Agency received several comments with specific suggestions for alternative requirements that might
reduce the cost of obtaining insurance coverage for USTs. One commenter suggested that a tank
manufacturer's product liability policy might be extended to provide indemnification for tank owners or
operators. However, such a mechanism would present a number of difficulties in meeting the financial
responsibility requirements. Among the difficulties would be setting a level of product liability insurance
that would ensure indemnification of each tank purchaser at a level of $1 million. In addition, it is likely
that the scope of product liability insurance coverage would be unacceptably low (e.g., it would only
cover releases caused by tank defects). Also, administrative difficulties connected with securing payment
through a manufacturer's policy might delay cleanup. For example, a claim might have to be made by first
contacting the manufacturer who would then contact the insurer. Therefore, the Agency declines to
authorize such a mechanism as a means of compliance with the regulations. The Agency recognizes,
however, that tank manufacturers may act as guarantors for tank owners or operators provided that they
comply with the applicable requirements of §280.96.
3. Viability of Risk Retention Groups
Commenters raised a number of issues concerning the viability of risk retention groups (RRGs) as an
alternative to traditional insurance coverage. Among the issues were: difficulty of organization, cost of
capitalization, instability of RRGs, and conflicts between current state laws and regulations and the
Liability Risk Retention Act of 1986 (RRA), 15 U.S.C. §3901 et seq.
The Agency recognizes that forming an RRG requires considerable effort. Evidence from the comments
suggests that it would take at least one year to establish a group. However, such groups are currently
being organized to offer environmental impairment liability insurance. One of these RRGs is now
offering coverage to a number of UST owners and operators, including owners of single outlets for retail
motor fuel marketing.
A number of commenters were concerned that costs of capitalization could be high for RRGs. The
Agency recognizes that capitalization costs could be a significant barrier to RRG development. At
present, however, there is little evidence available to indicate what typical capitalization costs per owner
or operator are likely to be. The recently formed RRG mentioned above requires a capital contribution of
$2,000 or an amount equivalent to the annual premium, whichever is less. Premiums are currently around
$1,600 per site and are expected to increase to about $2,000.
Broader questions of general RRG stability and solvency, along with issues concerning the regulation of
RRGs by states, are questions connected with the RRA and go beyond issues directly related to financial
responsibility for underground storage tanks. Therefore, it is not within the scope of this rulemaking to
address these broader RRG issues. Such issues, however, are being addressed by other agencies of the
federal government. The Commerce Department has recently issued a report evaluating the effectiveness
of the RRA.6 The report found no major problems with RRGs themselves (in terms of solvency and
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potential risk to the public), but noted conflicts between state insurance laws and regulations and the
provisions of the RRA. Such conflicts are matters for the states to address.
RRGs may be unavailable to some owners or operators due to an inability to organize into a group or
raise the necessary capital. Regulation may also limit the formation of such groups in some states. While
some UST owners and operators may be unable to form RRGs, however, the Agency believes the groups
may provide an alternative to insurance for a number of owners and operators of USTs.
4. Specific Requirements for Insurance and Risk Retention Group Coverage
A number of commenters questioned specific policy conditions that insurance mechanisms must include
under this rule. In general, commenters questioned the effect of these requirements on the availability of
insurance. The Agency recognizes that the limited availability of insurance, in part, reflects the significant
uncertainties regarding the risk that insurance providers may be undertaking and that various policy
language has been developed to minimize uncertainty. Therefore, in specifying certain policy conditions
the Agency attempted to meet two objectives: (1) the need to ensure that insurance coverage will provide
the same level of protection as other mechanisms; and (2) the need to preserve flexibility in policy
specifications to allow insurers to develop acceptable policies and to avoid unnecessarily constricting the
availability of insurance.
a. On-Site Cleanup. Several commenters questioned the availability of insurance for on-site cleanup and
suggested that financial responsibility for these costs not be required. The statute clearly requires financial
assurance for corrective action. Corrective action involves cleanup of contamination caused by a release.
While a release may, for an initial period of time, be confined to the property of an owner or operator of
an UST, there is no way to ensure, without corrective action, that the release will not eventually affect the
health or property of others. Financial responsibility for corrective action will ensure that cleanup may be
undertaken promptly, thus minimizing third-party and environmental damage.
The Agency recognizes that some insurers are reluctant to provide on-site coverage because of the "moral
hazard" involved. In other words, insurers fear that coverage of on-site corrective action could provide a
disincentive to the owner or operator of an UST to maintain his site properly or may encourage
negligence and thus may result in more releases and more claims to the insurance provider. Insurers also
fear that coverage for on-site cleanup might make them responsible for the costs of routine maintenance
or site restoration. First party coverage (i.e., coverage of damages to the insured) has traditionally been
offered as a separate type of coverage.
Some insurers, however, provide on-site coverage in order to limit their exposure to more expensive
third-party claims. Currently, the two primary sources of insurance for petroleum USTs cover on-site
cleanup of UST releases. A recent entrant into the market also provides on-site cleanup coverage. In
addition, some other insurance providers will cover on-site cleanup if it will prevent more costly third-
party damages. The comments suggesting that on-site coverage is not generally available referred to
policies covering environmental impairment liability in general and do not reflect the standard practice of
the specialized market for UST coverage. The Agency received only one comment regarding the recent
entry into the UST market of an insurer who will not cover on-site cleanup.
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One commenter suggested that coverage for cleanup be mandated whether or not the corrective action is
ordered by the government. Such a requirement could be interpreted to mean that policies must cover
response actions that the owner or operator might perform as a general operating practice. Although the
Agency is requiring that on-site corrective action be covered by all financial responsibility mechanisms, it
does not intend to require policies that make insurers responsible for activities that are clearly the day-to-
day responsibility of the owner or operator. Therefore, the Agency wishes to clarify that EPA is not
mandating that acceptable insurance policies cover response actions that are part of routine maintenance
of the tank site, site restoration and enhancement. Corrective action coverage will be required only for
cleanup of releases required by §§280.60 to 280.66 and 280.72 of the technical standards or ordered by
the implementing agency. The Agency believes that this requirement will ensure that adequate financial
resources are available to perform necessary corrective action.
b.	Non-Sudden Accidental Occurrences. Several commenters also suggested that insurance companies
would not be willing to provide coverage for non-sudden occurrences as required by today's proposal.
The statute requires, however, that all releases, whether sudden or non-sudden, be covered. This is
particularly necessary to ensure adequate coverage for USTs, because it is often difficult to determine
whether an UST release is sudden or gradual. Therefore, to ensure adequate protection of human health
and the environment, both types of coverage are necessary. Comments indicate that coverage for non-
sudden releases is currently offered by the major providers. In the event that an owner or operator could
not obtain insurance for non-sudden releases, a separate mechanism could be used. Both mechanisms,
however, must provide $1 million worth of coverage (see Section III.D.3).
c.	Agency Specification of Various Policy Terms. A number of commenters from the insurance industry
felt that EPA- proposed coverage terms did not precisely follow insurance industry standards and would
limit availability of insurance coverage for USTs. However, it was also clear from industry comments that
adoption of the recommended language would not, by itself, increase the availability of pollution
insurance. The objections of the commenters centered on the definitions of the terms occurrence,
accidental release, and bodily injury; on the prohibition of certain exclusions (those for non-sudden
releases and on-site coverage); and the requirement that 120-day notice be given to an insured in the event
of a cancellation. The commenters recommended that the Agency defer to standard industry practice in
establishing policy language. One commenter suggested specific terms that he felt would more strictly
define appropriate insurance coverage.
The Agency has two reasons for clearly delineating the terms of insurance policies that are acceptable to
meet financial responsibility requirements. The first is that, given an insurance market with widely
varying types and scopes of coverage, the Agency is concerned that the insurance provided to an UST
owner or operator in fact provides a sufficient level of financial assurance. Second, because the Agency
has mandated that proof of financial responsibility be demonstrated only in the event of a release or if
specifically requested by the implementing agency, the Agency wants to define very clearly the terms of
acceptable coverage so that both the insurer and the owner or operator can determine whether the policy
is adequate to comply with the regulations.
Several commenters took issue with the Agency's use of the terms "occurrence" and "accidental release,"
preferring instead the combined term "pollution incident," a term widely used in the insurance industry.
Commenters also suggested that the term "bodily injury" be defined in a manner consistent with the
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standard established in ISO's new CGL policy. These issues apply to all the instruments and have been
addressed in Section III.C above.
Commenters also requested that the 120-day notification period for cancellation of insurance be
shortened. The Agency agrees that a shorter time period will still give owners and operators adequate
time to locate another mechanism for financial responsibility, and that the 120-day requirement may put
too severe a burden on insurers by exposing them to the risk that the insured will fail to pay the premium
in those 120 days. Thus, the 120-day notification period may limit the availability of UST insurance. The
Agency is therefore shortening the notification period to 60 days (see also Section III.P below regarding
cancellation of mechanisms). The notification period for other terminations of insurance policies has also
been shortened to 60 days.
Commenters made a number of very specific recommendations regarding the terms of insurance policies.
Several commenters suggested that acceptable policies be required to include a provision specifying that
the insurer pay on behalf of the insured, rather than reimburse the owner or operator for cleanup costs or
third-party damage payments. The Agency has considered these comments and has determined that
specification that insurance policies pay on behalf of rather than indemnify the insured is not necessary to
ensure that insurance will provide adequate assurance for corrective action and third-party liability costs.
Many policies currently in use already specify that the insurer will pay on behalf of the insured, especially
in cases of third-party liability. In some cases of corrective action, the implementing agency may
undertake response activities to clean up a release in a timely manner. In such cases the implementing
agency would receive reimbursement by the insurer.
One commenter recommended that lower premiums be mandated for tanks brought into compliance with
tank performance standards in advance of their compliance dates. The Agency does not need to mandate
particular premium levels because the market itself should respond to tank improvements by offering
lower premiums for safer tanks.
d. First Dollar Coverage. Many commenters felt that the provision requiring policies that make insurers
liable for amounts within the deductible applicable to the insurance policy would be unfair to insurers,
and ultimately force them to bear the cost of the deductible. The Agency disagrees with these comments.
The Agency developed this requirement to ensure that disputes (between the insurer and the insured) over
who is responsible for paying amounts within deductible limits will not interfere with prompt
performance of corrective action measures or with payment of third-party claims. The Agency does not
intend to require policies that limit the right of insurers to specify deductibles applicable to particular
policies and to receive these costs from insureds. Therefore, the first dollar coverage requirement should
not hinder development of a pollution liability insurance market. If an owner or operator is in bankruptcy
at the time of a release and therefore cannot pay the deductible, the insurer, as a creditor, could seek
payment through the bankruptcy proceeding, just as any other creditor would.
Commenters suggested that the LUST Trust Fund might be used to guarantee payment of deductibles to
the insurer. However, the statute establishing the LUST Trust Fund specifically defines those cases in
which the Fund will pay corrective action costs and does not include payment of deductible amounts. In
addition, the Trust Fund cannot be used to pay third-party damages.
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Pollution liability policies frequently have high deductibles in order to keep premium costs down, and
commenters suggested that paying amounts within these deductibles may not be affordable by the
insured. The first dollar coverage requirement will prevent delay of cleanup or payment for third-party
damages in such cases and will meet the Agency's goals of protecting human health and the environment.
The insurer will still be entitled to recover costs within deductible limits from policyholders, although in
such cases payment arrangements would have to be made.
e. Policy Retroactive Dates and Exclusions for Pre-Existing Conditions. Several commenters expressed
concern that the Agency's acceptance of claims-made policies would limit protection of the insured and,
consequently, the degree of financial assurance. Claims-made policies typically provide coverage only for
releases reported during the policy period and that begin subsequent to the policy's retroactive date. The
retroactive date is generally the same as the effective date of the policy.
One commenter suggested requiring the retroactive date to be 18 months prior to the effective date of the
policy. The Agency understands the concern of the commenters and realizes that use of claims-made
policies could result in occasional gaps in coverage, particularly with respect to releases occurring prior to
the retroactive date. The Agency considered a requirement that claims-made policies have retroactive
dates 6 months prior to the issue date of the policy but decided against such a requirement because few, if
any, insurers are willing to offer such a policy. Given that insurance is likely to be the "mechanism of
choice" of most UST owners and operators (especially smaller businesses), the Agency feels that its goals
of protecting human health and the environment will not be served by specifying policy provisions which
will prevent most otherwise qualified UST owners and operators from being able to obtain insurance.
Prohibiting the use of claims-made policies or requiring a retroactive date prior to the policy effective
date is likely to severely limit insurance availability.
In addition, the problem of gaps occurring in coverage prior to the retroactive date is likely to be a
significant problem primarily at the outset of the UST financial responsibility requirements, when large
numbers of previously uninsured owners and operators purchase insurance for the first time. After that
initial time period, most owners or operators should be able to maintain continuous coverage, given the
advance notice of cancellation that the Agency is requiring as well as the use of extended reporting
periods for claims-made contracts. Extended reporting periods allow the insured to report a release
occurring during the policy period after the termination date of the new policy. This "tail" coverage helps
prevent gaps in coverage that could arise because the replacement policy will not cover releases that occur
prior to the retroactive date of the policy. In the case of policy renewal as opposed to policy replacement,
most policies should provide continuous coverage over time because the retroactive date of the policy is
generally the original issue date and not subsequent renewal dates.
As the technical requirements for leak detection are phased in, owners and operators are likely to identify
a number of USTs that are leaking and are not covered by a financial assurance mechanism. When the
owners or operators of these tanks obtain insurance, these identified leaks are likely to be excluded from
coverage as "pre-existing conditions." The Agency realizes that insurance is not appropriate to meet the
cost of known releases and is not requiring that insurance policies purchased to comply with today's rule
cover known pre-existing conditions. Any requirement for coverage of known conditions would be likely
to severely limit UST insurance availability because insurers will not be willing to issue policies
obligating payment for damages that have already occurred. UST owners and operators are responsible
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for cleanup and third-party liability costs that are not covered by financial assurance mechanisms. In some
instances the LUST Trust Fund or state funding programs may be appropriate means to fund cleanup of
those pre-existing conditions. (Under the LUST Trust Fund, however, owners and operators are liable for
any funds expended to clean up pre-existing conditions.
An insurance representative expressed concern that implementation of the technical regulations would
result in discovery of more releases in the early years of the regulation and lead insurers to avoid the UST
market until compliance with the technical regulations is complete. While it is likely that more releases
will be discovered in the early years of regulation, this fact alone should not reduce insurance availability.
Insurers will establish their own pre-conditions for tank coverage. Such pre-conditions may include
inspections, audits or other measures to identify existing leaks. Tanks that are insurable are likely to
remain so. Tanks that are discovered to be leaking are likely to need corrective action and appropriate
repair, upgrading, or replacement before an insurer will accept them for coverage. These measures will
also be required by the technical standards. Phased implementation of the technical requirements should
not adversely affect insurance availability, because insurers will be able to require correction of existing
releases as a condition for coverage.
f.	Endorsement and Certificate of Insurance. The Agency received a number of comments regarding the
specific wording of the Endorsement and Certificate of Insurance required for users of insurance and
RRG coverage. All commenters on this issue agreed that the requirement that tanks be listed by
identification numbers on the certificate of insurance or endorsement would result in more limited
insurance coverage than the standard industry practice of listing covered tanks by site. As described in
Section III.E.5, the Agency agrees with these comments. For the purpose of determining the appropriate
aggregate coverage, however, a statement indicating that the mechanism assures 100 or fewer or more
than 100 USTs is necessary. In today's rule, the endorsement and certificate language (§§280.97(b)(1) and
280.97(b)(2)) has been amended to strike the requirement for tank serial numbers and instead requires a
listing of the number of tanks at each facility insured and the name and address of each facility.
Commenters also suggested that the issue date of the policy is unnecessary for the endorsement and
certificate of insurance, given that the policy effective date, which defines the date on which coverage
begins, is also required. The Agency again agrees with the commenters that inclusion of the issue date is
unnecessary and that the scope of coverage provided is clearer when the endorsement and certificate of
insurance contain only the effective date of the policy. In policies without an effective date, the issue date
is considered to be the same as the effective date. However, in cases in which policies include effective
dates, coverage is generally considered to begin on the effective date. In most cases, the issue date and the
effective date of the policy will be the same, but in those cases in which they are not, the difference could
be a source of dispute concerning whether a particular release is covered. Listing only the effective date
on the endorsement and certificate will eliminate such a dispute. Today's rule does not include the issue
date of the policy in the endorsement or certificate (§§280.97(b)(1) and (b)(2)), but does continue to
require listing of the policy effective date.
g.	Six Month Extended Reporting Period. As indicated in the April 1987, proposal, the Agency is
concerned that a claims-made contract may leave gaps in coverage if, for example, a claim is reported
after the expiration of a policy for a release that began prior to the expiration date. Such claims may not
be covered by a replacement financial assurance mechanism (see retroactive date discussion, Section
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III.G.4.e above). Originally, the Agency proposed a one year "extended discovery" period to address this
concern. Under this provision, claims made during the extended discovery period for losses that occurred
during the policy period would be covered. In today's rule, the Agency has changed the term to "extended
reporting period" and reduced the time frame to six months. These changes were made for several
reasons.
Commenters suggested replacing the term "extended discovery period" with the term "extended reporting
period" to clarify that the period only covers incidents which took place during the actual policy period
and were reported during the extended reporting period. The Agency agrees with commenters that the
insurance industry suggestion more accurately describes the coverage that the Agency intends. The
Agency intends to require that only releases beginning during the policy period itself be covered during
the extension and agrees with commenters that the term "extended discovery period" could cause
confusion over whether a policy would cover occurrences beginning during the extended discovery period
or only those beginning under the actual policy period and reported during the discovery period.
Therefore, the Agency has changed the term to "extended reporting period." The Agency also agrees with
the comment that it would be unnecessary to include an extended reporting period clause in an
occurrence-based contract because by definition, such policies cover losses occurring during the policy
period regardless of when they are reported. Therefore paragraph 2(e) of the endorsement and certificate
of insurance (§§280.97(b)(1) and 280.97(b)(2)) are required only in the case of a claims-made contract.
The Agency also reconsidered the proposed one-year time frame for extended reporting. Several
commenters addressed this issue. One suggested a reporting period of three years. Others urged that EPA
should not establish a mandatory time frame. While the Agency recognizes that a three-year reporting
period may afford even greater assurance by allowing an owner or operator more time in which to report
damages caused by a release, the Agency has declined to mandate such a lengthy reporting period.
Insurers are unlikely to be willing to offer "tail" coverage as long as three years due to the continuing risk
to which such coverage would expose them. Also, even if insurers were willing to offer long reporting
periods, the cost of the coverage could be prohibitively expensive. Because the Agency believes that an
extended reporting period is essential to ensure adequate coverage by claims-made policies, the Agency
has decided not to mandate a reporting period of such length that the insurance would be unavailable or
unaffordable to otherwise qualified UST owners and operators. The significant reduction in insurance
coverage created by such a provision would result in lesser protection of human health and the
environment.
At the same time, the Agency does not believe that the length of the reporting period should be entirely
discretionary. Therefore, the Agency has decided to set a shorter minimum length of six months for the
extended reporting period.
The Agency has decided that six months is a reasonable time frame in which to identify and report a
release following termination of a policy for the following reasons. First, implementation of leak
detection requirements should result in prompt detection of releases. Six months should be sufficient time
to report releases occurring during the policy period. The Agency is making such a reporting period
mandatory for all claims-made contracts used to demonstrate compliance with today's rule, regardless of
the reason for termination. Although the extended reporting period differs from the industry standard, it is
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important to bridge the potential gap between the end of a claims-made insurance policy and the initiation
of another assurance mechanism.
Second, commenters estimated that the cost of the extended reporting period could range from half the
premium cost to more than the cost of a yearly premium. This reflects the difficulty in establishing proof
of when releases reported during this extension actually occurred. The Agency feels that the cost of a six-
month period would be affordable for more owners or operators than the cost of a one-year period, thus
increasing total insurance coverage. This is especially true because the owner or operator must also pay
the cost of a new financial assurance mechanism to remain in compliance with the rule.
The change of the reporting period requirement from one year to six months may help to address two
other issues raised by commenters. The first issue raised by commenters concerned potential conflicts
over responsibility for coverage during the reporting period. A release discovered during the reporting
period could either be covered by the old insurance policy if it began prior to policy termination or by the
new replacement mechanism if it began later. There could be a delay in payment for corrective action and
third-party damages while the date of the release was determined. As the reporting period was extended
the potential for conflict would increase. By reducing the reporting period to six months, the Agency
intends to minimize the potential for conflict between mechanisms and thus the potential for delay in
meeting the costs of a release.
Second, members of the insurance industry noted that the extended reporting period required by the
Agency differed from the reporting period in common use in the industry in that it was an "upfront"
requirement, not an option to be purchased only in the event that a policy was cancelled for reasons other
than non-payment of premium. Insurers feared that mandatory reporting periods would expose them to
the possibility of supplying coverage for one year to an insured who had not paid his premium, or who
voluntarily cancelled, thus essentially receiving "free" coverage for one year. The Agency wishes to stress
that it is only requiring an extended reporting period during which insureds may report releases that
occurred while their policy was in effect, not an extended coverage period during which insurers would
be liable for releases occurring after the policy's termination. Insureds who voluntarily cancel their
policies, therefore, would not receive "free" coverage for any period of time. Furthermore, by establishing
an appropriate schedule of premium payment, insurers can best protect themselves against providing
"free" coverage to insureds whose policies they ultimately would cancel due to nonpayment of premium.
One commenter recommended that forfeiture of insurance coverage due to delayed notice of a claim be
prohibited. The Agency believes, however, that the extended reporting provisions of the rule adequately
ensure that claims will be covered even if not reported immediately to the insurer. The reporting period
would allow an insured covered by a claims-made policy extra time to report any releases which may
have occurred during the policy period, but which were not immediately discovered.
h. Legal Defense Costs. The Agency's proposal to exclude legal defense costs from the coverage limits of
insurance policies used to comply with financial responsibility requirements was opposed by many
commenters. The commenters argued that insurers will not provide coverage exclusive of legal defense
costs. The Agency has reviewed these comments and decided to continue to require exclusion of coverage
for legal defense costs from insurance policy indemnity limits.
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The exclusion was originally proposed for several reasons: (1) to ensure that legal defense costs would not
absorb too great a portion of coverage limits and thus leave little coverage available for corrective action
and third-party liability; (2) to conform to the general insurance industry standard practice for
comprehensive general liability of paying all legal defense costs outside policy limits until the indemnity
limits have been exhausted; and (3) to provide the same level of financial assurance to cover both third-
party claims and corrective action as the other mechanisms (none of the other mechanisms for
demonstrating financial responsibility under the rule covers legal defense costs).
In general, the above reasons for the exclusion are still valid. Legal defense costs could amount to a
significant portion of policy limits now and in the future. A study by the ISO indicates that legal defense
costs have increased three times faster than indemnity losses since 1960.7 Defense costs per one dollar of
loss tripled between 1956 and 1984. This trend is not limited to any one particular area, but rather is
common throughout the general liability field. There are few actual data on defense costs for liability suits
brought in cases of pollution releases, but an Agency analysis of general liability, Superfund, and asbestos
claims suggests that legal defense costs in cases involving pollution liability could constitute as much as
36 to 42 percent of policy liability limits.
The insurance industry standard for commercial general liability coverage continues to be payment for all
legal defense costs outside general liability policy limits until the limits have been exhausted by
indemnity payments. Only about 25 percent of commercial general liability policies include payment of
legal defense costs within policy limits and ISO's standard CGL policy includes a clause obligating the
insurer to provide payment for legal defense until coverage is exhausted by indemnity payments. EIL
policies are more likely than CGL policies to include legal defense costs within policy limits; however,
industry practice even within the smaller universe of EIL policies is not uniform. EIL policies are
available that provide indemnity limits exclusive of legal defense costs.
The Agency recognizes that the insurance industry attitude toward legal defense costs may be changing.
Some members of the industry, in response to the spiralling costs of legal defense, have begun examining
ways to contain defense costs, feeling that the insurer's traditionally unlimited "duty to defend" may be a
disincentive to policyholders to keep legal defense costs down. At the same time, it does not appear that
the industry is moving toward inclusion of legal defense costs within policy limits as a solution to the
problem. While ISO proposed at one time that some portion of legal defense costs be included within
policy limits, it withdrew that proposal and has more recently put forward a plan to limit legal defense
costs outside of policy limits.
Although the Agency's reasoning on costs of legal defense and standard insurance practice continue in
general to hold true, EPA recognizes that legal defense costs are sometimes handled differently in the
specialized market of insurance for USTs. The consensus of commenters is that insurance policies for
USTs generally include legal defense costs within the policy limits. All policies issued through one major
broker were written inclusive of legal defense costs. A number of other insurance providers similarly
indicated that UST coverage would only be available if legal defense costs were included. One major
insurer, however, has excluded, and will continue to exclude, legal defense costs from policy limits. Thus,
while many current UST policies include legal defense in policy limits, the Agency does not feel that the
exclusion or inclusion of legal defense costs will affect the availability of insurance coverage over the
long term.
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The Agency considered two other approaches to dealing with legal defense costs. The first would be to
allow insurers to include legal defense costs within the limits. Because few UST insurers currently offer
coverage exclusive of defense costs, this option would at least reinforce currently available insurance
policies as a means of compliance with financial responsibility regulations. In addition, while it is clear
that RRGs may cover legal defense costs (section 3901(a)(2)(A) of the RRA explicitly includes legal
defense costs within the definition of allowable liability coverage), it is not clear that RRGs will generate
enough capital to cover legal defense costs above and beyond policy limits. Inclusion of defense costs in
the limits could facilitate RRG formation. The second approach would be to allow insurers to include
legal defense costs within policy limits higher than the $ 1 million requirement. This approach would
address insurer concerns regarding defense cost limitation, but probably would not address issues of RRG
capitalization.
The Agency believes, however, that arguments for continued exclusion are compelling and that
development of higher insurance policy limits allowing defense costs to be included would not guarantee
that insurance would provide adequate financial assurance. The final rule continues to require that policy
limits be exclusive of legal defense costs. The statutory requirement is $1 million of per-occurrence
coverage for the costs of corrective action and third-party liability for USTs at facilities engaged in
petroleum production, refining, or marketing. If insurance policy limits included defense costs, in effect,
insurance policies would be providing financial assurance at a level lower than that required by the
statute. Exclusion of legal defense costs from policy limits is also consistent with RCRA Subtitle C
liability coverage regulations.
The Agency recognizes that in many cases legal defense costs may not be high enough to significantly
affect the adequacy of insurance policies to provide the coverage required, particularly that for corrective
action. However, if defense costs for petroleum USTs are low, then the insurance industry will not be
excessively burdened if it must cover these costs outside of policy limits. Alternatively, if defense costs
for petroleum USTs are high, then coverage for these costs outside policy limits is necessary to ensure
adequate financial assurance for corrective action and third-party liability costs. While this may place a
greater burden on the insurer, the insurer is free, as many insurers are currently doing, to limit defense
costs in some way outside of policy limits.
i. Insurer Qualifications. The April 1987, proposal required that insurers eligible to provide policies in
compliance with UST financial responsibility requirements be licensed to transact the business of
insurance or as an excess or surplus lines insurer in each state where a covered UST is located.
Commenters suggested that the proposed qualifications were too limiting and one commenter suggested
substituting Department of Transportation regulations that allow insurers licensed or approved by a
foreign government to provide coverage in addition to those licensed in any state or eligible to provide
coverage as an excess or surplus lines insurer.
The Agency does not, however, feel that its qualifications for insurers are overly stringent. Foreign
insurers offering coverage in the United States are generally licensed to provide coverage in at least one
state which would, in most cases, qualify them to provide coverage as an excess lines insurer. Therefore,
the EPA qualifications requirements should not necessarily prevent UST owners or operators from
purchasing insurance from a foreign insurer. The Agency does not, however, wish to allow UST owners
and operators to purchase insurance to meet financial responsibility requirements from an insurer who
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may not be a stable source of coverage. An insurer who is licensed only by a foreign government may not
be subject to the same reserve requirements that help to ensure that an insurer can meet his obligations.
The Agency has, however, decided to make other changes to the qualifications for RRGs and insurers.
Today's rule does not include separate qualification for RRGs and insurers as originally proposed, but
instead imposes the same qualifications for both. Because a RRG is a type of insurer, it is simpler and
more appropriate to delete the separate requirements for RRGs. The Agency has also decided to delete
from the insurer qualifications the requirement that insurers be licensed or eligible in "each state where a
covered underground storage tank is located." The final rule requires instead that insurers and RRGs be
licensed to transact the business of insurance or eligible as an excess or surplus lines insurer in "one or
more states." This change was made because the Agency decided that the proposed requirements might
too severely limit insurance coverage available to owners and operators with USTs in more than one state.
While the Agency continues to believe that it is essential that insurers and RRGs supplying financial
assurance under today's rule be subject to adequate regulatory oversight, it believes that a requirement
that insurers be licensed or eligible in one or more states will ensure that insurers and RRGs are
sufficiently qualified to provide UST coverage. This ensures that the insurance provider meets the
qualifications of the state in which it is writing policies. If a provider writes a policy for a large firm with
USTs in more than one state, the provider must meet the eligibility requirements in the state where the
firm buys the policy, but does not need to meet licensing requirements in every state where an UST may
be located.
j. Other Comments. Commenters suggested specific changes regarding the manner in which insurance
policies are interpreted by the courts, specifically, questions of joint and several liability and use of
retroactive damages. These comments go beyond the scope of this rulemaking and are appropriately left
to private insurance law. Note, however, that under RCRA §9003(h)(6), liability is strict, joint and several
for government costs incurred in responding to a release of petroleum from an UST under §9003(h).
Commenters also suggested that the potential for direct action against a provider of financial assurance
would deter insurers from entering the market. The statutory provisions of RCRA §9003(d)(2), however,
specifically allow direct action against any provider of financial assurance. It is, therefore, beyond the
authority of the Agency to prevent such direct action.
Other commenters suggested that private insurers provide guidance to states on the structure of state
programs, that insurance be used to fill gaps in state fund coverage for third-party liability, and that EPA
develop outreach programs and programs to encourage entry of private insurers into the market. The
Agency agrees that private insurers can provide guidance on the structure of state funds and states may
choose to consult with private insurers in the development of state funds. This rule allows several
mechanisms and combinations of those mechanisms to achieve compliance. For example, traditional
insurance may be used in combination with some other mechanism (like a state fund) to demonstrate
financial responsibility.
To encourage the entry of private insurance carriers, the Agency is currently working with the insurance
industry to develop a better understanding of the UST population and how UST insurance works. Several
insurance companies currently provide UST coverage and there are indications that other insurers are
planning to enter the market. In addition, the Agency believes that the implementation of the technical
regulations will make UST risks more predictable and thus make the market more attractive to insurers.
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I. Surety Bond (§280.98)
The final rule, like the proposed rule, allows owners or operators to use surety bonds to satisfy their
financial responsibility obligations. Section 9003(d)(1) specifically lists surety bonds as mechanisms to be
considered in establishing financial responsibility requirements. Several commenters expressed concern
about the availability, terms, and costs of surety bonds. These commenters did not object to the use of
surety bonds as a financial mechanism, but questioned whether owners or operators would be able to
obtain surety bonds at a reasonable cost. They cited several factors affecting availability. Some
commenters felt that surety companies would be reluctant to provide coverage because they believe the
implementing agency would have absolute discretion over the control of the funds. For this reason, one
commenter objected to the cancellation provision, which requires the surety to fund a standby trust in the
event the principal fails to obtain an alternative mechanism and the Director of the implementing agency
knows or suspects that a release has occurred. A large number of commenters stated generally that surety
bonds will be unavailable for third-party liability and corrective action. Finally, some commenters stated
that if surety bonds are available, only those companies able to meet the financial test could afford the
bond. Along these lines, one commenter explained that, in attempting to meet the collateral requirements
of a surety bond, petroleum marketers would reduce or eliminate their financial ability to purchase their
products and equipment or to upgrade or monitor their equipment.
The Agency recognizes that certain terms of the proposed performance bond (e.g., the cancellation
provision) may limit the availability of the bond. The Agency believes, however, that the terms of the
surety bond as proposed are necessary to ensure that coverage is available when needed to take corrective
action and compensate third parties. For example, without the cancellation provision, sureties could
cancel coverage when a release is suspected and the costs would be unfunded.
The commenters who objected to the discretionary authority of the Director of the implementing agency
to control the funds appear to misunderstand the proposed regulations. The performance bond clearly
describes the situations in which funds may be drawn; the Director does not have unlimited discretion to
draw on the funds. (See also Section III.N of the preamble for discussion of the standby trust.)
The Agency acknowledges that many companies will be unable to afford surety bonds, or meet collateral
requirements. EPA has authorized the use of those bonds in order to allow those persons who can secure
surety bonds the option of using them to comply with these requirements. The rule continues to allow use
of a surety bond.
In addition, as discussed in Section III.V.2. the Agency is incorporating certain exclusionary language
into the terms of the instrument to more clearly limit the type and circumstances of third-party liability for
which this mechanism can be used.
J. Letter of Credit (§280.99)
The final rule, like the proposed rule, allows owners or operators to use letters of credit to satisfy their
financial responsibility obligations. Section 9003(d)(1) specifically lists letters of credit as a mechanism
to be considered in establishing financial responsibility requirements. Many commenters on this
mechanism did not object to the use of letters of credit, but were concerned about whether this mechanism
would be available. For example, many commenters believed that letters of credit are not viable options
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for smaller entities. Commenters pointed out that smaller companies cannot meet collateral or liquidity
requirements necessary to obtain letters of credit.
Other commenters pointed out that the costs of letters of credit are much higher than the costs of
insurance, and that tying up capital or collateral to purchase letters of credit would prevent owners or
operators from using letters of credit to purchase equipment for their businesses, including monitoring
equipment and equipment for upgrading or replacing tanks. One commenter noted that the letter of credit
would be unavailable to many governmental bodies because some lending institutions refuse to issue
them to governmental bodies, and some city codes prevent governmental entities from securing letters of
credit.
The Agency acknowledges that the collateral requirements for letters of credit may approach or exceed
the face value of the letter of credit, and will be prohibitively expensive for many owners and operators.
The Agency is allowing the use of letters of credit, however, as an option for those owners and operators
who can afford them.
One commenter objected to the language in the letter of credit because he believed that it requires the
issuer to examine the legitimacy of the conditions precedent to presentation of the sight draft. This
commenter suggested that the sight draft and the statement that the Director of the implementing agency
must provide to the bank should identify the purpose for which the letter is being issued (corrective action
and/or third-party liability for sudden and/or non-sudden releases). This commenter also suggested that
these documents should specify the tank identification number and name and address of each facility
location.
The letter of credit does not require the issuer to examine the legitimacy of the conditions precedent to
presentation of the sight draft. The letter of credit is payable upon presentation of a sight draft and a
signed statement certifying that the letter is payable pursuant to these regulations.
A number of commenters, in addressing specific mechanisms, disagreed with the proposed requirement to
identify individual tanks that are assured by the mechanisms. They all felt that identification of the
facilities covered by the mechanism would ensure that releases from the facilities are covered, without
delays and needless paperwork to determine which tank was the source of the release. The Agency agrees,
and has revised the language of the mechanisms to specify coverage by facility, rather than by individual
tank. Individual tanks must be identified if separate mechanisms are being used to cover different USTs.
The letter of credit does allow the parties to specify the purpose for which the letter is being issued
("corrective action" and/or "compensating third-parties for bodily injury and property damage").
In addition, as discussed in Section III.V.2., the Agency is incorporating certain exclusionary language
into the terms of the instrument to more clearly limit the type and circumstances of third-party liability for
which this mechanism can be used.
K. Use of State-Required Mechanisms (§280.100)
EPA proposed that, in those states that have not obtained UST regulatory program approval, UST owners
and operators may use state-required financial assurance mechanisms to meet the federal financial
responsibility requirements. However, the proposed rule required the EPA Regional Administrator to
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determine that such mechanisms provide assurances that are at least equivalent to those of mechanisms
specified in the federal requirements.
Several commenters noted that allowing use of state-required mechanisms will do little to help UST
owners or operators because not all states have established or will establish their own financial
responsibility requirements. Another commenter supported EPA's proposal that state-required
mechanisms used to determine financial responsibility while EPA reviews the state program will be
considered to be at least equivalent to other required mechanisms and thus in compliance with Subpart I
for the amount and types of costs covered by the mechanisms.
In response, the Agency agrees that some states without authorized UST programs may not have state-
implemented financial responsibility requirements for USTs. However, owners or operators in states that
do not have authorized programs, but which do have financial responsibility requirements, will be able to
use equivalent state-required mechanisms. These owner or operators will not have to procure additional
mechanisms to satisfy the federal requirements. The final rule regarding the use of state-required
mechanisms retains the language in the proposed rule.
L. State Fund or Other State Assurance (§280.101)
EPA proposed that UST owners or operators may use state funds or other state assurance programs to
meet the financial responsibility requirements. RCRA Section 9004(c)(1) authorizes the use of "corrective
action and compensation programs administered by state or local agencies" as mechanisms to provide
evidence of financial responsibility for state program approval.
Although several commenters supported the use of state assurance programs as an acceptable financial
assurance mechanism, commenters remarked that state assurance programs are generally not available
and, even where available, often do not provide sufficient coverage. Several states remarked that they did
not plan to establish funds or that the federal government should not rely on states to demonstrate
financial responsibility for UST owners and operators.
The Agency recognizes that state assurance programs are not widely available to date. However, funds
have been established in several states, including Virginia, Delaware, and Minnesota. Other states are also
in the process of attempting to establish funds. The Agency does not require any state to establish an
assurance program.
In addition, EPA is aware that state assurance programs may not provide complete financial responsibility
for UST owners or operators. For example, funds may not cover third-party compensation or all
corrective action costs. Therefore, UST owners and operators using these types of programs must use
other financial assurance mechanisms in combination with a state fund to demonstrate compliance with
the financial assurance requirements.
Several commenters suggested that states use particular program structures or particular financing
mechanisms. For example, several commenters suggested that state funds cover corrective action costs
above $100,000 and third-party compensation costs above $300,000, up to $1 million per occurrence.
Other commenters suggested that state funds be structured to encourage entry of private insurers into the
UST insurance market.
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The Agency believes that the structure and means of financing programs is at the discretion of each state.
EPA will not dictate the approach states should take in establishing assurance programs. However, for
those states interested in establishing assurance programs, EPA will provide assistance in designing and
evaluating such programs. In addition, EPA has developed a handbook providing guidance on
establishing state assurance programs.
The Agency also does not intend to mandate a particular program structure in states that currently use
funds to cover UST release costs. For example, the Agency would not require a state with a fund that only
covered corrective action costs to alter its fund structure (e.g., to add coverage for third-party
compensation) in order to qualify under this section. The owner or operator would have to obtain
additional assurance to cover third-party liability requirements.
M. Trust Fund (§280.102)
A trust fund was not included in the proposed rule as an allowable financial assurance mechanism. As
stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency believed that a trust fund with a pay-in period
would provide inadequate financial assurance early in the period, and a fully-funded trust fund would be
unaffordable to the owners or operators most likely to need to use the trust fund. Moreover, the Agency
felt that a trust fund used in combination with an insurance policy would probably be more costly than
paying the additional premium for first-dollar insurance coverage because: (1) unlike the costs of other
mechanisms, trust fund deposits are not business expenses for federal tax purposes; and (2) insurance
policies for USTs may be written to include coverage of a deductible that is later recovered from the
insured.
The Agency received a comment requesting that a trust fund be allowed as a financial assurance
mechanism. This commenter maintained that some firms may wish to use a trust fund to cover multiple
tanks if other mechanisms are not available, and advocated allowing either a fully-funded trust fund or a
partially-funded trust fund if combined with another mechanism that provides the remaining amount of
required coverage.
In light of this comment, the Agency decided to allow trust funds in the final rule. Although the Agency
believes that trust funds will in general cost more than other mechanisms and in many cases will be
unaffordable, trust funds are allowed to provide more flexibility to owners or operators in providing
financial assurance. To ensure that the trust fund will provide adequate financial assurance, the Agency
requires the trust fund to be fully-funded for the amount of required coverage, or partially-funded and
used in combination with another allowable mechanism that provides the remaining amount of required
coverage.
The language of the trust fund instrument is identical to the language of the standby trust fund used to
manage funds paid from other mechanisms (e.g., letter of credit). The amount of the trust fund is
determined by the owner or operator, as long as the remaining amount of required coverage is provided
by another mechanism.
In addition, as discussed in Section III.V.2. of the preamble, the Agency is incorporating certain
exclusionary language into the terms of the instrument to more clearly limit the type and circumstances of
third-party liability for which this mechanism can be used.
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N. Standby Trust Fund (§280.103)
Under the proposed and final rule, EPA establishes the standby trust fund as the depository mechanism
that an owner or operator must put in place upon acquiring one of the following financial assurance
instruments: guarantee (§280.96), surety bond (§280.98), or letter of credit (§280.99). Funds drawn under
any of these instruments, pursuant to the instruction of the Director of the implementing agency, must be
deposited directly into the standby trust fund by the institution making the payment. The use of a standby
trust is necessary because without such a depository mechanism, any funds drawn under those
instruments that are payable to the Regional Administrator would have to be paid into the U.S. Treasury
and could not be used specifically to pay for the UST corrective action or third-party liability claims for
which the funds were intended without Congressional action (see 31 U.S.C. 3302). Similarly, funds
payable to the state Director may have to be paid into the state treasury.
The rule requires that the trustee must have the authority to act as a trustee and its trust operations must be
regulated and examined by a federal or state agency. This trustee qualification requirement is the same as
the trustee qualification requirement under the Subtitle C regulations. If the trust operations are not
regulated and examined by a federal agency, the trust operations must be regulated and examined by a
state agency in each state in which a standby trust fund is established.
All commenters on the proposed standby trust requirement argued that the provision is unnecessary. In
the case where a guarantee is used to provide financial assurance, several commenters asserted that the
use of the guarantee is comparable to self-insurance, which does not require a standby trust because, in
each instance, funds are assured from existing corporate assets. The Agency recognizes that corporate
assets are the source of the funds for both self-insurance and guarantees, but does not believe that the
similarity obviates the need to establish the standby trust when a guarantee is used to provide financial
assurance.
The standby trust fund is necessary to ensure access to funds when they are required and to ensure that the
implementing agency can address corrective action requirements promptly and preclude further damage
to health or the environment.
The financial test of self-insurance is a direct mechanism for providing financial assurance. When it is
used, the owner or operator ensures that he will take prompt corrective action and pay valid third-party
claims from existing corporate assets ~ evidenced by satisfaction of the financial test.
A payment guarantee, such as the guarantee in the proposed rule and today's rule, is an indirect
mechanism. When it is used, the guarantor does not ensure that it will take prompt corrective action or
pay third-party claims if the owner or operator does not. Rather, the guarantor contracts with the
implementing agency that, if the owner or operator fails to undertake required activities, the guarantor
will provide the necessary funds to undertake the activities from its corporate assets. EPA cannot hold the
funds directly because of the prohibitions of 31 U.S.C. 3302, as discussed above. It is necessary, because
of the prohibition, that the funds be placed in an existing depository mechanism, the standby trust, from
which the implementing agency can direct funding of required actions as promptly as possible. Therefore
the standby trust requirement for a guarantee remains a provision of today's rule.
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Other commenters disagreed with the provision that the standby trust must be established at the same time
as the financial assurance mechanism, noting that, under RCRA
Subtitle C, the trust is established only when assured funds are required. The commenters misstate the
requirements of Subtitle C. The standby trust requirement in today's rule differs from the Subtitle C model
because its purpose is different. In the Subtitle C rule, guarantees are recognized to assure funds for
closure and post-closure and third-party liability. No standby trust is required for the guarantee for
liability because valid third-party claims, if not paid by the owner or operator, are paid by the guarantor
directly to the claimants. If an owner or operator fails to perform closure or post-closure care whenever
required to do so, the guarantor can perform the required activities itself or establish a trust from which
EPA can fund the activities. Today's rule provides financial assurance for both corrective action and third-
party liability. A release from an UST may or may not occur. If a release does occur and corrective action
is necessary, it should not be delayed while a standby trust is put in place. Prompt action will prevent
further damage to human health and the environment. In addition, because under Subtitle I one assurance
mechanism covers both corrective action and third-party liability, the standby trust provides a mechanism
for the Director of the implementing agency to ensure that funds are available first to pay for corrective
action (see Section III.S). The Agency, therefore, has not changed the requirement that a standby trust be
established when a guarantee, letter of credit, or surety bond is acquired to provide financial assurance in
compliance with this rule.
The wording of the standby trust agreement must be identical to the wording provided by §280.103(b).
Uniform wording of the agreement minimizes the administrative burden on the implementing agency by
eliminating case-by-case review of standby trust agreements and provides owners and operators with the
assurance that the agreements will satisfy the regulatory requirements. In addition, as discussed in Section
III.V.2. of the preamble, the Agency is incorporating certain exclusionary language into the terms of the
instrument to more clearly limit the use of the mechanism only to costs associated with releases from
USTs.
Commenters on the standby trust were also concerned about the costs of trusts, particularly if the owner
or operator has several facilities in several states for which standby trusts must be established and
maintained. The Agency evaluated the costs related to establishing and maintaining a standby trust fund
when today's rule was proposed. The primary costs are the costs of managing the funds; other relatively
minor costs include the administrative fee charged to establish the trust fund and fixed fees for simply
maintaining the account. The incremental costs of establishing a standby trust at the time the instrument is
established will be minimal, since there will be no funds in the trust. The Agency believes, therefore, that
the requirement to establish the standby trust fund at the time a financial assurance instrument is acquired
will not be particularly burdensome to UST owners or operators.
In addition, the final rule allows the owner or operator to establish one trust fund as the depository
mechanism for all funds assured in compliance with this rule. Owners and operators with a number of
facilities in various states may, therefore, establish one standby trust into which funds can be deposited if
and when required. States authorized to implement this program may adopt this policy or may require the
owner or operator to establish a standby trust in their own jurisdictions.
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0.	Substitution of Financial Assurance Mechanisms by an Owner or Operator (§280.104)
Under §280.104 of the proposed and final rule, the Agency allowed an owner or operator to substitute
alternate financial assurance, provided that an effective financial assurance mechanism or combination of
mechanisms that satisfy the financial responsibility requirements existed at all times. After obtaining
alternate financial assurance, an owner or operator may cancel a financial assurance mechanism by
providing notice to the provider of financial assurance. The owner or operator must maintain continuous
coverage with a financial assurance mechanism to ensure the availability of funds at all times for
corrective action and third-party liability claims, should a release occur from an UST containing
petroleum.
The Agency received no comments on provisions regarding the substitution of financial assurance
mechanisms by an owner or operator, and thus promulgates these provisions as proposed.
P. Cancellation or Nonrenewal by a Provider of Financial Assurance (§280.105)
1.	Length of Notice Period
In the April 17, 1987, proposal, the Agency required insurers to provide owners or operators 120 days
notice before cancelling (i.e., failing to renew) insurance coverage and 90 days before terminating a
policy under other circumstances (e.g., non-payment of premium by an insured). Other providers of
financial assurance were permitted to cancel, refuse to renew, or otherwise terminate an instrument only if
the provider first notified the owner or operator at least 120 days in advance. Further, EPA required any
owner or operator failing to obtain an alternate mechanism within 60 days after receiving a notice of
cancellation or termination to notify the implementing agency of such failure and submit evidence of the
existing financial assurance mechanism, the name and address of the provider of financial assurance, and
the date of cancellation. In the sixty days remaining until termination of coverage, the implementing
agency would then have the opportunity to inspect the affected tanks to determine if any releases had
occurred, thus assuring that the still viable mechanism could be drawn upon to provide any necessary
funds. Moreover, the 120-day requirement reflected the Agency's concern that providers of financial
assurance might want to cancel their mechanisms upon the discovery of an UST release, leaving the
owner or operator without assurance when it is most needed.
Several commenters, primarily from the insurance industry, urged EPA to reduce the number of days'
notice required for cancellation to 60 days. The commenters presented several arguments supporting their
request. First, they argued that 60 days is an adequate amount of time for owners or operators to search
for and obtain any other type of available assurance, or to determine that none is available and report this
to the implementing agency. Second, commenters noted that a 60-day notice period is becoming a
standard insurance practice in many states. Third, commenters viewed the 120-day provision as punitive
to insurers, and predicted that reducing the notice period to 60 days would result in the greater availability
of affordable coverage. Finally, two commenters warned that if 90 days or more notice were required,
insurers would automatically send out cancellation notices on an annual basis to every insured party,
thereby giving them the time to review accounts at a point closer to the beginning of a new policy year.
Based on these comments, the Agency has concluded that the 120-day notice period is unnecessary for
insurance, RRG coverage, and state fund coverage. In the 60 days following an owner's or operator's
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determination that no other financial assurance is available, the Director of the implementing agency has
the authority to require a guarantor, surety, or issuer of a letter of credit to fund a standby trust. However,
the Director of the implementing agency does not have the authority to require insurers, RRGs, and state
funds to fund a standby trust should a leak be suspected or confirmed. Consequently, an additional 60-day
period following the determination by an owner or operator that no alternate financial assurance is
available would not benefit an owner or operator using insurance, RRG coverage, or state fund coverage
in the manner intended by the Agency.
Other circumstances unique to insurance, RRG coverage, and state funds also support the conclusion that
a 120-day notice period for cancellation is inappropriate for these mechanisms. In cases where insurance
or RRG coverage is cancelled, for example, an owner or operator has an incentive to submit any claims if
there is a release. In addition, the extended reporting period for claims-made policies allows an owner or
operator to file a claim six months after the policy has been cancelled. Finally, states are not likely to
abruptly withdraw financial assurance in case of an UST leak.
Consequently, EPA has decided that providers of insurance, RRG coverage, and state-backed coverage
need only provide a 60-day notice period for cancellation or termination of coverage. Owners or operators
who fail to obtain alternate coverage after these mechanisms are cancelled are still required to notify the
implementing agency 60 days after being notified of cancellation or termination of financial assurance
(i.e., when coverage expires). Reporting at this time can trigger an evaluation of the USTs for releases
which should be reported during the extended reporting period.
Nevertheless, the Agency, for the reasons noted above, believes that the proposed 120-day period is
essential in cases where an owner or operator has obtained a guarantee, letter of credit, or surety bond.
Therefore, providers of these financial assurance mechanisms must still provide a 120-day advance notice
of cancellation or termination of coverage.
2. Termination for Non-Payment of Premium
A number of commenters, primarily from the insurance industry, argued that the provisions should allow
for a quick termination of coverage in the event of non-payment of premium by an insured. Most
suggested that this period be 10 days. Under the proposed provisions, commenters noted that the
insurance agent or insurer would have to provide 90 days worth of coverage on behalf of an insured who
fails to pay his premium. Some commenters warned that should the 90-day period be maintained in all
cases, they might protect themselves from this contingency by requiring full payment of premium prior to
the issuance of coverage. Moreover, commenters asserted that termination with 10 days notice for non-
payment of premium conforms with standard industry practice on other types of insurance.
While sympathetic to industry concerns, EPA is unwilling to accept a 10-day notice period in these cases.
First, the Agency calculates that such a brief notice period will not allow UST owners or operators
sufficient time to obtain alternate assurance mechanisms, and hence will result in unacceptable gaps in
coverage.
Second, the Agency remains convinced that the shortened 60-day notice period will fulfill the needs of
providers. As noted earlier, a 60-day notice period is standard in many states. In addition, insurers, for
example, could protect themselves by establishing an appropriate schedule of premium payment. Insurers
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could require payment 90 days before the expiration date of coverage for the maintenance or renewal of
the policy. An insurer could then terminate the policy with 60 days notice if an insured does not meet the
schedule of payment within 30 days of the premium due date.
The Agency therefore is requiring a 60-day notice period for termination of coverage even in the event of
non-payment of premium by an insured.
Q. Reporting by Owner or Operator (§280.106)
The April 17, 1987, proposal required each UST owner or operator to keep evidence of financial
responsibility at his UST site or at his place of business. (Section III.R of this preamble describes the
nature of the records that the owner or operator must maintain.) In addition, the proposed rule required an
owner or operator to submit the appropriate documentation of financial responsibility to the implementing
agency in the following circumstances:
(1)	When the owner or operator notifies the Regional Administrator of the existence of a new petroleum
underground storage tank under §280.22;
(2)	Within 30 days after the owner or operator has a known or suspected release from a petroleum
underground storage tank required to be reported under §280.74;
(3)	If the owner or operator fails to obtain alternate coverage as required by this subpart within 30 days
after the owner or operator receives notice of:
-	Commencement of a voluntary or involuntary proceeding under Title 11 (Bankruptcy), U.S. Code,
naming a provider of financial assurance as a debtor,
-	Suspension or revocation of the authority of a provider of financial assurance to issue a financial
assurance mechanism,
-	Failure of a guarantor to meet the requirements of the financial test, or
-	Other incapacity of a provider of financial assurance;
(4)	If an owner or operator is unable to obtain alternate assurance within 60 days after receiving a notice
of termination of a mechanism, as required by §280.105(b); or
(5)	If the owner or operator using the financial test fails to meet the requirements of the test, as required
by §280.94.
The Agency received several comments supporting the proposed reporting requirements. Two
commenters, both representative of large segments of the regulated community, noted that an annual
reporting requirement would impose excessive administrative burdens on small businesses. Moreover, a
number of state government commenters expressed concern that they might be unable to administer a
mandatory reporting requirement. The commenters supported their position by citing the large size of the
regulated community, the lack of state financial and personnel resources, and the excessive paperwork
burdens that would accompany such an effort.
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Other commenters, however, urged EPA to mandate more extensive reporting requirements. Two
commenters suggested an annual demonstration of financial responsibility. The commenters cited several
benefits of enhanced requirements, including: (1) greater incentives for proper tank management and rapid
release detection and response; (2) the Agency's ability to target enforcement efforts towards owners or
operators who fail to submit evidence; and (3) greater assurance that funds will be available to pay the
costs of UST releases.
There are other potential advantages of more stringent reporting requirements. Stringent reporting could
increase the level of compliance with the regulations, since owners or operators would be required to
demonstrate on an annual basis that they have obtained financial assurance required under this subpart.
Despite these considerations, the Agency has decided that the advantages of more frequent reporting are
outweighed by several factors unique to the UST financial responsibility program. First, the regulated
UST community, consisting of an estimated 1.7 million USTs located at 500,000 facilities, is extremely
large. Receiving and processing financial assurance certifications from all these UST owners or operators
on an annual basis could place substantial administrative burdens on implementing agencies. In fact, the
sheer volume of reports could overwhelm implementing agencies and mask the more critical information,
i.e., cancellation or release notices. However, the Agency intends to develop non-traditional approaches to
compliance monitoring and enforcement and will initiate pilot projects in states to test these approaches.
In addition, provisions in SARA for the LUST Trust Fund create incentives for owners and operators to
comply with the regulations, since the fund may be used to pay for costs in excess of the required amount
of financial responsibility if the owner or operator has maintained evidence of financial responsibility. To
increase awareness of and compliance with UST rules, EPA is preparing a public outreach program aimed
at providing UST owners and operators with information on all UST requirements. Moreover, many UST
owners and operators are already obtaining insurance to limit their exposure to future liability due to UST
costs.
Finally, the alternative of reporting by postcard, while minimizing costs for owners and operators, would
still inundate implementing agencies with the same number of reports, and thus would not alleviate the
critical problem created by annual reporting.
The Agency has thus decided not to impose more stringent reporting requirements on the regulated
community.
The Agency also received comments opposing certain provisions of the proposed reporting requirements.
Several commenters disagreed with the requirement to submit financial responsibility documentation for
new, and not old, tanks, arguing that new tanks are less likely to leak than older tanks.
The Agency has retained this provision in the final rule. As noted above, the proposed requirement builds
upon existing notification requirements mandated under Section 9002(a) of Subtitle I and codified in the
UST technical standards (53 FR 37082, September 23, 1988). Specifically, §280.22 requires owners or
operators who bring a new tank into use to notify the appropriate state or local agency or department of
the existence, age, size, type, location, and uses of the new tanks as well as to obtain an installation
certification. Including financial assurance information in these reports involves a minimal increase in the
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cost of these reports for the regulated community and provides valuable compliance monitoring
information to the implementing agency.
Another commenter argued that owners or operators should not be required to submit financial assurance
documentation for new tanks to both the EPA Regions and the states. The Agency agrees with the
commenter. While the proposed rule required owners or operators to submit this documentation to the
Regional Administrator, today's rule relies on submittal of the new tank notification to the appropriate
state or local agency or department, as required in §280.22 and RCRA Section 9002(a).
Another commenter found the wording of §280.106(a)(2) unclear, and inquired whether financial
responsibility documentation should be submitted for a suspected release or only in the event of a
confirmed release. The financial assurance reporting requirements, which have been revised to reflect
provisions for reporting releases for corrective action in §§280.53 and 280.61 of the UST technical
standards, now require submittals in the event of confirmed releases. (These provisions are discussed in
further detail in Section IV.F of the UST technical standards preamble.)
The same commenter urged EPA to allow entities installing large numbers of tanks the option of
submitting financial responsibility documentation annually to the Regional Administrator rather than
submitting multiple documentation for each new tank. The Agency sees no reason to adopt this approach.
Section 280.22 requires that owners or operators certify in the new tank notification form that they are in
compliance with the financial responsibility provisions as well as provide information on compliance with
other technical requirements.
R. Recordkeeping (§280.107)
Under the proposed rule, owners or operators were required to maintain evidence of all financial
assurance mechanisms used to demonstrate financial responsibility under this subpart until one year after
closure or one year after the completion of closure and corrective action. An owner or operator was
required to maintain at his UST site or place of business the following types of evidence for mechanisms
used to demonstrate financial responsibility:
(1)	Copies of assurance mechanisms specified in §§280.94-280.100, worded as specified.
(2)	Letters of certification from the chief financial officer of firms using the financial test of self-
insurance or providing guarantees, based on year-end financial statements for the last completed fiscal
year. Such evidence must be on file no later than 120 days after the close of each fiscal year.
(3)	Originally-signed duplicates of the standby trust funds worded as specified in §280.103(b) for
guarantees, surety bonds, or letters of credit.
(4)	Originally-signed duplicates of the insurance policies or RRG coverage policies with the
endorsements or certificates of insurance and any amendments.
(5)	Copies of letters or certificates from states regarding coverage by state funds or other state assurances.
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The proposed rule also required the owner or operator to maintain a certification that the financial
assurance mechanism used to demonstrate financial responsibility is in compliance with the requirements
of the rule.
The Agency received a number of comments concerning the recordkeeping requirements of owners or
operators of petroleum USTs. Some commenters expressed unconditional support for the provisions.
Several commenters, however, were dissatisfied with the requirements. One commenter urged EPA to
delete the recordkeeping requirements and instead require owners or operators to submit evidence of
financial responsibility directly to the Agency. Since the Agency, as noted in Section III.Q, does not
require the automatic submission of financial responsibility documentation, it has decided to retain the
recordkeeping requirements under §280.107.
Another commenter suggested that the certification of compliance be kept at the UST site, rather than at
the place of business, and that it include the address of the corporate office where details would be
maintained. The provisions of this section allow UST owners or operators to choose this recordkeeping
option. However, as with the technical standard rule, off-site records must be made available on request
of the implementing agency.
One commenter noted that compiling the annual letter from the chief financial officer supporting the use
of financial tests or guarantees is unnecessary. The commenter suggested that this annual letter should not
be required, especially since the certification of financial responsibility presents essentially the same
information. Another commenter asserted that the certification of financial responsibility is unnecessary.
The Agency has decided to retain both requirements. Because EPA is not receiving financial
responsibility reports on a regular basis, the Agency believes that requiring an annual letter from the chief
financial officer may be necessary to further ensure the validity of various financial responsibility
mechanisms. Moreover, the Agency notes that large firms, as a matter of standard business practice,
routinely maintain the information required in the annual letter. Similarly, requiring the certification of
financial responsibility will provide additional incentives for owners or operators to comply with the
regulations at all times, and will not entail a substantial administrative burden.
One commenter argued that sending the chief financial officer's annual letter to all UST sites will present
significant administrative burdens on some firms. The Agency agrees, and notes that the commenter
might have misread the proposed rule, which allows owners or operators to maintain all documentation at
either the UST site or the owner's or operator's place of business. However, off-site records must be made
available upon request of the implementing agency.
One commenter questioned the need to maintain an originally-signed duplicate of the standby trust
agreement at each UST location or place of business when it is adequate to maintain only a copy of the
guarantee, surety bond, or letter of credit. Similarly, the commenter questioned the need to maintain an
originally-signed duplicate of the insurance policy when it is adequate to maintain a copy of the certificate
of insurance, especially since the commenter's policy contains confidential information not intended for
widespread distribution. Requiring originals, the commenter asserted, would increase the paperwork
burden exponentially for firms with large numbers of facilities. As an alternative, the commenter
recommended that the Agency allow owners or operators to keep copies at each location and be required
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to submit originals only in accordance with proposed §280.106 or within 15 days of a written request by
the Agency.
The Agency agrees with the commenter that requiring an originally-signed duplicate of the standby trust
agreement and the insurance policy to be maintained at each facility is unnecessary. An owner or operator
need not maintain an originally-signed duplicate of an insurance policy in order to draw on the policy;
similarly, an owner or operator need not present an originally-signed copy of a standby trust in order to
exercise the trust.
Consequently, the Agency has revised the final rule to require an owner or operator using a guarantee,
surety bond, or letter of credit to maintain a copy of the signed standby trust fund agreement and copies of
any amendments to the agreement. In addition, an owner or operator using an insurance policy or RRG
coverage is now required to maintain a copy of the signed insurance policy or RRG coverage policy, with
the endorsement or certificate of insurance and any amendments to the agreements.
The Agency also received two comments suggesting that including a list of specific tanks and tank
numbers in the financial assurance mechanism is unnecessary. The Agency agrees with these comments
and has revised the required wording of all mechanisms to reference each facility where covered USTs
are located rather than a tank-specific list of USTs at each facility (see discussion under Section III.E of
this preamble).
Pursuant to the changes outlined in Section III.T, owners or operators will not be required to maintain
evidence of financial responsibility for one year after closure. Rather, owners or operators need only
maintain such evidence until the date of closure or until corrective action is completed if a release is
found at the time of closure.
S. Drawing on Financial Assurance Mechanisms (§280.108)
The proposed rule provided special procedures for funding and drawing on the trust fund and on the
standby trust fund for those financial assurance mechanisms (guarantees, indemnity contracts, surety
bonds, and letters of credit) that require action by EPA to initiate payment. The rule proposed procedures
for EPA to follow in funding corrective action and paying valid third-party claims, while minimizing the
administrative burdens on the Agency and owners, operators, and claimants.
For corrective action claims, the proposed rule required that an owner or operator who notifies the
Regional Administrator of a release in accordance with proposed notification requirements (Subpart F of
40 CFR Part 280) must provide evidence of financial assurance within 30 days. Once EPA possessed the
evidence of the assurance mechanism, the Regional Administrator would be able to prepare and submit
the appropriate instructions to the provider of financial assurance to fund the standby trust, if necessary. If
the owner or operator fails to conduct any necessary corrective action, the Regional Administrator can
direct the provider to fund the standby trust and can direct payments from the fund.
The proposal provided different procedures for third-party compensation claims in §280.108(b)(2) than
were established for corrective action claims, because the UST owner or operator may contest a third-
party compensation claim as invalid or inaccurate. In order to avoid EPA being placed in the role of a
claims adjuster, the proposal required the owner or operator and the third-party claimant to submit a
document signed by each party and by attorneys representing each party certifying the validity and
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amount of the claim. If the parties cannot agree on the claims or amount underlying the signed certificate,
a lawsuit may be required to adjudicate the validity of the claim and any amount due.
In addition, §280.108(c) of the proposed rule established procedures for the Regional Administrator to
draw on the financial assurance mechanisms once estimates or known costs of corrective action and third-
party claims are available. The rule required the Regional Administrator to instruct the trustee to pay
corrective action costs before paying third-party claims in order to minimize further threats to human
health and the environment and additional third-party claims caused by the release.
A number of commenters criticized the Regional Administrator's discretionary authority to fund the
standby trust fund as too vague, especially in light of the Regional Administrator's apparent lack of
training in technical and financial issues, his vulnerability as a political appointee to political pressures,
and the lack of a mechanism by which a guarantor or indemnitor can appeal the Administrator's decision
to fund the amounts awarded. Some commenters thought that this loss of control over funds by financial
institutions or other entities will discourage participation by such entities in providing financial assurance.
One commenter argued that providers of financial assurance will be reluctant to issue instruments if they
believe they will have to process paperwork and follow the funding protocol even when their customers
are financially capable of performing corrective action or paying third-party claims, or are able to obtain a
substitute instrument. Apparently, providers of surety bonds and letters of credit carefully screen
customers in order to minimize the likelihood that the instrument will ever be drawn upon; that is, these
are truly intended to be "standby" instruments. As a solution, the commenter recommended that the 120-
day cancellation provision be shortened, and that the instrument be drawn on only if substitute coverage
has not been provided five working days before the instrument expires. This timeframe would lessen the
probability that unnecessary paperwork and processing would commence and that cash would sit
needlessly in trust funds requiring management by the trustee.
The essence of these comments is that the mechanism for funding the standby trust will diminish the
availability of the financial assurance vehicles requiring establishment of a standby trust. In responding to
these comments, as well as those discussed below, it should be noted that the Agency's desire to
encourage the availability of a wide array of financial assurance vehicles under this rule is secondary to
the Agency's mandate to assure that all financial vehicles will be readily available when a leaking UST is
discovered. Thus, assuring the availability of funds for corrective actions must take precedence over
marginally enhancing the availability of any one mechanism.
With respect to the commenters who thought that the Regional Administrator's role in ordering the
funding of the standby trust or the disbursement of funds would impair availability or, worse, compromise
the integrity of the financial assurance program, these comments greatly overstate the discretion accorded
to the Director of the implementing agency (either the Regional Administrator or the state Agency
director) under these regulations. The Director of the implementing agency is required to act only under
clearly defined circumstances, and, other than for cancellations, only when the owner or operator does not
cover the costs of corrective action and third-party liabilities. For example, the Director will require
funding of and draw on the standby trust in three situations: (1) if the owner or operator fails to establish
alternative financial assurance within 60 days of notice of cancellation, and the Director of the
implementing agency determines or suspects that a release has occurred and so notifies the owner or
operator (evidence of a suspected release under §280.50 includes positive monitoring results from testing,
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monitoring and sampling, unusual operating conditions, or the discovery of regulated substances in the
environment); (2) if the Director determines that there is a release and the owner or operator fails to
undertake necessary corrective action; or (3) if the Director receives proper certification of a third-party
liability claim or a valid final court order for a third-party liability claim that the owner or operator fails to
pay (§280.108(a)(2) in the final rule). Thus, while the Director is a critical participant, the provider of
financial assurance and the owner or operator are intimately involved in the actions triggering funding of
the trust, and ample notification accompanies each step.
One commenter seemed to argue that availability does not hinge on the Director's role so much as it is a
function of the provider of assurance's aversion to risk and paperwork. According to this argument, these
mechanisms will be available only to owners and operators who have the ability to undertake corrective
action and meet demands for third-party damages, but will be jeopardized if it is likely that the standby
trust might be funded, necessitating cost and paperwork.
In response, EPA notes that payment into the standby trust fund is not easily triggered, but occurs when
cancellation of the financial assurance vehicle coincides with the likelihood or certainty of a release from
an UST or when the owner or operator fails to carry out or pay for the actual costs of corrective action or
fails to pay valid third-party claims. When an instrument is cancelled and there is a known or suspected
release, questions of aversion to handling costs or red tape are clearly secondary to securing the
availability of funds for corrective action. The only other circumstances under which the standby trust
would be drawn upon are consistent with the commenter's concern; that is when the owner or operator
truly fails to cover the assured costs. Further discussion of cancellation and notice is provided in Section
III.P, above.
One commenter objected to the specific language in the proposed §280.108(a)(l)(ii) that empowers the
Regional Administrator to require funding of the standby trust if the financial assurance mechanism is
cancelled and not replaced and if the Regional Administrator "determines or suspects that a release ... has
occurred," arguing that mere "suspicion" on the part of the Regional Administrator was not adequate
ground for funding the trust. The commenter would amend this language to prevent the Regional
Administrator from acting unless a determination has been made that a release has actually occurred.
The Agency cannot accept this restriction on the Director's authority to act on the suspicion that a release
has occurred. EPA intends that this suspicion be based on objective evidence, such as failure of a tank
tightness test, discovery of free product in adjacent sewer and utility lines, notice by the owner or
operator, or other clear but unverified evidence. Further, the suspicion must be coupled with the
cancellation and nonreplacement of the financial assurance mechanism as described above. In this case,
there would be no new assurance mechanism to take over when the cancellation becomes effective,
leaving the owner or operator potentially unable to fund corrective action and third-party liabilities arising
from releases that occurred before the cancellation.
Finally, a number of commenters misunderstood the workings of the provision. One commenter thought
that EPA should not propose procedures to evaluate third-party claims, but, rather, should allow the
parties themselves or the courts to settle claims. An insurance company association commented that the
language suggested that the owner or operator may settle a claim with a potential claimant without
consultation with its insurer, thus placing the insurer in the position of indemnifying any claim, no matter
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how frivolous, if the owner or operator chooses to settle. An insurance company commenter requested
that the standby trust provision be clarified to prevent its application to insurance entirely.
In response, the Agency notes that the claims for third-party damages are settled by the parties
themselves, with full access to the courts if unresolved issues remain. The regulations simply provide a
mechanism that expedites settlement of claims made against the funds held in trust if the parties agree on
the details of the settlement. It is unlikely that insurance companies will be providing surety bonds,
guarantees, or letters of credit, but if they do, issues concerning any alleged breach of duty by parties to
the agreement are the province of the legal system, not the Director. Finally, the regulations state clearly
that the provisions of the standby trust do not apply to insurance policies.
After reviewing all of the comments on drawing on the financial assurance mechanisms, EPA has
concluded that only two changes should be made to §280.108 as proposed. All references to the Regional
Administrator have been changed to the Director to clarify that these responsibilities are delegated to the
Director of the state implementing agency in authorized states. In addition, the standby trust is only
required for guarantees, letters of credit, and surety bonds because indemnity contracts are not included as
an allowable mechanism in the final rule.
T. Release From the Requirements (§280.109)
Under the proposed rule, owners and operators were released from the requirements after completion of
closure or, if corrective action was required, after the tank was properly closed and after completion of
corrective action. The preamble to the rule, however, discussed the Agency's intention to require owners
and operators to comply with the requirements for one year after closure. Many commenters objected to
the possibility that owners or operators who properly close their tanks would be subject to the
requirements for one year after closure. These commenters pointed out that there is no need to require
coverage after closure because corrective action, when required, must be taken before closure, and
because they believe that insurers are unlikely to insure owners and operators after tanks are closed.
Commenters indicated that it is unlikely that financial assurance providers will provide coverage after
tank closure. The Agency recognizes that this is the case. The closure requirements in Subpart G of the
technical standards specify a closure process that requires owners and operators to notify the Director of
the implementing agency before closure, and conduct a site assessment. If releases are identified, the
owner or operator must conduct corrective action and the tanks cannot be closed until corrective action is
completed. This process will ensure that closure is not completed until any releases from the petroleum
UST system have been cleaned up.
Therefore, the Agency has determined that the need for financial assurance will be greatly diminished
after corrective action and closure are completed and will not require owners and operators to maintain
financial assurance after proper closure of their tanks. Under the final rule, owners and operators are
released from the requirements after completion of closure or of corrective action and closure, when
required.
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U. Bankruptcy or Other Incapacity of Owner or Operator or Provider of Financial Assurance
(§208.110)
The proposed rule required that any owner or operator named as a debtor in voluntary or involuntary
bankruptcy proceedings (under Title 11 of the U.S. Code) notify the Regional Administrator within 10
days after commencement of such proceeding. In addition, the proposed rule required a guarantor or
indemnitor to notify the owner or operator by certified mail within 10 days after commencement of a
voluntary or involuntary proceeding under Title 11 (Bankruptcy) of the U.S. Code that names such
guarantor or indemnitor as debtor. The proposed rule stipulated, furthermore, that any owner who
demonstrated financial responsibility using a mechanism other than the financial test of self-insurance
will be deemed to be without the required financial assurance in the event of a bankruptcy or incapacity of
its provider of financial assurance, or a suspension or revocation of the authority of a provider to issue a
guarantee, indemnity contract, surety bond, insurance policy, risk retention group coverage policy, letter
of credit, or state-required mechanism. Finally, proposed §280.110 required states to notify the Regional
Administrator and owners and operators covered by a state fund or other state assurance within 30 days
after the assurance mechanism becomes incapable of covering assured costs. The proposed rule adopted
the provision in Subtitle C rules for the incapacity of owners or operators, guarantors, or financial
institutions (see §§264.148 and 265.148), but amended the language to make it more applicable to the
requirements for Subtitle I financial responsibility.
One commenter doubted whether an owner or operator would be informed within 10 days after the
commencement of bankruptcy of a provider of assurance to notify EPA of the bankruptcy. The
commenter suggested that this requirement be eliminated.
The commenter appears to have misread the rule. Proposed §280.110 required a guarantor or indemnitor
to notify the owner or operator by certified mail within 10 days after commencement of a voluntary or
involuntary bankruptcy proceeding naming the guarantor or indemnitor as a debtor. (As noted in Section
III.G of today's preamble, indemnity contracts cannot be used to satisfy the financial responsibility
requirements.) An owner or operator, in accordance with §280.106, must notify the Director of the
implementing agency of the incapacity (e.g., bankruptcy) of a provider of financial assurance only if the
owner or operator fails to obtain alternate assurance within 30 days of receiving notice of such incapacity.
The Agency, therefore, has decided to promulgate these provisions as proposed.
V. Provisions Pertaining to Other Instruments (§280.111)
1. Maintaining Other Instruments at Required Levels of Coverage
If the Director of the implementing agency requires funding of the standby trust where financial assurance
is provided by a guarantee, letter of credit, or a surety bond, and draws on the standby trust or on a trust
fund to pay the cost of corrective action or third-party damages, the full amount of assurance required by
§280.93 will no longer be available. The proposed regulations did not specify the steps the owner or
operator had to take to assure that his financial responsibility obligations were being met after one of
these mechanisms had been used. While the need to take these steps was implicit in the proposed rule, the
Agency is making a technical addition to the rule to clarify precisely how the mechanisms would be
implemented. Accordingly, a new section has been added to the final financial responsibility regulation
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(§280.111) establishing requirements for replenishing a guarantee, letter of credit, surety bond, or trust
fund if the assurance these mechanisms provide falls below the required amount.
These new provisions provide that, if the amount in the standby trust is reduced below the full amount of
assurance required, the owner or operator shall:
(1)	by the anniversary date of the financial mechanism from which the funds were drawn,
(2)	replenish the value of financial assurance to equal the full amount of assurance required, or
(3)	acquire another financial assurance mechanism for the amount by which funds in the standby trust
have been reduced.
If a combination of mechanisms was used to provide the assurance funds which were drawn upon,
replenishment shall occur by the earliest anniversary date among the mechanisms. This new section
provides needed instruction for the Director of the implementing agency and the owner or operator, and,
more importantly, ensures that an adequate level of funding will be available for corrective action and
payment of third-party damage claims.
2. Exclusionary Language for Other Instruments
The language of the instruments for guarantees, letters of credit, surety bonds and trust funds in today's
rule contains a provision that they do not apply to certain categories of damages or obligations. These
exclusions are patterned on existing standard exclusions found in insurance coverage, and are intended to
ensure that the coverage is not exhausted by the payment of claims that are covered by other
compensation systems or that are otherwise not intended to be included within the scope of coverage. The
five exclusions do not represent all common insurance policy exclusions, but were selected because they
were considered most relevant to the financial assurance mechanisms for liability required under Subtitle
I. In commenting on specific mechanisms, some commenters were concerned about the possible uses for
the mechanism or the Director's perceived discretion in ordering payments from the standby trust.
Incorporating this exclusionary language will ensure more certainty for the owner or operator and for the
provider that these mechanisms will be used only for costs associated with UST releases, as the rule
requires.
The exclusions, with one exception, parallel exclusions that are being proposed for instruments under
Subtitle C. The purpose of adding these exclusions to Subtitle C instruments is similar to the purpose
under Subtitle I, to ensure that coverage provided by the instruments will be available only to respond to
corrective action and third-party claims related to releases from underground storage tanks and will not be
available to cover routine accidents not related to UST releases or claims for damage to the owner or
operator, or to meet other liabilities assumed by the owner or operator which are unrelated to UST
releases. The Subtitle C exclusion, however, excludes damage to the property of the owner or operator.
While permissible for Subtitle C liability requirements because only third-party damages must be
covered, such an exclusion would be inappropriate for Subtitle I because coverage for corrective action is
explicitly required. Accordingly, EPA is providing a limited form of on-site exclusion which prevents use
of funds to cover non-required corrective action (e.g., cleanup which would be part of routine
maintenance and not subject to Subpart F of the technical standards).
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Exclusion (a), for obligations under workers' compensation, disability benefits, or unemployment
compensation law or similar law, is intended to prevent the use of Subtitle I financial assurance
mechanisms to cover such claims.
Exclusion (b), for bodily injury to the employees of the owner or operator, is also intended to ensure that
such claims are not covered by assurance mechanisms obtained to comply with this rule.
Exclusion (c), for bodily injury or property damage arising out of the ownership or use of any aircraft,
motor vehicle, or watercraft, is to prevent use of an authorized financial assurance mechanism for routine
accidents that are not directly related to management of underground storage tanks.
Exclusion (d), for property damage other than that related to cleanup as required by under Subpart F of
the technical standards, is intended to prevent use of the instruments' funds to meet other on-site cleanup
costs such as those for routine maintenance.
Exclusion (e), for bodily injury or property damage for which the owner or operator is obligated to pay
damages by reason of the assumption of liability in a contract or agreement, is intended to exclude
liabilities assumed by contract that do not involve the ownership or operation of the underground storage
tank. It does not exclude settlements or other agreements to pay damages in connection with accidental
occurrences resulting in bodily injury or property damage caused by releases from underground storage
tanks.
W. Suspension of Enforcement (§280.112)
1. Statutory Authority
RCRA Section 9003(d)(5)(D) authorizes the Administrator to suspend enforcement of the financial
responsibility requirements for particular classes or categories of USTs. Suspensions of enforcement may
allow time for owners and operators of USTs in particular classes or categories or located in particular
states to obtain assurance for corrective action and third-party compensation costs. Because some owners
or operators of certain classes or categories of USTs may find that financial assurance mechanisms are not
generally available on the date set for compliance in the rule, suspensions would allow these owners and
operators time to comply with the requirements through the formation of RRGs or the establishment of
state funds.
The statute requires that, to suspend enforcement, the Administrator must determine that (1) methods of
financial responsibility are not generally available for USTs in the class or category; and (2) either steps
are being taken to establish a RRG for that class of tanks or a state is taking steps to establish a corrective
action and compensation fund under RCRA Section 9004(c)(1). A suspension of enforcement may not
exceed 180 days. The Administrator has the discretion to suspend enforcement for a period of less than
180 days.
After an initial suspension expires, the Administrator may again suspend enforcement of financial
responsibility requirements, but only if (1) methods of financial responsibility are still not generally
available, and (2) either (a) "substantial progress" has been made in establishing a RRG; or (b) the owners
or operators of USTs belonging to the class or category demonstrate, and the Administrator finds, that the
state is unable or unwilling to establish a fund and formation of a RRG is not possible.
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EPA proposed relatively detailed procedures and criteria for its consideration of suspension applications.
EPA requested comment on all aspects of the proposed suspension of enforcement procedures and on any
alternative procedures.
2. Suspension of Enforcement Process
A number of commenters stated that the proposed requirements were unnecessarily complex and
burdensome. They urged the Agency to simplify the procedural requirements associated with suspension
of enforcement. (A detailed summary of these comments is contained in the Response to Comments
document, Section II.T., in the docket.) Based on these comments and the enormous uncertainty over the
number of suspension applications the Agency will receive on the dates set for compliance, the Agency
has decided to defer promulgation of the final procedures for suspension of enforcement. Therefore, this
section is not included in today's final rule; EPA intends to promulgate final suspension procedures as
necessary in the future.
As noted earlier, the regulated community subject to these rules is extremely large. Due to current
constraints in the insurance industry and the assurance risks associated with the existing tank universe,
there is also a correspondingly large universe of USTs for which financial assurance is currently
unavailable. However, EPA is today phasing in these requirements over two years and recognizes that the
availability of certain financial assurance mechanisms (particularly state funds) may change dramatically
during that time. Moreover, some states may receive approval to operate their programs in lieu of the
federal UST program as the compliance dates arrive. As a result of these factors, there is significant
uncertainty over whether, and to what extent, suspension of enforcement will be necessary in the future.
Thus, it is impossible for the Agency to craft appropriate procedures for implementing the provision in a
manner that is at the same time consistent with statutory requirements, responsive to the regulated
community, and not an overwhelming burden on the Agency.
During the phase-in period, the Agency will gain experience with implementation of the UST financial
responsibility program and gather additional information on the form that suspension of enforcement
petitions should take. This will serve as the basis for adopting procedures, if necessary, before the
scheduled compliance dates for the largest group of UST owners and operators. Until such procedures are
promulgated, however, the Agency does not intend to exercise its discretionary suspension authority.
IV. Integration with Other EPA Programs
In promulgating the Subtitle I financial responsibility requirements, the Agency received a number of
comments concerning integration of these requirements with other EPA programs, including other
Subtitle I rulemakings and the LUST Trust Fund program.
A. Other Subtitle I Rulemakings
The proposal noted that certain requirements in other Subtitle I rulemakings were relevant to UST
financial responsibility requirements. One set of relationships raised in the preamble was the influence of
UST technical standards on the cost of corrective action and third-party liability, and on the amounts of
aggregate coverage needed. Early detection or reduction in the probability of release will reduce the
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occurrence and extent of harm, thus influencing coverage. These relationships were the subject of
numerous comments addressed in Section III.D of this preamble concerning aggregate levels of coverage.
Numerous comments raised other significant concerns about the relationship between the technical and
financial responsibility requirements. Commenters were concerned about the impact providers of
financial assurance would have on tank upgrading and replacement vis-a-vis the proposed phasing of
requirements in the technical standards rule. For example, several state and local governments addressed
the relationship between the content and timing of the proposed technical UST requirements and the
financial requirements, primarily the securing of insurance. They thought that insurance would become
more readily available and less expensive if tank inspection and certification were required first since
insurance companies generally attached these conditions to coverage. However, they were surprised that
the Agency's timeframe for bringing tanks into compliance with new tank standards was so long in view
of the relationship between tank upgrading and inspection and availability of insurance.
Some went further, stating that the insurance industry via the financial responsibility requirements would
be determining the technical tank standards, and that this incongruity was a major philosophical and
logical flaw in the regulations. Rather, technical considerations should drive the construction and
monitoring standards; then, with tougher tank standards, the financial responsibility requirements can be
significantly curtailed. Furthermore, they argued that the heavy reliance placed by Congress and EPA on
financial responsibility was not consistent with the goal of Subtitle I to prevent contamination of ground
water. Instead, consideration should be given to expanding efforts in preventing contamination, which
should be the objective of regulation, rather than environmental reclamation after the fact.
Commenters from the regulated community made approximately the same comment as the above, noting
that meeting conditions imposed by insurers for tank tightness and leak detection will force tank owners
and operators to meet technical standards when the financial responsibility requirements become
effective, despite the later compliance schedules under the technical standards.
Drawing a blunter economic relationship between the financial responsibility and the technical
requirements, these commenters stated that the money spent on insurance would be unavailable for tank
upgrading where, they reasoned, it would be better spent. One commenter concluded that a conservative
UST technical program and the state-of-the-art UST manufacturing and installation techniques currently
available will substantially reduce, if not eliminate, the need for excessive financial responsibility in most
cases.
Commenters from states and the regulated community argued that the timing and content of the technical
and financial responsibility regulations will result in remediation, rather than prevention, being the
dominant consideration behind UST control, and in the providers of financial assurance specifying the
technical requirements for tank owners and operators as a condition for coverage. The states and owners
and operators apparently differ on how each would correct this situation. The states would strengthen the
technical requirements and reduce the financial responsibility requirements, whereas commenters from
the regulated community would substitute state-of-the-art technical requirements for all financial
assurance requirements.
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EPA does not believe either correction is necessary. EPA does not agree with the assumption that the
technical and financial responsibility rules are necessarily competing alternatives, and in its final rules has
attempted to interrelate the two more clearly.
Congress specified that financial responsibility under §9003(c) and (d) of RCRA could be required at the
discretion of the Administrator. SARA amended these provisions to mandate financial responsibility
coverage and to provide a response program for petroleum UST releases. Congress did not present these
amendments as alternatives to technical specifications for USTs. The sections of this comprehensive
legislation cannot be viewed in isolation, but must be viewed as a whole; the overall goal of the
legislation is to reduce the unacceptable risk to human health and the environment posed by thousands of
UST leaks through prevention and assuring quick response when leaks occur.
Both the technical and financial responsibility requirements are preventive in nature. Neither would be
totally preventive of harm to the public health and environment in itself, but in conjunction they will
assure a high degree of protection. The direct control of leakage from USTs is obviously a preventive
strategy, but is not foolproof. The funds assured through the various mechanisms permitted in this
rulemaking establish a safety net that finances immediate and thorough corrective action when a release
does occur and before the spread of contamination. If the provider of assurance also places demands on
the owner or operator for technical controls, this strengthens protection of public health and the
environment by increasing the incentive for tank upgrading and replacement as well as assuring funds for
corrective action and third-party liability.
Phasing in compliance for the financial responsibility requirements brings this compliance schedule more
into balance with the compliance schedule for the technical requirements. The Agency projects that many
owners and operators will begin to comply with the technical standards early in the phased-in schedule for
tank testing and upgrading or replacement. These tanks will represent low-risk USTs and thus financial
assurance, particularly insurance, should be available for them at a lower cost than for pre-regulation
tanks.
The Agency recognizes that there might be continuing concern because the timeframes for the two
regulations are not the same; however, EPA cannot wait until all technical requirements are in place
before imposing the financial responsibility rules. The result of further delay would be an unduly long
period of time during which many members of the regulated community would have no financial
assurance and could be unable to afford the cost of cleanup or liability. Moreover, longer delay would
provide little incentive to states and insurance providers to develop mechanisms that will be needed to
comply with the rule.
Several commenters claimed that the burden of complying with financial responsibility requirements
would force owners and operators to move tanks aboveground and, thus, that the final rules should
contain criteria that help the changeover to aboveground systems. For example, commenters suggested
that an owner or operator's commitment to move tanks aboveground over a specified period of time
should trigger an exemption from interim requirements for leak detection. Small businesses would be
especially likely to install aboveground petroleum tanks in place of USTs. Because these tanks would
pose significant hazards to facility personnel, local communities, and the environment, the commenters
went on to urge the Agency to assess the consequences of this scenario before promulgating a final rule,
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and, meanwhile, to exempt small businesses not involved in petroleum marketing from financial
responsibility requirements.
The Agency feels that moving tanks aboveground is not necessarily a problem if done in compliance with
applicable state and local requirements. Any tank removed from underground to aboveground must meet
the same closure requirements under Subpart G as any other tank that is taken out of service or
permanently closed. No reasons have been put forth by commenters for why financial assurance
requirements should be waived for owners and operators who intend to withdraw tanks from coverage
under these regulations in the future. In addition, because numerous jurisdictions already stringently
regulate or prohibit aboveground tanks, the Agency suspects that moving tanks will not present as
appealing an alternative to leaving the tanks underground and providing mandated protection. Therefore,
EPA has not provided an exemption from these requirements for tanks that may be moved aboveground.
Finally, two suggestions were submitted that would relate technical and financial requirements. One
commenter suggested that a financial credit should be available to owners and operators who installed
secondary containment with continuous interstitial monitoring, thereby minimizing the potential for leak
occurrence and attendant cleanup costs and third-party damages. However, EPA has rejected the use of
such credits, as discussed in Section III.D, above.
The second mechanism consists of a new federal fund, financed by a sales tax on petroleum products, to
be collected and used by states as a state cleanup fund. One condition on the fund is that owners and
operators would have to register tanks with the state environmental department within 90 days, with
failure to comply triggering the need to supply proof of insurance and/or net worth as prescribed in the
proposed financial responsibility regulations. However, the only available federal fund, the LUST Trust
Fund under §9003(h), was created to provide cleanup of UST releases in particular circumstances.
Congress did not authorize its use as a financial assurance mechanism. Rather the fund is intended to
"stand behind" the owner or operator who has obtained financial responsibility in the required amounts.
SARA Conference Report H. Rep. 99-962, 99th Cong., 2nd Sess. at 271.
B. Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) Trust Fund and Response Program
Because the LUST Trust Fund and the financial responsibility program are closely related, the comments
proposed a wide range of uses for the Fund. Several commenters stated that the final regulation should
require states to use the Trust Fund to cover costs in excess of financial responsibility limits where the
owner or operator has complied with all regulatory and financial responsibility requirements. In support,
the commenters cited the Agency's discretion to forego full cost-recovery in Section 9003(h)(6)(B) and
the potential incentive this provision might give owners and operators to secure financial responsibility
and report leaks promptly, as reasons why the final rules should specify such a condition on use of the
Trust Fund.
Several additional uses of the Trust Fund were suggested. One commenter encouraged EPA to allow use
of Trust Fund monies in cases where a leak occurs at the site of an owner or operator who belongs to a
class against which enforcement has been suspended. Another commenter suggested that the Trust Fund
could be used to repay RRGs for payments for deductibles. To offset these costs to the Fund, the RRG
would require protection beyond that required by the final regulations (e.g., secondary containment).
Another commenter objected to the requirement that an insurance company must pay the deductible for a
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company in bankruptcy, because if the Trust Fund were used for such purposes, the U.S. Government
would be a preferred creditor in bankruptcy, whereas an insurance company making the payment would
be non-preferred.
A state commenter argued that Trust Fund money should not be given only to states with approved UST
regulatory programs. The commenter stated that the Trust Fund and the regulatory program were created
separately and should remain so; that the loss of Fund monies would place a major financial burden on
states with marginal capability to fund the base program; and, furthermore, that the environment and
public health would be jeopardized by not using the Trust Fund separately from the regulatory program,
as designed by Congress. Mayors could tap into the Fund if EPA would require, as part of state program
approval, that the state program provide direct municipal access to the Trust Fund for cleanup and oblige
the state to address other local concerns. In addition, the commenter urged EPA to seek authority to use
the Fund as a source of grants to develop local programs.
With respect to the numerous and varied uses of the LUST Trust Fund offered in the comments, as noted
earlier, Congress has authorized use of the Fund to pay corrective action costs only under limited and
specifically defined circumstances. After final regulations on the technical standards and financial
responsibility go into effect, Fund monies can be used to pay for corrective action only in the following
situations:
(1)	An owner or operator who is required to undertake the corrective action and who is capable of
carrying out corrective action properly does not exist or cannot be identified;
(2)	Prompt action by the Administrator (or state) is necessary to protect human health and the
environment;
(3)	The financial resources of the owner or operator, including any UST financial assurance, are
inadequate to pay the entire cost of the corrective action, and expenditures from the Fund are necessary to
assure effective corrective action; or
(4)	An owner or operator has failed or refused to comply with an order to perform corrective action.
Section 9003(h)(l 1) explicitly prohibits the expenditure of Fund monies for corrective action at any
facility where the owner or operator has failed to maintain evidence of financial responsibility in the
required amounts, except (1) in cases where there is no solvent owner or operator, or (2) in cases where
immediate action is necessary to respond to an imminent and substantial endangerment of human health
or the environment, or (3) to undertake an "allowable corrective action" to protect human health. (Section
9003(h)(5) defines these allowable corrective actions to include "temporary or permanent relocation of
residents and alternative water supplies" and exposure assessments undertaken to protect human health.)
One result of these requirements is the preclusion of many of the alternative uses for the Fund suggested
by commenters. Specifically, EPA does not agree that the state should be required to use the Trust Fund
to cover costs in excess of the financial responsibility requirement. While the statute clearly allows the
state to use the Trust Fund in such a situation, the decision should be made on a case-by-case basis at the
discretion of the state. EPA also does not agree with commenters who suggested that the Trust Fund be
used to (1) repay RRGs for payments for deductibles, and (2) to pay deductibles for companies in
bankruptcy. Owners and operators are expected to maintain evidence of financial responsibility and pay
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the costs of their releases. Congress intended the Trust Fund to stand behind an owner or operator who
obtained assurance to meet the financial responsibility requirement and, as indicated above, is to be used
in instances where the cost of corrective action exceeds the level of financial responsibility required to be
maintained.
In response to the comment that Trust Fund money should not be given to states that do not have
approved UST regulatory programs, the Agency wants to emphasize that the negotiation of state
cooperative agreements for use of the LUST Trust Fund is proceeding on a path separate from the
approval of state programs. However, EPA has decided to make a link between the LUST Trust Fund and
UST regulatory program to ensure that future contamination is minimized. After the effective date of
today's final rule, a state's success in making reasonable progress toward submitting a completed
application for state program approval may be grounds for increasing state access to the Trust Fund in
fiscal year 1990 and thereafter.
In response to the commenters urging that the Trust Fund be made directly available to local
governments, EPA's cooperative agreement process involves states negotiating arrangements for proper
use, recovery, and accounting of Trust Fund money with EPA. The municipalities are not parties to these
negotiations and will need to rely on the state to implement a sound and effective program for the use of
the Trust Fund for corrective action. The statute does not provide for any direct EPA/municipality
arrangement.
Finally, as discussed in Section III.W of this preamble, the Agency has decided to defer promulgation of
final procedures for suspension of enforcement. Until such procedures are promulgated, the Agency does
not intend to exercise its discretionary suspension of enforcement authority. At that time, the Agency will
address the use of LUST Trust Fund monies to respond to releases from tanks whose owner or operator is
a member of a class which has been granted a suspension of enforcement.
V. State Program Approval
A.	Background
Section 9004 of RCRA allows any state to submit an underground storage tank regulatory program for
review and approval by EPA. An EPA-approved state UST regulatory program will operate "in lieu of'
the federal program. The Agency may approve the state program if the state demonstrates that its program
(1) imposes requirements that are "no less stringent" than the federal release detection, prevention,
correction, and financial responsibility requirements, and (2) provides for adequate enforcement of
compliance with such requirements.
B.	Financial Responsibility Objective (§281.37)
In its final State Program Approval rule (53 FR 37212, September 23, 1988), EPA promulgated criteria
for state program approval in the form of objectives for seven of the technical program elements in the
final technical standards rule (53 FR 37082, September 23, 1988): new UST system design, construction,
installation and notification; upgrading existing UST systems; general operating requirements; release
detection; release reporting and investigation; corrective action; and out-of-service and closed UST
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systems. The eighth objective for financial responsibility of owners and operators of petroleum UST
systems is promulgated in today's rule.
These objectives represent the Agency's expectations of what constitutes a no-less-stringent state
program. By requiring the state to achieve the objectives underlying the detailed federal requirements in
each element rather than match each regulatory detail of the federal requirements, EPA provides a
performance-based measure for evaluating programs and recognizes that the precise details in the federal
program are not the only feasible approach to UST regulation. By establishing these objectives, EPA also
provides a framework for approval that guarantees that each state UST program provides a minimum
level of protection.
An important objective of the federal program is that owners and operators of UST systems containing
petroleum have adequate financial responsibility to undertake corrective action and meet third-party
liability claims. The federal law mandates $1 million per occurrence with appropriate aggregate amounts
as the minimum level of assurance needed by most owners and operators of petroleum UST systems to
meet cleanup and liability costs. Today's federal financial responsibility rule allows an exception for
certain classes of owners and operators who store small quantities of petroleum for purposes other than
selling it as a product. More specifically, owners and operators not engaged in petroleum production,
refining, or marketing and who have a throughput of 10,000 gallons or less per month are required to have
only $500,000 per occurrence for corrective action and third-party liability claims. In addition, the
financial responsibility rule sets the aggregate amounts at $2 million for owners and operators with more
than 100 UST systems, and $1 million for those who have 100 or fewer UST systems. Finally, the
financial responsibility requirements will be phased-in over a 24-month period from the date of
promulgation for different groups of owners and operators. In order to be no less stringent than the federal
requirements for financial responsibility for USTs containing petroleum, the state must have requirements
for owners and operators to have financial assurance and for the types of mechanisms used to provide that
financial assurance.
The Agency received comments in support of the holistic approach to determining no less stringent state
programs, particularly because such an approach would enable a state to trade-off more stringent
technical requirements with less stringent financial requirements, for example, lower amounts of financial
responsibility. While the Agency understands that states may experience difficulty in obtaining statutory
or regulatory authority to require $1 million in coverage, that amount was established by Congress in
Subtitle I and EPA believes it does not have the flexibility to lower that level of coverage as part of the
federal program or as part of state program approval.
The first aspect of this objective (§281.37(a)) concerns the amount of financial assurance, both per
occurrence and in aggregate, that an owner or operator must have. First, the state must have a statute or
regulations that require an owner or operator to have at least $1 million or $500,000 per occurrence and
$1 million or $2 million in aggregate, depending on the size and type of the operation. This requirement
follows directly from the federal financial responsibility regulations for petroleum-containing UST
systems.
The Supplemental Notice published on December 23, 1987 (52 FR 48644) included an objective for
financial responsibility; however, aggregate levels were not included in the proposed objective. To remain
consistent with the federal requirements for financial responsibility, the Agency today is promulgating the
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final objective with a requirement that the owner or operator have financial assurance in appropriate
aggregate levels. Addition of the aggregate is necessary to ensure that approved states require an adequate
level of coverage. The aggregate level varies depending on the number of tanks owned or operated.
Owners and operators with 1 to 100 tanks must have an aggregate level of coverage of $1 million and
those with more than 100 tanks must have an aggregate level of coverage of $2 million. The final
objective establishes the same levels of coverage. Further discussion on per-occurrence and aggregate
levels of coverage can be found in today's preamble at Section III.D.
The second aspect of this objective (§281.37(b)) concerns the phase-in compliance schedule for owners
and operators. The objective proposed on December 23, 1987 (52 FR 48644) did not include a provision
for a phase-in schedule. This provision is being added to be consistent with decisions made following the
Supplemental Notice to the proposed rule for financial responsibility for petroleum USTs that was
published in the Federal Register on March 31, 1988 (53 FR 10401). In today's final financial
responsibility rule, EPA has decided to phase-in compliance over 24 months from the date of
promulgation at all UST systems following a schedule based on net worth and the number of tanks
owned. Although EPA recommends that a similar approach be used by state programs, the Agency has
decided to allow flexibility in the objective for states to use other phase-in approaches provided that the
schedule is completed in 24 months. Approaches that allow all of the regulated community to wait until
the end of the 24-month period would not be accepted as an orderly schedule.
The third aspect of this objective (§281.37(c)) concerns the variety of financial mechanisms that may be
used by owners and operators to demonstrate adequate financial responsibility. The federal financial
responsibility rule allows a wide variety of mechanisms and combinations of mechanisms to be used. The
state may also allow a variety of financial mechanisms to be used. To determine whether state-allowed or
required mechanisms are no less stringent than the federal requirement, general criteria have been
established that are applicable to all financial mechanisms. By establishing these criteria in the federal
objective, the Agency believes that it is unnecessary for the state to have detailed requirements for each
mechanism affected by these criteria for purposes of state program approval. However, EPA encourages
states to adopt the financial responsibility regulation, especially the language of each mechanism, since
they have been developed and tested to ensure that adequate financial responsibility will be available
when necessary. For example, the state will not be expected to demonstrate that its regulations require a
surety company to state in a bond that the bond cannot be cancelled during a 120-day period following
notice of cancellation of the bond to the owner or operator. The state must, however, be able to draw on
the funds assured by the bond before cancellation occurs. The state regulations must ensure that the time
period before the effective cancellation of the bond provides ample opportunity for the state to assess the
facility, determine if a release has occurred, and, if needed, draw funds from the instrument. In this way,
the federal objectives for financial responsibility for UST systems containing petroleum are met.
Section 9004(c)(1) of Subtitle I allows states to set up a fund that may be used to meet the no less
stringent requirement for financial responsibility. The state may choose to establish a state fund to provide
financial assurance for certain classes of owners and operators or for all owners and operators. The
general criteria for state funds are represented in the objective (§281.37(a) and (c)); these criteria are
essentially the same as the requirements for state funds set out in the federal financial responsibility rule
in §280.100. Further discussion on state funds and their use in providing financial assurance will be
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available in guidance due to be issued this fall by EPA. A briefer discussion can also be found in EPA's
State Program Approval Handbook.
Some commenters expressed concern that the requirement that states have a financial responsibility
program that is no less stringent than the federal program in order to receive state program approval will
delay approval of state programs. The commenters stated that complex financial responsibility
requirements could discourage states from submitting UST programs for approval. They urged that EPA
promulgate a simple financial responsibility framework and provide guidance to the states.
As explained above, the requirement that an approved state program contain financial responsibility
requirements that are no less stringent than those under the federal program is required by RCRA Section
9004. However, EPA has developed an approach to state program approval that provides states as much
latitude as possible consistent with the statute in adopting approaches to fulfill the requirement. The
Agency recognizes the difficulties for states in developing financial responsibility programs and is
preparing detailed guidance and outreach assistance to states to help them develop their programs.
A more complete analysis of issues regarding state program approval is presented in the preamble to that
rule (53 FR 37212, September 23, 1988).
VI. Compliance Monitoring and Enforcement
Although not raised as an issue in the proposal, implications of the proposed rules for compliance
monitoring and enforcement activities received considerable comment. Many of the comments were
submitted by states.
In general, the comments note that performing compliance monitoring and enforcement for financial
responsibility rules will place a heavy resource burden on the states. Moreover, some states are currently
understaffed while others apparently have little experience with the options for demonstrating financial
responsibility and would have difficulty evaluating them. Also, the proposed requirement for maintaining
financial responsibility for one year after tank closure would be difficult to enforce, especially if the
business is sold, closes, or goes bankrupt.
Some states noted that, if the states will be responsible for implementation of the financial responsibility
program and will not be provided funding, then EPA should not have a strong oversight role or stringent
requirements for state program approval. Another state commenter reads the proposed section on
reporting, which requires owners or operators to send evidence of financial responsibility to the Regional
Administrator, to mean that EPA will administer the entire financial responsibility program.
A number of non-governmental commenters also noted the enormous burden that ensuring compliance
for such a large universe would entail, with some offering approaches to enhance compliance and
enforcement. One approach suggested by several commenters is that EPA collect evidence of financial
responsibility from all owners or operators through periodic reporting; for example, using the Tank
Notification Program to provide the basis for annual notification of compliance with financial
responsibility requirements. Other commenters suggested that proof of financial responsibility be made a
condition to obtain an annual operating permit. Another suggested that enforcement would be enhanced if
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the scope of these complicated rules could be clarified using the following techniques: (1) workshops, (2)
fact sheets, (3) more detailed summaries, and (4) condensed versions of the regulations.
Virtually all of the comments evidence both justifiable concern that performing compliance monitoring
and enforcement for such an enormous regulated community presents a formidable challenge and
considerable confusion about EPA's program for dealing with this challenge. The Agency believes that
UST requirements can best be implemented if the program is delegated to the states and localities. In a
companion rule to the financial responsibility rules, EPA has set forth the requirements and approval
procedures for state UST programs (53 FR 37212, September 23, 1988). States with approved programs
will have primary enforcement responsibility for their own UST programs. Under this rule, EPA has
provided states as much flexibility as possible to develop their own approach to UST regulation and
implementation consistent with statutory requirements.
Thus, in response to state concerns, the Agency will be allowing each state seeking program approval
considerable latitude in establishing the details of an enforcement program. Although federal law
mandates certain elements of the financial responsibility requirements (e.g., the one million dollar
minimum level of assurance), the federal program not only allows a wide variety of mechanisms, but
allows the states to develop their own financial mechanisms (e.g., state funds) to meet these requirements.
In short, contrary to the concerns expressed in the comments, EPA intends that, over time, states will
assume primary responsibility for the UST program and will also have considerable ability to tailor their
programs to each state's experiences and resources.
States could adopt more stringent provisions, such as reporting requirements, than are established in the
federal requirements, or they could adopt any of the mechanisms for assuring compliance that have been
submitted in comments. Although EPA believes that the event-based reporting requirements finalized
today are sufficient to ensure compliance by the regulated community and to provide timely information
to the implementing agency for compliance monitoring, states can and, in many instances, have imposed
annual notification requirements on owners or operators.
In addition to assisting the states seeking approval with the development of their programs, EPA will be
providing the regulated community with extensive compliance outreach materials, which should include
materials targeted to the needs of the large and diverse UST population. A secondary benefit of
compliance outreach should be a higher degree of awareness of these regulations and a greater level of
voluntary compliance, thus easing the enforcement burden on the states.
VII. Economic and Regulatory Impacts
A. Regulatory Impact Analysis
1. Compliance with Executive Order 12291
Sections 2 and 3 of Executive Order 12291 (46 FR 131393, February 19, 1981) require that a regulatory
agency determine whether a new regulation will be "major" and, if so, that a regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) be conducted. A major rule is defined as one that is likely to result in (1) an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more; (2) a major increase in costs or prices for consumers, individual
industries, federal, state, or local government agencies, or geographic regions; or (3) significant adverse
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effects on competition, employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or on the ability of U.S.-based
enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in domestic or export markets.
EPA has conducted an RIA of the Subtitle I financial responsibility requirements for petroleum-
containing underground storage tanks. Based on this analysis, the Agency has concluded that this
regulation may have annual costs of greater than $100 million. Therefore, the regulation promulgated
today is a major rule, as defined by E.O. 12291. The following six sections summarize the results of the
RIA: Section 2 describes the integration of the technical standards and financial responsibility RIAs;
Section 3 describes the regulated community affected by this regulation; Section 4 presents some of the
methods and assumptions used to produce the financial responsibility RIA; Section 5 presents EPA's
estimates of the present value of real resource costs; Section 6 discusses the regulation's economic
impacts; and Section 7 describes its potential benefits.
2. Integration of the Financial Responsibility and Technical Standards Regulatory Impact
Analyses
Under Section 9003 of Subtitle I of RCRA, the Administrator of EPA is required to promulgate both
technical and financial responsibility requirements for USTs. The RIA described here presents the costs,
economic impacts, and benefits associated with the UST financial responsibility requirements. A separate
RIA assesses the costs, economic impacts, and benefits of the technical standards (53 FR 37212,
September 23, 1988).
The results of the RIA for the financial responsibility regulation are presented both in terms of the
incremental costs and economic impacts of the financial responsibility requirements (the additional costs
and impacts that owners or operators complying with the technical standards will absorb to comply with
the financial responsibility requirements) and in terms of the total costs and economic impacts associated
with the imposition of the technical standards and the financial responsibility requirements. (The benefits
of the technical standards and the financial responsibility requirements were not integrated because these
two regulations have different types of benefits that are not additive.)
Methodology
There are two important differences between the regulated community for the technical standards rules
and that for the financial responsibility requirements. First, the technical standards apply to petroleum-
containing and hazardous-substance-containing USTs. The financial responsibility requirements only
apply to petroleum-containing USTs. Owners or operators of hazardous-substance-containing USTs are
not yet required to demonstrate evidence of financial responsibility. Second, all owners or operators of
USTs falling within the scope of the technical standards rule will incur costs to comply with the technical
standards. States and the federal government, however, will not incur costs to comply with the financial
responsibility requirements, because they are not required to demonstrate evidence of financial
responsibility for their USTs. Therefore, the regulatory impact analysis for the financial responsibility
requirements applies to a smaller universe of USTs (approximately 1.5 million) than does the regulatory
impact analysis for the technical standards (approximately 1.7 million). The combined costs and
economic impacts of both rules apply to the entire universe of 1.7 million USTs.
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The technical standards will require firms to improve their methods of leak detection within 2 to 5 years
after these rules are promulgated; in addition, firms are allowed up to 10 years to replace or upgrade their
UST systems to meet UST system performance requirements. To comply with the financial responsibility
requirements, many firms will similarly have to improve their methods of leak detection and replace or
upgrade UST system components, although within a faster timeframe. This is because, to demonstrate
evidence of financial responsibility, many firms that cannot self-insure and that do not currently have
insurance will have to attempt to get insurance within two years of the financial responsibility rule's
effective date. Insurers will generally require upgrading of UST systems as a prerequisite to coverage.
For the financial responsibility RIA, EPA assumed that insurers would require that:
-	Tanks be less than 15 years old or retrofitted to meet new tank performance standards; and
-	Leak detection measures taken by tank owners or operators be at least as stringent as those required by
the technical standards.
To avoid double-counting leak detection and tank upgrading costs, the combined costs of the technical
standards and the financial responsibility requirements are estimated by attributing to the financial
responsibility requirements the difference between the present value of the costs of meeting insurers'
criteria and the present value of the costs of meeting the technical standards. The only other cost elements
added by the financial responsibility requirements to the total costs of both rules are the costs of procuring
and maintaining financial assurance mechanisms.
The financial responsibility RIA compares the economic impacts of the technical standards alone to the
combined economic impacts of the technical standards and the financial responsibility requirements.
While the combined impacts of both requirements are, in all cases, more severe than the impacts of the
technical standards alone, in individual cases, the financial responsibility requirements actually help to
mitigate the economic impacts of the technical standards. Quicker detection of UST releases and the
availability of insurance to pay UST corrective action costs will lessen, for some firms, the economic
impacts of having to comply with corrective action requirements.
3. The Regulated Community
This regulation is estimated to apply to 1.5 million underground storage tanks (USTs) containing
petroleum located at 468,000 separate facilities. For the purpose of this analysis, the regulated community
was divided into four major sectors: retail motor fuel marketing, agriculture, local government entities,
and general industry. Retail motor fuel marketing is the largest single affected sector and includes
193,000 retail motor fuel outlets owned by approximately 90,000 firms. This sector has been further
subdivided into three segments: refiners, multi-outlet retail chains, and open dealers (defined as firms
owning and operating a single retail motor fuel outlet). The agricultural sector includes all farms owning
USTs with capacities of more than 1,100 gallons; approximately 46,000 USTs located at 30,500 farms
meet this definition. Local government entities own approximately 62,000 USTs at 29,000 facilities. For
the purposes of this analysis, the general industry sector includes all other sectors (i.e., sectors other than
retail motor fuel marketing, governments, and agriculture) where USTs are located. Firms in the general
industry sector range from large manufacturing concerns to small retail operations. USTs in this sector
usually are used to provide motor fuel for fleets of vehicles (e.g., at trucking firms and automobile rental
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agencies) or to provide convenient access to motor fuel for off-the-road vehicles (e.g., construction
equipment). The general industry sector is estimated to contain 642,000 USTs at 192,000 facilities owned
by approximately 137,000 firms.
4.	Assumptions and Methodology Used in the RIA
Following are the key assumptions used to estimate the costs and other impacts of this regulation:
-	The costs and economic impacts of the technical standards are the baseline from which the costs and
economic impacts of the financial responsibility requirements will be measured.
-	Owners, rather than operators, satisfy and pay the costs of financial responsibility requirements, except
when the owner is a private individual and the operator is a business corporation.
-	All owners who qualify for self-insurance use this mechanism to satisfy their financial responsibility
requirements and incur real resource costs for developing and maintaining the required records and
reports.
-	All firms or local governments currently insured for corrective action and compensation of third-parties
will maintain their insurance to comply with this regulation.
-	Firms or local governments that are not currently insured and that cannot use the financial test of self-
insurance will attempt to obtain insurance (rather than other financial assurance mechanisms) to comply
with this regulation.
-	Insurance will only be available to firms or local governments meeting insurers' criteria for insurability.
The RIA presents regulatory costs assuming that all firms and local governments that do not currently
have insurance or pass the financial test are able to get insurance by meeting insurers' criteria for
insurability (i.e., upgrading or replacing tanks greater than 15 years old and instituting suitable leak
detection measures). Using this assumption results in higher costs than assuming that firms and local
governments that do not currently have insurance or meet the financial test cannot get insurance.
Obtaining a suspension of enforcement should be less expensive than meeting insurers' eligibility
requirements within 2 years and paying insurance premiums thereafter.
-	Insurance premium costs are estimated by assuming that premiums will be double the expected value of
corrective action and third-party liability costs for the USTs covered. The expected value of costs of
corrective action and third-party liability are based on the UST model developed for the technical
standards RIA.
5.	Annual Real Resource Costs
There are three main cost elements in the combined total costs of the financial responsibility and technical
standards requirements: costs related to the tank replacement and upgrading and to leak detection; costs
related to performing corrective action; and the costs of procuring financial assurance mechanisms. The
costs of procuring financial assurance mechanisms do not include the costs related to performing
corrective action because these costs are accounted for separately. They also do not include the costs of
satisfying third-party liability awards because such costs would be incurred even if the technical standards
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and the financial responsibility requirements were not promulgated. The cost of insurance, for example,
does not include that portion of insurance premiums used to pay the costs of corrective action and third-
party liability awards. It does include the cost of insurers' profits, administrative costs, and sales costs.
These costs (the real resource costs of insurance) are equal to approximately 40 percent of the total
insurance premium cost.
The present value of the combined real resource costs of the technical standards and the financial
responsibility requirements over 30 years is $70.28 billion. $38.83 billion of these costs represent the
costs of tank replacement, tank upgrading, and leak detection. $29.49 billion of these costs represent the
costs of performing corrective action. $1.96 billion of these costs represent the real resource costs of
financial assurance mechanisms. A portion of these costs (e.g., the costs of tank upgrading and
replacement, and the costs of procuring insurance) would be incurred even if the technical standards and
financial responsibility requirements were not promulgated. The present value of the total incremental
costs of both rules (the costs of the technical standards and the financial responsibility requirements
attributable to the promulgation of these rules) is $49.63 billion. $18.50 billion of these costs are
attributable to tank replacement, tank upgrading, and leak detection; $29.49 billion are attributable to
corrective action; and $1.64 billion are attributable to procuring financial assurance mechanisms.
The incremental costs of complying with the financial responsibility requirements represent a minor
portion of the combined incremental costs of the technical standards and financial responsibility rules.
The incremental costs of the financial responsibility requirements alone are $701 million. These
incremental costs include $1.55 billion for accelerated tank replacement, tank upgrading, and leak
detection (to meet insurers' criteria for insurance); $1.64 billion for financial assurance mechanisms (for
firms that do not currently have them); and a $2.49 billion cost savings in the costs of corrective action.
This savings results from the earlier application of improved leak detection, and earlier tank upgrading
than would be required if only the technical standards were promulgated.
6. Economic Impacts
The economic impacts of the regulations are assessed for all firms in the retail motor fuel marketing
sector, except refiners, and for firms in the general industry sector for which the expected annual
insurance premium costs are more than 10 percent of before-tax-profits.
In the retail motor fuel marketing sector, economic impacts are measured in terms of the percentage of
existing outlets surviving 5, 10, and 15 years after the imposition of regulations. Through year 5, 57
percent of existing small-firm-owned outlets would survive if only the technical requirements were
imposed. (Small firms are defined as firms with less than $4.6 million in annual sales. This corresponds to
the Small Business Administration's definition of small firms in this sector.) Assuming the imposition of
technical and financial responsibility requirements, 55 percent of existing outlets survive, if all small
firms obtain insurance. By year 15, 34 percent of outlets would survive the imposition of technical
requirements and 47 percent would survive the imposition of both technical and financial responsibility
requirements, if all small firms obtain insurance. Thus, by year 15, the imposition of the financial
responsibility requirements has a beneficial impact on the survival of small-firm-owners and operators.
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Small-firm-owned outlets that do not have existing releases and that can afford improved leak detection
and tank upgrading or replacement costs are better able to survive with insurance than without it. Those
small-firm-owned outlets with existing releases and outlets owned by financially-marginal small firms
will exit the industry more quickly with the imposition of the financial responsibility requirements than
with the imposition of the technical standards alone.
The technical standards RIA does not account for the fact that many large firms in the retail motor fuel
marketing sector have insurance which can mitigate the economic impacts of having to perform corrective
action. It thus presents a worst case economic impact scenario. The technical standards RIA estimates that
73 percent of existing retail motor fuel marketing outlets owned by large firms (other than refiners) would
survive through year 5. The financial responsibility RIA, which accounts for the fact that many of these
firms have insurance, estimates that 83 percent of large-firm-owned outlets survive through year 5. By
year 15, only 50 percent of large-firm-owned outlets would survive the imposition of the technical
standards if they did not have insurance. When insurance is considered, 78 percent of large-firm-owned
outlets survive through year 15.
In the general industry sector, EPA examined financial data for firms in 65 four-digit SIC code categories
that contain firms that own USTs. In only 4 of these SIC code categories would the value of premiums
exceed 10 percent of the before-tax profits of average firms in those categories having less than $1
million in assets, and the impact of these premium costs on the pre-tax returns on assets for these firms
ranged between 0.1 and 0.9 percent. Most firms in these SIC code categories do not use USTs, and it is
possible that, if the costs of today's regulation imposed severe impacts on those firms in those sectors that
do use them, they could avoid these costs by closing their UST facilities.
7. Benefits
Today's rule is associated with a variety of potential economic benefits that are discussed in qualitative
terms in the RIA. Potential economic benefits from the financial responsibility requirements can be
placed in three categories:
-	Resource allocation;
-	Willingness to pay for distributional goals; and
-	Reductions in cleanup costs, environmental and health damage, UST releases, and business disruptions.
If the financial responsibility requirements induce firms to consider the full costs of UST releases as part
of their real production costs (i.e., cost internalization), the result may be an improvement in the allocative
efficiency of UST users. Since allocative efficiency improvements result in improvements for the
population in the aggregate, the population can be expected to be willing to pay for this improvement.
Similarly, the population also could be willing to pay for progress toward distributional goals (i.e., be
willing to incur some cost to ensure that the UST owners and operators and the consumers of goods
whose production involves the use of USTs and who benefit from the use of the USTs also bear the costs
of that activity).
Small firms that use insurance to meet their financial responsibility requirements may be more inclined to
report releases from their USTs promptly, whereas firms without insurance may be reluctant to report
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releases out of a fear that the costs associated with the release could force the firms out of business. In
addition, firms having to obtain insurance will have to meet insurers' eligibility requirements (e.g.,
improved leak detection and tank upgrading), thus reducing the likelihood of releases.
As reported above, meeting insurers' eligibility criteria is estimated to save $2.49 billion in corrective
action costs over 30 years. Over the long term, the imposition of the financial responsibility requirements
also reduces the economic disruptions caused by the bankruptcy of firms unable to meet the costs of
performing corrective action or satisfying third-party liability awards. After 15 years, the number of
surviving outlets is 14 percentage points higher if financial responsibility requirements are imposed.
The RIA also estimates the quantitative benefits of the financial responsibility rule. It provides a
comparison of the value of unfunded financial responsibility obligations that would occur if the technical
standards alone were implemented, to the value of unfunded financial responsibility obligations if all
businesses in the retail motor fuel marketing sector meet financial responsibility requirements using
insurance or the financial test. In making this comparison, the RIA finds that the promulgation of the
financial responsibility, in addition to the technical, standards saves $391 million, or $494 per UST, over
a 30-year period.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.), whenever an agency is required to
publish a general notice of rulemaking for any proposed or final rule, it must prepare and make available
for public comment a regulatory flexibility analysis that describes the impact of the rule on small entities
(i.e., small businesses, small organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions). No regulatory
flexibility analysis is required, however, if the head of the agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
EPA has conducted an analysis of the impacts of this regulation on small businesses as part of its
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) and has concluded that this regulation may have a significant economic
impact on some small businesses. EPA examined the economic impacts of financial responsibility
requirements on the small business segments of the retail motor fuel marketing industry and on the
general industry sectors for which expected annual insurance premium costs are more than 10 percent of
before-tax profits.
In the retail motor fuel marketing sector, economic impacts are measured in terms of the percentage of
existing outlets surviving 5, 10, and 15 years after the imposition of regulations. Through year 5, 57
percent of existing small-firm-owned outlets would survive if only the technical requirements were
imposed. Assuming the imposition of technical and financial responsibility requirements, 55 percent of
existing outlets survive, if all small firms can obtain insurance. By year 15, 34 percent of outlets would
survive the imposition of technical requirements and 47 percent would survive the imposition of both
technical and financial responsibility requirements, if all small firms can obtain insurance. Thus, by year
15, the imposition of the financial responsibility requirements has a beneficial impact on the survival of
small-firm-owned outlets.
In the general industry sector, EPA found that the costs of insurance premiums represent 10 percent or
more of the before-tax profits of firms that have less than $1 million in assets in 4 of the 65 four-digit SIC
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codes examined. The impact of these premium costs on the pre-tax returns on assets for these firms
ranged between 0.1 and 0.9 percent.
The RIA does not examine the possibility that all corrective action costs and third-party liability awards
might be paid by state funds financed by taxes on gasoline. Such funds would minimize economic
impacts on small businesses and transfer the costs of these financial responsibility requirements to the
consumers of motor fuel.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements in this rule have been approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have been assigned
OMB control number 2050-0066. The reporting and recordkeeping burden on the public for this
collection is estimated at 65,707 hours for the 265,534 respondents, with an average of 0.1 hours per
response. These burden estimates include all aspects of the collection effort and may include time for
reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed,
completing and reviewing the collection of information, etc.
If you wish to submit comments regarding any aspect of this collection of information, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, or if you would like a copy of the information collection request
(please reference ICR #1359), contact Rick Westlund, Information Policy Branch, PM-223, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M St., S.W., Washington, D.C. 20460 (202-382-2745); and
Marcus Peacock, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, D.C. 20503.
VIII. List of Subjects in 40 CFR Parts 280 and 281
Administrative practice and procedure, Environmental protection, Hazardous materials insurance, Oil
pollution, Penalties, Petroleum, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, State program approval,
Surety bonds, Underground storage tanks, Water pollution control.
Lee M. Thomas,
Administrator
Dated:	, 1988
1. Under Section 9001(1) "underground storage tank" is defined as "any one or combination of tanks
(including underground pipes connected thereto) which is used to contain an accumulation of regulated
substances, and the volume of which (including the volume of the underground pipes connected thereto)
is 10 percent or more beneath the surface of the ground. Such term does not include any ~
(A)	farm or residential tank of 1,100 gallons or less capacity used for storing motor fuel for
noncommercial purposes,
(B)	tank used for storing heating oil for consumptive use on the premises where stored,
(C)	septic tank,
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(D)	pipeline facility (including gathering lines) regulated under ~
(i)	the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act of 1968 (49 U.S.C. App. 1671, et seq.),
(ii)	the Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Act of 1979 (49 U.S.C. App. 2001, et seq.), or
(iii)	which is an intrastate pipeline facility regulated under State laws comparable to the provisions of law
referred to in clause (i) or (ii) of this subparagraph,
(E)	surface impoundment, pit, pond, or lagoon,
(F)	storm water or waste water collection system,
(G)	flow-through process tank,
(H)	liquid trap or associated gathering lines directly related to oil or gas production and gathering
operations, or
(I)	storage tank situated in an underground area (such as a basement, cellar, mineworking, drift, shaft, or
tunnel) if the storage tank is situated upon or above the surface of the floor.
The term 'underground storage tank' shall not include any pipes connected to any tank which is described
in subparagraphs (A) through (I)." These terms are further defined by regulation under the technical
standards published at (CITE-TS).
2.	Under Section 9001(8), petroleum is defined as "petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction
thereof," which is liquid at standard conditions of temperature (60 degrees Fahrenheit) and pressure (14.7
pounds per square inch absolute).
3.	Under Section 9001(2), "regulated substances" are defined as "(A) any substance defined in Section
101(14) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (but
not including any substance regulated as a hazardous waste under Subtitle C), and (B) petroleum."
4.	The Trust Fund may not be used to compensate third parties.
5.	Information supporting EPA's assumptions with regard to the types of financial assurance mechanisms
available to petroleum marketing firms owning different numbers of USTs can be found in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis for the rule that is available in the docket.
6.	U.S. Department of Commerce, Liability Risk Retention Act of 1986 Implementation Report,
September 1987.
7.	The Rising Costs of General Liability Legal Defense, Insurance Services Office, 1986.
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