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Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar NRD in Missouri Overview of the NRD Process November 4, 2014
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Page 1: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Missouri Hazardous Waste SeminarNRD in Missouri

Overview of the NRD Process

November 4, 2014

Page 2: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

NRD Regulatory Basis

• Clean Water Act Section 311(F)(4) & (5)

Cleanup costs incurred in restoration or replacement of natural resources

• CERCLA Section 107

Recover damages necessary to restore injured natural resources.

• Oil Pollution Act of 1990

Recovery of natural resource damages caused by oil spills

Page 3: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Trustees

• Department of the Interior

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

National Park Service

• Department of Commerce

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

• Department of Agriculture

U.S. Forest Service

• Indian Tribes

• Department of Energy

• Department of Defense

• States

Page 4: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Definition of Natural ResourcesCERCLA Section 101(16)

• “land, fish , wildlife, biota, air, water, ground

water, drinking water supplies, and other such

resources belonging to, managed by, held in trust

by, appertaining to, or otherwise controlled by the

United States … any State or local government,

any foreign government, any Indian Tribe…..”

Page 5: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Definitions

• Injury

Measurable, adverse change in chemical or physical quality, or viability of a natural resource

• Services

Physical and biological functions performed by natural resources (habitat, recreation, aesthetics, drinking water)

• Damages

Compensation for loss or reduction of services

Page 6: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

“Causal” Connection• Section 107(a)(4)(c) of CERCLA provides that

responsible parties are liable for “[D]amages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources, including the reasonable costs of assessing such injury, destruction or loss resulting from such a release.”

• To establish causal link, Trustees must show:Injuries or losses to natural resourcesNexus with lost servicesDirect correlation between injuries and release

caused by responsible party

Causal Connection

Page 7: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Baseline

• Fundamental premise in the NRD process

• The condition of the resource or resources that would have existed at the assessment area had the release not occurred

• Changes from baseline are to be measured in surface water, groundwater, air and geologic resources in the area in which contamination from the discharge or release is found (43 CFR § 11.71(h) – (l)

• Changes in biologic resources to be determined by changes at the population, ecosystem, or habitat level (43 CFR § 11.71(h) – (l)

Page 8: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Establishment of Baselines

• PRP liability does not extend to diminished ecosystem services and/or other "injuries" not caused by the hazardous substance release.

• A given PRP is not responsible for injuries from releases that occurred wholly before the PRP had an ownership, operational or other interest.

• Trustees must consider baseline in determination of injuries in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.

Establishment of BaselineDefinitions

Page 9: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Injury Definitions

• CERCLA Section 107(a)(4)(C)

• “Damages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources, including the reasonable costs of assessing such injury, destruction or loss resulting from such a release.”

• Nexus between a release and the injury must be proven

• Limited to injuries that occurred after the passage of CERCLA (1981)

Page 10: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Injury Determination

• Either chemical or physical quality of resource

• NRD regulations allow proof of injury by either:

Empirical evidence of an adverse change in the resource

Exceedance of regulatory standard

Page 11: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Service Determination• Physical and biological functions performed by the resource

• Result of the quality of the resource.

• Habitat and supporting ecosystem, nutrient cycling, geochemical exchange processes, primary/secondary production, transport of energy (food)

• Baseline services must be determined as part of the injury quantification stage (43 CRF 11.72[a])

Services

Page 12: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Services (Continued)

• Calculation of restoration is based on

Determination of baseline services of injured resources;

Determination of the extent of injuries and the reduction of services resulting from the injuries;

Determination of recoverability of the injured resources (43 CFR 11.70[c])

• Baseline services must be determined as part of the injury quantification stage (43 CRF 11.72[a])

Page 13: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

NRDA Concept

• Natural resources managed by trustees

• Natural resource provide a service to the public

• Injury to resources from chronic release or spill results in a loss of service

• Responsible party is obligated to pay for the lost services, for restoration to the point services are restored, and for the trustees costs

Page 14: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

NRDA Concept (Continued)

• Responsible party pays for restoration of services to some predetermined baseline or reference condition

• Trustees required to use recovered damages to restore, replace, or acquire the equivalent of the affected resource

Page 15: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Relationship to Remedial Action

• A natural resource damage action under CERCLA usually seeks to recover for residual harm that will exist after any remedial action implemented by EPA

• NRD actions can and have been brought under CERCLA in situations not involving a remedial action

Page 16: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Concept Overview

PristinePristine

BaselineBaseline

Va

lue

of

Re

so

urc

eV

alu

e o

f R

es

ou

rce

TimeTime

Natural RecoveryNatural Recovery

RemediationRemediation

ChemicalChemicalReleaseRelease

Restoration

Value of the NRDA =Value of lost services

+ Compensatory

Page 17: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

NRDA Process

Pre-assessment (Is there a problem?)

Injury determination (What are the injuries?)

Injury quantification (What are the lost services?)

Damage determination (What are the costs?)

Restoration (Plan/restore the injured resources)

Page 18: Harman, Charles, AMEC, NRD in Missouri, Overview of the NRD Process, at 2014 Missouri Hazardous Waste Seminar, November, 4, 2014, Columbia, MO

Two Types of Injury Determinations

• Type A: Simplified procedures. Computer model.

• Type B: More rigorous scientific evaluations conducted in the field pursuant to a series of USFWS guidance documents


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