1 / 21

NRDs 101

NRDs 101. Vicky Peters Colorado Attorney General’s Office. What are they?.

sydney
Télécharger la présentation

NRDs 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NRDs 101 Vicky Peters Colorado Attorney General’s Office

  2. What are they? • 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" CERCLA 42 USC 9607(4)(C); OPA 1002(b)(2)(A).

  3. Response Action • Respond to the release • Address threats • Protect Human Health and Environment

  4. Natural Resource Damages • Compensate public for injuries to natural resources • Primary--Compensation for injuries residual to response action as compared to baseline • Compensatory--Compensation for losses from time of injury (or 1981) until restoration achieved

  5. Oil Pollution Act • protect and restorecoastal and ocean resourcesinjured by releases of oil,hazardous substances or physical impacts

  6. Natural resources • "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..., [or] any state or local government,…Indian Tribe..." CERCLA sec. 101(16); (OPA 1001(20) and 1006(a) has similar definition)

  7. Injury • the Department of Interior's (DOI) damages assessment regulations define it as a "measurable adverse change in the chemical or physical quality or the viability of a natural resource” 43 CFR 11.14(v). • NOAA regs include impairment of a natural resource service 15 CFR 900.30 (Subpart C)

  8. Proof of Injury • empirical evidence of an adverse change in a particular case (e.g., lower hatching rates or increased incidence of tumors); or • reliance on a prior regulatory determination, such as water quality standards or FDA tolerance limits

  9. Damage Recoveries • CERCLA section 107(f)(1) allows sums recovered only to be used to restore, replace, or acquire the equivalent of natural resources • OPA 1006(c) and (f), allows excess recoveries to go to revolving trust account

  10. Natural Resource Trustees • State Tribes • Secretaries of Fed Agencies • Agriculture (e.g. Forest Service) • Commerce (NOAA) • Defense • Energy • Interior (FWS)

  11. Role of the Public • Input at • Assessment Scoping Phase • Assessment • Restoration Planning • Consent Decree

  12. Relevance to DOE sites • Timing--Some sites are close to completion • Rocky Flats, CO • Fernald, OH • Weldon Springs, MO

  13. Statute of Limitations • For NPL sites, Federal facilities identified under sec. 120, or facilities at which a remedial action under CERCLA is scheduled: • Action must be brought w/i 3 years of completion of remedial action

  14. Selection of Remedies • Incorporate NRD considerations into selection of interim and final remedies

  15. Injured Resources • Groundwater -- state resource • Surface water and aquatic life - state, federal, tribal • Terrestrial wildlife, birds - state, federal, tribal • Air?

  16. Evolution of NRD Programs • From valuation to restoration • From afterthought to integration • From litigation to cooperation

  17. Valuation • Contingent Valuation Methodology • Hedonic Methodology • Market Analysis

  18. Restoration-based • Habitat Equivalency Analysis • Resource Equivalency Analysis • “Good projects solve hard cases.” • Steve Hampton, June 2004

  19. Integration • Risks of not integrating • Puget sound? Trustees couldn’t restore resources because EPA’s PCB cleanup levels too high to sustain organisms • NJ. Borrow material for cap discovered to be wetlands

  20. Benefits of integration reflected in DOE policy

  21. Cooperative Assessments • Tend to incorporate both concepts of • restoration over valuation and • integration

More Related