Compliance , Enforcement Risks , and Emerging Issues Regarding EPA ’ s Vessel General Permit
BY JEANNE M . GRASSO AND DANA S . MERKEL incidental discharges . It also required vessels to conduct routine and annual inspections and imposed numerous recordkeeping obligations , as well as monitoring and reporting requirements .
About a year ago , we wrote about a
rise in enforcement of the U . S . Environmental Protection Agency ’ s (“ EPA ”) Vessel General Permit (“ VGP ”). In the words of one EPA attorney , that was “ just the beginning ” and we have continued to see more aggressive reviews of VGP compliance and penalty demands , particularly on the U . S . West Coast . Since then , EPA has continued demanding significant penalties for alleged violations , sometimes citing interpretations of the VGP that are not outlined in any guidance documents . Additionally , in January 2023 , EPA published an Enforcement Alert ,
EPA Reminder About Clean Water Act Vessel General Permit Requirements , reminding the maritime industry of the VGP requirements and impacts of non-compliance , and citing recent enforcement examples .
The VGP and VIDA Implementation The VGP was issued under the Clean Water Act ’ s (“ CWA ”) National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (“ NPDES ”) program and provides permit coverage nationwide for discharges incidental to the normal operation of commercial vessels more than 79 feet in length . EPA issued the first version of the VGP in 2008 and then another , more stringent version in 2013 . The VGP set effluent limits and mandated Best Management Practices to control certain types of
The 2013 VGP was set to expire in December 2018 and a new VGP was to be issued . However , in December 2018 , the Vessel Incidental Discharge Act (“ VIDA ”) was signed into law , with the intent of replacing the VGP and bringing uniformity , consistency , and certainty to the regulation of incidental discharges throughout the United States from U . S . -flag and foreign-flag vessels alike . VIDA amended the CWA and will substantially alter how EPA and the United States Coast Guard (“ USCG ”) regulate vessel discharges . VIDA required EPA to finalize uniform performance standards for each type of incidental discharge by December 2020 , a deadline that the EPA has missed by more than two years already , and required the USCG to implement EPA ’ s final standards within two years .
EPA is applying its penalty calculation policies very aggressively , resulting in high penalty demands for every violation type , substantially higher than in the first 10 + years of VGP enforcement . Every violation , even paperwork violations , is considered to have presented a risk to the marine environment .
Significantly , on January 19 , 2023 , EPA announced plans to issue a Supplemental Notice in Fall 2023 to its Vessel Incidental Discharge National Standards of Performance proposed rule , originally issued in October 2020 but never finalized . EPA indicated that the Supplemental Notice is intended to clarify its proposed rule , share ballast water data compiled by the USCG , and propose additional regulatory options that EPA is considering . EPA plans to request comments on the issues identified in the Supplemental Notice prior to finalizing its performance standards in Fall 2024 — nearly four years after the deadline mandated by
Congress . Once EPA finalizes its performance standards , VIDA requires the USCG to promulgate regulations implementing EPA ’ s standards , including equipment , compliance , monitoring , inspections , and enforcement , within two years . Until such time as VIDA is fully implemented , likely in late 2026 , the VGP will remain in effect .
Litigation by Environmental Groups
EPA ’ s delay in finalizing its performance standards prompted the Center for Biological Diversity and Friends of the Earth to file a lawsuit in February 2023 to force EPA to finalize its standards . The plaintiffs seek a declaration by the court that EPA ’ s failure to finalize the incidental discharge standards violates the Clean Water Act and ask the court to order EPA to implement final standards within 60 days .
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