Federal Judge Rules That Limits On Oil Spill Dispersants Must Be Part Of Response Plans
A federal judge has ordered President Donald Trump's administration to update its oil spill response plans and potentially limit the use of the chemical dispersants that were heavily used during the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster.
In a ruling on Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick of the Northern District of California agreed with environmental groups that the Clean Water Act requires the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to maintain spill response plans that reflect current science. Over the past three years, a flood of new research has blamed dispersants for a host of environmental and human health problems, including lingering effects from the BP disaster a decade ago.
Judge Orricks ruling is a game-changer, said Claudia Polsky, director of the University of California-Berkeley Environmental Law Clinic, which filed a lawsuit in January that argued federal rules on dispersant use were lax and outdated. This is the first time a court has addressed whether EPA has a duty to keep the cleanup plans current and effective. The court said yes.
Orrick also denied a motion by the American Petroleum Institute to intervene in support of the EPA. In court filings, the institute had argued that the EPA might not sufficiently represent oil industry interests. On Wednesday, an EPA spokesman said the agency is still reviewing the decision but declined to comment further.
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