Consumer Price Index Adjustments of Oil Pollution Act of 1990 Limits of Liability-Vessels, Deepwater Ports and Onshore Facilities, 72342-72356 [2015-29519]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
comments by using the Federal
eRulemaking Portal, as described above.
2015, the rule will become effective on
January 13, 2016.
16 CFR Parts 1109 and 1500
Written Submissions
[Docket No. CPSC–2011–0081]
Submit written submissions in the
following way:
Mail/Hand delivery/Courier,
preferably in five copies, to: Office of
the Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission, Room 820, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone (301) 504–7923.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number for this notice. All
comments received may be posted
without change, including any personal
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personal information provided, to:
https://www.regulations.gov. Do not
submit confidential business
information, trade secret information, or
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electronically. Such information should
be submitted in writing.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to: https://
www.regulations.gov and insert the
Docket No. CPSC–2011–0081 into the
‘‘Search’’ box and follow the prompts.
Alberta E. Mills,
Acting Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Amendment To Clarify When
Component Part Testing Can Be Used
and Which Textile Products Have Been
Determined Not To Exceed the
Allowable Lead Content Limits; Delay
of Effective Date and Extension of
Comment Period
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Direct final rule; delay of
effective date and extension of comment
period.
AGENCY:
The Consumer Product Safety
Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘CPSC’’)
published a direct final rule (‘‘DFR’’)
and notice of proposed rulemaking
(‘‘NPR’’) in the same issue of the
Federal Register on October 14, 2015,
clarifying when component part testing
can be used and clarifying which textile
products have been determined not to
exceed the allowable lead content
limits. The DFR provided that, unless
the Commission receives a significant
adverse comment by November 13,
2015, the DFR would become effective
on December 14, 2015. In response to a
request for an extension of time for
comments, the Commission is extending
the comment period to December 14,
2015. The Commission is also delaying
the effective date for the DFR to January
13, 2016.
DATES: The effective date for the direct
final rule published October 14, 2015, at
80 FR 61729, is delayed from December
14, 2015, until January 13, 2016. The
rule will be effective unless we receive
a significant adverse comment. If we
receive a significant adverse comment,
we will publish notification in the
Federal Register withdrawing this
direct final rule before its effective date.
The comment date is extended to
December 14, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CPSC–2011–
0081, by any of the following methods:
SUMMARY:
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Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the
following way:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
The Commission does not accept
comments submitted by electronic mail
(email), except through: https://
www.regulations.gov. The Commission
encourages you to submit electronic
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On
October 14, 2015, the Commission
published a DFR and an NPR in the
Federal Register, clarifying when
component part testing can be used and
clarifying which textile products have
been determined not to exceed the
allowable lead content limits. (DFR, 80
FR 61729 and NPR, 80 FR 61773). The
American Apparel and Footwear
Association (‘‘AAFA’’) has requested an
extension of the comment period for 30
days because AAFA-member companies
are currently reviewing the
Commission’s proposed amendment to
the rule and need additional time to
submit comments.
The Commission has considered the
request and is extending the comment
period for an additional 30 days.
Because 30-day extension date falls on
a Sunday, the comment period will
close on December 14, 2015. The
Commission believes that this extension
allows adequate time for interested
persons to submit comments on the
proposed rule, without significantly
delaying the rulemaking. Because the
Commission is extending the period for
comments 30 days, the Commission is
extending the effective date for the DFR
30 days, as well. Thus, unless the
Commission receives a significant
adverse comment by December 14,
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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[FR Doc. 2015–29503 Filed 11–18–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 138
[Docket No. USCG–2013–1006]
RIN 1625–AC14
Consumer Price Index Adjustments of
Oil Pollution Act of 1990 Limits of
Liability—Vessels, Deepwater Ports
and Onshore Facilities
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is issuing a
final rule to increase the limits of
liability for vessels, deepwater ports,
and onshore facilities, under the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (OPA
90), to reflect significant increases in the
Consumer Price Index (CPI). This final
rule also establishes a simplified
regulatory procedure for the Coast
Guard to make future required periodic
CPI increases to these OPA 90 limits of
liability. These regulatory inflation
increases to the limits of liability are
required by OPA 90 and are necessary
to preserve the deterrent effect and
‘‘polluter pays’’ principle embodied in
OPA 90. In addition, this final rule
clarifies applicability of the OPA 90
vessel limits of liability to edible oil
cargo tank vessels and tank vessels
designated as oil spill response vessels.
This clarification to the prior regulatory
text is needed for consistency with OPA
90. Finally, this rule makes several nonsubstantive clarifying and editorial
revisions to the regulatory text. This
rulemaking promotes the Coast Guard’s
missions of maritime safety and
maritime stewardship.
DATES: This final rule is effective
December 21, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information about this document call or
email Benjamin White, Coast Guard;
telephone 202–309–1937, email
Benjamin.H.White@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Basis and Purpose
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
III. Background and Regulatory History
A. Creation of 33 CFR Part 138, Subpart B
B. Prior Regulatory Inflation Adjustments
to the OPA 90 Limits of Liability for
Vessels and Deepwater Ports
C. Clarification of the Coast Guard’s
Delegated Authority To Adjust the
Onshore Facility Limit of Liability
D. Overview of Changes Proposed by the
NPRM for This Rulemaking (CPI–2
NPRM)
IV. Discussion of Comments and Changes
A. Limit of Liability Adjustments
B. Simplified Regulatory Procedure for
Future Inflation Adjustments to the
Limits
C. Inflation Adjustment Methodology
D. Clarifying Applicability of the ‘‘Other
Vessel’’ Limits of Liability to Edible Oil
Tank Vessels and Oil Spill Response
Vessels
E. Applicability of the Tank Vessel Limits
of Liability, Including for MODUs
F. Other Revisions to Clarify the Regulatory
Text
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
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I. Abbreviations
Annual CPI–U The Annual ‘‘Consumer
Price Index—All Urban Consumers, Not
Seasonally Adjusted, U.S. City Average,
All Items, 1982–84=100’’
BLS U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics
BOEM The Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
COFR Certificate of Financial
Responsibility
COFR Rule The Coast Guard regulation, at
33 CFR part 138, subpart A, implementing
the requirements under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2716 and 2716a) and the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act (42 U.S.C. 9608 and 9609)
for responsible parties to establish and
maintain evidence of financial
responsibility in the event of an oil spill
incident or hazardous substance release.
CPI Consumer Price Index
CPI–1 Rule The Coast Guard’s first
rulemaking amending 33 CFR part 138,
subpart B, to adjust the OPA 90 limits of
liability for vessels and deepwater ports for
inflation, as required by 33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(4), and to establish the Coast
Guard’s procedure for future required
inflation adjustments to the OPA 90 limits
of liability (Docket No. USCG–2008–0007).
See 73 FR 54997 (September 24, 2008)
[CPI–1 NPRM]; 74 FR 31357 (July 1, 2009)
[CPI–1 Interim Rule]; 75 FR 750 (January
6, 2010) [CPI–1 Final Rule].
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CPI–2 NPRM The NPRM for this
rulemaking, published at 79 FR 49206
(August 19, 2014).
CPI–2 Rule This rulemaking, which is the
Coast Guard’s second rulemaking under 33
U.S.C. 2704(d)(4) to amend 33 CFR part
138, subpart B, to adjust the OPA 90 vessel
and deepwater port limits of liability for
inflation, and the first rulemaking
adjusting the onshore facility limit of
liability for inflation (Docket No. USCG–
2013–1006).
Deepwater port A facility licensed under
the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C.
1501–1524)
DHS U.S. Department of Homeland
Security
DRPA The Delaware River Protection Act of
2006, Title VI of the Coast Guard and
Maritime Transportation Act of 2006, Pub.
L. 109–241, July 11, 2006, 120 Stat. 516
E.O. Executive Order
FR Federal Register
Fund The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund
created by 26 U.S.C. 9509, and
administered by NPFC
LNG Liquefied natural gas
LOOP Louisiana Offshore Oil Port
MARAD U.S. Department of
Transportation, Maritime Administration
MODU Mobile offshore drilling unit
NPFC U.S. Coast Guard, National Pollution
Funds Center
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
OMB U.S. Office of Management and
Budget
OPA 90 The Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as
amended (33 U.S.C. 2701, et seq.)
SBA U.S. Small Business Administration
§ Section symbol
U.S. United States
U.S.C. United States Code
II. Basis and Purpose
In general, under Title I of the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (OPA
90),1 the responsible parties for any
vessel (other than a public vessel) 2 or
for any facility 3 from which oil is
discharged, or which poses a substantial
threat of discharge of oil, into or upon
the navigable waters or the adjoining
shorelines or the exclusive economic
zone of the United States, are strictly
liable, jointly and severally, under 33
U.S.C. 2702 for the removal costs and
damages that result from such incident
(‘‘OPA 90 removal costs and damages’’).
Under 33 U.S.C. 2704, however, a
responsible party’s OPA 90 liability
1 33
U.S.C. 2701, et seq.
vessels are expressly excluded from OPA
90 coverage. See 33 U.S.C. 2701(29) and (37)
(definitions of public vessel and vessel) and 33
U.S.C. 2702(c)(2) (public vessel exclusion).
3 OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2701(9)) defines ‘‘facility’’ as
‘‘any structure, group of structures, equipment, or
device (other than a vessel) which is used for one
or more of the following purposes: Exploring for,
drilling for, producing, storing, handling,
transferring, processing, or transporting oil. This
term includes any motor vehicle, rolling stock, or
pipeline used for one or more of these purposes’’.
2 Public
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with respect to any one incident 4 is
limited (with certain exceptions set
forth in 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)) to a specified
dollar amount.
In instances when a limit of liability
applies, the Oil Spill Liability Trust
Fund (Fund) is available to compensate
the OPA 90 removal costs and damages
incurred by the responsible party and
third-party claimants in excess of the
applicable limit of liability.5 This Fund
is managed by the Coast Guard’s
National Pollution Funds Center
(NPFC).
OPA 90 sets forth the statutory limits
of liability for vessels and three types of
facilities: Onshore facilities, deepwater
ports licensed under the Deepwater Port
Act of 1974 (hereinafter ‘‘deepwater
ports’’), and offshore facilities other
than deepwater ports.6 In addition, to
prevent the real value of the OPA 90
statutory limits of liability from
depreciating over time as a result of
inflation and preserve the ‘‘polluter
pays’’ principle embodied in OPA 90,
33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4) requires that the
OPA 90 limits of liability be adjusted by
regulation ‘‘not less than every 3 years
. . . to reflect significant increases in
the Consumer Price Index’’.7
The President has delegated this
regulatory authority to the Secretary of
the department in which the Coast
Guard is operating, in respect to the
statutory limits of liability for vessels,
deepwater ports, and onshore facilities.
The Secretary of Homeland Security has
further delegated this authority to the
Commandant of the Coast Guard.8
4 The term ‘‘incident’’ is defined in 33 U.S.C.
2701(14) as ‘‘any occurrence or series of
occurrences having the same origin, involving one
or more vessels, facilities, or any combination
thereof, resulting in the discharge or substantial
threat of discharge of oil’’.
5 See 33 U.S.C. 2708, 2712(a)(4) and 2713; and 33
CFR part 136. A more comprehensive description
of the Fund can be found in the Coast Guard’s May
12, 2005, ‘‘Report on Implementation of the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990’’, which is available in the
docket.
6 The term ‘‘onshore facility’’ is defined in 33
U.S.C. 2701(24) as ‘‘any facility (including but not
limited to, motor vehicles and rolling stock) of any
kind located in, on, or under, any land within the
United States other than submerged land’’. The
term ‘‘deepwater port’’ is defined in 33 U.S.C.
2701(6) as ‘‘a facility licensed under the Deepwater
Port Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C. 1501–1524)’’. The term
‘‘offshore facility’’ is defined in 33 U.S.C. 2701(24)
as ‘‘any facility of any kind located in, on, or under
any of the navigable waters of the United States,
and any facility of any kind which is subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States and is located in,
on, or under any other waters, other than a vessel
or a public vessel;’’ Onshore facilities, deepwater
ports and offshore facilities include component
pipelines. See definition of ‘‘facility’’ in footnote 3,
above.
7 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4).
8 The regulatory authority to adjust the offshore
facility limit of liability for damages has been
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
In this final rule we are making four
changes to the Coast Guard regulations
at 33 CFR part 138, subpart B. First, we
are carrying out the required inflation
adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of
liability for vessels, deepwater ports and
onshore facilities. Second, we are
establishing a simplified regulatory
procedure to ensure timely future
required inflation adjustments to those
limits of liability. Third, we are
clarifying applicability of the OPA 90
vessel limits of liability to edible oil
cargo tank vessels and to tank vessels
designated in their certificates of
inspection as oil spill response vessels.9
This clarification to the regulatory text
is needed for consistency with OPA 90.
Fourth, we are making several nonsubstantive clarifying and editorial
revisions to the regulatory text. These
revisions include adding a crossreference to the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) section that sets forth
the offshore facility limit of liability for
damages, as adjusted for inflation by the
U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau
of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).
That limit of liability can be found at 30
CFR 553.702. The regulatory text
revisions made by this final rule were
discussed in the notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM), and the Coast
Guard is adopting them today without
substantive change.
III. Background and Regulatory History
A. Creation of 33 CFR Part 138,
Subpart B
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In 2008, we promulgated 33 CFR part
138, subpart B, setting forth the OPA 90
limits of liability for vessels and
deepwater ports. (See, Docket No.
USCG–2005–21780.) This was done in
anticipation of the Coast Guard
periodically adjusting those limits of
liability to reflect significant increases
in the CPI, as required by 33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(4), and to ensure that the
applicable amounts of OPA 90 financial
responsibility that must be
demonstrated and maintained by vessel
and deepwater port responsible parties,
as required by 33 U.S.C. 2716 and 33
CFR part 138, subpart A (COFR Rule),
would always equal the applicable OPA
90 limits of liability as adjusted over
time.
delegated to the Secretary of the Interior. See
further discussion of the delegations in Part III.C.,
below, under Background and Regulatory History.
9 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4).
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B. Prior Regulatory Inflation
Adjustments to the OPA 90 Limits of
Liability for Vessels and Deepwater
Ports
We published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) on September 24,
2008 (73 FR 54997) (CPI–1 NPRM), and
an interim rule with request for
comments on July 1, 2009 (74 FR 31357)
(CPI–1 Interim Rule) adjusting the
vessel and deepwater port limits of
liability at 33 CFR part 138, subpart B,
to reflect significant increases in the
CPI.10 The CPI–1 Interim Rule also
established the Coast Guard’s
procedures and methodology for
adjusting the OPA 90 limits of liability
for inflation over time at § 138.240.
We received no adverse public
comments on the CPI–1 Interim Rule.
We, therefore, published a final rule on
January 6, 2010, adopting the CPI–1
Interim Rule amendments to 33 CFR
part 138, subpart B, without change
(CPI–1 Final Rule, 75 FR 750).11
C. Clarification of the Coast Guard’s
Delegated Authority To Adjust the
Onshore Facility Limit of Liability
The CPI–1 Rule was the Coast Guard’s
first set of inflation adjustments to the
OPA 90 limits of liability for vessels and
deepwater ports. We, however, deferred
adjusting the statutory limit of liability
for onshore facilities in 33 U.S.C.
2704(a)(4) at that time. This was because
Executive Order (E.O.) 12777, Sec. 4,
and its implementing re-delegations
vested the President’s responsibility to
adjust the OPA 90 limits of liability in
multiple agencies.
Specifically, the delegations vested
the President’s limit of liability
adjustment authorities in the
Commandant of the Coast Guard for
vessels, deepwater ports and marine
transportation-related onshore facilities,
in the Secretary of the Department of
Transportation for non-marine
transportation-related onshore facilities,
in the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency for
non-transportation-related onshore
10 This included adjustments to the regulatory
limit of liability established for the Louisiana
Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) under the OPA 90
deepwater port risk-based limit of liability
adjustment authority at 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(2), 60 FR
39849 (August 4, 1995). See the CPI–1 Rule for
more background on LOOP. We promulgated the
CPI–1 Rule adjustments as an interim, rather than
final, rule to clarify the regulatory text in response
to a late comment we received on a related 2008
rulemaking amending the COFR Rule. That
comment is discussed below in Part IV.E., in
response to a comment submitted on this
rulemaking.
11 All Federal Register notices, comments and
other materials related to the CPI–1 Rule are
available in the public docket for that rulemaking
(Docket No. USCG–2008–0007).
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facilities, and in the Secretary of the
Interior for offshore facilities. That
division of responsibilities complicated
the CPI adjustment rulemaking
requirement, particularly in respect to
the three sub-categories of onshore
facilities. Further interagency
coordination was, therefore, needed to
avoid inconsistent regulatory treatment.
By deferring the first onshore facility
limit of liability inflation adjustment we
were able to complete the required first
set of inflation increases to the vessel
and deepwater port limits of liability by
the 2009 statutory deadline established
by the Delaware River Protection Act of
2006 (DRPA).12 In addition, as of that
date, there had never been an onshore
facility incident that exceeded the
statutory onshore facility limit of
liability, and there were no adverse
public comments on our decision to
defer the first regulatory inflation
adjustment to the onshore facility limit
of liability.
On March 15, 2013, the President
signed E.O. 13638, restating and
simplifying the delegations in E.O.
12777, Sec. 4, and vesting the authority
to make CPI adjustments to the onshore
facility statutory limit of liability in ‘‘the
Secretary of the Department in which
the Coast Guard is operating’’.13 The
restated delegations also require
interagency coordination, but otherwise
preserve the earlier delegations,
including the authority to adjust the
limits of liability for vessels and
deepwater ports. On July 10, 2013, the
Secretary of Homeland Security issued
DHS Delegation Number 5110, Revision
01, re-delegating these authorities to the
Commandant of the Coast Guard.
D. Overview of Changes Proposed by the
NPRM for This Rulemaking (CPI–2
NPRM)
On August 19, 2014, we published an
NPRM to amend 33 CFR part 138,
subpart B (CPI–2 NPRM, at 79 FR
49206). The CPI–2 NPRM proposed four
changes to 33 CFR part 138, subpart B.
First, we proposed to carry out the
second set of inflation adjustments to
the vessel and deepwater port limits of
liability, and the first inflation
adjustment under the Commandant’s
newly-delegated authorities to the
onshore facility statutory limit of
12 Title VI of the Coast Guard and Maritime
Transportation Act of 2006, Public Law 109–241,
July 11, 2006, 120 Stat. 516. Section 603 of DRPA
added a 2009 statutory deadline for completing the
first rulemaking to increase the limits of liability for
inflation to 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4).
13 E.O. 13638, Sec. 1, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp., p.227
(also available at 78 FR 17589, March 21, 2013),
amending E.O. 12777, Sec. 4, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp.,
p. 351, as amended by E.O. 13286, Sec. 89, 3 CFR,
2004 Comp., p. 166.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
liability. Second, we proposed a
simplified regulatory procedure, at new
§ 138.240(a), for the Coast Guard to
make future required periodic CPI
increases to the OPA 90 limits of
liability for vessels, deepwater ports,
and onshore facilities. Third, we
proposed to clarify applicability of the
vessel limits of liability to edible oil
cargo tank vessels and oil spill response
vessels for consistency with statute, and
to renumber some of the subparagraphs
for clarity. Fourth, we proposed a
number of non-substantive clarifying
and editorial revisions to the regulatory
text. These revisions included: Updates
to the titles for Part 138, Subpart B and
§ 138.240, to the list of authorities, and
to the scope, applicability and
definitions sections (e.g., to reflect the
addition of the onshore facility limit of
liability); adding cross-references (e.g.,
including a cross-reference in
§ 138.230(d) to the OPA 90 offshore
facility limit of liability for damages as
adjusted for inflation by BOEM and set
forth at 30 CFR 553.702); and paragraph
restructuring and plain language
revisions to improve the rule’s
readability (e.g., replacing public law
citations with U.S. code citations).
We discussed the following two
issues in the CPI–2 NPRM, and they are
of relevance to changes we are making
to the regulatory text in this final rule.
1. Updated Annual CPI–U. To keep
the limits of liability current, the
inflation adjustment methodology
established by the CPI–1 Rule at
§ 138.240 requires that we use the
Annual CPI–U that has been most
recently published by the U.S.
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) as the ‘‘current period’’
value. We, therefore, noted in the CPI–
2 NPRM that the limits of liability
shown in proposed § 138.230 were
estimates, calculated using the thenavailable 2013 Annual CPI–U value of
232.957 as the ‘‘current period’’ value.14
We further noted that we would
calculate the limit of liability
adjustments at the final rule stage using
the most recently-published Annual
CPI–U then available, and that the final
limits of liability would therefore differ
marginally from the proposed values.
2. Previous period options. The CPI–
2 NPRM notified the public that, after
considering any public comments on
the proposal, we might re-calculate the
inflation adjustments to the deepwater
port and onshore facility statutory limit
of liability (33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(4)) using
the 1990 Annual CPI–U value of 130.7
14 See Table 24 of the BLS CPI Detailed Reports,
which are made available each month at the
following link: https://www.bls.gov/cpi/tables.htm.
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as the ‘‘previous period’’. This would be
instead of the 2008 Annual CPI–U value
of 215.3 that we used to calculate the
proposed deepwater port limit of
liability (shown in § 138.230(b)(1) of the
CPI–2 NPRM), and the 2006 Annual
CPI–U ‘‘previous period’’ value of 201.6
that we used to calculate the proposed
onshore facility limit of liability (shown
in § 138.230(c) of the CPI–2 NPRM).
We discuss public comments received
on these topics and how we have
resolved them in Part IV, of this
preamble, below.
IV. Discussion of Comments and
Changes
A. Limit of Liability Adjustments
We received nine written submissions
to the docket. Two submissions were
from citizen advisory groups organized
under OPA 90, Sec. 5002. Four
submissions (including one set of
comments submitted on behalf of two
commenters) were from environmental
advocacy organizations. One comment
document was from a drilling contractor
association, and two submissions were
from anonymous individuals. We
received no requests for public
meetings, and held no public meetings
for this rulemaking.
1. General public support for the
rulemaking. Six commenters expressed
general support for the proposal. In
addition, one commenter expressed
support for prioritizing regulations that
provide environmental change. No
commenter opposed the proposal. The
Coast Guard appreciates this support.
2. Issues raised by the public that are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Two commenters stated that the OPA 90
statutory limits of liability are
inadequate and should be significantly
increased. Four commenters expressed
the view that OPA 90 liability should
not be capped. Several of these
commenters stated that removing the
liability limits would encourage
industry best practices and be consistent
with Congressional intent that polluters
pay for the injuries they cause. These
comments are outside the scope of this
rulemaking because, as several of the
commenters recognized, striking or
significantly increasing the statutory
limits of liability would require
legislative change.
One commenter expressed the view
that penalties for oil spills should not be
limited. (This comment concerns civil
or criminal penalty liability for oil
spills, and is therefore in addition to the
comments discussed above in the
previous paragraph about the adequacy
or need for OPA 90 limits of liability for
removal costs and damages.) Another
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72345
commenter stated that independent
third parties should audit clean-ups by
responsible parties. Both of these
comments also are outside the scope of
this rulemaking. This rulemaking only
concerns the inflation adjustments to
the OPA 90 limits of liability for
removal costs and damages that are
required under 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4). It
does not concern penalty liability or the
procedures for carrying-out removal
actions.
3. Updated Annual CPI–U. We
received no comments opposing use of
the Annual CPI–U that has been most
recently published by the BLS, as
required in § 138.240.
4. Public comments concerning use of
a 1990 ‘‘previous period’’. No
commenter opposed, and five
commenters expressed support for,
using the 1990 Annual CPI–U as the
‘‘previous period’’ value to adjust the
statutory onshore facility and deepwater
port limit of liability. Several of these
commenters stated that using a 1990
‘‘previous period’’ would capture the
full amount of inflation since OPA 90
was enacted, thereby restoring the
onshore facility and deepwater port
statutory limit of liability to the amount
intended by Congress. One of the
commenters stated that using the 1990
‘‘previous period’’ is appropriate
because of the increasing risks to U.S.
waters of new, more intensive methods
of oil production and transportation,
including Bakken crude and tar sands.
The commenter expressed the view that
the approach would help achieve
Congress’s intent of ensuring the
‘‘polluter pays,’’ and would encourage
onshore facility and deepwater port
operators to conduct their operations in
the safest manner possible.
5. Final adjusted limits of liability.
As we noted above in Part III.D.1., the
inflation adjustment methodology
established by the CPI–1 Rule at
§ 138.240 requires that we use the
Annual CPI–U that has been most
recently published by the BLS as the
‘‘current period’’ value. This
requirement is to keep the limits of
liability current. On January 16, 2015,
the BLS published the 2014 Annual
CPI–U value of 236.736. This is the most
recently published Annual CPI–U. We
have, therefore, used the 2014 Annual
CPI–U as the ‘‘current period’’ value to
calculate the new vessel, deepwater port
and offshore facility limits of liability
established by this final rule.
We also agree with the public
comments summarized above, in
subpart A.4. of this part, that it is
appropriate to use the 1990 Annual
CPI–U as the ‘‘previous period’’ value
for adjusting the onshore facility and
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deepwater port statutory limit of
liability in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(4). This
approach captures the full amount of
inflation since that limit of liability was
established by OPA 90 and is, therefore,
consistent with congressional intent. It
is also consistent with the approach
recently taken by BOEM to adjust the
offshore facility limit of liability. (See 79
FR 73832, December 12, 2014.) We
have, therefore, recalculated the
adjustments to the onshore facility and
deepwater port statutory limit of
liability using the 1990 Annual CPI–U
value of 130.7 as the ‘‘previous
period’’.15
Applying the formula set forth in
§ 138.240(b) for calculating the
cumulative percent change in the
Annual CPI–U, we have determined that
the percent change in the Annual CPI–
U exceeds the significance threshold
specified in § 138.240(c). We have,
therefore, calculated the limit of liability
adjustments using the formula set forth
in § 138.240(d).
Table 1 shows the vessel, deepwater
port and onshore facility limits of
liability before their adjustment by this
final rule (Previous Limits of Liability),
the percent change in the Annual CPI–
U, and the final inflation-adjusted limits
of liability established by today’s final
rule at § 138.230 (New Limits of
Liability). These New Limits of Liability
will take effect on December 21, 2015.
TABLE 1—CPI-ADJUSTED LIMITS OF LIABILITY
[§ 138.230]
Previous limit of
liability
Source category
Percent
change in the
annual CPI–U
New limit of
liability
(a) Vessels
(1) The OPA 90 limits of liability for tank vessels, other than
edible oil tank vessels and oil spill response vessels, are—
(i) For a single-hull tank vessel greater than 3,000 gross
tons,16
(ii) For a tank vessel greater than 3,000 gross tons, other
than a single-hull tank vessel,
(iii) For a single-hull tank vessel less than or equal to 3,000
gross tons,
(iv) For a tank vessel less than or equal to 3,000 gross tons,
other than a single-hull tank vessel,
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for any vessel other than a
vessel listed in subparagraph (a)(1) of § 138.230, including
for any edible oil tank vessel and any oil spill response,
vessel, are—
the greater of $3,200 per
gross ton or $23,496,000.
the greater of $2,000 per
gross ton or $17,088,000.
the greater of $3,200 per
gross ton or $6,408,000.
the greater of $2,000 per
gross ton or $4,272,000.
the greater of $1,000 per
gross ton or $854,400.
10
10
10
10
10
The greater of
gross ton or
The greater of
gross ton or
The greater of
gross ton or
The greater of
gross ton or
The greater of
gross ton or
$3,500 per
$25,845,600.
$2,200 per
$18,796,800.
$3,500 per
$7,048,800.
$2,200 per
$4,699,200.
$1,100 per
$939,800.
(b) Deepwater ports
(1) The OPA 90 limit of liability for any deepwater port, including for any component pipelines, other than a deepwater port listed in subparagraph (b)(2) of § 138.230, is—
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for deepwater ports with limits of liability established by regulation under OPA 90 (33
U.S.C. 2704(d)(2)), including for any component pipelines,
are—
(i) For the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) ........................
(ii) [Reserved] ............................................................................
$373,800,000 ..........................
81.1
$633,850,000.
$87,606,000 ............................
N/A ..........................................
10
N/A
$96,366,600.
N/A.
81.1
$633,850,000.
(c) Onshore facilities
The OPA 90 limit of liability for onshore facilities, including,
but not limited to, any motor vehicle, rolling stock or onshore pipeline, is
$350,000,000 ..........................
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B. Simplified Regulatory Procedure for
Future Inflation Adjustments to the
Limits
Four commenters supported adoption
of the simplified regulatory procedure
15 We are not changing the approach we used in
the CPI–1 Rule to adjust the vessel limits of liability
for inflation, where we used the 2006 Annual CPI–
U value as the ‘‘previous period.’’ We continue to
view that approach as consistent with congressional
intent, because in 2006 Congress passed DRPA
revising the vessel limits of liability. Importantly,
however, Congress did not revise the facility limits
of liability in 2006 and has not done so since. Thus,
although we used the 2006 CPI–U value in making
inflation adjustments to the deepwater port limits
of liability in the CPI–1 Rule, and we stated that we
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would also use that same approach in adjusting the
onshore facility limits of liability at some future
date, we have now decided (with the benefit of
public comments on the issue and for the other
reasons discussed above and in the CPI–2 NPRM)
to use a different approach in adjusting the limits
for deepwater ports and onshore facilities. As
explained, we are making inflation adjustments for
these limits of liability using the 1990 Annual CPI–
U value as the ‘‘previous period,’’ because Congress
established these limits in 1990 and has not revised
them since that time. In addition to being more
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consistent with congressional intent and the
‘‘polluter pays’’ principle than our prior approach
reflected in the CPI–1 Rule, our revised approach
also may encourage onshore facility and deepwater
port operators to conduct their operations in the
safest manner possible, as a commenter suggested.
16 As of January 1, 2015, tank vessels not
equipped with a double hull can no longer operate
on waters subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States, including the Exclusive Economic Zone
(EEZ), carrying oil in bulk as cargo or cargo residue;
and there are no waivers or extensions of the
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proposed in new § 138.240(a) for
making future CPI adjustments to the
limits of liability. The Coast Guard
appreciates and agrees with these
comments. No commenter opposed this
proposal. We are, therefore, adopting
the simplified regulatory procedure as
proposed. This procedure, which is
based on a Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission fee-adjustment procedure
in 18 CFR 381.104(a) and (d), will help
ensure regular, timely inflation
adjustments to the limits of liability,
and is an appropriate and helpful
efficiency measure given the mandatory
and routine nature of the CPI
adjustments.
C. Inflation Adjustment Methodology
The CPI–2 NPRM did not propose any
substantive changes to the § 138.240
limit of liability adjustment
methodology promulgated by the CPI–1
Rule (§ 138.240(b)–(d), and previously
designated as paragraphs (a)–(c)). Two
commenters, however, expressed
support for the inflation significance
threshold in § 138.240(c) and the
adjustment methodology established by
the CPI–1 Rule generally, including the
annual reviews the Coast Guard will
conduct if the significance threshold is
not met after 3 years. We appreciate
receiving that input and are today
adopting those provisions of § 138.240
with no substantive change.
The only changes we have made to
the regulatory text of § 138.240, as
adopted by the CPI–1 Rule, are: (1)
Changing the title, (2) adding the
simplified regulatory procedure that
was proposed as new paragraph
§ 138.240(a) in the CPI–2 NPRM; (3)
redesignating the paragraph lettering in
the provisions that follow to
accommodate insertion of the simplified
regulatory procedure and for clarity; and
(4) an editorial amendment to
§ 138.240(b)(2) to more clearly crossreference § 138.240(b)(1).
D. Clarifying Applicability of the ‘‘Other
Vessel’’ Limits of Liability to Edible Oil
Tank Vessels and Oil Spill Response
Vessels
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The CPI–2 NPRM proposed to clarify
the regulatory text for consistency with
OPA 90 as amended by the 1995 Edible
Oil Regulatory Reform Act 17 and the
Coast Guard Authorization Act of
deadline. See Coast Guard message DTG
221736ZDEC14. OPA 90, however, continues to
specify limits of liability for single-hull tank
vessels. The Coast Guard will, therefore, continue
to adjust those limits of liability for inflation.
17 Pub. L. 104–55, Nov. 20, 1995, 109 Stat. 546,
Section 2(d) amending OPA 90 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(1)
and 33 U.S.C. 2716(a).
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1998.18 Those amendments to OPA 90
exclude edible oil tank vessels and oil
spill response vessels from the
definition of ‘‘tank vessel’’. As a result,
both vessel types are classified as a
matter of law to the ‘‘any other vessel’’
category for purposes of determining the
applicable OPA 90 limits of liability and
evidence of financial responsibility
requirements.
One commenter expressed support for
our proposal to clarify applicability of
the vessel limits of liability to these two
vessel categories. We appreciate
receiving this comment and believe that
the proposed clarification will reduce
regulatory uncertainty. No commenter
opposed this proposal. We are therefore
adopting the proposed regulatory text
clarification, with minor nonsubstantive editorial revisions.
E. Applicability of the Tank Vessel
Limits of Liability, Including for MODUs
One commenter recommended that
the Coast Guard amend the regulatory
text to further clarify that a mobile
offshore drilling unit (MODU) that is not
‘‘constructed or adapted to carry, or
carries, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo
residue’’ is subject to the lower tank
vessel limits of liability in
§ 138.230(a)(1)(ii) and (iv). The
commenter’s understanding of the rule
is correct. We, however, already
clarified this issue in the CPI–1 Rule.
Resolving this issue was, indeed, the
only reason we published the CPI–1
Rule initially as an interim rule, rather
than a final rule, in July, 2009.
Specifically, in response to late
comments we received on our separate
but related 2008 COFR Rule
amendments (Docket No. USCG–2005–
21780), our CPI–1 Interim Rule
proposed a new definition in § 138.220
for the term ‘‘single-hull’’. The revision
limited the term ‘‘single-hull’’ to a tank
vessel that is ‘‘constructed or adapted to
carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo
or cargo residue.’’ In addition, we added
limiting language in § 138.230(a). We
received no adverse public comments
on those proposed CPI–1 Interim Rule
revisions and, therefore, adopted the
clarifications in the CPI–1 Final Rule
without change.
Those regulatory text revisions made
clear that any tank vessel that does not
meet the regulatory definition of ‘‘single
hull’’—including but not limited to a
MODU that is neither constructed nor
adapted to carry, and that does not
carry, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo
residue—are excluded from the singlehull tank vessel limit of liability
18 Pub. L. 105–383, title IV, section 406, Nov. 13,
1998, 112 Stat. 3429.
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72347
categories in § 138.230(a)(1)(i) and (iii).
All such vessels are instead subject to
the ‘‘other than a single-hull tank
vessel’’ limit of liability categories in
§ 138.230(a)(1)(ii) and (iv).
Therefore, since the same standard
applies to all tank vessels (i.e., a vessel
either is, or is not, a vessel ‘‘constructed
or adapted to carry, or that carries, oil
in bulk as cargo or cargo residue’’), we
do not see a need to single-out specific
categories of tank vessels, such as
MODUs, in the regulatory text. Singling
out MODUs could, moreover, create
unintended ambiguity respecting
applicability of the general standard to
other types of tank vessels.
We note that this issue is very
different from the clarifications we are
adopting today in respect to the
treatment of edible oil tank vessels and
oil spill response vessels. We are
adopting those clarifications because
those two vessel categories are, as a
matter of law, not ‘‘tank vessels’’ under
OPA 90.19 They are, therefore, subject to
the ‘‘other vessel’’ limits of liability in
§ 138.230(a)(2), rather than any of the
‘‘tank vessel’’ limits of liability in
§ 138.230(a)(1). A MODU, by
comparison, is treated in OPA 90 as a
‘‘tank vessel’’.20
F. Other Revisions To Clarify the
Regulatory Text
The CPI–2 NPRM proposed a number
of non-substantive clarifying and
editorial changes to the regulatory text
to improve its readability. These
included: Updates to titles, and the list
of authorities and definitions; adding
cross-references, including a crossreference in § 138.230(d) to the OPA 90
offshore facility limit of liability for
damages as adjusted for inflation by
BOEM; paragraph restructuring and
renumbering to accommodate new
regulatory text; and plain language
revisions. We received no comments
opposing these changes. This final rule,
therefore, adopts the proposed changes
and we have further clarified and edited
the text for readability. The additional
revisions include: Further updates to
and simplification of the list of
authorities citations; wording to clarify
applicability of the limits of liability to
motor vehicles, rolling stock and
pipelines for consistency with OPA 90;
simplification of the paragraph structure
and introductory clauses in § 138.230
for readability and to eliminate
subparagraph titles; and an editorial
amendment to § 138.240(b)(2) to more
clearly cross-reference § 138.240(b)(1).
19 See
20 33
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U.S.C. 2704(b)(1).
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V. Regulatory Analyses
We developed this rule after
considering numerous statutes and
Executive Orders related to rulemaking.
Below we summarize our analyses
based on these statutes or Executive
Orders.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This rule
has not been designated a ‘‘significant
regulatory action,’’ under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866. Accordingly,
the rule has not been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget. A
final Regulatory Assessment is available
in the docket, and a summary follows.
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1. Regulatory Costs
We have analyzed the potential costs
of this rulemaking, and expect it to:
Regulatory Cost 1: Increase the cost of
liability; and
Regulatory Cost 2: Increase the cost of
establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility.
a. Discussion of Regulatory Cost 1
This rule could increase the dollar
amount of OPA 90 removal costs and
damages the responsible party of a
vessel (other than a public vessel),
deepwater port, or onshore facility must
pay in the event of an OPA 90 incident.
This regulatory cost, however, would
only be incurred by a responsible party
if an incident resulted in OPA 90
removal costs and damages that
exceeded the applicable vessel,
deepwater port, or onshore facility
Previous Limit of Liability. In any such
case, assuming as we do in this analysis
that the responsible party is entitled to
a limit of liability (i.e., that none of the
exceptions in 33 U.S.C. 2704(c) apply),
the difference between the Previous
Limit of Liability amount and the New
Limit of Liability amount is the
maximum increased cost to the
responsible party. The responsible party
would have no legal obligation to incur
incident costs above this value.
i. Affected Population—Vessels
This rule could affect the responsible
parties of any vessel (other than a public
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vessel),21 involved in an OPA 90
incident.22 The impact would, however,
only occur if the incident resulted in
OPA 90 removal costs and damages in
excess of the vessel’s Previous Limit of
Liability.
Coast Guard data as of May 2014
indicate that—since OPA 90 was
enacted in August of 1990—67 vessel
incidents (i.e., an average of
approximately three vessel incidents per
year) resulted in OPA 90 removal costs
and damages in excess of the applicable
Previous Limits of Liability.23 For the
purpose of this analysis, we have
therefore assumed that three OPA 90
vessel incidents with costs exceeding
the Previous Limits of Liability would
occur each year throughout the 10-year
analysis period (2016–2025).
ii. Affected Population—Deepwater
Ports
This rule could affect the responsible
parties of any deepwater port (including
its component pipelines) involved in an
OPA 90 incident. The impact would,
however, only occur if the incident
resulted in OPA 90 removal costs and
damages in excess of the deepwater
port’s Previous Limit of Liability.
Currently there are only two licensed
deepwater ports in operation—LOOP
and Northeast Gateway. Northeast
Gateway is a liquefied natural gas (LNG)
port and, as currently designed and
operated, uses less than 100 gallons of
oil. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that
Northeast Gateway would ever be the
source of an OPA 90 incident with
removal costs and damages in excess of
the Previous Limit of Liability. We
therefore do not include Northeast
Gateway in this analysis.24
21 According to Coast Guard’s MISLE database,
there are over 200,000 vessels of various types in
the population of vessels using U.S. waters that are
not public vessels. Examples of vessel types
include, but are not limited to: fish processing
vessel, freight barge, freight ship, industrial vessel,
mobile offshore drilling unit, offshore supply
vessel, oil recovery vessel, passenger vessel,
commercial fishing vessel, passenger barge,
research vessel, school ship, tank barge, tank ship,
and towing vessel.
22 See the OPA 90 definition of ‘‘incident’’ in
footnote 4, above.
23 See United States Coast Guard Report to
Congress, ‘‘Oil Pollution Act Liability Limits in
2014’’, Department of Homeland Security, October
2, 2014, which is available in the docket at
https://www.regulations.gov, Docket No. USCG–
2013–1006, RIN 1625–AC14.
24 Two other similarly-designed LNG deepwater
ports, Gulf Gateway Energy Bridge and Port
Dolphin, were mentioned in the regulatory analysis
for the CPI–1 Rule. But, on June 28, 2013, the
Maritime Administrator (MARAD) cleared
decommissioning of the Gulf Gateway Energy
Bridge, approving termination of its license; and, on
August 28, 2015, Port Dolphin Energy LLC
Deepwater Port surrendered its license. In addition,
MARAD licensed the Neptune LNG, LLC,
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To date, LOOP (the only oil
deepwater port in operation) has not
had an OPA 90 incident that resulted in
removal costs and damages in excess of
LOOP’s Previous Limit of Liability of
$87,606,000. However, the potential for
such a spill exists. Therefore, for the
purposes of this analysis, we show the
cost of one OPA 90 incident occurring
at LOOP over the 10-year analysis
period (2016–2025), with OPA 90
removal costs and damages in excess of
the Previous Limit of Liability for
LOOP.
iii. Affected Population—Onshore
Facilities
This rule could affect the responsible
parties for any onshore facility
(including onshore pipelines) involved
in an OPA 90 incident. The impact
would, however, only occur if the
incident resulted in OPA 90 removal
costs and damages in excess of the
onshore facility Previous Limit of
Liability.
Because of the large number and
diversity of onshore facilities, it is not
possible to predict which specific types
or sizes of onshore facilities might be
affected by this rule. Coast Guard data,
however, indicate that from the
enactment of OPA 90 in August, 1990,
through May, 2015, only one onshore
facility incident—the 2010 Enbridge
Pipeline spill in Michigan—has likely
resulted in OPA 90 removal costs and
damages exceeding the onshore facility
Previous Limit of Liability of
$350,000,000.25
The Enbridge Pipeline incident
indicates that the Previous Limit of
Liability for an onshore facility,
although high, can still be exceeded by
a low likelihood, but high consequence
oil spill. Therefore, for the purposes of
this analysis, we assume one onshore
facility incident would occur over the
10-year analysis time period (2016–
deepwater port on March 23, 2007. But, on July 22,
2013, MARAD approved a request by Suez Energy
North America, Inc., to suspend that deepwater
port’s operations for five years and to amend its
license. Neptune, moreover, has substantially the
same design as Northeast Gateway and, therefore,
also is not likely to ever have an oil pollution
incident with removal costs and damages in excess
of the Previous Limit of Liability. These LNG
deepwater ports, therefore, also are not included in
this analysis. MARAD has received applications for
two other LNG deepwater ports, and we expect
others will be proposed over the next ten years. If
those ports are designed to use substantially the
same technology as Northeast Gateway, they also
would not be likely to ever have oil pollution
incidents with removal costs and damages in excess
of the Previous Limit of Liability.
25 As of June 2015, Enbridge Energy Partners
reported costs of more than $1.2 billion resulting
from the pipeline spill. https://www.mlive.com/
news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2015/06/enbridge_to_
pay_additional_4_m.html.
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2025) with OPA 90 removal costs and
damages in excess of the onshore
facility Previous Limit of Liability.
iv. Cost Summary Regulatory Cost 1
(a) Vessels
We estimate the greatest cost to a
vessel responsible party entitled to a
limit of liability under OPA 90, for
purposes of this analysis, by assuming
that the average annual cost from the
historical incidents analyzed would
remain constant throughout the analysis
period (2016–2025). The average annual
increased cost of liability was estimated
first by calculating the difference
between the Previous Limit of Liability
and the New Limit of Liability for each
of the 67 historical vessel incidents with
removal costs and damages in excess of
the applicable OPA 90 limit of liability.
These values were then totaled 26 and
divided by the number of years of data
to estimate the average annual increased
cost.
$60,376,000 ÷ 24 years = $2,515,700 per
year (non-discounted dollars)
(b) Deepwater Ports
We estimate the greatest cost to a
deepwater port responsible party
entitled to a limit of liability under OPA
90, for purposes of this analysis, by
assuming that the cost of the incident
would be equal to the New Limit of
Liability. As mentioned above, LOOP
has never had an incident with OPA 90
removal costs and damages in excess of
its Previous Limit of Liability.
Therefore, given the lack of any
deepwater port historical data, we have
assumed that a LOOP incident with
costs above its Previous Limit of
Liability of $87,606,000 would be
analogous to a vessel incident with costs
in excess of $87,606,000 with respect to
the duration of responsible party
payments.
Specifically, relying on historical
duration of payment data for vessel
incidents, we assume that the LOOP
responsible parties would make OPA 90
removal cost and damage payments for
the one hypothetical incident over the
course of 10 years after the incident
date.27 In addition, for the purposes of
this analysis, we assume that the
payments would be spread out in equal
26 See
Figure 3 in the Regulatory Assessment.
per-incident duration of payments was
determined by comparing the incident date and the
completion date for each vessel incident occurring
since enactment of OPA 90 with incident removal
costs and damages (in 2014 dollars) above LOOP’s
‘‘Previous Limit of Liability’’ of $87,606,000. There
were six incidents fitting this criteria. Three are
ongoing incidents, and three are completed. The
average duration of payments for the three
completed incidents was approximately 10 years.
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27 The
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annual amounts over the 10-year
analysis period (2016–2025).28
Applying these assumptions, the
average annual cost resulting from the
one hypothetical LOOP incident would
be $876,000 (non-discounted dollars).
$96,366,600¥$87,606,000 = $8,760,600
$8,760,600 ÷ 10 years = $876,000 per
year (non-discounted dollars)
(c) Onshore Facilities
We estimate the greatest cost to an
onshore facility responsible party
entitled to a limit of liability under OPA
90, for purposes of this analysis, by
assuming that the cost of the incident
would be equal to the New Limit of
Liability. Based on NPFC’s experience
with onshore facility incidents, we
assume that an onshore facility
responsible party would be making OPA
90 removal cost and damage payments
for the one estimated incident over the
course of 10 years after the incident
date.29 We further assume that the
payments would be spread out in equal
annual amounts over the 10-year
analysis period (2016–2025).30
Applying these assumptions, the
average annual cost resulting from the
one estimated onshore facility OPA 90
incident over 10 years is estimated to be
$28,385,000 (non-discounted dollars).
$633,850,000¥$350,000,000 =
$283,850,000
$283,850,000 ÷ 10 years = $28,385,000
per year (non-discounted dollars).
v. Present Value of Regulatory Cost 1
The 10-year present value of
Regulatory Cost 1, at a 3 percent
discount rate, is estimated to be $271.1
million. The 10-year present value of
Regulatory Cost 1, at a 7 percent
discount rate, is estimated to be $223.2
million. The annualized discounted cost
of Regulatory Cost 1, at a 3 percent
discount rate, is estimated to be $31.8
million. The annualized discounted cost
of Regulatory Cost 1, at a 7 percent
28 Based on Coast Guard subject matter expert
experience, we have assumed that the payments
would be spread out equally over the 10-year
analysis period. This realistically models the long
duration of OPA 90 removal actions (particularly in
the case of an incident resulting in OPA 90 removal
costs and damages exceeding the limit of liability),
the time lag in billings and payments and, if
applicable, associated claim submissions, claim
payments and litigation.
29 The per-incident duration of payments was
determined by comparing the incident date and the
completion date of each onshore facility incident
occurring since enactment of OPA 90 with incident
removal costs and damages (in 2014 dollars) greater
than or equal to $5 million. There were 21 incidents
fitting these criteria: 9 are ongoing incidents and 12
are completed. The average duration for the 12
completed incidents was approximately 10 years.
30 See
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72349
discount rate is estimated to be $31.8
million.
b. Discussion of Regulatory Cost 2
OPA 90 requires that the responsible
parties for certain types and sizes of
vessels and for deepwater ports
establish and maintain evidence of
financial responsibility to ensure that
they have the ability to pay for OPA 90
removal costs and damages, up to the
applicable limits of liability, in the
event of an OPA 90 incident.31
Therefore, because the regulatory
changes contemplated by this rule
would increase those limits of liability,
vessel and deepwater port responsible
parties could incur additional costs
establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility as a result of
this rulemaking.
As discussed above and further
below, there will be no Regulatory Cost
2 impacts on deepwater ports because
LOOP is the only deepwater port in
operation required to provide evidence
of financial responsibility, and LOOP is
not expected to have any increased
evidence of financial responsibility
costs as a result of this rule. Therefore,
only vessel responsible parties are
expected to see Regulatory Cost 2
impacts.
i. Affected Population—Vessels
Vessel responsible parties who are
required to establish and maintain
evidence of financial responsibility,
may do so using any of the following
methods: Insurance, Self-Insurance,
Financial Guaranty, Surety Bond, or any
other method approved by the Director,
NPFC.32 As of April 1, 2015, the NPFC’s
Certificate of Financial Responsibility
(COFR) database contained 19,750
vessels using Insurance, 4,199 vessels
using Self-Insurance, 1,368 vessels
using Financial Guaranties, and 2
vessels using Surety Bonds. This rule
could affect the cost to vessel
responsible parties of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial
responsibility using any of these
31 See 33 U.S.C. 2716(a) and (c)(2). OPA 90 also
imposes financial responsibility requirements on
offshore facilities. Those requirements are,
however, regulated by the BOEM. (See 30 CFR part
553.) OPA 90 does not impose evidence of financial
responsibility requirements on onshore facilities.
32 See 33 CFR 138.80(b). The term ‘‘Insurance’’ is
capitalized here to refer to the insurance used to
comply with the requirement under OPA 90 (33
U.S.C. 2716) for responsible parties to establish and
maintain evidence of financial responsibility. This
use of the term ‘‘Insurance’’ is distinct from other
types of insurance a responsible party might have
(e.g., vessel hull insurance, marine pollution
insurance, etc.).
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methods.33 The OPA 90 evidence of
financial responsibility applicable
amounts required under 33 CFR
138.80(f) are equal to the OPA 90 limits
of liability in 33 CFR 138.230(a) and
automatically update when the limits of
liability are increased for inflation.
Because of this relationship, the amount
of financial responsibility required is
also based on the type of vessel and, in
the case of tank vessels, on their hull
type.
ii. Affected Population—Deepwater
Ports
As discussed above in respect to Cost
1, currently there are two licensed
deepwater ports in operation—LOOP
and Northeast Gateway. The Coast
Guard, however, has not yet proposed
regulations implementing OPA 90
financial responsibility requirements for
deepwater ports. Therefore, although
LOOP is providing evidence of financial
responsibility under a procedure that
was grandfathered by OPA 90, 33 U.S.C.
2716(h), there are no OPA 90 evidence
of financial responsibility regulatory
requirements that currently apply to
deepwater ports generally, including
Northeast Gateway. We have, therefore,
analyzed Cost 2 impacts only in respect
to LOOP.
iii. Affected Population—Onshore
Facilities
None. There is no requirement in
OPA 90 for onshore facility responsible
parties to establish and maintain
evidence of financial responsibility.
iv. Cost Summary Regulatory Cost 2
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(a) Vessels
Increases to Vessel Insurance
Premiums. The calculation of Insurance
premium rates are dependent on many
constantly changing factors, including:
market forces, interest rates and
investment opportunities for the
premium income, the terms and
conditions of the policy, and
underwriting criteria such as vessel age,
loss history, construction, classification
details, and management history. As
calculated above, the change in the
limits of liability for vessels is 10
percent (rounded to one decimal place
as required by the rule). At the NPRM
stage of this rulemaking, data was
requested from 9 of a possible 14
Insurance companies. Four responded
with their current premium rates and
33 There currently are no vessel responsible
parties using other methods of demonstrating
financial responsibility approved by the Director,
NPFC, and, based on historical experience, NPFC
does not expect any responsible parties will use any
other method during the analysis period (2016–
2025)
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their best estimates of the increase in
premium rates resulting from the
proposed regulatory change. These four
Insurance companies represented
approximately 93 percent of vessels that
use the Insurance method of financial
responsibility. The data provided
estimated that a 6 percent increase in
premiums would occur for an increase
in the limits of liability in the range of
5 percent to 10 percent. Therefore,
consistent with the NPRM’s Regulatory
Analysis, it is assumed that a 10 percent
increase in the limits of liability would
cause on average a 6 percent increase in
Insurance premiums charged across all
vessel types.34
We estimated costs by multiplying the
number of vessels by vessel category for
each year of the analysis (2016–2025) by
the Expected Average Increase in
Premium for that particular vessel type.
The annual cost associated with
increased Insurance premiums is
estimated to be $6.5 million (nondiscounted dollars).
Migration of responsible parties
currently using the Self-Insurance and
Financial Guaranty Methods of
Financial Responsibility to the
Insurance market. Based on the
financial documentation received from
responsible parties using the SelfInsurance or Financial Guaranty
methods, the Coast Guard estimates that
the responsible parties for 2 percent of
the vessels that have COFRs based on
those methods might need to migrate to
the Insurance method of financial
responsibility.
The cost estimates for responsible
parties migrating to the Insurance
method of financial responsibility were
calculated by first multiplying the
number of vessels using Self-Insurance
or Financial Guaranty by vessel category
for each year of the analysis period
(2016–2025) by the presumed percent of
impacted vessels (2 percent) and then
multiplying the product by the
estimated Expected Average Annual
Premium for that particular vessel type.
The annual cost associated with
vessel responsible parties migrating to
Insurance is estimated to be $532,100
(non-discounted dollars).
Increased Cost to Responsible Parties
using the Surety Bond Method.
Currently only one responsible party
uses the Surety Bond method to
34 After we published the NPRM, several
Insurance companies provided updated data
indicating that, due to changing market conditions,
an increase in limits of liability for vessels of 15%
or less should not cause them to raise their
premiums. The actual impact of Regulatory Cost 2
could therefore be less than the impact we are
estimating here. This is because we rely in this
analysis on the data used for the NPRM regulatory
analysis.
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establish evidence of financial
responsible for two tank vessels. For
that responsible party, additional Surety
Bond coverage will be required to
establish or maintain evidence of
financial responsibility up to the New
Limits of Liability. The responsible
party would also have the option of
changing the method of financial
guaranty to the Insurance method, or (if
the responsible party meets the financial
requirements to do so) to the SelfInsurance or Financial Guaranty
method.
We do not have data on the fees
charged by Surety Bond providers. But,
if the cost of obtaining Surety Bond
coverage were higher than the cost of
Insurance, we would expect the one
responsible party currently relying on
the Surety Bond method to use the
Insurance method instead. Therefore,
we assume that the cost to the
responsible party of using the surety
method does not exceed the Insurance
premium associated with the Insurance
method. In the case of the one
responsible party that is using the
Surety Bond method for two tank
vessels under 3,000 gross tons, this
would be cost of $3,700 per vessel per
year (i.e., the cost of Insurance per
vessel) or a total annual cost of $7,400.
(b) Deepwater Ports
The 10 percent increase in the LOOP
limit of liability resulting from this
rulemaking is not expected to increase
the cost to the LOOP responsible parties
associated with establishing and
maintaining LOOP’s evidence of
financial responsibility. This is because
the LOOP responsible parties are
already providing evidence of financial
responsibility to the Coast Guard at a
level that exceeds both LOOP’s Previous
Limit of Liability and its New Limit of
Liability of $96,366,600. The Coast
Guard has historically accepted the
following documentation as evidence of
financial responsibility for LOOP:
D An insurance policy issued by Oil
Insurance Limited (OIL) of Bermuda
with coverage up to $150 million per
OPA 90 incident and a $225 million
annual aggregate,
D Documentation that LOOP operates
with a net worth of at least $50 million,
and
D Documentation that the total value
of the OIL policy aggregate plus LOOP’s
working capital does not fall below $100
million.
The Coast Guard, therefore, does not
expect this action to change the terms of
the OIL policy, to result in an increased
premium for the OIL policy, or to
require LOOP to have higher minimum
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net worth or working capital
requirements.
(c) Onshore Facilities
None. There is no requirement in
OPA 90 for onshore facility responsible
parties to establish and maintain
evidence of financial responsibility.
v. Present Value of Regulatory cost 2
The 10-year present value, at a 3
percent discount rate, is estimated to be
$60.0 million. The 10-year present
value, at a 7 percent discount rate, is
estimated to be $49.3 million. The
annualized discounted cost, at a 3
percent discount rate, is estimated to be
$7.0 million. The annualized
discounted cost, at a 7 percent discount
rate, is estimated to be $7.0 million.
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c. Present Value of Total Cost
The 10-year present value, at a 3
percent discount rate, is estimated to be
$331.0 million. The 10-year present
value, at a 7 percent discount rate, is
estimated to be $272.5 million. The
annualized discounted cost, at a 3
percent discount rate is estimated to be
$38.8 million. The annualized
discounted cost, at a 7 percent discount
rate is estimated to be $38.8 million.
2. Regulatory Benefits
In our Regulatory Analysis, we have
analyzed the regulatory benefits of this
final rule qualitatively.
a. Regulatory Benefit 1: Ensure that
the OPA 90 limits of liability keep pace
with inflation.
OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4))
mandates that limits of liability be
updated periodically to reflect
significant increases in the CPI to
account for inflation. The intent of this
requirement is to ensure that the real
values of the limits of liability do not
decline over time. Absent CPI
adjustments, a responsible party
ultimately gains an advantage that is not
contemplated by OPA 90 because the
responsible party pays a reduced
percentage of the total incident costs the
responsible party would be required to
pay with inflation incorporated into the
determination of the applicable limit of
liability. This final rule requires
responsible parties to internalize
inflation, thereby benefitting the public.
b. Regulatory Benefit 2: Ensure that
the responsible party is held
accountable.
By increasing the limits of liability to
account for inflation, this final rule
ensures that the appropriate amount of
removal costs and damages are borne by
the responsible party and that liability
risk is not shifted away from the
responsible party to the Fund. This
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helps preserve the ’’polluter pays’’
principle as intended by Congress and
preserves the Fund for its other
authorized uses. Failing to adjust the
limits of liability for inflation, by
comparison, shifts those costs to the
public and the Fund.
c. Regulatory Benefit 3: Reduce and
deter substandard shipping and oil
handling practices.
Increasing the limits of liability serves
to reduce the number of substandard
ships in U.S. waters and ports because
Insurers, Surety Bond providers and
Financial Guarantors are less likely to
provide coverage for substandard
vessels at the new levels of OPA 90
liability. Maintaining the limits of
liability also helps preserve the
deterrent effect of the OPA 90 liability
provisions for Self Insurers.
With respect to oil handling practices,
the higher the responsible parties’ limits
of liability are, the greater the incentive
for them to operate in the safest and
most risk-averse manner possible.
Conversely, the lower the limits of
liability, the lower the incentive is for
responsible parties to spend money on
capital improvements and operation and
maintenance systems that will protect
against oil spills.
d. Regulatory Benefit 4: Provide
statutory consistency, regulatory
certainty and administrative efficiency
using the streamlined approach.
Under the simplified regulatory
procedure established by this final rule,
the Director, NPFC, will publish the
inflation-adjusted limits of liability in
the Federal Register as final rule
amendments to 33 CFR 138.230. The
Director will also use this simplified
regulatory procedure to update 33 CFR
138.230 to reflect statutory changes to
the OPA 90 limits of liability. This will
ensure that the limits of liability set
forth in 33 CFR 138, Subpart B, remain
consistent with the statutory limits of
liability if they are amended. This
simplified regulatory procedure will
provide regulatory certainty by ensuring
regular, timely inflation adjustments to
the limits of liability as required by
statute. The approach is also an
appropriate and helpful efficiency
measure given the mandatory and
routine nature of the CPI adjustments.
The public comments on the NPRM
supported this simplified rulemaking
procedure, and no commenter opposed
it.
e. Regulatory Benefit 5: Provide
regulatory clarity to responsible parties
for edible oil and response tank vessels.
As discussed above, 33 U.S.C.
2704(c)(4) excludes edible oil tank
vessels (i.e., tank vessels on which the
only oil carried as cargo is an animal fat
PO 00000
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72351
or vegetable oil) and oil spill response
vessels from the OPA 90 tank vessel
limits of liability in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(1).
The effect of this exclusion is that edible
oil tank vessels and oil spill response
vessels are classified, as a matter of law,
to the ‘‘any other vessel’’ limit of
liability category in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(2)
of OPA 90. In addition, edible oil tank
vessels and oil spill response vessels are
subject to the lower OPA 90 evidence of
financial responsibility requirements
applicable to the ‘‘any other vessel’’
category.
The special treatment accorded by
OPA 90 to edible oil tank vessels and oil
spill response vessels was not reflected
in the prior regulatory text of 33 CFR
part 138. The Coast Guard’s clarification
to the regulatory text by this final rule
will, therefore, promote consistency
with OPA 90 and be helpful to industry
and the public by reducing regulatory
uncertainty.
B. Small Entities
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601–612, we have considered
whether this rule would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The term ‘‘small entities’’ comprises
small businesses, not-for-profit
organizations that are independently
owned and operated and are not
dominant in their fields, and
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000. A Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
discussing the impact of this rule on
small entities is available in the docket,
and a summary follows.
We have analyzed the potential
impacts of this final rule on small
entities, and expect it to: 35
Regulatory Cost 1. Increase the cost of
liability, and
Regulatory Cost 2. Increase the cost of
establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility.
1. Regulatory Cost 1: Increase the Cost
of Liability
As explained above in Part V.A of this
preamble and in the Regulatory
Analysis for this rule, Regulatory Cost 1
will only occur if there is an OPA 90
incident that has OPA 90 removal costs
and damages in excess of the existing
limits of liability.
a. Affected Population—Vessels
The rule could affect the responsible
parties of any vessel (other than a public
35 We expect the simplified regulatory procedure
and the clarification of edible oil cargo tank vessels
and tank vessels designated as oil spill response
vessels to provide a marginal benefit to all
responsible parties, including small entities.
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vessel) from which oil is discharged, or
which poses the substantial threat of a
discharge of oil, into or upon the
navigable waters or adjoining shorelines
or the exclusive economic zone of the
United States. This can include vessels
owned, operated or demise chartered by
small entities.
According to Coast Guard’s MISLE
database, there are over 200,000 vessels
of various types in the vessel population
that are not public vessels. Examples of
vessel types include, but are not limited
to: fish processing vessel, freight barge,
freight ship, industrial vessel, mobile
offshore drilling unit, offshore supply
vessel, oil recovery vessel, passenger
vessel, commercial fishing vessel,
passenger barge, research vessel, school
ship, tank barge, tank ship, and towing
vessel.
Coast Guard data indicate that—from
the date of enactment of OPA 90
through May 1, 2014—there were 67
OPA 90 vessel incidents (i.e., an average
of approximately three OPA 90 vessel
incidents per year) that resulted in OPA
90 removal costs and damages in excess
of the Previous Limits of Liability. For
the purpose of this analysis, we have
therefore assumed that three OPA 90
vessel incidents would continue to
occur each year throughout the 10-year
analysis period (2016–2025). In
addition, although we do not have any
way to predict if any of the estimated
three incidents per year would involve
a small entity, we have assumed that the
three vessels involved are owned,
operated or demise chartered by small
entities.
b. Cost Summary—Vessels
As calculated in the Regulatory
Analysis, the average cost of a vessel
incident that exceeds its Previous Limit
of Liability is approximately $838,600
but could range from $85,800 to
$11,368,500. We note that the majority
of the incidents, 60 percent, would only
have incurred an additional $85,800 in
OPA 90 removal costs and damages.
However, in the event that a small entity
had a vessel incident which resulted in
OPA 90 removal costs and damages
above the Previous Limit of Liability in
that amount, it would likely have a
significant economic impact.
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c. Affected Population—Deepwater
Ports
As discussed above in Part V.A of this
preamble and in the Regulatory
Analysis, the only deepwater port
affected by the final rule is LOOP.
LOOP, however, does not meet the
Small Business Administration (SBA)
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criteria to be categorized as a small
entity.36
This would likely have a significant
economic impact on the small entity.
d. Cost Summary—Deepwater Ports
2. Regulatory Cost 2: Increase the Cost
of Establishing and Maintaining
Financial Responsibility
Because there are no small entity
deepwater ports, there would be no
Regulatory Cost 1 small entity impacts
to Deepwater Ports.
e. Affected Population—Onshore
Facilities
As discussed above in Part V.A of this
preamble and in the Regulatory
Analysis, the final rule could affect the
responsible parties for any onshore
facility.37 Since the enactment of OPA
90, however, the 2010 Enbridge Pipeline
spill in Michigan may well be the only
onshore facility incident resulting in
OPA 90 removal costs and damages
exceeding the previous $350 million
onshore facility limit of liability and
that onshore facility is not a small
entity. Nevertheless, in the Regulatory
Analysis for the rule, we assume that
there will be one onshore facility OPA
90 incident occurring over the 10-year
analysis period with OPA 90 removal
costs and damages exceeding the
existing limit of liability.
The onshore facility population
encompasses dozens of NAICS codes
representing diverse industries.38 It,
therefore, would not be practical to
predict which specific type or size of
onshore facility might be involved in
the one hypothetical incident assumed
to occur over the 10-year analysis
period, or whether it would involve a
small entity.
f. Cost Summary—Onshore Facilities
As previously stated above, there has
never been a small entity onshore
facility incident with OPA 90 removal
costs and damage that exceeded the
Previous Limit of Liability of $350
million. However, in the event that a
small entity onshore facility were to
have an incident with OPA 90 removal
costs and damages equal to the New
Limit of Liability, that onshore facility
would be responsible for an average
annual additional cost of $28,385,000.
36 LOOP is a limited liability corporation (NAICS
Code: 48691001) owned by three major oil
companies: Marathon Oil Company, Murphy Oil
Corporation, and Shell Oil Company. None of these
companies are small entities.
37 See the OPA 90 definitions of ‘‘facility’’ and
‘‘onshore facility’’ in footnotes 3 and 6, above.
38 Examples of onshore facilities include, but are
not limited to: onshore pipelines; rail; motor
carriers; petroleum bulk stations and terminals;
petroleum refineries; government installations; oil
production facilities; electrical utility plants;
electrical transmission lines; mobile facilities;
marinas, marine fuel stations and related facilities;
farms; residential and commercial fuel tank owners;
fuel oil distribution facilities; and gasoline stations.
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a. Affected Population—Vessels
Regulatory Cost 2 will only apply to
vessel responsible parties required to
establish and maintain OPA 90 evidence
of financial responsibility under 33
U.S.C. 2716 and 33 CFR part 138,
subpart A. As of July 3, 2013, there were
1,744 unique entities in the Coast
Guard’s COFR database that could be
affected by the rulemaking. Because of
the large number of entities, we
determined the statistically significant
sample size necessary to represent the
population. The appropriate statistical
sample size, at a 95 percent confidence
level and a 5 percent confidence
interval, for the population is 315
entities. This means we are 95 percent
certain that the characteristics of the
sample reflect the characteristics of the
entire population within a margin of
error of + or ¥5 percent.
Using a random number generator, we
then randomly selected the 315 entities
from the population for analysis. Of the
sample, 309 were businesses, 0 were
not-for-profit organizations and 6 were
governmental jurisdictions. For each
business entity, we next determined the
number of employees, annual revenue,
and NAICS Code to the extent possible
using public and proprietary business
databases. The SBA’s publication ‘‘U.S.
Small Business Administration Table of
Small Business Size Standards Matched
to North American Industry
Classification System codes effective
January 22, 2014’’ 39 was then used to
determine whether an entity is a small
entity. For governmental jurisdictions,
we determined whether they had
populations of less than 50,000 as per
the criteria in the RFA.
Of the sampled population, 220
would be considered small entities
using SBA’s criteria, 72 would not be
small entities, and no data was found
for the remaining 23 entities.40 If we
assume that entities where no revenue
or employee data was found are small
entities, then small entities make up 77
percent of the sample.41 We can then
extrapolate the entire population of
entities from the sample using the
following formula, where ‘‘X’’ is the
39 https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/
Size_Standards_Table.pdf.
40 The 6 governmental jurisdictions were a subset
of the 23 entities where no data was found.
41 The data show that small entities are often
responsible parties for multiple vessels.
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number of small entities within the total
entities in the population.
(X small entities in the total population
÷1,744 total entities in the population)
= (243 small entities in the sample ÷
315 total entities in the sample).
Solving for X, X equals 1,345 small
entities within the total population of
1,744 vessel responsible parties.
vessels using the Insurance method by
the average increase in insurance
premiums. This calculation was
conducted for each small entity. The
value was then divided by the annual
revenue for the small entity and
multiplied by 100 to determine the
percent impact of the final rule on the
small entities’ annual revenue.
b. Cost Summary—Vessels
As discussed above in Part V.A. and
in the Regulatory Analysis, the rule
could increase the cost to vessel
responsible parties associated with
establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility in three ways:
D Responsible parties using the
Insurance method of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial
responsibility could incur higher
Insurance premiums.
D Some responsible parties currently
using the Self-Insurance or Financial
Guaranty methods of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial
responsibility might need to migrate to
the Insurance method for their vessels.
This would only be the case if the SelfInsuring responsible parties or Financial
Guarantors’ financial condition
(working capital and net worth) no
longer qualified them to establish and
maintain evidence of financial
responsibility.
D The one responsible party using the
Surety Bond method will need to ensure
that the amount of the Surety Bonds are
adequate to cover OPA 90 removal costs
and damages up to the New Limits of
Liability. Alternatively, the responsible
party could opt to switch to one of the
other methods of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial
responsibility.
ii. Migration of Responsible Parties
Currently Using the Self-Insurance and
Financial Responsibility Methods of
Financial Responsibility to the
Insurance Market
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i. Increases to Vessel Insurance
Premiums
Based on the data in the Regulatory
Analysis above, we have estimated the
average annual per-vessel increase in
Insurance premiums to be $300.
$6,450,800 ÷ 19,724 vessels = $327 per
vessel
Rounded to nearest 100 = $300 per
vessel
The estimated increased cost of
establishing evidence of financial
responsibility for each small entity is
calculated by multiplying the number of
Based on review of financial data of
entities using the Self-Insurance or
Financial Guaranty method for
establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility, Coast Guard
subject matter experts estimate that
responsible parties for 2 percent of
vessels using those two methods would
not have the requisite working capital
and net worth necessary to qualify for
these methods as a result of the rule. In
those cases, we assume they will use the
Insurance method to establish and
maintain evidence of financial
responsibility. Based on the data in Part
V.A., above, and in the Regulatory
Analysis, the estimated average annual
cost per vessel of migrating from the
Self-insurance/Financial Guaranty
methods to the Insurance method is
$5,100.
$564,700 ÷ 111 vessels = $5,087 per
vessel
Rounded to nearest 100 = $5,100 per
vessel
The increased cost of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial
responsibility for each small entity is
calculated by:
Multiplying the number of vessels using
the Self-Insurance/Financial Guaranty
methods by 2 percent and then
multiplying by the Average Annual
Insurance Premium ($5,100)
For example, the cost for a small
entity responsible party with 100
vessels that would not have the
requisite working capital and net worth
necessary to use the Self-Insurance or
Financial Guaranty method for all of its
vessels would be calculated as follows:
(100 vessels using Self-Insurance or
Financial Guaranty method × 2
percent of vessels expected to migrate
from Self-Insurance or Financial
Guaranty method to the Insurance
method × $5,100/year) = $10,200/year
This calculation was conducted for
each small entity. The value was then
divided by the annual revenue for the
small entity and multiplied by 100 to
determine the percent impact of the rule
on the small entities’ annual revenue.
iii. Increased Cost of Using the Surety
Bond Method of Financial
Responsibility
As previously noted, there is one
responsible party using the Surety Bond
method of establishing and maintaining
financial responsibility for two vessels.
This responsible party is not a small
entity. In addition, based on Coast
Guard subject matter expertise, we do
not expect any other responsible party
to use the Surety Bond method during
the analysis period. Because there are
no small entities involved, there would
be no Regulatory Cost 2 small entity
impacts for these two vessels.
c. Affected Population—Deepwater
Ports
As discussed above, the only
deepwater port potentially affected by
the rule is LOOP. LOOP, however, does
not meet SBA’s criteria to be categorized
as a small entity.
d. Cost Summary—Deepwater Ports
Because there are no small entity
deepwater ports, there would be no
Regulatory Cost 2 small entity impacts
to Deepwater Ports.
e. Affected Population—Onshore
Facilities
As stated above in Part V.A. and in
the Regulatory Analysis, onshore
facilities are not required to establish
and maintain evidence of financial
responsibility under 33 U.S.C. 2716.
f. Cost Summary—Onshore Facilities
Because onshore facilities are not
required to establish and maintain
evidence of financial responsibility,
there are no Regulatory Cost 2 small
entity impacts to onshore facilities
resulting from this rulemaking.
The figure below shows the economic
impact to small entities of Regulatory
Cost 2.
ECONOMIC IMPACT TO SMALL ENTITIES—REGULATORY COST 2
Percent of annual revenue
Extrapolated number of small entities
Percent of small entities
1% to 2%
< 1%
17
1,328
1.3%
98.7%
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Public Law 104–
121, we offered to assist small entities
in understanding this rule so that they
could better evaluate its effects on them
and participate in the rulemaking. The
Coast Guard will not retaliate against
small entities that question or complain
about this rule or any policy or action
of the Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of Federal employees
who enforce, or otherwise determine
compliance with, Federal regulations to
the Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and the Regional Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
Ombudsman evaluates these actions
annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of the Coast Guard, call 1–
888–REG–FAIR (1–888–734–3247).
D. Collection of Information
This rule calls for no new collection
of information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3520.
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E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism
under E.O. 13132 (‘‘Federalism’’) if it
has a substantial direct effect on States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. We have analyzed
this final rule under that Order and have
determined that it is consistent with the
fundamental federalism principles and
preemption requirements described in
E.O. 13132. This final rule makes
necessary adjustments to the OPA 90
limits of liability to reflect significant
increases in the CPI, establishes a
framework for such future CPI increases,
and clarifies the OPA 90 limits of
liability for certain vessels. Nothing in
this final rule affects the preservation of
State authorities under 33 U.S.C. 2718,
including the authority of any State to
impose additional liability or financial
responsibility requirements with respect
to discharges of oil within such State.
Therefore, it has no implications for
federalism.
The Coast Guard recognizes the key
role that State and local governments
may have in making regulatory
determinations. Additionally, for rules
with federalism implications and
preemptive effect, E.O. 13132
specifically directs agencies to consult
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with State and local governments during
the rulemaking process. The NPRM,
therefore, invited anyone who believed
this rule has implications for federalism
under E.O. 13132 to contact us. We
received no such public comment.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, requires
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their discretionary regulatory actions. In
particular, the Act addresses actions
that may result in the expenditure by a
State, local, or tribal government, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector of
$100,000,000 (adjusted for inflation) or
more in any one year. Though this rule
will not result in such an expenditure,
we do discuss the effects of this rule
elsewhere in this preamble.
G. Taking of Private Property
This rule will not cause a taking of
private property or otherwise have
taking implications under E.O. 12630
(‘‘Governmental Actions and
Interference with Constitutionally
Protected Property Rights’’).
H. Civil Justice Reform
This rule meets applicable standards
in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of E.O.
12988, (‘‘Civil Justice Reform’’), to
minimize litigation, eliminate
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this rule under E.O.
13045 (‘‘Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks’’). This rule is not an
economically significant rule and would
not create an environmental risk to
health or risk to safety that might
disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal
implications under E.O. 13175
(‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’), because it
would not have a substantial direct
effect on one or more Indian tribes, on
the relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this rule under E.O.
13211 (‘‘Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use’’).
We have determined that it is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ under that
order because it is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under E.O. 12866 and
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is not likely to have a significant
adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act, codified as a
note to 15 U.S.C. 272, directs agencies
to use voluntary consensus standards in
their regulatory activities unless the
agency provides Congress, through
OMB, with an explanation of why using
these standards would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (e.g.,
specifications of materials, performance,
design, or operation; test methods;
sampling procedures; and related
management systems practices) that are
developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies. This rule
does not use technical standards.
Therefore, we did not consider the use
of voluntary consensus standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this rule under
Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023–01,
Commandant Instruction M16475.lD,
and 67 FR 48243 (July 23, 2002) which
guide the Coast Guard in complying
with the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4370f, and
have concluded that this action is one
of a category of actions that do not
individually or cumulatively have a
significant effect on the human
environment. A final environmental
analysis checklist supporting this
determination is available in the docket
where indicated under the ‘‘Public
Participation and Request for
Comments’’ section of this preamble.
This rule increases the OPA 90 limits of
liability for vessels, deepwater ports,
and onshore facilities to reflect
significant increases in the CPI using the
methodology established in the CPI–1
Rule. This action is one of a category of
actions which do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment and is
categorically excluded from further
environmental documentation under
paragraph 6(b) of 67 FR 48243 (July 23,
2002).
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 138
Financial responsibility, Guarantors,
Hazardous materials transportation,
Insurance, Limits of liability, Oil
pollution, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Surety bonds, Water
pollution control.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard amends 33
CFR part 138 as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
PART 138—FINANCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY FOR WATER
POLLUTION (VESSELS) AND OPA 90
LIMITS OF LIABILITY (VESSELS,
DEEPWATER PORTS AND ONSHORE
FACILITIES)
1. The authority citation for part 138
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 2704, 2716, 2716a; 42
U.S.C. 9608, 9609; 6 U.S.C. 552; E.O. 12580,
Sec. 7(b), 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 193; E.O.
12777, Secs. 4 and 5, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p.
351, as amended by E.O. 13286, Sec. 89, 3
CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 166, and by E.O. 13638,
Sec. 1, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp., p.227;
Department of Homeland Security Delegation
Nos. 0170.1 and 5110, Revision 01. Section
138.30 also issued under the authority of 46
U.S.C. 2103 and 14302.
2. Revise the heading to part 138 to
read as set forth above.
■ 3. Revise Subpart B to read as follows:
■
Subpart B—OPA 90 Limits of Liability
(Vessels, Deepwater Ports and Onshore
Facilities)
Sec.
138.200 Scope.
138.210 Applicability.
138.220 Definitions.
138.230 Limits of liability.
138.240 Procedure for updating limits of
liability to reflect significant increases in
the Consumer Price Index (Annual CPI–
U) and statutory changes.
Subpart B—OPA 90 Limits of Liability
(Vessels, Deepwater Ports and
Onshore Facilities)
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§ 138.200
Scope.
This subpart sets forth the limits of
liability under Title I of the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (33
U.S.C. 2701, et seq.) (OPA 90), for
vessels, deepwater ports, and onshore
facilities, as adjusted under OPA 90 (33
U.S.C. 2704(d)). This subpart also sets
forth the method and procedure the
Coast Guard uses to periodically adjust
the OPA 90 limits of liability by
regulation under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(4)), to reflect significant
increases in the Consumer Price Index
(CPI), and to update the limits of
liability when they are amended by
statute. In addition, this subpart crossreferences the U.S. Department of the
Interior regulation setting forth the OPA
90 limit of liability applicable to
offshore facilities, as adjusted under
OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4)) to reflect
significant increases in the CPI.
§ 138.210
Applicability.
This subpart applies to you if you are
a responsible party for a vessel, a
deepwater port, or an onshore facility
(including, but not limited to, motor
vehicles, rolling stock and onshore
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pipelines), unless your liability is
unlimited under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(c)).
§ 138.220
Definitions.
(a) As used in this subpart, the
following terms have the meanings set
forth in OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2701):
deepwater port, facility, gross ton,
liability, oil, offshore facility, onshore
facility, responsible party, tank vessel,
and vessel.
(b) As used in this subpart—
Annual CPI–U means the annual
‘‘Consumer Price Index—All Urban
Consumers, Not Seasonally Adjusted,
U.S. City Average, All items, 1982–
84=100’’, published by the U.S.
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Current period means the year in
which the Annual CPI–U was most
recently published by the U.S.
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Director, NPFC means the person in
charge of the U.S. Coast Guard, National
Pollution Funds Center (NPFC), or that
person’s authorized representative.
Edible oil tank vessel means a tank
vessel referred to in OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(c)(4)(A)).
Oil spill response vessel means a tank
vessel referred to in OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(c)(4)(B)).
Previous period means the year in
which the previous limit of liability was
established, or last adjusted by statute or
regulation, whichever is later.
Single-hull means the hull of a tank
vessel that is constructed or adapted to
carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo
or cargo residue, that is not a double
hull as defined in 33 CFR part 157.
Single-hull includes the hull of any
such tank vessel that is fitted with
double sides only or a double bottom
only.
§ 138.230
Limits of liability.
(a) Vessels. (1) The OPA 90 limits of
liability for tank vessels, other than
edible oil tank vessels and oil spill
response vessels, are—
(i) For a single-hull tank vessel greater
than 3,000 gross tons, the greater of
$3,500 per gross ton or $25,845,600;
(ii) For a tank vessel greater than
3,000 gross tons, other than a single-hull
tank vessel, the greater of $2,200 per
gross ton or $18,796,800;
(iii) For a single-hull tank vessel less
than or equal to 3,000 gross tons, the
greater of $3,500 per gross ton or
$7,048,800; and
(iv) For a tank vessel less than or
equal to 3,000 gross tons, other than a
single-hull tank vessel, the greater of
$2,200 per gross ton or $4,699,200.
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72355
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for
any vessel other than a vessel listed in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section,
including for any edible oil tank vessel
and any oil spill response vessel, are the
greater of $1,100 per gross ton or
$939,800.
(b) Deepwater ports. (1) The OPA 90
limit of liability for any deepwater port,
including for any component pipelines,
other than a deepwater port listed in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, is
$633,850,000;
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for
deepwater ports with limits of liability
established by regulation under OPA 90
(33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(2)), including for any
component pipelines, are—
(i) For the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port
(LOOP), $96,366,600; and
(ii) [Reserved]
(c) Onshore facilities. The OPA 90
limit of liability for onshore facilities,
including, but not limited to, motor
vehicles, rolling stock and onshore
pipelines, is $633,850,000.
(d) Offshore facilities. The OPA 90
limit of liability for offshore facilities
other than deepwater ports, including
for any offshore pipelines, is set forth at
30 CFR 553.702.
§ 138.240 Procedure for updating limits of
liability to reflect significant increases in
the Consumer Price Index (Annual CPI–U)
and statutory changes.
(a) Update and publication. The
Director, NPFC, will periodically adjust
the limits of liability set forth in
§ 138.230(a) through (c) to reflect
significant increases in the Annual CPI–
U, according to the procedure for
calculating limit of liability inflation
adjustments set forth in paragraphs (b)–
(d) of this section, and will publish the
inflation-adjusted limits of liability and
any statutory amendments to those
limits of liability in the Federal Register
as amendments to § 138.230. Updates to
the limits of liability under this
paragraph are effective on the 90th day
after publication in the Federal Register
of the amendments to § 138.230, unless
otherwise specified by statute (in the
event of a statutory amendment to the
limits of liability) or in the Federal
Register notice amending § 138.230.
(b) Formula for calculating a
cumulative percent change in the
Annual CPI–U. (1) The Director, NPFC,
calculates the cumulative percent
change in the Annual CPI–U from the
year the limit of liability was
established, or last adjusted by statute or
regulation, whichever is later (i.e., the
previous period), to the most recently
published Annual CPI–U (i.e., the
current period), using the following
escalation formula:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 223 / Thursday, November 19, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
Percent change in the Annual CPI–U =
[(Annual CPI–U for Current
Period¥Annual CPI–U for Previous
Period) ÷ Annual CPI–U for Previous
Period] × 100.
(2) The cumulative percent change
value calculated using the formula in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section is
rounded to one decimal place.
(c) Significance threshold. Not later
than every three years from the year the
limits of liability were last adjusted for
inflation, the Director, NPFC, will
evaluate whether the cumulative
percent change in the Annual CPI–U
since that date has reached a
significance threshold of 3 percent or
greater. For any three-year period in
which the cumulative percent change in
the Annual CPI–U is less than 3 percent,
the Director, NPFC, will publish a
notice of no inflation adjustment to the
limits of liability in the Federal
Register. If this occurs, the Director,
NPFC, will recalculate the cumulative
percent change in the Annual CPI–U
since the year in which the limits of
liability were last adjusted for inflation
each year thereafter until the cumulative
percent change equals or exceeds the
threshold amount of 3 percent. Once the
3-percent threshold is reached, the
Director, NPFC, will increase the limits
of liability, by regulation using the
procedure set forth in paragraph (a) of
this section, for all source categories
(including any new limit of liability
established by statute or regulation
since the last time the limits of liability
were adjusted for inflation) by an
amount equal to the cumulative percent
change in the Annual CPI–U from the
year each limit was established, or last
adjusted by statute or regulation,
whichever is later. Nothing in this
paragraph shall prevent the Director,
NPFC, in the Director’s sole discretion,
from adjusting the limits of liability for
inflation by regulation issued more
frequently than every three years.
(d) Formula for calculating inflation
adjustments. The Director, NPFC,
calculates adjustments to the limits of
liability in § 138.230 for inflation using
the following formula:
New limit of liability = Previous limit of
liability + (Previous limit of liability
× percent change in the Annual CPI–
U calculated under paragraph (b) of
this section), then rounded to the
closest $100.
Dated: November 3, 2015.
William R. Grawe,
Director, U.S. Coast Guard, National Pollution
Funds Center.
[FR Doc. 2015–29519 Filed 11–18–15; 8:45 am]
Notice of enforcement of
regulation.
ACTION:
The Coast Guard will enforce
various safety zones within the Captain
of the Port New York Zone on the
specified dates and times. This action is
necessary to ensure the safety of vessels
and spectators from hazards associated
with fireworks displays. During the
enforcement period, no person or vessel
may enter the safety zones without
permission of the Captain of the Port
(COTP).
SUMMARY:
The regulation for the safety
zones described in 33 CFR 165.160 will
be enforced on the dates and times
listed in the table below.
DATES:
If
you have questions on this notice, call
or email Petty Officer First Class Daniel
Vazquez U.S. Coast Guard; telephone
718–354–4154, email daniel.vazquez@
uscg.mil.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
The Coast
Guard will enforce the safety zones
listed in 33 CFR 165.160 on the
specified dates and times as indicated in
Table 1 below. This regulation was
published in the Federal Register on
November 9, 2011 (76 FR 69614).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2015–0968]
Safety Zones; Fireworks Events in
Captain of the Port New York Zone
AGENCY:
Coast Guard, DHS.
TABLE 1
1. City of Poughkeepsie, Poughkeepsie, NY, Hudson River Safety
Zone, 33 CFR 165.160(5.13).
2. KPMG #1, Liberty Island Safety Zone, 33 CFR 165.160(2.1) .............
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3. HKM Productions, Liberty Island Safety Zone, 33 CFR 165.160(2.1)
4. KPMG #2, Liberty Island Safety Zone, 33 CFR 165.160(2.1) .............
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• Launch site: A barge located in approximate position 41°42′24.50″
N. 073°56′44.16″ W. (NAD 1983), approximately 420 yards north of
the Mid Hudson Bridge. This Safety Zone is a 300-yard radius from
the barge.
• Date: October 29, 2015.
• Time: 7:00 p.m.–08:20 p.m.
• Launch site: A barge located in approximate position 40°41′16.5″ N.
074°02′23″ W. (NAD 1983), located in Federal Anchorage 20–C,
about 360 yards east of Liberty Island. This Safety Zone is a 360yard radius from the barge.
• Date: November 5, 2015.
• Time: 9:00 p.m.–10:30 p.m.
• Launch site: A barge located in approximate position 40°41′16.5″ N.
074°02′23″ W. (NAD 1983), located in Federal Anchorage 20–C,
about 360 yards east of Liberty Island. This Safety Zone is a 360yard radius from the barge.
• Date: November 6, 2015.
• Rain Date: November 7, 2015.
• Time: 9:00 p.m.–10:30 p.m.
• Launch site: A barge located in approximate position 40°41′16.5″ N.
074°02′23″ W. (NAD 1983), located in Federal Anchorage 20–C,
about 360 yards east of Liberty Island. This Safety Zone is a 360yard radius from the barge.
• Date: November 19, 2015.
• Time: 9:00 p.m.–10:30 p.m.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 223 (Thursday, November 19, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 72342-72356]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-29519]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 138
[Docket No. USCG-2013-1006]
RIN 1625-AC14
Consumer Price Index Adjustments of Oil Pollution Act of 1990
Limits of Liability--Vessels, Deepwater Ports and Onshore Facilities
AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is issuing a final rule to increase the limits
of liability for vessels, deepwater ports, and onshore facilities,
under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (OPA 90), to reflect
significant increases in the Consumer Price Index (CPI). This final
rule also establishes a simplified regulatory procedure for the Coast
Guard to make future required periodic CPI increases to these OPA 90
limits of liability. These regulatory inflation increases to the limits
of liability are required by OPA 90 and are necessary to preserve the
deterrent effect and ``polluter pays'' principle embodied in OPA 90. In
addition, this final rule clarifies applicability of the OPA 90 vessel
limits of liability to edible oil cargo tank vessels and tank vessels
designated as oil spill response vessels. This clarification to the
prior regulatory text is needed for consistency with OPA 90. Finally,
this rule makes several non-substantive clarifying and editorial
revisions to the regulatory text. This rulemaking promotes the Coast
Guard's missions of maritime safety and maritime stewardship.
DATES: This final rule is effective December 21, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information about this document
call or email Benjamin White, Coast Guard; telephone 202-309-1937,
email Benjamin.H.White@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Basis and Purpose
[[Page 72343]]
III. Background and Regulatory History
A. Creation of 33 CFR Part 138, Subpart B
B. Prior Regulatory Inflation Adjustments to the OPA 90 Limits
of Liability for Vessels and Deepwater Ports
C. Clarification of the Coast Guard's Delegated Authority To
Adjust the Onshore Facility Limit of Liability
D. Overview of Changes Proposed by the NPRM for This Rulemaking
(CPI-2 NPRM)
IV. Discussion of Comments and Changes
A. Limit of Liability Adjustments
B. Simplified Regulatory Procedure for Future Inflation
Adjustments to the Limits
C. Inflation Adjustment Methodology
D. Clarifying Applicability of the ``Other Vessel'' Limits of
Liability to Edible Oil Tank Vessels and Oil Spill Response Vessels
E. Applicability of the Tank Vessel Limits of Liability,
Including for MODUs
F. Other Revisions to Clarify the Regulatory Text
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Abbreviations
Annual CPI-U The Annual ``Consumer Price Index--All Urban Consumers,
Not Seasonally Adjusted, U.S. City Average, All Items, 1982-84=100''
BLS U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics
BOEM The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
COFR Certificate of Financial Responsibility
COFR Rule The Coast Guard regulation, at 33 CFR part 138, subpart A,
implementing the requirements under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2716 and
2716a) and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act (42 U.S.C. 9608 and 9609) for responsible parties
to establish and maintain evidence of financial responsibility in
the event of an oil spill incident or hazardous substance release.
CPI Consumer Price Index
CPI-1 Rule The Coast Guard's first rulemaking amending 33 CFR part
138, subpart B, to adjust the OPA 90 limits of liability for vessels
and deepwater ports for inflation, as required by 33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(4), and to establish the Coast Guard's procedure for future
required inflation adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of liability
(Docket No. USCG-2008-0007). See 73 FR 54997 (September 24, 2008)
[CPI-1 NPRM]; 74 FR 31357 (July 1, 2009) [CPI-1 Interim Rule]; 75 FR
750 (January 6, 2010) [CPI-1 Final Rule].
CPI-2 NPRM The NPRM for this rulemaking, published at 79 FR 49206
(August 19, 2014).
CPI-2 Rule This rulemaking, which is the Coast Guard's second
rulemaking under 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4) to amend 33 CFR part 138,
subpart B, to adjust the OPA 90 vessel and deepwater port limits of
liability for inflation, and the first rulemaking adjusting the
onshore facility limit of liability for inflation (Docket No. USCG-
2013-1006).
Deepwater port A facility licensed under the Deepwater Port Act of
1974 (33 U.S.C. 1501-1524)
DHS U.S. Department of Homeland Security
DRPA The Delaware River Protection Act of 2006, Title VI of the
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109-
241, July 11, 2006, 120 Stat. 516
E.O. Executive Order
FR Federal Register
Fund The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund created by 26 U.S.C. 9509,
and administered by NPFC
LNG Liquefied natural gas
LOOP Louisiana Offshore Oil Port
MARAD U.S. Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration
MODU Mobile offshore drilling unit
NPFC U.S. Coast Guard, National Pollution Funds Center
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
OMB U.S. Office of Management and Budget
OPA 90 The Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (33 U.S.C. 2701, et
seq.)
SBA U.S. Small Business Administration
Sec. Section symbol
U.S. United States
U.S.C. United States Code
II. Basis and Purpose
In general, under Title I of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as
amended (OPA 90),\1\ the responsible parties for any vessel (other than
a public vessel) \2\ or for any facility \3\ from which oil is
discharged, or which poses a substantial threat of discharge of oil,
into or upon the navigable waters or the adjoining shorelines or the
exclusive economic zone of the United States, are strictly liable,
jointly and severally, under 33 U.S.C. 2702 for the removal costs and
damages that result from such incident (``OPA 90 removal costs and
damages''). Under 33 U.S.C. 2704, however, a responsible party's OPA 90
liability with respect to any one incident \4\ is limited (with certain
exceptions set forth in 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)) to a specified dollar
amount.
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\1\ 33 U.S.C. 2701, et seq.
\2\ Public vessels are expressly excluded from OPA 90 coverage.
See 33 U.S.C. 2701(29) and (37) (definitions of public vessel and
vessel) and 33 U.S.C. 2702(c)(2) (public vessel exclusion).
\3\ OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2701(9)) defines ``facility'' as ``any
structure, group of structures, equipment, or device (other than a
vessel) which is used for one or more of the following purposes:
Exploring for, drilling for, producing, storing, handling,
transferring, processing, or transporting oil. This term includes
any motor vehicle, rolling stock, or pipeline used for one or more
of these purposes''.
\4\ The term ``incident'' is defined in 33 U.S.C. 2701(14) as
``any occurrence or series of occurrences having the same origin,
involving one or more vessels, facilities, or any combination
thereof, resulting in the discharge or substantial threat of
discharge of oil''.
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In instances when a limit of liability applies, the Oil Spill
Liability Trust Fund (Fund) is available to compensate the OPA 90
removal costs and damages incurred by the responsible party and third-
party claimants in excess of the applicable limit of liability.\5\ This
Fund is managed by the Coast Guard's National Pollution Funds Center
(NPFC).
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\5\ See 33 U.S.C. 2708, 2712(a)(4) and 2713; and 33 CFR part
136. A more comprehensive description of the Fund can be found in
the Coast Guard's May 12, 2005, ``Report on Implementation of the
Oil Pollution Act of 1990'', which is available in the docket.
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OPA 90 sets forth the statutory limits of liability for vessels and
three types of facilities: Onshore facilities, deepwater ports licensed
under the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 (hereinafter ``deepwater ports''),
and offshore facilities other than deepwater ports.\6\ In addition, to
prevent the real value of the OPA 90 statutory limits of liability from
depreciating over time as a result of inflation and preserve the
``polluter pays'' principle embodied in OPA 90, 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4)
requires that the OPA 90 limits of liability be adjusted by regulation
``not less than every 3 years . . . to reflect significant increases in
the Consumer Price Index''.\7\
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\6\ The term ``onshore facility'' is defined in 33 U.S.C.
2701(24) as ``any facility (including but not limited to, motor
vehicles and rolling stock) of any kind located in, on, or under,
any land within the United States other than submerged land''. The
term ``deepwater port'' is defined in 33 U.S.C. 2701(6) as ``a
facility licensed under the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C.
1501-1524)''. The term ``offshore facility'' is defined in 33 U.S.C.
2701(24) as ``any facility of any kind located in, on, or under any
of the navigable waters of the United States, and any facility of
any kind which is subject to the jurisdiction of the United States
and is located in, on, or under any other waters, other than a
vessel or a public vessel;'' Onshore facilities, deepwater ports and
offshore facilities include component pipelines. See definition of
``facility'' in footnote 3, above.
\7\ 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4).
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The President has delegated this regulatory authority to the
Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating, in
respect to the statutory limits of liability for vessels, deepwater
ports, and onshore facilities. The Secretary of Homeland Security has
further delegated this authority to the Commandant of the Coast
Guard.\8\
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\8\ The regulatory authority to adjust the offshore facility
limit of liability for damages has been delegated to the Secretary
of the Interior. See further discussion of the delegations in Part
III.C., below, under Background and Regulatory History.
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[[Page 72344]]
In this final rule we are making four changes to the Coast Guard
regulations at 33 CFR part 138, subpart B. First, we are carrying out
the required inflation adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of liability
for vessels, deepwater ports and onshore facilities. Second, we are
establishing a simplified regulatory procedure to ensure timely future
required inflation adjustments to those limits of liability. Third, we
are clarifying applicability of the OPA 90 vessel limits of liability
to edible oil cargo tank vessels and to tank vessels designated in
their certificates of inspection as oil spill response vessels.\9\ This
clarification to the regulatory text is needed for consistency with OPA
90. Fourth, we are making several non-substantive clarifying and
editorial revisions to the regulatory text. These revisions include
adding a cross-reference to the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
section that sets forth the offshore facility limit of liability for
damages, as adjusted for inflation by the U.S. Department of the
Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM). That limit of
liability can be found at 30 CFR 553.702. The regulatory text revisions
made by this final rule were discussed in the notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM), and the Coast Guard is adopting them today without
substantive change.
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\9\ 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4).
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III. Background and Regulatory History
A. Creation of 33 CFR Part 138, Subpart B
In 2008, we promulgated 33 CFR part 138, subpart B, setting forth
the OPA 90 limits of liability for vessels and deepwater ports. (See,
Docket No. USCG-2005-21780.) This was done in anticipation of the Coast
Guard periodically adjusting those limits of liability to reflect
significant increases in the CPI, as required by 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4),
and to ensure that the applicable amounts of OPA 90 financial
responsibility that must be demonstrated and maintained by vessel and
deepwater port responsible parties, as required by 33 U.S.C. 2716 and
33 CFR part 138, subpart A (COFR Rule), would always equal the
applicable OPA 90 limits of liability as adjusted over time.
B. Prior Regulatory Inflation Adjustments to the OPA 90 Limits of
Liability for Vessels and Deepwater Ports
We published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) on September
24, 2008 (73 FR 54997) (CPI-1 NPRM), and an interim rule with request
for comments on July 1, 2009 (74 FR 31357) (CPI-1 Interim Rule)
adjusting the vessel and deepwater port limits of liability at 33 CFR
part 138, subpart B, to reflect significant increases in the CPI.\10\
The CPI-1 Interim Rule also established the Coast Guard's procedures
and methodology for adjusting the OPA 90 limits of liability for
inflation over time at Sec. 138.240.
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\10\ This included adjustments to the regulatory limit of
liability established for the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP)
under the OPA 90 deepwater port risk-based limit of liability
adjustment authority at 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(2), 60 FR 39849 (August 4,
1995). See the CPI-1 Rule for more background on LOOP. We
promulgated the CPI-1 Rule adjustments as an interim, rather than
final, rule to clarify the regulatory text in response to a late
comment we received on a related 2008 rulemaking amending the COFR
Rule. That comment is discussed below in Part IV.E., in response to
a comment submitted on this rulemaking.
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We received no adverse public comments on the CPI-1 Interim Rule.
We, therefore, published a final rule on January 6, 2010, adopting the
CPI-1 Interim Rule amendments to 33 CFR part 138, subpart B, without
change (CPI-1 Final Rule, 75 FR 750).\11\
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\11\ All Federal Register notices, comments and other materials
related to the CPI-1 Rule are available in the public docket for
that rulemaking (Docket No. USCG-2008-0007).
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C. Clarification of the Coast Guard's Delegated Authority To Adjust the
Onshore Facility Limit of Liability
The CPI-1 Rule was the Coast Guard's first set of inflation
adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of liability for vessels and deepwater
ports. We, however, deferred adjusting the statutory limit of liability
for onshore facilities in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(4) at that time. This was
because Executive Order (E.O.) 12777, Sec. 4, and its implementing re-
delegations vested the President's responsibility to adjust the OPA 90
limits of liability in multiple agencies.
Specifically, the delegations vested the President's limit of
liability adjustment authorities in the Commandant of the Coast Guard
for vessels, deepwater ports and marine transportation-related onshore
facilities, in the Secretary of the Department of Transportation for
non-marine transportation-related onshore facilities, in the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency for non-
transportation-related onshore facilities, and in the Secretary of the
Interior for offshore facilities. That division of responsibilities
complicated the CPI adjustment rulemaking requirement, particularly in
respect to the three sub-categories of onshore facilities. Further
interagency coordination was, therefore, needed to avoid inconsistent
regulatory treatment.
By deferring the first onshore facility limit of liability
inflation adjustment we were able to complete the required first set of
inflation increases to the vessel and deepwater port limits of
liability by the 2009 statutory deadline established by the Delaware
River Protection Act of 2006 (DRPA).\12\ In addition, as of that date,
there had never been an onshore facility incident that exceeded the
statutory onshore facility limit of liability, and there were no
adverse public comments on our decision to defer the first regulatory
inflation adjustment to the onshore facility limit of liability.
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\12\ Title VI of the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act
of 2006, Public Law 109-241, July 11, 2006, 120 Stat. 516. Section
603 of DRPA added a 2009 statutory deadline for completing the first
rulemaking to increase the limits of liability for inflation to 33
U.S.C. 2704(d)(4).
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On March 15, 2013, the President signed E.O. 13638, restating and
simplifying the delegations in E.O. 12777, Sec. 4, and vesting the
authority to make CPI adjustments to the onshore facility statutory
limit of liability in ``the Secretary of the Department in which the
Coast Guard is operating''.\13\ The restated delegations also require
interagency coordination, but otherwise preserve the earlier
delegations, including the authority to adjust the limits of liability
for vessels and deepwater ports. On July 10, 2013, the Secretary of
Homeland Security issued DHS Delegation Number 5110, Revision 01, re-
delegating these authorities to the Commandant of the Coast Guard.
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\13\ E.O. 13638, Sec. 1, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp., p.227 (also
available at 78 FR 17589, March 21, 2013), amending E.O. 12777, Sec.
4, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 351, as amended by E.O. 13286, Sec. 89, 3
CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 166.
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D. Overview of Changes Proposed by the NPRM for This Rulemaking (CPI-2
NPRM)
On August 19, 2014, we published an NPRM to amend 33 CFR part 138,
subpart B (CPI-2 NPRM, at 79 FR 49206). The CPI-2 NPRM proposed four
changes to 33 CFR part 138, subpart B. First, we proposed to carry out
the second set of inflation adjustments to the vessel and deepwater
port limits of liability, and the first inflation adjustment under the
Commandant's newly-delegated authorities to the onshore facility
statutory limit of
[[Page 72345]]
liability. Second, we proposed a simplified regulatory procedure, at
new Sec. 138.240(a), for the Coast Guard to make future required
periodic CPI increases to the OPA 90 limits of liability for vessels,
deepwater ports, and onshore facilities. Third, we proposed to clarify
applicability of the vessel limits of liability to edible oil cargo
tank vessels and oil spill response vessels for consistency with
statute, and to renumber some of the subparagraphs for clarity. Fourth,
we proposed a number of non-substantive clarifying and editorial
revisions to the regulatory text. These revisions included: Updates to
the titles for Part 138, Subpart B and Sec. 138.240, to the list of
authorities, and to the scope, applicability and definitions sections
(e.g., to reflect the addition of the onshore facility limit of
liability); adding cross-references (e.g., including a cross-reference
in Sec. 138.230(d) to the OPA 90 offshore facility limit of liability
for damages as adjusted for inflation by BOEM and set forth at 30 CFR
553.702); and paragraph restructuring and plain language revisions to
improve the rule's readability (e.g., replacing public law citations
with U.S. code citations).
We discussed the following two issues in the CPI-2 NPRM, and they
are of relevance to changes we are making to the regulatory text in
this final rule.
1. Updated Annual CPI-U. To keep the limits of liability current,
the inflation adjustment methodology established by the CPI-1 Rule at
Sec. 138.240 requires that we use the Annual CPI-U that has been most
recently published by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) as the ``current period'' value. We, therefore, noted
in the CPI-2 NPRM that the limits of liability shown in proposed Sec.
138.230 were estimates, calculated using the then-available 2013 Annual
CPI-U value of 232.957 as the ``current period'' value.\14\ We further
noted that we would calculate the limit of liability adjustments at the
final rule stage using the most recently-published Annual CPI-U then
available, and that the final limits of liability would therefore
differ marginally from the proposed values.
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\14\ See Table 24 of the BLS CPI Detailed Reports, which are
made available each month at the following link: https://www.bls.gov/cpi/tables.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Previous period options. The CPI-2 NPRM notified the public
that, after considering any public comments on the proposal, we might
re-calculate the inflation adjustments to the deepwater port and
onshore facility statutory limit of liability (33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(4))
using the 1990 Annual CPI-U value of 130.7 as the ``previous period''.
This would be instead of the 2008 Annual CPI-U value of 215.3 that we
used to calculate the proposed deepwater port limit of liability (shown
in Sec. 138.230(b)(1) of the CPI-2 NPRM), and the 2006 Annual CPI-U
``previous period'' value of 201.6 that we used to calculate the
proposed onshore facility limit of liability (shown in Sec. 138.230(c)
of the CPI-2 NPRM).
We discuss public comments received on these topics and how we have
resolved them in Part IV, of this preamble, below.
IV. Discussion of Comments and Changes
A. Limit of Liability Adjustments
We received nine written submissions to the docket. Two submissions
were from citizen advisory groups organized under OPA 90, Sec. 5002.
Four submissions (including one set of comments submitted on behalf of
two commenters) were from environmental advocacy organizations. One
comment document was from a drilling contractor association, and two
submissions were from anonymous individuals. We received no requests
for public meetings, and held no public meetings for this rulemaking.
1. General public support for the rulemaking. Six commenters
expressed general support for the proposal. In addition, one commenter
expressed support for prioritizing regulations that provide
environmental change. No commenter opposed the proposal. The Coast
Guard appreciates this support.
2. Issues raised by the public that are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. Two commenters stated that the OPA 90 statutory limits of
liability are inadequate and should be significantly increased. Four
commenters expressed the view that OPA 90 liability should not be
capped. Several of these commenters stated that removing the liability
limits would encourage industry best practices and be consistent with
Congressional intent that polluters pay for the injuries they cause.
These comments are outside the scope of this rulemaking because, as
several of the commenters recognized, striking or significantly
increasing the statutory limits of liability would require legislative
change.
One commenter expressed the view that penalties for oil spills
should not be limited. (This comment concerns civil or criminal penalty
liability for oil spills, and is therefore in addition to the comments
discussed above in the previous paragraph about the adequacy or need
for OPA 90 limits of liability for removal costs and damages.) Another
commenter stated that independent third parties should audit clean-ups
by responsible parties. Both of these comments also are outside the
scope of this rulemaking. This rulemaking only concerns the inflation
adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of liability for removal costs and
damages that are required under 33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4). It does not
concern penalty liability or the procedures for carrying-out removal
actions.
3. Updated Annual CPI-U. We received no comments opposing use of
the Annual CPI-U that has been most recently published by the BLS, as
required in Sec. 138.240.
4. Public comments concerning use of a 1990 ``previous period''. No
commenter opposed, and five commenters expressed support for, using the
1990 Annual CPI-U as the ``previous period'' value to adjust the
statutory onshore facility and deepwater port limit of liability.
Several of these commenters stated that using a 1990 ``previous
period'' would capture the full amount of inflation since OPA 90 was
enacted, thereby restoring the onshore facility and deepwater port
statutory limit of liability to the amount intended by Congress. One of
the commenters stated that using the 1990 ``previous period'' is
appropriate because of the increasing risks to U.S. waters of new, more
intensive methods of oil production and transportation, including
Bakken crude and tar sands. The commenter expressed the view that the
approach would help achieve Congress's intent of ensuring the
``polluter pays,'' and would encourage onshore facility and deepwater
port operators to conduct their operations in the safest manner
possible.
5. Final adjusted limits of liability.
As we noted above in Part III.D.1., the inflation adjustment
methodology established by the CPI-1 Rule at Sec. 138.240 requires
that we use the Annual CPI-U that has been most recently published by
the BLS as the ``current period'' value. This requirement is to keep
the limits of liability current. On January 16, 2015, the BLS published
the 2014 Annual CPI-U value of 236.736. This is the most recently
published Annual CPI-U. We have, therefore, used the 2014 Annual CPI-U
as the ``current period'' value to calculate the new vessel, deepwater
port and offshore facility limits of liability established by this
final rule.
We also agree with the public comments summarized above, in subpart
A.4. of this part, that it is appropriate to use the 1990 Annual CPI-U
as the ``previous period'' value for adjusting the onshore facility and
[[Page 72346]]
deepwater port statutory limit of liability in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(4).
This approach captures the full amount of inflation since that limit of
liability was established by OPA 90 and is, therefore, consistent with
congressional intent. It is also consistent with the approach recently
taken by BOEM to adjust the offshore facility limit of liability. (See
79 FR 73832, December 12, 2014.) We have, therefore, recalculated the
adjustments to the onshore facility and deepwater port statutory limit
of liability using the 1990 Annual CPI-U value of 130.7 as the
``previous period''.\15\
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\15\ We are not changing the approach we used in the CPI-1 Rule
to adjust the vessel limits of liability for inflation, where we
used the 2006 Annual CPI-U value as the ``previous period.'' We
continue to view that approach as consistent with congressional
intent, because in 2006 Congress passed DRPA revising the vessel
limits of liability. Importantly, however, Congress did not revise
the facility limits of liability in 2006 and has not done so since.
Thus, although we used the 2006 CPI-U value in making inflation
adjustments to the deepwater port limits of liability in the CPI-1
Rule, and we stated that we would also use that same approach in
adjusting the onshore facility limits of liability at some future
date, we have now decided (with the benefit of public comments on
the issue and for the other reasons discussed above and in the CPI-2
NPRM) to use a different approach in adjusting the limits for
deepwater ports and onshore facilities. As explained, we are making
inflation adjustments for these limits of liability using the 1990
Annual CPI-U value as the ``previous period,'' because Congress
established these limits in 1990 and has not revised them since that
time. In addition to being more consistent with congressional intent
and the ``polluter pays'' principle than our prior approach
reflected in the CPI-1 Rule, our revised approach also may encourage
onshore facility and deepwater port operators to conduct their
operations in the safest manner possible, as a commenter suggested.
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Applying the formula set forth in Sec. 138.240(b) for calculating
the cumulative percent change in the Annual CPI-U, we have determined
that the percent change in the Annual CPI-U exceeds the significance
threshold specified in Sec. 138.240(c). We have, therefore, calculated
the limit of liability adjustments using the formula set forth in Sec.
138.240(d).
Table 1 shows the vessel, deepwater port and onshore facility
limits of liability before their adjustment by this final rule
(Previous Limits of Liability), the percent change in the Annual CPI-U,
and the final inflation-adjusted limits of liability established by
today's final rule at Sec. 138.230 (New Limits of Liability). These
New Limits of Liability will take effect on December 21, 2015.
Table 1--CPI-Adjusted Limits of Liability
[Sec. 138.230]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent change
Source category Previous limit of in the annual New limit of liability
liability CPI-U
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) Vessels
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) The OPA 90 limits of liability for
tank vessels, other than edible oil
tank vessels and oil spill response
vessels, are--
(i) For a single-hull tank vessel the greater of $3,200 per 10 The greater of $3,500 per
greater than 3,000 gross tons,\16\ gross ton or $23,496,000. gross ton or $25,845,600.
(ii) For a tank vessel greater than the greater of $2,000 per 10 The greater of $2,200 per
3,000 gross tons, other than a single- gross ton or $17,088,000. gross ton or $18,796,800.
hull tank vessel,
(iii) For a single-hull tank vessel less the greater of $3,200 per 10 The greater of $3,500 per
than or equal to 3,000 gross tons, gross ton or $6,408,000. gross ton or $7,048,800.
(iv) For a tank vessel less than or the greater of $2,000 per 10 The greater of $2,200 per
equal to 3,000 gross tons, other than a gross ton or $4,272,000. gross ton or $4,699,200.
single-hull tank vessel,
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for the greater of $1,000 per 10 The greater of $1,100 per
any vessel other than a vessel listed gross ton or $854,400. gross ton or $939,800.
in subparagraph (a)(1) of Sec.
138.230, including for any edible oil
tank vessel and any oil spill response,
vessel, are--
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Deepwater ports
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) The OPA 90 limit of liability for $373,800,000.............. 81.1 $633,850,000.
any deepwater port, including for any
component pipelines, other than a
deepwater port listed in subparagraph
(b)(2) of Sec. 138.230, is--
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for
deepwater ports with limits of
liability established by regulation
under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(2)),
including for any component pipelines,
are--
(i) For the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port $87,606,000............... 10 $96,366,600.
(LOOP).
(ii) [Reserved]......................... N/A....................... N/A N/A.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Onshore facilities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OPA 90 limit of liability for $350,000,000.............. 81.1 $633,850,000.
onshore facilities, including, but not
limited to, any motor vehicle, rolling
stock or onshore pipeline, is
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Simplified Regulatory Procedure for Future Inflation Adjustments to
the Limits
Four commenters supported adoption of the simplified regulatory
procedure
[[Page 72347]]
proposed in new Sec. 138.240(a) for making future CPI adjustments to
the limits of liability. The Coast Guard appreciates and agrees with
these comments. No commenter opposed this proposal. We are, therefore,
adopting the simplified regulatory procedure as proposed. This
procedure, which is based on a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
fee-adjustment procedure in 18 CFR 381.104(a) and (d), will help ensure
regular, timely inflation adjustments to the limits of liability, and
is an appropriate and helpful efficiency measure given the mandatory
and routine nature of the CPI adjustments.
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\16\ As of January 1, 2015, tank vessels not equipped with a
double hull can no longer operate on waters subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States, including the Exclusive Economic
Zone (EEZ), carrying oil in bulk as cargo or cargo residue; and
there are no waivers or extensions of the deadline. See Coast Guard
message DTG 221736ZDEC14. OPA 90, however, continues to specify
limits of liability for single-hull tank vessels. The Coast Guard
will, therefore, continue to adjust those limits of liability for
inflation.
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C. Inflation Adjustment Methodology
The CPI-2 NPRM did not propose any substantive changes to the Sec.
138.240 limit of liability adjustment methodology promulgated by the
CPI-1 Rule (Sec. 138.240(b)-(d), and previously designated as
paragraphs (a)-(c)). Two commenters, however, expressed support for the
inflation significance threshold in Sec. 138.240(c) and the adjustment
methodology established by the CPI-1 Rule generally, including the
annual reviews the Coast Guard will conduct if the significance
threshold is not met after 3 years. We appreciate receiving that input
and are today adopting those provisions of Sec. 138.240 with no
substantive change.
The only changes we have made to the regulatory text of Sec.
138.240, as adopted by the CPI-1 Rule, are: (1) Changing the title, (2)
adding the simplified regulatory procedure that was proposed as new
paragraph Sec. 138.240(a) in the CPI-2 NPRM; (3) redesignating the
paragraph lettering in the provisions that follow to accommodate
insertion of the simplified regulatory procedure and for clarity; and
(4) an editorial amendment to Sec. 138.240(b)(2) to more clearly
cross-reference Sec. 138.240(b)(1).
D. Clarifying Applicability of the ``Other Vessel'' Limits of Liability
to Edible Oil Tank Vessels and Oil Spill Response Vessels
The CPI-2 NPRM proposed to clarify the regulatory text for
consistency with OPA 90 as amended by the 1995 Edible Oil Regulatory
Reform Act \17\ and the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 1998.\18\
Those amendments to OPA 90 exclude edible oil tank vessels and oil
spill response vessels from the definition of ``tank vessel''. As a
result, both vessel types are classified as a matter of law to the
``any other vessel'' category for purposes of determining the
applicable OPA 90 limits of liability and evidence of financial
responsibility requirements.
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\17\ Pub. L. 104-55, Nov. 20, 1995, 109 Stat. 546, Section 2(d)
amending OPA 90 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(1) and 33 U.S.C. 2716(a).
\18\ Pub. L. 105-383, title IV, section 406, Nov. 13, 1998, 112
Stat. 3429.
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One commenter expressed support for our proposal to clarify
applicability of the vessel limits of liability to these two vessel
categories. We appreciate receiving this comment and believe that the
proposed clarification will reduce regulatory uncertainty. No commenter
opposed this proposal. We are therefore adopting the proposed
regulatory text clarification, with minor non-substantive editorial
revisions.
E. Applicability of the Tank Vessel Limits of Liability, Including for
MODUs
One commenter recommended that the Coast Guard amend the regulatory
text to further clarify that a mobile offshore drilling unit (MODU)
that is not ``constructed or adapted to carry, or carries, oil in bulk
as cargo or cargo residue'' is subject to the lower tank vessel limits
of liability in Sec. 138.230(a)(1)(ii) and (iv). The commenter's
understanding of the rule is correct. We, however, already clarified
this issue in the CPI-1 Rule. Resolving this issue was, indeed, the
only reason we published the CPI-1 Rule initially as an interim rule,
rather than a final rule, in July, 2009.
Specifically, in response to late comments we received on our
separate but related 2008 COFR Rule amendments (Docket No. USCG-2005-
21780), our CPI-1 Interim Rule proposed a new definition in Sec.
138.220 for the term ``single-hull''. The revision limited the term
``single-hull'' to a tank vessel that is ``constructed or adapted to
carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo residue.'' In
addition, we added limiting language in Sec. 138.230(a). We received
no adverse public comments on those proposed CPI-1 Interim Rule
revisions and, therefore, adopted the clarifications in the CPI-1 Final
Rule without change.
Those regulatory text revisions made clear that any tank vessel
that does not meet the regulatory definition of ``single hull''--
including but not limited to a MODU that is neither constructed nor
adapted to carry, and that does not carry, oil in bulk as cargo or
cargo residue--are excluded from the single-hull tank vessel limit of
liability categories in Sec. 138.230(a)(1)(i) and (iii). All such
vessels are instead subject to the ``other than a single-hull tank
vessel'' limit of liability categories in Sec. 138.230(a)(1)(ii) and
(iv).
Therefore, since the same standard applies to all tank vessels
(i.e., a vessel either is, or is not, a vessel ``constructed or adapted
to carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo residue''), we
do not see a need to single-out specific categories of tank vessels,
such as MODUs, in the regulatory text. Singling out MODUs could,
moreover, create unintended ambiguity respecting applicability of the
general standard to other types of tank vessels.
We note that this issue is very different from the clarifications
we are adopting today in respect to the treatment of edible oil tank
vessels and oil spill response vessels. We are adopting those
clarifications because those two vessel categories are, as a matter of
law, not ``tank vessels'' under OPA 90.\19\ They are, therefore,
subject to the ``other vessel'' limits of liability in Sec.
138.230(a)(2), rather than any of the ``tank vessel'' limits of
liability in Sec. 138.230(a)(1). A MODU, by comparison, is treated in
OPA 90 as a ``tank vessel''.\20\
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\19\ See 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4)(A) and (B).
\20\ 33 U.S.C. 2704(b)(1).
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F. Other Revisions To Clarify the Regulatory Text
The CPI-2 NPRM proposed a number of non-substantive clarifying and
editorial changes to the regulatory text to improve its readability.
These included: Updates to titles, and the list of authorities and
definitions; adding cross-references, including a cross-reference in
Sec. 138.230(d) to the OPA 90 offshore facility limit of liability for
damages as adjusted for inflation by BOEM; paragraph restructuring and
renumbering to accommodate new regulatory text; and plain language
revisions. We received no comments opposing these changes. This final
rule, therefore, adopts the proposed changes and we have further
clarified and edited the text for readability. The additional revisions
include: Further updates to and simplification of the list of
authorities citations; wording to clarify applicability of the limits
of liability to motor vehicles, rolling stock and pipelines for
consistency with OPA 90; simplification of the paragraph structure and
introductory clauses in Sec. 138.230 for readability and to eliminate
subparagraph titles; and an editorial amendment to Sec. 138.240(b)(2)
to more clearly cross-reference Sec. 138.240(b)(1).
[[Page 72348]]
V. Regulatory Analyses
We developed this rule after considering numerous statutes and
Executive Orders related to rulemaking. Below we summarize our analyses
based on these statutes or Executive Orders.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This rule has not been designated a ``significant
regulatory action,'' under section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the rule has not been reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget. A final Regulatory Assessment is available in the docket,
and a summary follows.
1. Regulatory Costs
We have analyzed the potential costs of this rulemaking, and expect
it to:
Regulatory Cost 1: Increase the cost of liability; and
Regulatory Cost 2: Increase the cost of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial responsibility.
a. Discussion of Regulatory Cost 1
This rule could increase the dollar amount of OPA 90 removal costs
and damages the responsible party of a vessel (other than a public
vessel), deepwater port, or onshore facility must pay in the event of
an OPA 90 incident. This regulatory cost, however, would only be
incurred by a responsible party if an incident resulted in OPA 90
removal costs and damages that exceeded the applicable vessel,
deepwater port, or onshore facility Previous Limit of Liability. In any
such case, assuming as we do in this analysis that the responsible
party is entitled to a limit of liability (i.e., that none of the
exceptions in 33 U.S.C. 2704(c) apply), the difference between the
Previous Limit of Liability amount and the New Limit of Liability
amount is the maximum increased cost to the responsible party. The
responsible party would have no legal obligation to incur incident
costs above this value.
i. Affected Population--Vessels
This rule could affect the responsible parties of any vessel (other
than a public vessel),\21\ involved in an OPA 90 incident.\22\ The
impact would, however, only occur if the incident resulted in OPA 90
removal costs and damages in excess of the vessel's Previous Limit of
Liability.
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\21\ According to Coast Guard's MISLE database, there are over
200,000 vessels of various types in the population of vessels using
U.S. waters that are not public vessels. Examples of vessel types
include, but are not limited to: fish processing vessel, freight
barge, freight ship, industrial vessel, mobile offshore drilling
unit, offshore supply vessel, oil recovery vessel, passenger vessel,
commercial fishing vessel, passenger barge, research vessel, school
ship, tank barge, tank ship, and towing vessel.
\22\ See the OPA 90 definition of ``incident'' in footnote 4,
above.
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Coast Guard data as of May 2014 indicate that--since OPA 90 was
enacted in August of 1990--67 vessel incidents (i.e., an average of
approximately three vessel incidents per year) resulted in OPA 90
removal costs and damages in excess of the applicable Previous Limits
of Liability.\23\ For the purpose of this analysis, we have therefore
assumed that three OPA 90 vessel incidents with costs exceeding the
Previous Limits of Liability would occur each year throughout the 10-
year analysis period (2016-2025).
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\23\ See United States Coast Guard Report to Congress, ``Oil
Pollution Act Liability Limits in 2014'', Department of Homeland
Security, October 2, 2014, which is available in the docket at
https://www.regulations.gov, Docket No. USCG-2013-1006, RIN 1625-
AC14.
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ii. Affected Population--Deepwater Ports
This rule could affect the responsible parties of any deepwater
port (including its component pipelines) involved in an OPA 90
incident. The impact would, however, only occur if the incident
resulted in OPA 90 removal costs and damages in excess of the deepwater
port's Previous Limit of Liability.
Currently there are only two licensed deepwater ports in
operation--LOOP and Northeast Gateway. Northeast Gateway is a liquefied
natural gas (LNG) port and, as currently designed and operated, uses
less than 100 gallons of oil. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that
Northeast Gateway would ever be the source of an OPA 90 incident with
removal costs and damages in excess of the Previous Limit of Liability.
We therefore do not include Northeast Gateway in this analysis.\24\
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\24\ Two other similarly-designed LNG deepwater ports, Gulf
Gateway Energy Bridge and Port Dolphin, were mentioned in the
regulatory analysis for the CPI-1 Rule. But, on June 28, 2013, the
Maritime Administrator (MARAD) cleared decommissioning of the Gulf
Gateway Energy Bridge, approving termination of its license; and, on
August 28, 2015, Port Dolphin Energy LLC Deepwater Port surrendered
its license. In addition, MARAD licensed the Neptune LNG, LLC,
deepwater port on March 23, 2007. But, on July 22, 2013, MARAD
approved a request by Suez Energy North America, Inc., to suspend
that deepwater port's operations for five years and to amend its
license. Neptune, moreover, has substantially the same design as
Northeast Gateway and, therefore, also is not likely to ever have an
oil pollution incident with removal costs and damages in excess of
the Previous Limit of Liability. These LNG deepwater ports,
therefore, also are not included in this analysis. MARAD has
received applications for two other LNG deepwater ports, and we
expect others will be proposed over the next ten years. If those
ports are designed to use substantially the same technology as
Northeast Gateway, they also would not be likely to ever have oil
pollution incidents with removal costs and damages in excess of the
Previous Limit of Liability.
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To date, LOOP (the only oil deepwater port in operation) has not
had an OPA 90 incident that resulted in removal costs and damages in
excess of LOOP's Previous Limit of Liability of $87,606,000. However,
the potential for such a spill exists. Therefore, for the purposes of
this analysis, we show the cost of one OPA 90 incident occurring at
LOOP over the 10-year analysis period (2016-2025), with OPA 90 removal
costs and damages in excess of the Previous Limit of Liability for
LOOP.
iii. Affected Population--Onshore Facilities
This rule could affect the responsible parties for any onshore
facility (including onshore pipelines) involved in an OPA 90 incident.
The impact would, however, only occur if the incident resulted in OPA
90 removal costs and damages in excess of the onshore facility Previous
Limit of Liability.
Because of the large number and diversity of onshore facilities, it
is not possible to predict which specific types or sizes of onshore
facilities might be affected by this rule. Coast Guard data, however,
indicate that from the enactment of OPA 90 in August, 1990, through
May, 2015, only one onshore facility incident--the 2010 Enbridge
Pipeline spill in Michigan--has likely resulted in OPA 90 removal costs
and damages exceeding the onshore facility Previous Limit of Liability
of $350,000,000.\25\
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\25\ As of June 2015, Enbridge Energy Partners reported costs of
more than $1.2 billion resulting from the pipeline spill. https://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2015/06/enbridge_to_pay_additional_4_m.html.
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The Enbridge Pipeline incident indicates that the Previous Limit of
Liability for an onshore facility, although high, can still be exceeded
by a low likelihood, but high consequence oil spill. Therefore, for the
purposes of this analysis, we assume one onshore facility incident
would occur over the 10-year analysis time period (2016-
[[Page 72349]]
2025) with OPA 90 removal costs and damages in excess of the onshore
facility Previous Limit of Liability.
iv. Cost Summary Regulatory Cost 1
(a) Vessels
We estimate the greatest cost to a vessel responsible party
entitled to a limit of liability under OPA 90, for purposes of this
analysis, by assuming that the average annual cost from the historical
incidents analyzed would remain constant throughout the analysis period
(2016-2025). The average annual increased cost of liability was
estimated first by calculating the difference between the Previous
Limit of Liability and the New Limit of Liability for each of the 67
historical vessel incidents with removal costs and damages in excess of
the applicable OPA 90 limit of liability. These values were then
totaled \26\ and divided by the number of years of data to estimate the
average annual increased cost.
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\26\ See Figure 3 in the Regulatory Assessment.
$60,376,000 / 24 years = $2,515,700 per year (non-discounted dollars)
(b) Deepwater Ports
We estimate the greatest cost to a deepwater port responsible party
entitled to a limit of liability under OPA 90, for purposes of this
analysis, by assuming that the cost of the incident would be equal to
the New Limit of Liability. As mentioned above, LOOP has never had an
incident with OPA 90 removal costs and damages in excess of its
Previous Limit of Liability. Therefore, given the lack of any deepwater
port historical data, we have assumed that a LOOP incident with costs
above its Previous Limit of Liability of $87,606,000 would be analogous
to a vessel incident with costs in excess of $87,606,000 with respect
to the duration of responsible party payments.
Specifically, relying on historical duration of payment data for
vessel incidents, we assume that the LOOP responsible parties would
make OPA 90 removal cost and damage payments for the one hypothetical
incident over the course of 10 years after the incident date.\27\ In
addition, for the purposes of this analysis, we assume that the
payments would be spread out in equal annual amounts over the 10-year
analysis period (2016-2025).\28\ Applying these assumptions, the
average annual cost resulting from the one hypothetical LOOP incident
would be $876,000 (non-discounted dollars).
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\27\ The per-incident duration of payments was determined by
comparing the incident date and the completion date for each vessel
incident occurring since enactment of OPA 90 with incident removal
costs and damages (in 2014 dollars) above LOOP's ``Previous Limit of
Liability'' of $87,606,000. There were six incidents fitting this
criteria. Three are ongoing incidents, and three are completed. The
average duration of payments for the three completed incidents was
approximately 10 years.
\28\ Based on Coast Guard subject matter expert experience, we
have assumed that the payments would be spread out equally over the
10-year analysis period. This realistically models the long duration
of OPA 90 removal actions (particularly in the case of an incident
resulting in OPA 90 removal costs and damages exceeding the limit of
liability), the time lag in billings and payments and, if
applicable, associated claim submissions, claim payments and
litigation.
$96,366,600-$87,606,000 = $8,760,600
$8,760,600 / 10 years = $876,000 per year (non-discounted dollars)
(c) Onshore Facilities
We estimate the greatest cost to an onshore facility responsible
party entitled to a limit of liability under OPA 90, for purposes of
this analysis, by assuming that the cost of the incident would be equal
to the New Limit of Liability. Based on NPFC's experience with onshore
facility incidents, we assume that an onshore facility responsible
party would be making OPA 90 removal cost and damage payments for the
one estimated incident over the course of 10 years after the incident
date.\29\ We further assume that the payments would be spread out in
equal annual amounts over the 10-year analysis period (2016-2025).\30\
Applying these assumptions, the average annual cost resulting from the
one estimated onshore facility OPA 90 incident over 10 years is
estimated to be $28,385,000 (non-discounted dollars).
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\29\ The per-incident duration of payments was determined by
comparing the incident date and the completion date of each onshore
facility incident occurring since enactment of OPA 90 with incident
removal costs and damages (in 2014 dollars) greater than or equal to
$5 million. There were 21 incidents fitting these criteria: 9 are
ongoing incidents and 12 are completed. The average duration for the
12 completed incidents was approximately 10 years.
\30\ See footnote 28, above.
$633,850,000-$350,000,000 = $283,850,000
$283,850,000 / 10 years = $28,385,000 per year (non-discounted
dollars).
v. Present Value of Regulatory Cost 1
The 10-year present value of Regulatory Cost 1, at a 3 percent
discount rate, is estimated to be $271.1 million. The 10-year present
value of Regulatory Cost 1, at a 7 percent discount rate, is estimated
to be $223.2 million. The annualized discounted cost of Regulatory Cost
1, at a 3 percent discount rate, is estimated to be $31.8 million. The
annualized discounted cost of Regulatory Cost 1, at a 7 percent
discount rate is estimated to be $31.8 million.
b. Discussion of Regulatory Cost 2
OPA 90 requires that the responsible parties for certain types and
sizes of vessels and for deepwater ports establish and maintain
evidence of financial responsibility to ensure that they have the
ability to pay for OPA 90 removal costs and damages, up to the
applicable limits of liability, in the event of an OPA 90 incident.\31\
Therefore, because the regulatory changes contemplated by this rule
would increase those limits of liability, vessel and deepwater port
responsible parties could incur additional costs establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial responsibility as a result of this
rulemaking.
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\31\ See 33 U.S.C. 2716(a) and (c)(2). OPA 90 also imposes
financial responsibility requirements on offshore facilities. Those
requirements are, however, regulated by the BOEM. (See 30 CFR part
553.) OPA 90 does not impose evidence of financial responsibility
requirements on onshore facilities.
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As discussed above and further below, there will be no Regulatory
Cost 2 impacts on deepwater ports because LOOP is the only deepwater
port in operation required to provide evidence of financial
responsibility, and LOOP is not expected to have any increased evidence
of financial responsibility costs as a result of this rule. Therefore,
only vessel responsible parties are expected to see Regulatory Cost 2
impacts.
i. Affected Population--Vessels
Vessel responsible parties who are required to establish and
maintain evidence of financial responsibility, may do so using any of
the following methods: Insurance, Self-Insurance, Financial Guaranty,
Surety Bond, or any other method approved by the Director, NPFC.\32\ As
of April 1, 2015, the NPFC's Certificate of Financial Responsibility
(COFR) database contained 19,750 vessels using Insurance, 4,199 vessels
using Self-Insurance, 1,368 vessels using Financial Guaranties, and 2
vessels using Surety Bonds. This rule could affect the cost to vessel
responsible parties of establishing and maintaining evidence of
financial responsibility using any of these
[[Page 72350]]
methods.\33\ The OPA 90 evidence of financial responsibility applicable
amounts required under 33 CFR 138.80(f) are equal to the OPA 90 limits
of liability in 33 CFR 138.230(a) and automatically update when the
limits of liability are increased for inflation. Because of this
relationship, the amount of financial responsibility required is also
based on the type of vessel and, in the case of tank vessels, on their
hull type.
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\32\ See 33 CFR 138.80(b). The term ``Insurance'' is capitalized
here to refer to the insurance used to comply with the requirement
under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2716) for responsible parties to establish
and maintain evidence of financial responsibility. This use of the
term ``Insurance'' is distinct from other types of insurance a
responsible party might have (e.g., vessel hull insurance, marine
pollution insurance, etc.).
\33\ There currently are no vessel responsible parties using
other methods of demonstrating financial responsibility approved by
the Director, NPFC, and, based on historical experience, NPFC does
not expect any responsible parties will use any other method during
the analysis period (2016-2025)
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ii. Affected Population--Deepwater Ports
As discussed above in respect to Cost 1, currently there are two
licensed deepwater ports in operation--LOOP and Northeast Gateway. The
Coast Guard, however, has not yet proposed regulations implementing OPA
90 financial responsibility requirements for deepwater ports.
Therefore, although LOOP is providing evidence of financial
responsibility under a procedure that was grandfathered by OPA 90, 33
U.S.C. 2716(h), there are no OPA 90 evidence of financial
responsibility regulatory requirements that currently apply to
deepwater ports generally, including Northeast Gateway. We have,
therefore, analyzed Cost 2 impacts only in respect to LOOP.
iii. Affected Population--Onshore Facilities
None. There is no requirement in OPA 90 for onshore facility
responsible parties to establish and maintain evidence of financial
responsibility.
iv. Cost Summary Regulatory Cost 2
(a) Vessels
Increases to Vessel Insurance Premiums. The calculation of
Insurance premium rates are dependent on many constantly changing
factors, including: market forces, interest rates and investment
opportunities for the premium income, the terms and conditions of the
policy, and underwriting criteria such as vessel age, loss history,
construction, classification details, and management history. As
calculated above, the change in the limits of liability for vessels is
10 percent (rounded to one decimal place as required by the rule). At
the NPRM stage of this rulemaking, data was requested from 9 of a
possible 14 Insurance companies. Four responded with their current
premium rates and their best estimates of the increase in premium rates
resulting from the proposed regulatory change. These four Insurance
companies represented approximately 93 percent of vessels that use the
Insurance method of financial responsibility. The data provided
estimated that a 6 percent increase in premiums would occur for an
increase in the limits of liability in the range of 5 percent to 10
percent. Therefore, consistent with the NPRM's Regulatory Analysis, it
is assumed that a 10 percent increase in the limits of liability would
cause on average a 6 percent increase in Insurance premiums charged
across all vessel types.\34\
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\34\ After we published the NPRM, several Insurance companies
provided updated data indicating that, due to changing market
conditions, an increase in limits of liability for vessels of 15% or
less should not cause them to raise their premiums. The actual
impact of Regulatory Cost 2 could therefore be less than the impact
we are estimating here. This is because we rely in this analysis on
the data used for the NPRM regulatory analysis.
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We estimated costs by multiplying the number of vessels by vessel
category for each year of the analysis (2016-2025) by the Expected
Average Increase in Premium for that particular vessel type. The annual
cost associated with increased Insurance premiums is estimated to be
$6.5 million (non-discounted dollars).
Migration of responsible parties currently using the Self-Insurance
and Financial Guaranty Methods of Financial Responsibility to the
Insurance market. Based on the financial documentation received from
responsible parties using the Self-Insurance or Financial Guaranty
methods, the Coast Guard estimates that the responsible parties for 2
percent of the vessels that have COFRs based on those methods might
need to migrate to the Insurance method of financial responsibility.
The cost estimates for responsible parties migrating to the
Insurance method of financial responsibility were calculated by first
multiplying the number of vessels using Self-Insurance or Financial
Guaranty by vessel category for each year of the analysis period (2016-
2025) by the presumed percent of impacted vessels (2 percent) and then
multiplying the product by the estimated Expected Average Annual
Premium for that particular vessel type.
The annual cost associated with vessel responsible parties
migrating to Insurance is estimated to be $532,100 (non-discounted
dollars).
Increased Cost to Responsible Parties using the Surety Bond Method.
Currently only one responsible party uses the Surety Bond method to
establish evidence of financial responsible for two tank vessels. For
that responsible party, additional Surety Bond coverage will be
required to establish or maintain evidence of financial responsibility
up to the New Limits of Liability. The responsible party would also
have the option of changing the method of financial guaranty to the
Insurance method, or (if the responsible party meets the financial
requirements to do so) to the Self-Insurance or Financial Guaranty
method.
We do not have data on the fees charged by Surety Bond providers.
But, if the cost of obtaining Surety Bond coverage were higher than the
cost of Insurance, we would expect the one responsible party currently
relying on the Surety Bond method to use the Insurance method instead.
Therefore, we assume that the cost to the responsible party of using
the surety method does not exceed the Insurance premium associated with
the Insurance method. In the case of the one responsible party that is
using the Surety Bond method for two tank vessels under 3,000 gross
tons, this would be cost of $3,700 per vessel per year (i.e., the cost
of Insurance per vessel) or a total annual cost of $7,400.
(b) Deepwater Ports
The 10 percent increase in the LOOP limit of liability resulting
from this rulemaking is not expected to increase the cost to the LOOP
responsible parties associated with establishing and maintaining LOOP's
evidence of financial responsibility. This is because the LOOP
responsible parties are already providing evidence of financial
responsibility to the Coast Guard at a level that exceeds both LOOP's
Previous Limit of Liability and its New Limit of Liability of
$96,366,600. The Coast Guard has historically accepted the following
documentation as evidence of financial responsibility for LOOP:
[ssquf] An insurance policy issued by Oil Insurance Limited (OIL)
of Bermuda with coverage up to $150 million per OPA 90 incident and a
$225 million annual aggregate,
[ssquf] Documentation that LOOP operates with a net worth of at
least $50 million, and
[ssquf] Documentation that the total value of the OIL policy
aggregate plus LOOP's working capital does not fall below $100 million.
The Coast Guard, therefore, does not expect this action to change
the terms of the OIL policy, to result in an increased premium for the
OIL policy, or to require LOOP to have higher minimum
[[Page 72351]]
net worth or working capital requirements.
(c) Onshore Facilities
None. There is no requirement in OPA 90 for onshore facility
responsible parties to establish and maintain evidence of financial
responsibility.
v. Present Value of Regulatory cost 2
The 10-year present value, at a 3 percent discount rate, is
estimated to be $60.0 million. The 10-year present value, at a 7
percent discount rate, is estimated to be $49.3 million. The annualized
discounted cost, at a 3 percent discount rate, is estimated to be $7.0
million. The annualized discounted cost, at a 7 percent discount rate,
is estimated to be $7.0 million.
c. Present Value of Total Cost
The 10-year present value, at a 3 percent discount rate, is
estimated to be $331.0 million. The 10-year present value, at a 7
percent discount rate, is estimated to be $272.5 million. The
annualized discounted cost, at a 3 percent discount rate is estimated
to be $38.8 million. The annualized discounted cost, at a 7 percent
discount rate is estimated to be $38.8 million.
2. Regulatory Benefits
In our Regulatory Analysis, we have analyzed the regulatory
benefits of this final rule qualitatively.
a. Regulatory Benefit 1: Ensure that the OPA 90 limits of liability
keep pace with inflation.
OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4)) mandates that limits of liability be
updated periodically to reflect significant increases in the CPI to
account for inflation. The intent of this requirement is to ensure that
the real values of the limits of liability do not decline over time.
Absent CPI adjustments, a responsible party ultimately gains an
advantage that is not contemplated by OPA 90 because the responsible
party pays a reduced percentage of the total incident costs the
responsible party would be required to pay with inflation incorporated
into the determination of the applicable limit of liability. This final
rule requires responsible parties to internalize inflation, thereby
benefitting the public.
b. Regulatory Benefit 2: Ensure that the responsible party is held
accountable.
By increasing the limits of liability to account for inflation,
this final rule ensures that the appropriate amount of removal costs
and damages are borne by the responsible party and that liability risk
is not shifted away from the responsible party to the Fund. This helps
preserve the ''polluter pays'' principle as intended by Congress and
preserves the Fund for its other authorized uses. Failing to adjust the
limits of liability for inflation, by comparison, shifts those costs to
the public and the Fund.
c. Regulatory Benefit 3: Reduce and deter substandard shipping and
oil handling practices.
Increasing the limits of liability serves to reduce the number of
substandard ships in U.S. waters and ports because Insurers, Surety
Bond providers and Financial Guarantors are less likely to provide
coverage for substandard vessels at the new levels of OPA 90 liability.
Maintaining the limits of liability also helps preserve the deterrent
effect of the OPA 90 liability provisions for Self Insurers.
With respect to oil handling practices, the higher the responsible
parties' limits of liability are, the greater the incentive for them to
operate in the safest and most risk-averse manner possible. Conversely,
the lower the limits of liability, the lower the incentive is for
responsible parties to spend money on capital improvements and
operation and maintenance systems that will protect against oil spills.
d. Regulatory Benefit 4: Provide statutory consistency, regulatory
certainty and administrative efficiency using the streamlined approach.
Under the simplified regulatory procedure established by this final
rule, the Director, NPFC, will publish the inflation-adjusted limits of
liability in the Federal Register as final rule amendments to 33 CFR
138.230. The Director will also use this simplified regulatory
procedure to update 33 CFR 138.230 to reflect statutory changes to the
OPA 90 limits of liability. This will ensure that the limits of
liability set forth in 33 CFR 138, Subpart B, remain consistent with
the statutory limits of liability if they are amended. This simplified
regulatory procedure will provide regulatory certainty by ensuring
regular, timely inflation adjustments to the limits of liability as
required by statute. The approach is also an appropriate and helpful
efficiency measure given the mandatory and routine nature of the CPI
adjustments. The public comments on the NPRM supported this simplified
rulemaking procedure, and no commenter opposed it.
e. Regulatory Benefit 5: Provide regulatory clarity to responsible
parties for edible oil and response tank vessels.
As discussed above, 33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4) excludes edible oil tank
vessels (i.e., tank vessels on which the only oil carried as cargo is
an animal fat or vegetable oil) and oil spill response vessels from the
OPA 90 tank vessel limits of liability in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(1). The
effect of this exclusion is that edible oil tank vessels and oil spill
response vessels are classified, as a matter of law, to the ``any other
vessel'' limit of liability category in 33 U.S.C. 2704(a)(2) of OPA 90.
In addition, edible oil tank vessels and oil spill response vessels are
subject to the lower OPA 90 evidence of financial responsibility
requirements applicable to the ``any other vessel'' category.
The special treatment accorded by OPA 90 to edible oil tank vessels
and oil spill response vessels was not reflected in the prior
regulatory text of 33 CFR part 138. The Coast Guard's clarification to
the regulatory text by this final rule will, therefore, promote
consistency with OPA 90 and be helpful to industry and the public by
reducing regulatory uncertainty.
B. Small Entities
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, we have
considered whether this rule would have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities. The term ``small entities''
comprises small businesses, not-for-profit organizations that are
independently owned and operated and are not dominant in their fields,
and governmental jurisdictions with populations of less than 50,000. A
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis discussing the impact of this
rule on small entities is available in the docket, and a summary
follows.
We have analyzed the potential impacts of this final rule on small
entities, and expect it to: \35\
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\35\ We expect the simplified regulatory procedure and the
clarification of edible oil cargo tank vessels and tank vessels
designated as oil spill response vessels to provide a marginal
benefit to all responsible parties, including small entities.
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Regulatory Cost 1. Increase the cost of liability, and
Regulatory Cost 2. Increase the cost of establishing and
maintaining evidence of financial responsibility.
1. Regulatory Cost 1: Increase the Cost of Liability
As explained above in Part V.A of this preamble and in the
Regulatory Analysis for this rule, Regulatory Cost 1 will only occur if
there is an OPA 90 incident that has OPA 90 removal costs and damages
in excess of the existing limits of liability.
a. Affected Population--Vessels
The rule could affect the responsible parties of any vessel (other
than a public
[[Page 72352]]
vessel) from which oil is discharged, or which poses the substantial
threat of a discharge of oil, into or upon the navigable waters or
adjoining shorelines or the exclusive economic zone of the United
States. This can include vessels owned, operated or demise chartered by
small entities.
According to Coast Guard's MISLE database, there are over 200,000
vessels of various types in the vessel population that are not public
vessels. Examples of vessel types include, but are not limited to: fish
processing vessel, freight barge, freight ship, industrial vessel,
mobile offshore drilling unit, offshore supply vessel, oil recovery
vessel, passenger vessel, commercial fishing vessel, passenger barge,
research vessel, school ship, tank barge, tank ship, and towing vessel.
Coast Guard data indicate that--from the date of enactment of OPA
90 through May 1, 2014--there were 67 OPA 90 vessel incidents (i.e., an
average of approximately three OPA 90 vessel incidents per year) that
resulted in OPA 90 removal costs and damages in excess of the Previous
Limits of Liability. For the purpose of this analysis, we have
therefore assumed that three OPA 90 vessel incidents would continue to
occur each year throughout the 10-year analysis period (2016-2025). In
addition, although we do not have any way to predict if any of the
estimated three incidents per year would involve a small entity, we
have assumed that the three vessels involved are owned, operated or
demise chartered by small entities.
b. Cost Summary--Vessels
As calculated in the Regulatory Analysis, the average cost of a
vessel incident that exceeds its Previous Limit of Liability is
approximately $838,600 but could range from $85,800 to $11,368,500. We
note that the majority of the incidents, 60 percent, would only have
incurred an additional $85,800 in OPA 90 removal costs and damages.
However, in the event that a small entity had a vessel incident which
resulted in OPA 90 removal costs and damages above the Previous Limit
of Liability in that amount, it would likely have a significant
economic impact.
c. Affected Population--Deepwater Ports
As discussed above in Part V.A of this preamble and in the
Regulatory Analysis, the only deepwater port affected by the final rule
is LOOP. LOOP, however, does not meet the Small Business Administration
(SBA) criteria to be categorized as a small entity.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ LOOP is a limited liability corporation (NAICS Code:
48691001) owned by three major oil companies: Marathon Oil Company,
Murphy Oil Corporation, and Shell Oil Company. None of these
companies are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Cost Summary--Deepwater Ports
Because there are no small entity deepwater ports, there would be
no Regulatory Cost 1 small entity impacts to Deepwater Ports.
e. Affected Population--Onshore Facilities
As discussed above in Part V.A of this preamble and in the
Regulatory Analysis, the final rule could affect the responsible
parties for any onshore facility.\37\ Since the enactment of OPA 90,
however, the 2010 Enbridge Pipeline spill in Michigan may well be the
only onshore facility incident resulting in OPA 90 removal costs and
damages exceeding the previous $350 million onshore facility limit of
liability and that onshore facility is not a small entity.
Nevertheless, in the Regulatory Analysis for the rule, we assume that
there will be one onshore facility OPA 90 incident occurring over the
10-year analysis period with OPA 90 removal costs and damages exceeding
the existing limit of liability.
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\37\ See the OPA 90 definitions of ``facility'' and ``onshore
facility'' in footnotes 3 and 6, above.
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The onshore facility population encompasses dozens of NAICS codes
representing diverse industries.\38\ It, therefore, would not be
practical to predict which specific type or size of onshore facility
might be involved in the one hypothetical incident assumed to occur
over the 10-year analysis period, or whether it would involve a small
entity.
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\38\ Examples of onshore facilities include, but are not limited
to: onshore pipelines; rail; motor carriers; petroleum bulk stations
and terminals; petroleum refineries; government installations; oil
production facilities; electrical utility plants; electrical
transmission lines; mobile facilities; marinas, marine fuel stations
and related facilities; farms; residential and commercial fuel tank
owners; fuel oil distribution facilities; and gasoline stations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Cost Summary--Onshore Facilities
As previously stated above, there has never been a small entity
onshore facility incident with OPA 90 removal costs and damage that
exceeded the Previous Limit of Liability of $350 million. However, in
the event that a small entity onshore facility were to have an incident
with OPA 90 removal costs and damages equal to the New Limit of
Liability, that onshore facility would be responsible for an average
annual additional cost of $28,385,000. This would likely have a
significant economic impact on the small entity.
2. Regulatory Cost 2: Increase the Cost of Establishing and Maintaining
Financial Responsibility
a. Affected Population--Vessels
Regulatory Cost 2 will only apply to vessel responsible parties
required to establish and maintain OPA 90 evidence of financial
responsibility under 33 U.S.C. 2716 and 33 CFR part 138, subpart A. As
of July 3, 2013, there were 1,744 unique entities in the Coast Guard's
COFR database that could be affected by the rulemaking. Because of the
large number of entities, we determined the statistically significant
sample size necessary to represent the population. The appropriate
statistical sample size, at a 95 percent confidence level and a 5
percent confidence interval, for the population is 315 entities. This
means we are 95 percent certain that the characteristics of the sample
reflect the characteristics of the entire population within a margin of
error of + or -5 percent.
Using a random number generator, we then randomly selected the 315
entities from the population for analysis. Of the sample, 309 were
businesses, 0 were not-for-profit organizations and 6 were governmental
jurisdictions. For each business entity, we next determined the number
of employees, annual revenue, and NAICS Code to the extent possible
using public and proprietary business databases. The SBA's publication
``U.S. Small Business Administration Table of Small Business Size
Standards Matched to North American Industry Classification System
codes effective January 22, 2014'' \39\ was then used to determine
whether an entity is a small entity. For governmental jurisdictions, we
determined whether they had populations of less than 50,000 as per the
criteria in the RFA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Of the sampled population, 220 would be considered small entities
using SBA's criteria, 72 would not be small entities, and no data was
found for the remaining 23 entities.\40\ If we assume that entities
where no revenue or employee data was found are small entities, then
small entities make up 77 percent of the sample.\41\ We can then
extrapolate the entire population of entities from the sample using the
following formula, where ``X'' is the
[[Page 72353]]
number of small entities within the total entities in the population.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ The 6 governmental jurisdictions were a subset of the 23
entities where no data was found.
\41\ The data show that small entities are often responsible
parties for multiple vessels.
(X small entities in the total population /1,744 total entities in the
population) = (243 small entities in the sample / 315 total entities in
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
the sample).
Solving for X, X equals 1,345 small entities within the total
population of 1,744 vessel responsible parties.
b. Cost Summary--Vessels
As discussed above in Part V.A. and in the Regulatory Analysis, the
rule could increase the cost to vessel responsible parties associated
with establishing and maintaining evidence of financial responsibility
in three ways:
[ssquf] Responsible parties using the Insurance method of
establishing and maintaining evidence of financial responsibility could
incur higher Insurance premiums.
[ssquf] Some responsible parties currently using the Self-Insurance
or Financial Guaranty methods of establishing and maintaining evidence
of financial responsibility might need to migrate to the Insurance
method for their vessels. This would only be the case if the Self-
Insuring responsible parties or Financial Guarantors' financial
condition (working capital and net worth) no longer qualified them to
establish and maintain evidence of financial responsibility.
[ssquf] The one responsible party using the Surety Bond method will
need to ensure that the amount of the Surety Bonds are adequate to
cover OPA 90 removal costs and damages up to the New Limits of
Liability. Alternatively, the responsible party could opt to switch to
one of the other methods of establishing and maintaining evidence of
financial responsibility.
i. Increases to Vessel Insurance Premiums
Based on the data in the Regulatory Analysis above, we have
estimated the average annual per-vessel increase in Insurance premiums
to be $300.
$6,450,800 / 19,724 vessels = $327 per vessel
Rounded to nearest 100 = $300 per vessel
The estimated increased cost of establishing evidence of financial
responsibility for each small entity is calculated by multiplying the
number of vessels using the Insurance method by the average increase in
insurance premiums. This calculation was conducted for each small
entity. The value was then divided by the annual revenue for the small
entity and multiplied by 100 to determine the percent impact of the
final rule on the small entities' annual revenue.
ii. Migration of Responsible Parties Currently Using the Self-Insurance
and Financial Responsibility Methods of Financial Responsibility to the
Insurance Market
Based on review of financial data of entities using the Self-
Insurance or Financial Guaranty method for establishing and maintaining
evidence of financial responsibility, Coast Guard subject matter
experts estimate that responsible parties for 2 percent of vessels
using those two methods would not have the requisite working capital
and net worth necessary to qualify for these methods as a result of the
rule. In those cases, we assume they will use the Insurance method to
establish and maintain evidence of financial responsibility. Based on
the data in Part V.A., above, and in the Regulatory Analysis, the
estimated average annual cost per vessel of migrating from the Self-
insurance/Financial Guaranty methods to the Insurance method is $5,100.
$564,700 / 111 vessels = $5,087 per vessel
Rounded to nearest 100 = $5,100 per vessel
The increased cost of establishing and maintaining evidence of
financial responsibility for each small entity is calculated by:
Multiplying the number of vessels using the Self-Insurance/Financial
Guaranty methods by 2 percent and then multiplying by the Average
Annual Insurance Premium ($5,100)
For example, the cost for a small entity responsible party with 100
vessels that would not have the requisite working capital and net worth
necessary to use the Self-Insurance or Financial Guaranty method for
all of its vessels would be calculated as follows:
(100 vessels using Self-Insurance or Financial Guaranty method x 2
percent of vessels expected to migrate from Self-Insurance or Financial
Guaranty method to the Insurance method x $5,100/year) = $10,200/year
This calculation was conducted for each small entity. The value was
then divided by the annual revenue for the small entity and multiplied
by 100 to determine the percent impact of the rule on the small
entities' annual revenue.
iii. Increased Cost of Using the Surety Bond Method of Financial
Responsibility
As previously noted, there is one responsible party using the
Surety Bond method of establishing and maintaining financial
responsibility for two vessels. This responsible party is not a small
entity. In addition, based on Coast Guard subject matter expertise, we
do not expect any other responsible party to use the Surety Bond method
during the analysis period. Because there are no small entities
involved, there would be no Regulatory Cost 2 small entity impacts for
these two vessels.
c. Affected Population--Deepwater Ports
As discussed above, the only deepwater port potentially affected by
the rule is LOOP. LOOP, however, does not meet SBA's criteria to be
categorized as a small entity.
d. Cost Summary--Deepwater Ports
Because there are no small entity deepwater ports, there would be
no Regulatory Cost 2 small entity impacts to Deepwater Ports.
e. Affected Population--Onshore Facilities
As stated above in Part V.A. and in the Regulatory Analysis,
onshore facilities are not required to establish and maintain evidence
of financial responsibility under 33 U.S.C. 2716.
f. Cost Summary--Onshore Facilities
Because onshore facilities are not required to establish and
maintain evidence of financial responsibility, there are no Regulatory
Cost 2 small entity impacts to onshore facilities resulting from this
rulemaking.
The figure below shows the economic impact to small entities of
Regulatory Cost 2.
Economic Impact to Small Entities--Regulatory Cost 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent of annual Extrapolated number of Percent of small
revenue small entities entities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1% to 2% 17 1.3%
< 1% 1,328 98.7%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 72354]]
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Public Law 104-121, we offered to assist small
entities in understanding this rule so that they could better evaluate
its effects on them and participate in the rulemaking. The Coast Guard
will not retaliate against small entities that question or complain
about this rule or any policy or action of the Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal
employees who enforce, or otherwise determine compliance with, Federal
regulations to the Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory
Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small Business Regulatory
Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these actions annually and
rates each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to
comment on actions by employees of the Coast Guard, call 1-888-REG-FAIR
(1-888-734-3247).
D. Collection of Information
This rule calls for no new collection of information under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520.
E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism under E.O. 13132
(``Federalism'') if it has a substantial direct effect on States, on
the relationship between the national government and the States, or on
the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels
of government. We have analyzed this final rule under that Order and
have determined that it is consistent with the fundamental federalism
principles and preemption requirements described in E.O. 13132. This
final rule makes necessary adjustments to the OPA 90 limits of
liability to reflect significant increases in the CPI, establishes a
framework for such future CPI increases, and clarifies the OPA 90
limits of liability for certain vessels. Nothing in this final rule
affects the preservation of State authorities under 33 U.S.C. 2718,
including the authority of any State to impose additional liability or
financial responsibility requirements with respect to discharges of oil
within such State. Therefore, it has no implications for federalism.
The Coast Guard recognizes the key role that State and local
governments may have in making regulatory determinations. Additionally,
for rules with federalism implications and preemptive effect, E.O.
13132 specifically directs agencies to consult with State and local
governments during the rulemaking process. The NPRM, therefore, invited
anyone who believed this rule has implications for federalism under
E.O. 13132 to contact us. We received no such public comment.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538,
requires Federal agencies to assess the effects of their discretionary
regulatory actions. In particular, the Act addresses actions that may
result in the expenditure by a State, local, or tribal government, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector of $100,000,000 (adjusted for
inflation) or more in any one year. Though this rule will not result in
such an expenditure, we do discuss the effects of this rule elsewhere
in this preamble.
G. Taking of Private Property
This rule will not cause a taking of private property or otherwise
have taking implications under E.O. 12630 (``Governmental Actions and
Interference with Constitutionally Protected Property Rights'').
H. Civil Justice Reform
This rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2)
of E.O. 12988, (``Civil Justice Reform''), to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this rule under E.O. 13045 (``Protection of
Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks''). This rule
is not an economically significant rule and would not create an
environmental risk to health or risk to safety that might
disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal implications under E.O. 13175
(``Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments''),
because it would not have a substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this rule under E.O. 13211 (``Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or
Use''). We have determined that it is not a ``significant energy
action'' under that order because it is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' under E.O. 12866 and is not likely to have a significant
adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act, codified as a
note to 15 U.S.C. 272, directs agencies to use voluntary consensus
standards in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides
Congress, through OMB, with an explanation of why using these standards
would be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards are technical standards (e.g.,
specifications of materials, performance, design, or operation; test
methods; sampling procedures; and related management systems practices)
that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies.
This rule does not use technical standards. Therefore, we did not
consider the use of voluntary consensus standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this rule under Department of Homeland Security
Management Directive 023-01, Commandant Instruction M16475.lD, and 67
FR 48243 (July 23, 2002) which guide the Coast Guard in complying with
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4370f,
and have concluded that this action is one of a category of actions
that do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment. A final environmental analysis checklist
supporting this determination is available in the docket where
indicated under the ``Public Participation and Request for Comments''
section of this preamble. This rule increases the OPA 90 limits of
liability for vessels, deepwater ports, and onshore facilities to
reflect significant increases in the CPI using the methodology
established in the CPI-1 Rule. This action is one of a category of
actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant
effect on the human environment and is categorically excluded from
further environmental documentation under paragraph 6(b) of 67 FR 48243
(July 23, 2002).
List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 138
Financial responsibility, Guarantors, Hazardous materials
transportation, Insurance, Limits of liability, Oil pollution,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Surety bonds, Water pollution
control.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Coast Guard amends
33 CFR part 138 as follows:
[[Page 72355]]
PART 138--FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR WATER POLLUTION (VESSELS)
AND OPA 90 LIMITS OF LIABILITY (VESSELS, DEEPWATER PORTS AND
ONSHORE FACILITIES)
0
1. The authority citation for part 138 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 2704, 2716, 2716a; 42 U.S.C. 9608, 9609; 6
U.S.C. 552; E.O. 12580, Sec. 7(b), 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 193; E.O.
12777, Secs. 4 and 5, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 351, as amended by E.O.
13286, Sec. 89, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 166, and by E.O. 13638, Sec.
1, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp., p.227; Department of Homeland Security
Delegation Nos. 0170.1 and 5110, Revision 01. Section 138.30 also
issued under the authority of 46 U.S.C. 2103 and 14302.
0
2. Revise the heading to part 138 to read as set forth above.
0
3. Revise Subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B--OPA 90 Limits of Liability (Vessels, Deepwater Ports and
Onshore Facilities)
Sec.
138.200 Scope.
138.210 Applicability.
138.220 Definitions.
138.230 Limits of liability.
138.240 Procedure for updating limits of liability to reflect
significant increases in the Consumer Price Index (Annual CPI-U) and
statutory changes.
Subpart B--OPA 90 Limits of Liability (Vessels, Deepwater Ports and
Onshore Facilities)
Sec. 138.200 Scope.
This subpart sets forth the limits of liability under Title I of
the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended (33 U.S.C. 2701, et seq.)
(OPA 90), for vessels, deepwater ports, and onshore facilities, as
adjusted under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(d)). This subpart also sets forth
the method and procedure the Coast Guard uses to periodically adjust
the OPA 90 limits of liability by regulation under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(4)), to reflect significant increases in the Consumer Price
Index (CPI), and to update the limits of liability when they are
amended by statute. In addition, this subpart cross-references the U.S.
Department of the Interior regulation setting forth the OPA 90 limit of
liability applicable to offshore facilities, as adjusted under OPA 90
(33 U.S.C. 2704(d)(4)) to reflect significant increases in the CPI.
Sec. 138.210 Applicability.
This subpart applies to you if you are a responsible party for a
vessel, a deepwater port, or an onshore facility (including, but not
limited to, motor vehicles, rolling stock and onshore pipelines),
unless your liability is unlimited under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2704(c)).
Sec. 138.220 Definitions.
(a) As used in this subpart, the following terms have the meanings
set forth in OPA 90 (33 U.S.C. 2701): deepwater port, facility, gross
ton, liability, oil, offshore facility, onshore facility, responsible
party, tank vessel, and vessel.
(b) As used in this subpart--
Annual CPI-U means the annual ``Consumer Price Index--All Urban
Consumers, Not Seasonally Adjusted, U.S. City Average, All items, 1982-
84=100'', published by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Current period means the year in which the Annual CPI-U was most
recently published by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Director, NPFC means the person in charge of the U.S. Coast Guard,
National Pollution Funds Center (NPFC), or that person's authorized
representative.
Edible oil tank vessel means a tank vessel referred to in OPA 90
(33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4)(A)).
Oil spill response vessel means a tank vessel referred to in OPA 90
(33 U.S.C. 2704(c)(4)(B)).
Previous period means the year in which the previous limit of
liability was established, or last adjusted by statute or regulation,
whichever is later.
Single-hull means the hull of a tank vessel that is constructed or
adapted to carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo
residue, that is not a double hull as defined in 33 CFR part 157.
Single-hull includes the hull of any such tank vessel that is fitted
with double sides only or a double bottom only.
Sec. 138.230 Limits of liability.
(a) Vessels. (1) The OPA 90 limits of liability for tank vessels,
other than edible oil tank vessels and oil spill response vessels,
are--
(i) For a single-hull tank vessel greater than 3,000 gross tons,
the greater of $3,500 per gross ton or $25,845,600;
(ii) For a tank vessel greater than 3,000 gross tons, other than a
single-hull tank vessel, the greater of $2,200 per gross ton or
$18,796,800;
(iii) For a single-hull tank vessel less than or equal to 3,000
gross tons, the greater of $3,500 per gross ton or $7,048,800; and
(iv) For a tank vessel less than or equal to 3,000 gross tons,
other than a single-hull tank vessel, the greater of $2,200 per gross
ton or $4,699,200.
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for any vessel other than a
vessel listed in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, including for any
edible oil tank vessel and any oil spill response vessel, are the
greater of $1,100 per gross ton or $939,800.
(b) Deepwater ports. (1) The OPA 90 limit of liability for any
deepwater port, including for any component pipelines, other than a
deepwater port listed in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, is
$633,850,000;
(2) The OPA 90 limits of liability for deepwater ports with limits
of liability established by regulation under OPA 90 (33 U.S.C.
2704(d)(2)), including for any component pipelines, are--
(i) For the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP), $96,366,600; and
(ii) [Reserved]
(c) Onshore facilities. The OPA 90 limit of liability for onshore
facilities, including, but not limited to, motor vehicles, rolling
stock and onshore pipelines, is $633,850,000.
(d) Offshore facilities. The OPA 90 limit of liability for offshore
facilities other than deepwater ports, including for any offshore
pipelines, is set forth at 30 CFR 553.702.
Sec. 138.240 Procedure for updating limits of liability to reflect
significant increases in the Consumer Price Index (Annual CPI-U) and
statutory changes.
(a) Update and publication. The Director, NPFC, will periodically
adjust the limits of liability set forth in Sec. 138.230(a) through
(c) to reflect significant increases in the Annual CPI-U, according to
the procedure for calculating limit of liability inflation adjustments
set forth in paragraphs (b)-(d) of this section, and will publish the
inflation-adjusted limits of liability and any statutory amendments to
those limits of liability in the Federal Register as amendments to
Sec. 138.230. Updates to the limits of liability under this paragraph
are effective on the 90th day after publication in the Federal Register
of the amendments to Sec. 138.230, unless otherwise specified by
statute (in the event of a statutory amendment to the limits of
liability) or in the Federal Register notice amending Sec. 138.230.
(b) Formula for calculating a cumulative percent change in the
Annual CPI-U. (1) The Director, NPFC, calculates the cumulative percent
change in the Annual CPI-U from the year the limit of liability was
established, or last adjusted by statute or regulation, whichever is
later (i.e., the previous period), to the most recently published
Annual CPI-U (i.e., the current period), using the following escalation
formula:
[[Page 72356]]
Percent change in the Annual CPI-U = [(Annual CPI-U for Current Period-
Annual CPI-U for Previous Period) / Annual CPI-U for Previous Period] x
100.
(2) The cumulative percent change value calculated using the
formula in paragraph (b)(1) of this section is rounded to one decimal
place.
(c) Significance threshold. Not later than every three years from
the year the limits of liability were last adjusted for inflation, the
Director, NPFC, will evaluate whether the cumulative percent change in
the Annual CPI-U since that date has reached a significance threshold
of 3 percent or greater. For any three-year period in which the
cumulative percent change in the Annual CPI-U is less than 3 percent,
the Director, NPFC, will publish a notice of no inflation adjustment to
the limits of liability in the Federal Register. If this occurs, the
Director, NPFC, will recalculate the cumulative percent change in the
Annual CPI-U since the year in which the limits of liability were last
adjusted for inflation each year thereafter until the cumulative
percent change equals or exceeds the threshold amount of 3 percent.
Once the 3-percent threshold is reached, the Director, NPFC, will
increase the limits of liability, by regulation using the procedure set
forth in paragraph (a) of this section, for all source categories
(including any new limit of liability established by statute or
regulation since the last time the limits of liability were adjusted
for inflation) by an amount equal to the cumulative percent change in
the Annual CPI-U from the year each limit was established, or last
adjusted by statute or regulation, whichever is later. Nothing in this
paragraph shall prevent the Director, NPFC, in the Director's sole
discretion, from adjusting the limits of liability for inflation by
regulation issued more frequently than every three years.
(d) Formula for calculating inflation adjustments. The Director,
NPFC, calculates adjustments to the limits of liability in Sec.
138.230 for inflation using the following formula:
New limit of liability = Previous limit of liability + (Previous limit
of liability x percent change in the Annual CPI-U calculated under
paragraph (b) of this section), then rounded to the closest $100.
Dated: November 3, 2015.
William R. Grawe,
Director, U.S. Coast Guard, National Pollution Funds Center.
[FR Doc. 2015-29519 Filed 11-18-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-04-P