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entitled 'Maritime Transportation: Major Oil Spills Occur Infrequently, 
but Risks to the Federal Oil Spill Fund Remain' which was released on 
September 7, 2007. 

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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

September 2007: 

Maritime Transportation: 

Major Oil Spills Occur Infrequently, but Risks to the Federal Oil Spill 
Fund Remain: 

Oil Spill Costs: 

GAO-07-1085: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-1085, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

When oil spills occur in U.S. waters, federal law places primary 
liability on the vessel owner or operator—that is, the responsible 
party—up to a statutory limit. As a supplement to this “polluter pays” 
approach, a federal Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund administered by the 
Coast Guard pays for costs when a responsible party does not or cannot 
pay. 

The Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006 directed GAO to 
examine spills that cost the responsible party and the Fund at least $1 
million. This report answers three questions: (1) How many major spills 
(i.e., $1 million or more) have occurred since 1990, and what is their 
total cost? (2) What factors affect the cost of spills? and (3) What 
are the implications of major oil spills for the Oil Spill Liability 
Trust Fund? GAO’s work to address these objectives included analyzing 
oil spill costs data, interviewing federal, state, and private-sector 
officials, and reviewing Coast Guard files from selected spills. 

What GAO Found: 

On the basis of cost information collected from a variety of sources, 
GAO estimates that 51 spills with costs above $1 million have occurred 
since 1990 and that responsible parties and the federal Oil Spill 
Liability Trust Fund (Fund) have spent between about $860 million and 
$1.1 billion for oil spill removal costs and compensation for damages 
(e.g., lost profits and natural resource damages). Responsible parties 
paid between about 72 percent and 78 percent of these costs; the Fund 
has paid the remainder. Since removal costs and damage claims may 
stretch out over many years, the costs of the spills could rise. The 51 
spills, which constitute about 2 percent of all vessel spills since 
1990, varied greatly from year to year in number and cost. 

Three main factors affect the cost of spills: a spill’s location, the 
time of year, and the type of oil spilled. Spills that occur in remote 
areas, for example, can increase costs involved in mobilizing 
responders and equipment. Similarly, a spill occurring during tourist 
or fishing season might produce substantial compensation claims, while 
a spill occurring during another time of year may not be as costly. The 
type of oil affects costs in various ways: fuels like gasoline or 
diesel fuel may dissipate quickly but are extremely toxic to fish and 
plants, while crude oil is less toxic but harder to clean up. Each 
spill’s cost reflects a unique mix of these factors. 

To date, the Fund has been able to cover costs from major spills that 
responsible parties have not paid, but risks remain. Specifically, the 
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006 increased liability 
limits, but GAO’s analysis shows the new limit for tank barges remains 
low relative to the average cost of such spills. Since 1990, the Oil 
Pollution Act required that liability limits be adjusted above the 
limits set forth in statute for significant increases in inflation, but 
such changes have never been made. Not making such adjustments between 
1990 and 2006 potentially shifted an estimated $39 million in costs 
from responsible parties to the Fund. 

Figure: Location and Cost of Major Oil Spills, 1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure]

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Coast Guard (1) determine whether and how 
liability limits should be changed, by vessel type, and make 
recommendations about these changes to the Congress and (2) adjust the 
limits of liability for vessels every 3 years to reflect changes in 
inflation, as appropriate. 

DHS officials generally agreed with the contents and agreed with the 
recommendations in this report. 

[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-1085]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Susan Fleming at (202) 
512-4431 or flemings@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Oil Spills Costing More than $1 Million Occurred Infrequently Since 
1990, but Estimated Costs Total $860 Million to $1.1 Billion: 

Key Factors Affect Oil Spill Costs in Unique Ways: 

Fund Has Been Able to Cover Costs Not Paid by Responsible Parties, but 
Risks Remain: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Overview: 

Our Categorization of Oil Spill Costs: 

Available Data: 

Universe of Major Oil Spills: 

Data Analysis and Case Studies: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Types of OPA-Compensable Removal Costs and Damages: 

Table 2: Description of Different Oil Types: 

Table 3: Comparison of Limits of Liability as Established in OPA (1990) 
and the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act (2006): 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Description of Vessel Types and Current Limits of Liability: 

Figure 2: Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund Expenditures, Fiscal Years, 
1990-2006: 

Figure 3: Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund Balance, Fiscal Years 1993- 
2006: 

Figure 4: Number of Major Oil Spills, by Year, 1990-2006: 

Figure 5: Location and Cost of Major Oil Spills, 1990-2006: 

Figure 6: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills, by Year, 1990- 
2006: 

Figure 7: Average per Spill Cost of Major Oil Spills, by Location, 1990-
2006: 

Figure 8: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills, by Time of Year, 
1990-2006: 

Figure 9: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills by Type of Oil, 
1990-2006: 

Figure 10: Average Spill Costs and Limits of Liability for Major Oil 
Spill Vessels, 1990-2006: 

Abbreviations: 

Commerce Department of Commerce: 

DOI: Department of the Interior: 
EPA: Environmental Protection Agency: 
Fund: Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund: 
FWS: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: 
NPFC: National Pollution Funds Center: 
NOAA: National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration: 
OPA: Oil Pollution Act of 1990: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Washington, DC 20548: 

September 7, 2007: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Ted Stevens: 
Vice Chairman: 
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable: 
James L. Oberstar: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John L. Mica: 
Ranking Republican Member: 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure: 
House of Representatives: 

The potential for an oil spill exists daily across coastal and inland 
waters of the United States. In 2005, for example, oil tankers 
transported over half of the crude oil that entered the country, and 
often, barges move petroleum products to the markets where they are 
used. The potential for spills also extends well beyond vessels 
involved in the petroleum industry. Cargo, fishing, and other types of 
vessels also carry substantial fuel reserves. Accidents, groundings, or 
collisions can release this fuel and create substantial damage. Spills 
can be expensive, with considerable costs to the federal government and 
the private sector. The most expensive spill in U.S. waters, the 1989 
Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska, cost $2.2 billion to clean up, according 
to ExxonMobil.[Footnote 1] Less expensive but still significant spills 
have occurred since then. For example, in 2004, the tanker Athos I 
spilled over 260,000 gallons of crude oil into the Delaware River; and, 
according to the Coast Guard, removal costs and damage claims from this 
spill have cost more than $120 million to date. 

The framework for addressing and paying for maritime oil spills is 
identified in the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA), which was enacted 
after the Exxon Valdez spill. OPA created a "polluter pays" system that 
places the primary burden of liability and the costs of oil spills on 
the vessel owner or operator who was responsible for the spill--that 
is, the responsible party--in return for financial limitations on that 
liability. Under this system, the responsible party assumes, up to a 
specified limit, the burden of paying for spill costs--which can 
include both removal costs (cleaning up the spill) and damage claims 
(restoring the environment and payment of compensation to parties that 
were economically harmed by the spill). Above the specified limit, the 
responsible party is no longer financially liable.[Footnote 2] To pay 
costs above the limit of liability, as well as to pay costs when a 
responsible party does not pay or cannot be identified, OPA authorized 
the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (Fund), which is financed primarily 
from a per-barrel tax on petroleum products either produced in the 
United States or imported from other countries. The Fund is 
administered by the National Pollution Funds Center (NPFC) within the 
U.S. Coast Guard. The balance in the Fund--about $600 million at the 
end of fiscal year 2006--is well below its yearly peak of $1.2 billion 
in 2000. The decline in the Fund's balance reflects an expiration of 
the barrel tax on petroleum in 1994. The tax was not reinstated until 
2005. 

While this system is well understood, the costs involved in responding 
to oil spills are less clear. Costs paid from the Fund are well 
documented, but the party responsible for the spill is not required to 
report the costs it incurs. As a result, private-sector and total costs 
for cleaning up spills and paying damages are largely unknown to the 
public. The lack of information about the cost of spills, the declining 
Fund balance, and significant claims made on the Fund--for spills in 
which the removal costs and damage claims have exceeded established OPA 
liability limits--have all raised concerns about the Fund's long-term 
viability. 

The Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006 directed us to 
conduct an assessment of the cost of response activities and claims 
related to oil spills from vessels that have occurred since January 1, 
1990, for which the total costs and claims paid was at least $1 million 
per spill. The mandate required that the report summarize the costs and 
claims for oil spills that have occurred since January 1, 1990, that 
total at least $1 million per spill, and the source, if known, of each 
spill for each year. To fulfill this requirement, we examined--after 
consultation with committee staff--the following questions: (1) How 
many major oil spills have occurred since 1990 and what have been the 
total costs of these spills? (2) What are the factors that affect major 
oil spill costs? and (3) What are the implications of major oil spill 
costs for the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund? 

To address these questions, we analyzed oil spill removal cost and 
claims data from NPFC, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration's (NOAA) Damage Assessment, Remediation, and Restoration 
Program, and the Department of the Interior's (DOI) Natural Resource 
Damage Assessment and Restoration Program and the U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service (FWS). We also analyzed cost data obtained from vessel 
insurers and in contract with Environmental Research 
Consulting.[Footnote 3] We interviewed NPFC, NOAA, and state officials 
responsible for oil spill response, as well as industry experts and 
representatives from key industry associations and a vessel owner. In 
addition, we selected five oil spills on the basis of the spill's 
location, oil type, and spill volume for an in-depth review. During 
this review, we interviewed NPFC officials involved in spill response 
for all five spills, as well as representatives of private sector 
companies involved in the spill and spill response; and we conducted a 
file review of NPFC records of the federal oil spill removal activities 
and costs associated with spill cleanup. We also reviewed documentation 
from the NPFC regarding the Fund balance and vessels' limits of 
liability. This report focuses on oil spills that have occurred since 
the enactment of OPA--August 18, 1990--for which removal costs and 
damage claims exceeded $1 million, and we refer to such spills as major 
oil spills.[Footnote 4] Because private-sector and total costs for 
cleaning up spills and paying damages are not centrally tracked and 
maintained, we obtained the best available cost data from a variety of 
sources, as previously described. We then combined the information that 
we collected from these various sources to develop cost estimates for 
the oil spills. However, because the cost data are somewhat imprecise 
and the data we collected vary somewhat by source, we present the cost 
estimates in ranges. The lower and higher bounds of the range represent 
the low and high end of cost information we obtained. Based on reviews 
of data documentation, interviews with relevant officials, and tests 
for reasonableness, we determined that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of our study. We conducted our review from 
July 2006 through August 2007 in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. More details regarding our scope and 
methodology can be found in appendix I. 

Results in Brief: 

We estimate that since 1990, 51 oil spills have involved removal costs 
and damage claims totaling more than $1 million. Collectively, we 
estimate that responsible parties and the Fund have paid between 
approximately $860 million and $1.1 billion to clean up these spills 
and compensate affected parties. Responsible parties paid between about 
72 to 78 percent of these costs; the Fund has paid the remainder, or 
$240 million. The overall cost for the 51 spills we identified could 
also increase over time because the claims adjudication processes can 
take many years to resolve. The 51 spills we identified, which 
constitute about 2 percent of all vessel spills since 1990, varied 
greatly from year to year in number and cost and showed no discernible 
trends in frequency or size. 

Three main factors affect the costs of a spill, according to industry 
experts and agency officials and the studies we reviewed: the spill's 
location, the time of year it occurs, and the type of oil 
spilled.[Footnote 5] A remote location, for example, can increase the 
cost of a spill because of the additional expense involved in mounting 
a remote response. Similarly, a spill that occurs close to shore rather 
than further out at sea can become more expensive because it may 
involve the use of manual labor to remove oil from sensitive shoreline 
habitat. Time also has situation-specific effects, in that a spill that 
occurs at a particular time of year might involve a much greater cost 
than a spill occurring in the same place, but at a different time of 
year. For example, a spill occurring during fishing or tourist season 
might carry additional economic damage, or a spill occurring during a 
typically stormy season might prove more expensive because it is more 
difficult to clean up than one occurring during a season with generally 
calmer weather. The specific type of oil affects costs because the type 
of oil can affect the amount of cleanup needed and the amount of 
natural resource damage incurred. Light oils naturally dissipate and 
evaporate quickly--requiring minimal cleanup--but are highly toxic and 
create severe environmental impacts. Heavy oils do not evaporate, and 
therefore may require intensive structural and shoreline cleanup; and 
while they are less toxic than light oils, heavy oils can harm 
waterfowl and fur-bearing mammals through coating and ingestion. Each 
spill's cost reflects the particular mix of these factors, and no 
factor is clearly predictive of the outcome. The 51 major spills we 
identified, for example, occurred on all U.S. coasts, across all 
seasons, and with all major types of oil; but each spill's particular 
location, time, or product contributed to making it expensive. 

To date, the Fund has been able to cover costs that responsible parties 
have not paid, but risks remain. In particular, the Fund is at risk 
from claims resulting from spills that significantly exceed responsible 
parties' liability limits. The effect of such spills can be seen among 
the 51 major oil spills we identified: 10 of them exceeded the limit of 
liability, resulting in claims of about $252 million on the Fund. In 
the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006, the Congress 
increased these liability limits, but additional attention to the 
limits appears warranted. First, the liability limits for certain 
vessel types may be disproportionately low compared with their historic 
spill cost. For example, of the 51 major spills since 1990, 15 resulted 
from tank barges. The average cost for these 15 tank barge spills was 
about $23 million--more than double the average new liability limit 
($10.3 million) for these vessels. The Coast Guard is responsible for 
adjusting limits of liability at least every 3 years for significant 
increases in inflation and for making recommendations to the Congress 
on whether adjustments to limits are necessary to help protect the 
Fund.[Footnote 6] In its January 2007 report examining oil spills that 
exceeded the limits of liability, the Coast Guard had similar findings 
on the adequacy of some of the new limits. However, the Coast Guard did 
not make explicit recommendations to the Congress on how the limits 
should be adjusted. Second, although OPA has required since 1990 that 
liability limits be adjusted every 3 years to account for significant 
increases in inflation, such adjustments have never been made. If such 
adjustments had been made between 1990 and 2006, claims against the 
Fund for the 51 major spills would have been reduced by 16 percent, 
which could have saved the Fund $39 million. 

We are recommending that the Commandant of the Coast Guard (1) 
determine whether and how liability limits should be changed, by vessel 
type, and make recommendations about these changes to the Congress and 
(2) adjust the limits of liability for vessels every 3 years to reflect 
changes in inflation, as appropriate. We provided a copy of this draft 
for review and comment to the Departments of Homeland Security (DHS), 
including the Coast Guard; Commerce; the Interior (DOI); and 
Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In 
commenting on a draft of this report, DHS generally agreed with its 
contents and agreed with the recommendations. The written comments from 
DHS can be found in appendix II. The Departments of Commerce, 
Transportation, DOI, and EPA also provided technical clarifications, 
which we have incorporated in this report, as appropriate. 

Background: 

The United States is the world's largest net importer of oil. In 2006, 
the United States had net imports of 12.2 million gallons of oil per 
day, more than twice as much as Japan and over three times as much as 
China, the world's next largest importers. The transport of oil into 
the United States occurs primarily by sea with ports throughout the 
United States receiving over 40,000 shipments of oil in 2005. In 
addition, vessels not transporting oil, such as cargo and freight 
vessels, fishing vessels, and passenger ships, often carry tens of 
thousands of gallons of fuel oil to power their engines. With over 
100,000 commercial vessels navigating U.S. waters, oil spills are 
inevitable. Fortunately, however, they are relatively infrequent and 
are decreasing. While oil transport and maritime traffic have continued 
to increase, the total number of reported spills has generally declined 
each year since 1990. 

OPA forms the foundation of U.S. maritime policy as it pertains to oil 
pollution. OPA was passed in 1990, following the 1989 Exxon Valdez 
spill in Alaska, which highlighted the need for greater federal 
oversight of maritime oil transport. OPA places the primary burden of 
liability and the costs of oil spills on the vessel owner and operator 
who was responsible for the spill.[Footnote 7] This "polluter pays" 
system provides a deterrent for vessel owners and operators who spill 
oil by requiring that they assume the burden of spill response, natural 
resource restoration, and compensation to those damaged by the spill, 
up to a specified limit of liability--which is the amount above which 
responsible parties are no longer financially liable under certain 
conditions. For example, if a vessel's limit of liability is $10 
million and a spill resulted in $12 million in costs, the responsible 
party only has to pay up to $10 million--the Fund will pay for the 
remaining $2 million.[Footnote 8] Current limits of liability, which 
vary by type of vessel and are determined by a vessel's gross tonnage, 
were set by the Congress in 2006. The Coast Guard is responsible for 
adjusting limits for significant increases in inflation and for making 
recommendations to the Congress on whether adjustments are necessary to 
help protect the Fund.[Footnote 9] OPA also requires that vessel owners 
and operators must demonstrate their ability to pay for oil spill 
response up to their limit of liability. Specifically, by regulation, 
with few exceptions, owners and operators of vessels over 300 gross 
tons and any vessels that transship or transfer oil in the Exclusive 
Economic Zone are required to have a certificate of financial 
responsibility that demonstrates their ability to pay for oil spill 
response up to their limit of liability.[Footnote 10] 

Figure 1: Description of Vessel Types and Current Limits of Liability: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

OPA consolidated the liability and compensation provisions of four 
prior federal oil pollution initiatives and their respective trust 
funds into the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund and authorized the 
collection of revenue and the use of the money, with certain 
limitations, with regards to expenditures.[Footnote 11] The Fund has 
two major components--the Principal Fund and the Emergency Fund. The 
Emergency Fund consists of $50 million apportioned each year to fund 
spill response and the initiation of natural resource damage 
assessments, which provide the basis for determining the natural 
resource restoration needs that address the public's loss and use of 
natural resources as a result of a spill. The Principal Fund provides 
the funds for third-party and natural resource damage claims, limit of 
liability claims, reimbursement of government agencies' removal costs, 
and provides for oil spill related appropriations. A number of 
agencies--including the Coast Guard, EPA, and DOI--receive an annual 
appropriation from the Fund to cover administrative, operational, 
personnel, and enforcement costs. From 1990 to 2006, these 
appropriations amounted to the Fund's largest expense (see fig. 2). 

Figure 2: Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund Expenditures, Fiscal Years, 
1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of NPFC data. 

Notes: Federal research and other programs include appropriations to 
Department of Transportation, the Denali Commission, and the Oil Spill 
Recovery Institute. The Department of Treasury and the Army Corps of 
Engineers have received appropriations, but these account for about 
0.10 percent of Fund expenditures. 

Percentages do not sum to 100 percent due to rounding.

[End of figure] 

The Fund's balance has generally declined from 1995 through 2006, and 
since fiscal year 2003, its balance has been less than the authorized 
limit on federal expenditures for the response to a single spill, which 
is currently set at $1 billion (see fig. 3). The balance has declined, 
in part, because the Fund's main source of revenue--a $0.05 per barrel 
tax on U.S. produced and imported oil--was not collected for most of 
the time between 1993 and 2006.[Footnote 12] As a result, the Fund 
balance was $604.4 million at the end of fiscal year 2006.[Footnote 13] 
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 reinstated the barrel tax beginning in 
April 2006.[Footnote 14] With the barrel tax once again in place, NPFC 
anticipates that the Fund will be able to cover its projected 
noncatastrophic liabilities. 

Figure 3: Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund Balance, Fiscal Years 1993- 
2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of NPFC data. 

Note: The Fund balance increase in 2000 was largely due to a transfer 
of $181.8 million from the Trans-Alaska Pipeline Liability Fund. 

[End of figure] 

OPA also defines the costs for which responsible parties are liable and 
for the costs for which the Fund is made available for compensation in 
the event that the responsible party does not pay or is not identified. 
These costs, or "OPA compensable" costs, are of two main types: 

* Removal costs: Removal costs are incurred by the federal government 
or any other entity taking approved action to respond to, contain, and 
clean up the spill. For example, removal costs include the equipment 
used in the response--skimmers to pull oil from the water, booms to 
contain the oil, planes for aerial observation--as well as salaries and 
travel and lodging costs for responders. 

* Damages caused by the oil spill: OPA-compensable damages cover a wide 
range of both actual and potential adverse impacts from an oil spill, 
for which a claim may be made to either the responsible party or the 
Fund. (Table 1 provides a brief definition of OPA-compensable removal 
costs and damages.) Claims include natural resource damage claims filed 
by trustees, claims for uncompensated removal costs and third-party 
damage claims for lost or damaged property and lost profits, among 
other things.[Footnote 15] 

Table 1: Types of OPA-Compensable Removal Costs and Damages: 

Removal costs: Removal of oil; 
Costs for the containment and removal of oil from water and shorelines 
including contract services (such as cleanup contractors and incident 
management support) and the equipment used for removal. 

Removal costs: Disposal; 
Costs for the proper disposal of recovered oil and oily debris. 

Removal costs: Personnel; 
Costs for government personnel and temporary government employees hired 
for the duration of the spill response, including costs for monitoring 
the activities of the responsible parties. 

Removal costs: Prevention; 
Costs for the prevention or minimization of a substantial threat of an 
oil spill. 

Damages: Natural resources; 
Federal, state, foreign, or Indian tribe trustees can claim damages for 
injury to, or destruction of, and loss of, or loss of use of, natural 
resources, including the reasonable costs of assessing the damage. 

Damages: Real or personal property; 
Damages for injury to, or economic losses resulting from destruction 
of, real or personal property, such as boats or docks. 

Damages: Subsistence use; 
Damages for loss of subsistence use of natural resources, without 
regard to the ownership or management of the resources. 

Damages: Government revenues, profits, and earning capacity; 
The federal, state, or local government can claim damages for the loss 
of taxes, royalties, rents, fees, or profits. Companies can claim 
damages for loss of profits or impairment of earning capacity. 

Damages: Public services; 
States and local governments can recover costs for providing increased 
public services during or after an oil spill response, including 
protection from fire, safety, or health hazards. 

Source: GAO summary of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. § 2702 
(b)). 

[End of table] 

The Fund also covers costs when responsible parties cannot be located 
or do not pay their liabilities. NPFC encounters cases where the source 
of the spill, and therefore the responsible party is unknown, or where 
the responsible party does not have the ability to pay. In other cases, 
since the cost recovery can take a period of years, the responsible 
party may be bankrupt or dissolved. Based on our analysis of NPFC 
records, excluding spills with limit of liability claims, the recovery 
rate for costs from the 51 major oil spills since 1990 is 65 percent, 
which means that responsible parties have paid 65 percent of costs. The 
35 percent of nonreimbursed costs to the Fund for these major spills 
have amounted to $53.9 million. 

Response to large oil spills is typically a cooperative effort between 
the public and private sector, and there are numerous players who 
participate in responding to and paying for oil spills. To manage the 
response effort, the responsible party, the Coast Guard, EPA, and the 
pertinent state and local agencies form the unified command, which 
implements and manages the spill response.[Footnote 16] Beyond the 
response operations, there are other stakeholders, such as accountants 
who are involved in documenting and accounting for costs, and receiving 
and processing claims. In addition, insurers and underwriters provide 
financial backing to the responsible party. The players involved in 
responding to and/or paying for major spill response are as 
follows:[Footnote 17] 

* Government agencies: The lead federal authority, or Federal On-Scene 
Coordinator, in conducting a spill response is usually the nearest 
Coast Guard Sector and is headed by the Coast Guard Captain of the 
Port.[Footnote 18] The Federal On-Scene Coordinator directs response 
efforts and coordinates all other efforts at the scene of an oil spill. 
Additionally, the on-scene coordinator issues pollution removal funding 
authorizations--guarantees that the agency will receive reimbursement 
for performing response activities--to obtain services and assistance 
from other government agencies. Other federal agencies may also be 
involved. NOAA provides scientific support, monitoring and predicting 
the movement of oil, and conducting environmental assessments of the 
impacted area. The federal, state, and tribal trustees join together to 
perform a natural resource damage assessment, if necessary. Within the 
Coast Guard, the NPFC is responsible for disbursing funds to the 
Federal On-Scene Coordinator for oil spill removal activities and 
seeking reimbursement from responsible parties for federal costs. 
Additionally, regional governmental entities that are affected by the 
spill--both state and local--as well as tribal government officials or 
representatives may participate in the unified command and contribute 
to the response effort, which is paid for by the responsible party or 
are reimbursed by the responsible party or the Fund.[Footnote 19] 

* Responsible parties: OPA stipulates that both the vessel owner and 
operator are ultimately liable for the costs of the spill and the 
cleanup effort. The Coast Guard has final determination on what actions 
must be taken in a spill response, and the responsible party may form 
part of the unified command--along with the Federal On-Scene 
Coordinator and pertinent state and local agencies--to manage the spill 
response. The responsible parties rely on other entities to evaluate 
the spill effects and the resulting compensation. Responsible parties 
hire environmental and scientific support staff, specialized claims 
adjustors to adjudicate third-party claims, public relations firms, and 
legal representation to file and defend limit of liability claims on 
the Fund, as well as serve as counsel throughout the spill response. 

* Qualified individuals: Federal regulations require that vessels 
carrying oil as cargo have an incident response plan and, as part of 
the plan, they appoint a qualified individual who acts with full 
authority to obligate funds required to carry out response activities. 
The qualified individual acts as a liaison with the Federal On-Scene 
Coordinator and is responsible for activating the incident response 
plan. 

* Oil spill response organizations: These organizations are private 
companies that perform oil spill cleanup, such as skimming and disposal 
of oil. Many of the companies have contractual agreements with 
responsible parties and the Coast Guard. The agreements, called basic 
ordering agreements, provide for prearranged pricing, response 
personnel, and equipment in the event of an oil spill. 

* Insurers: Responsible parties often have multiple layers of primary 
and excess insurance coverage, which pays oil spill costs and claims. 
Pollution liability coverage for large vessels is often underwritten by 
not-for-profit mutual insurance organizations. The organizations act as 
a collective of ship owners, who insure themselves, at-cost. The 
primary insurers of commercial vessels in U.S. waters are the Water 
Quality Insurance Syndicate, an organization providing pollution 
liability insurance to over 40,000 vessels, and the International Group 
of P & I Clubs, 13 protection and indemnity organizations that provide 
insurance primarily to foreign-flagged large vessels.[Footnote 20] 

Oil Spills Costing More than $1 Million Occurred Infrequently Since 
1990, but Estimated Costs Total $860 Million to $1.1 Billion: 

On the basis of information we were able to assemble about responsible 
parties' expenditures and payments from the Fund, we estimate that 51 
oil spills involving removal costs and damage claims totaling $1 
million or more have occurred since 1990. In all, the Fund spent $240 
million on these spills, and the responsible parties themselves spent 
about $620 million to $840 million, for a total of $860 million to $1.1 
billion. The number of spills and their costs varied from year to year 
and showed no discernable trends in either frequency or cost. 

Less Than 2 Percent of Oil Spills Occurring Since 1990 Were Major 
Spills: 

Less than 2 percent of oil spills from vessels, since 1990, had removal 
costs and damage claims of $1 million or greater. Each year, there are 
thousands of incident reports called into the National Response Center 
that claim oil or oil-like substances have been spilled from vessels 
sailing in coastal or inland waters in the United States[Footnote 21]-
--but only a small percentage of these reported incidents are oil 
spills from vessels that received federal reimbursement for response 
efforts. Specifically, there have been 3,389 oil spills from vessels 
that sought reimbursement from the Fund for response efforts. Of these 
spills, we estimate that 51 were major oil spills.[Footnote 22] As 
figure 4 shows, there are no discernable trends in the number of major 
oil spills that occur each year. The highest number of spills was seven 
in 1996; the lowest number was zero in 2006. 

Figure 4: Number of Major Oil Spills, by Year, 1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of NPFC data. 

Note: Because spill costs accrue over time, there may have been vessel 
spills in 2006 for which costs will exceed $1 million in the future. 

[End of figure] 

These 51 spills occurred in a variety of locations. As figure 5 shows, 
the spills occurred on the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts and 
include spills both in open coastal waters and more confined waterways. 

Figure 5: Location and Cost of Major Oil Spills, 1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

Total Cost of Major Spills Ranges from $860 Million to $1.1 Billion, 
and Responsible Parties Pay the Majority of Costs: 

The total cost of the 51 spills cannot be precisely determined, for 
several reasons: 

* Private-sector expenditures are not tracked: The NPFC tracks federal 
removal costs expended by the Fund for Coast Guard and other federal 
agencies' spill response efforts, but it does not oversee costs 
incurred by the private sector. There is also no legal requirement in 
place that requires responsible parties to disclose costs incurred for 
responding to a spill.[Footnote 23] 

* The various parties involved in covering these costs do not 
categorize them uniformly: For example, one vessel insurer we spoke 
with separates total spill costs by removal costs (for immediate spill 
cleanup) and loss adjustment expenses, which contain all other 
expenses, including legal fees. In contrast, the NPFC tracks removal 
costs and damage claims in terms of the statutory definitions 
delineated in OPA. 

* Spill costs are somewhat fluid and accrue over time: In particular, 
the natural resource and third-party damage claims adjudication 
processes can take many years to complete. Moreover, it can take many 
months or years to determine the full effect of a spill to natural 
resources and to determine the costs and extent of the natural resource 
injury and the appropriate restoration needed to repair the damage. For 
example, natural resource damage claims were recently paid for a spill 
that occurred near Puerto Rico in 1991, over 16 years ago. 

Because spill cost data are somewhat imprecise and the data we 
collected vary somewhat by source, the results described below will be 
reported in ranges, in which various data sources are combined 
together. The lower and higher bounds of the range represent the low 
and high end of cost information we obtained. 

Our analysis of these 51 spills shows their total cost was 
approximately $1 billion--ranging from $860 million to $1.1 billion. 
This amount breaks down by source as follows: 

* Amount paid out of the Fund: Because the NPFC tracks and reports all 
Fund expenditures, the amount paid from the Fund can be reported as an 
actual amount, not an estimate. For these 51 spills, the Fund paid a 
total of $239.5 million. 

* Amount paid by responsible parties: Because of the lack of precise 
information about amounts paid by responsible parties and the 
differences in how they categorize their costs, this portion of the 
expenditures must be presented as an estimate. Based on the data we 
were able to obtain and analyze, responsible parties spent between $620 
million and $840 million. Even at the low end of the range, this amount 
is nearly triple the expenditure from the Fund. 

Costs Vary Widely by Spill and Year: 

Costs of these 51 spills varied widely by spill, and therefore, by year 
(see fig. 6). For example, 1994 and 2004 both had four spills during 
the year, but the average cost per spill in 1994 was about $30 million, 
while the average cost per spill in 2004 was between $71 million and 
$96 million. Just as there was no discernible trend in the frequency of 
these major spills, there is no discernible trend in their cost. 
Although the substantial increase in 2004 may look like an upward 
trend, 2004 may be an anomaly that reflects the unique character of two 
of the four spills that occurred that year. These two spills accounted 
for 98 percent of the year's costs. 

Figure 6: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills, by Year, 1990- 
2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

Note: Because we are reporting costs from multiple sources of data, the 
data were combined and grouped into cost ranges. In some cases, 
however, there was only one cost estimate. In those cases, we present 
the amount as a single cost estimate. 

[End of figure] 

Key Factors Affect Oil Spill Costs in Unique Ways: 

Location, time of year, and type of oil are key factors affecting oil 
spill costs, according to industry experts, agency officials, and our 
analysis of spills. Data on the 51 major spills show that spills 
occurred on all U.S. coasts, across all seasons, and for all oil types. 
In ways that are unique to each spill, however, each of these factors 
can affect the breadth and difficulty of the response effort or the 
extent of damage that requires mitigation. For example, spills that 
occur in remote areas can make response difficult in terms of 
mobilizing responders and equipment, as well as complicating the 
logistics of removing oil--all of which can increase the costs. 
Officials also identified two other factors that may influence oil 
spill costs to a lesser extent--the effectiveness of the spill response 
and the level of public interest in a spill. 

Location Impacts Costs in Different Ways: 

The location of a spill can have a large bearing on spill costs because 
it will determine the extent of response needed, as well as the degree 
of damage to the environment and local economies. According to state 
officials with whom we spoke and industry experts, there are three 
primary characteristics of location that affect costs: 

* Remoteness: For spills that occur in remote areas, spill response can 
be particularly difficult in terms of mobilizing responders and 
equipment, and they can complicate the logistics of removing oil from 
the water--all of which can increase the costs of a spill. For example, 
a 2001 spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound--which occurred 
approximately 40 miles from Valdez, AK--resulted in considerable 
removal costs after a fishing vessel hit a rock and sank to a depth of 
approximately 1,000 feet. Response took many days and several million 
dollars to contain the oil that was still in the vessel, but the effort 
was eventually abandoned because it was too difficult from that 
depth.[Footnote 24] 

* Proximity to shore: There are also significant costs associated with 
spills that occur close to shore. Contamination of shoreline areas has 
a considerable bearing on the costs of spills as such spills can 
require manual labor to remove oil from the shoreline and sensitive 
habitats. The extent of damage is also affected by the specific 
shoreline location. For example, spills that occur in marshes and 
swamps with little water movement are likely to incur more severe 
impacts than flowing water. A September 2002 spill from a cargo vessel 
in the Cooper River near the harbor in Charleston, SC, spread oil 
across 30 miles of a variety of shoreline types. The spill resulted in 
the oiling of a number of shorebirds and a temporary disruption to 
recreational shrimp-baiting in area waters, among other things. As of 
July 2007, a settlement for natural resource damages associated with 
the spill was still pending. 

* Proximity to economic centers: Spills that occur in the proximity of 
economic centers can also result in increased costs when local services 
are disrupted. A spill near a port can interrupt the flow of goods, 
necessitating an expeditious response in order to resume business 
activities, which could increase removal costs. Additionally, spills 
that disrupt economic activities can result in expensive third-party 
damage claims. For example, after approximately 250,000 gallons of oil 
spilled from a tanker in the Delaware River in 2004, a large nuclear 
plant in the vicinity was forced to suspend activity for more than a 
week. The plant is seeking reimbursement for $57 million in lost 
profits.[Footnote 25] 

Overall, for the 51 major oil spills, location had the greatest effect 
on costs for spills that occurred in the waters of the Caribbean, 
followed by the East Coast, Alaska, and the Gulf states.[Footnote 26] 
(See fig. 7). The range of average per spill costs for the spills that 
occurred in the East Coast locations ranged from about $27 million to 
over $37 million, higher than the average costs in any other region 
besides the two spills in Caribbean. The high spill costs in the East 
Coast locations were caused by several spills in that geographic area 
that had considerably higher costs. Specifically, four of the eight 
most expensive spills occurred on the waters off the East 
Coast.[Footnote 27] 

Figure 7: Average per Spill Cost of Major Oil Spills, by Location, 1990-
2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

Note: Because we are reporting costs from multiple sources of data, the 
data were combined and grouped into cost ranges. In some cases, 
however, there was only one cost estimate. In those cases, we present 
the amount as a single cost estimate. 

[End of figure] 

Time of Year Has Impact on Local Economies and Response Efforts: 

The time of year in which a spill occurs can also affect spill costs-- 
in particular, impacting local economies and response efforts. 
According to several state and private-sector officials with whom we 
spoke, spills that disrupt seasonal events that are critical for local 
economies can result in considerable expenses. For example, spills in 
the spring months in areas of the country that rely on revenue from 
tourism may incur additional removal costs in order to expedite spill 
cleanup, or because there are stricter standards for cleanup, which 
increase the costs. This situation occurred in March of 1996 when a 
tank barge spilled approximately 176,000 gallons of fuel oil along the 
coast of Texas. Because the spill occurred during the annual spring 
break tourist season, the time frames for cleaning up the spill were 
truncated, and the standards of cleanliness were elevated. Both of 
these factors contributed to higher removal costs, according to state 
officials we interviewed. 

The time of year in which a spill occurs also affects response efforts 
because of possible inclement weather conditions. For example, spills 
that occur during the winter months in areas of the country that 
experience harsh winter conditions can result in higher removal costs 
because of the increased difficulty in mobilizing equipment and 
personnel to respond to a spill in inclement weather. According to a 
state official knowledgeable about a January 1996 spill along the coast 
of Rhode Island, extremely cold and stormy weather made response 
efforts very difficult. 

Although the 51 spills occurred during all seasons of the year, they 
were most prevalent in the fall and winter months, with 20 spills 
occurring in the fall and 13 spills during the winter, compared with 9 
spills in the spring and 9 in the summer months.[Footnote 28] On a per- 
spill basis, the cost range for the 51 spills was highest in the fall 
(see fig. 8). 

Figure 8: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills, by Time of Year, 
1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

Note: Because we are reporting costs from multiple sources of data, the 
data were combined and grouped into cost ranges. In some cases, 
however, there was only one cost estimate. In those cases, we present 
the amount as a single cost estimate. 

[End of figure] 

Type of Oil Spilled Impacts the Extent of the Response Effort and the 
Amount of Damage: 

The type of oil spilled affects the degree to which oil can be cleaned 
up and removed, as well as the nature of the natural resource damage 
caused by the spill--both of which can significantly impact the costs 
associated with an oil spill. The different types of oil can be grouped 
into four categories, each with its own set of impacts on spill 
response and the environment (see table 2). For example, lighter oils 
such as jet fuels, gasoline, and diesel dissipate quickly, but they are 
highly toxic, whereas heavier oils such as crude oils and other heavy 
petroleum products do not dissipate much and, while less toxic, can 
have severe environmental impacts. 

Table 2: Description of Different Oil Types: 

Oil type [A]: Very light oils (Jet fuels, gasoline); 
Removal and response: Highly volatile (they will evaporate within 1-2 
days). It is rarely possible to clean up the oil from such spills; 
Environmental impact: Highly toxic: Can cause severe impacts to 
shoreline resources. 

Oil type [A]: Light oils (Diesel, No. 2 fuel oil, light crudes); 
Removal and response: Moderately volatile, but will leave a residue 
after a few days. Cleanup can be very effective for these spills; 
Environmental impact: Moderately toxic: Has the potential to create 
long-term contamination of shoreline resources. 

Oil type [A]: Medium oils (Most crude oils); 
Removal and response: Some oil (about one-third) will evaporate in 24 
hours. Cleanup most effective if conducted quickly; 
Environmental impact: Less toxic: Oil contamination of shoreline can be 
severe and long-term, and can have significant impacts to waterfowl and 
fur-bearing mammals. 

Oil type [A]: Heavy oils (Heavy crude oils, No. 6 fuel oil, bunker C 
fuel); 
Removal and response: Little or no oil will evaporate. Cleanup is 
difficult; 
Environmental impact: Less toxic: Heavy contamination of shoreline 
resources is likely, with severe impacts to waterfowl and fur-bearing 
mammals through coating and ingestion. 

Source: NOAA. 

[A] In general, oil types differ from each other in three ways: 
viscosity--oil's resistance to flow, volatility--how quickly the oil 
evaporates in the air, and toxicity--how poisonous the oil is to people 
and other organisms. 

[End of table] 

Very light and light oils naturally dissipate and evaporate quickly, 
and as such, often require minimal cleanup. However, light oils that 
are highly toxic can result in severe impacts to the environment, 
particularly if conditions for evaporation are unfavorable. For 
instance, in 1996, a tank barge that was carrying home-heating oil 
grounded in the middle of a storm near Point Judith, Rhode Island, 
spilling approximately 828,000 gallons of heating oil (light oil). 
Although this oil might dissipate quickly under normal circumstances, 
heavy wave conditions caused an estimated 80 percent of the release to 
mix with water, with only about 12 percent evaporating and 10 percent 
staying on the surface of the water.[Footnote 29] The natural resource 
damages alone were estimated at $18 million, due to the death of 
approximately 9 million lobsters, 27 million clams and crabs, and over 
4 million fish. 

Medium and heavy oils do not evaporate much, even during favorable 
weather conditions, and thus, can result in significant contamination 
of shoreline areas. Medium and heavy oils have a high density and can 
blanket structures they come in contact with--boats and fishing gear, 
for example--as well as the shoreline, creating severe environmental 
impacts to these areas, and harming waterfowl and fur-bearing mammals 
through coating and ingestion. Additionally, heavy oils can sink, 
creating prolonged contamination of the sea bed and tar balls that sink 
to the ocean floor and scatter along beaches. These spills can require 
intensive shoreline and structural cleanup, which is time consuming and 
expensive. For example, in 1995, a tanker spilled approximately 38,000 
gallons of heavy fuel oil into the Gulf of Mexico when it collided with 
another tanker as it prepared to lighter its oil to another 
ship.[Footnote 30] Less than 1 percent (210 gallons) of the oil was 
recovered from the sea, and as a result, recovery efforts on the 
beaches of Matagorda and South Padre Islands were labor intensive, as 
hundreds of workers had to manually pick up tar balls with shovels. The 
total removal costs for the spill were estimated at $7 million. 

Spills involving heavy oil were the most prevalent among the 51 spills; 
21 of the 51 major oil spills were from heavy oils. On a per-spill 
basis, costs among the 51 spills, varied by type of oil, but the cost 
ranges for medium and heavy oils were higher than light and very light 
oils (see fig. 9). 

Figure 9: Average per Spill Costs of Major Oil Spills by Type of Oil, 
1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

Note: Because we are reporting costs from multiple sources of data, the 
data were combined and grouped into cost ranges. In some cases, 
however, there was only one cost estimate. In those cases, we present 
the amount as a single cost estimate. 

[End of figure] 

Other Factors Also Affect Spill Costs: 

Although available evidence points to location, time of year, and type 
of oil spilled as key factors affecting spill costs, some industry 
experts reported that the effectiveness of the spill response and the 
level of the public interest can also impact the costs incurred during 
a spill. 

* Effectiveness of spill response: Some private-sector officials stated 
that the effectiveness of spill response can impact the cost of 
cleanup. The longer it takes to assemble and conduct the spill 
response, the more likely it is that the oil will move with changing 
tides and currents and affect a greater area, which can increase costs. 
Some officials also stated that the level of experience of those 
involved in the incident command is critical to the effectiveness of 
spill response, and they can greatly affect spill costs. For example, 
poor decision making during a spill response could lead to the 
deployment of unnecessary response equipment, or worse, not enough 
equipment to respond to a spill. In particular, several private-sector 
officials with whom we spoke expressed concern that Coast Guard 
officials are increasingly inexperienced in handling spill response, in 
part because the Coast Guard's mission has been increased to include 
homeland security initiatives. Additionally, another noted that 
response companies, in general, have less experience in dealing with 
spill response and less familiarity with the local geography of the 
area affected by the spill, which can be critical to determining which 
spill response techniques are most effective in a given area. They 
attributed the limited experience to the overall decline in the number 
of spills in recent years. Further, one private-sector official noted 
that response companies can no longer afford to specialize in cleaning 
up spills alone, given the relatively low number of spills, and thus, 
the quality, effectiveness, and level of expertise and experience 
diminish over time. 

* Public interest: Several officials with whom we spoke stated that 
level of public attention placed on a spill creates pressure on parties 
to take action and can increase costs. They also noted that the level 
of public interest can increase the standards of cleanliness expected, 
which may increase removal costs. For example, several officials noted 
that a spill along the Texas coast in February 1995 resulted in 
increased public attention because it occurred close to peak tourist 
season. In addition to raising the standards of cleanliness at the 
beaches to a much higher level than normal because of tourist season, 
certain response activities were completed for primarily aesthetic 
reasons, both of which increased the removal costs, according to state 
officials. 

Fund Has Been Able to Cover Costs Not Paid by Responsible Parties, but 
Risks Remain: 

The Fund has been able to cover costs from major spills that 
responsible parties have not paid, but risks remain. Although liability 
limits were increased in 2006, the liability limits for certain vessel 
types, notably tank barges, may be disproportionately low relative to 
costs associated with such spills. There is also no assurance that 
vessel owners and operators are able to financially cover these new 
limits, because the Coast Guard has not yet issued regulations for 
satisfying financial responsibility requirements. In addition, although 
OPA calls for periodic increases in liability limits to account for 
significant increases in inflation, such increases have never been 
made. We estimate that not making such adjustments in the past 
potentially cost the Fund $39 million between 1990 and 2006. Besides 
issues related to limits of liability, the Fund faces other potential 
drains on its resources, including ongoing claims from existing spills, 
claims related to already-sunken vessels that may begin to leak oil, 
and the threat of a catastrophic spill such as occurred with the Exxon 
Valdez in 1989. 

Further Attention to Limits of Liability Is Needed: 

Major oil spills that exceed the vessel's limit of liability are 
infrequent, but their impact on the Fund could be significant. Limits 
of liability are the amount, under certain circumstances, above which 
responsible parties are no longer financially liable for spill removal 
costs and damage claims. If the responsible party's costs exceed the 
limit of liability, they can make a claim against the Fund for the 
amount above the limit. Of the 51 major oil spills that occurred since 
1990, 10 spills resulted in limit of liability claims on the 
Fund.[Footnote 31] The limit of liability claims of these 10 spills 
ranged from less than $1 million to over $100 million, and totaled over 
$252 million in claims on the Fund. Limit of liability claims will 
continue to have a pronounced effect on the Fund. NPFC estimates that 
74 percent of claims under adjudication that were outstanding as of 
January 2007 were for spills in which the limit of liability had been 
exceeded. The amount of these claims under adjudication was $217 
million.[Footnote 32] 

We identified three areas in which further attention to these liability 
limits appears warranted: the appropriateness of some current liability 
limits, the need to adjust limits periodically in the future to account 
for significant increases in inflation, and the need for updated 
regulations for ensuring vessel owners and operators are able to 
financially cover their new limits. 

Some Recent Adjustments to Liability Limits Do Not Reflect the Cost of 
Major Spills: 

The Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006 significantly 
increased the limits of liability from the limits set by OPA in 1990. 
Both laws base the liability on a specified amount per gross ton of 
vessel volume, with different amounts for vessels that transport oil 
commodities (tankers and tank barges) than for vessels that carry oil 
as a fuel (such as cargo vessels, fishing vessels, and passenger 
ships). The 2006 act raised both the per-ton and the required minimum 
amounts, differentiating between vessels with a double hull, which 
helps prevent oil spills resulting from collision or grounding, and 
vessels without a double hull (see table 3 for a comparison of amounts 
by vessel category).[Footnote 33] For example, the liability limit for 
single-hull vessels larger than 3,000 gross tons was increased from the 
greater of $1,200 per gross ton or $10 million to the greater of $3,000 
per gross ton or $22 million. 

Table 3: Comparison of Limits of Liability as Established in OPA (1990) 
and the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act (2006): 

Vessel types: Single-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: Vessels greater than 3,000 gross tons: the 
greater of $1,200 per gross ton or $10 million; 
2006 Limit of liability: Vessels greater than 3,000 gross tons: the 
greater of $3,000 per gross ton or $22 million. 

Vessel types: Single-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: Vessels less than or equal to 3,000 gross 
tons: the greater of $1,200 per gross ton or $2 million; 
2006 Limit of liability: Vessels less than or equal to 3,000 gross 
tons: the greater of $3,000 per gross ton or $6 million. 

Vessel types: Single-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: (Single and double-hull tankers and tank 
barges.); 
2006 Limit of liability: [Empty]. 

Vessel types: Double-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: Vessels greater than 3,000 gross tons: the 
greater of $1,200 per gross ton or $10 million; 
2006 Limit of liability: Vessels greater than 3,000 gross tons: the 
greater of $1,900 per gross ton or $16 million. 

Vessel types: Double-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: Vessels less than or equal to 3,000 gross 
tons: the greater of $1,200 per gross ton or $2 million; 
2006 Limit of liability: Vessels less than or equal to 3,000 gross 
tons: the greater of $1,900 per gross ton or $4 million. 

Vessel types: Double-hull tankers and tank barges; 
1990 Limit of liability: (Single and double-hull tankers and tank 
barges.); 
2006 Limit of liability: [Empty]. 

Vessel types: All other vessels: Cargo vessels, fishing vessels, 
passenger ships; 
1990 Limit of liability: The greater of $600 per gross ton or $500,000; 
2006 Limit of liability: The greater of $950 per gross ton or $800,000. 

Source: Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006. 

[End of table] 

Our analysis of the 51 spills showed that the average spill cost for 
some types of vessels, particularly tank barges, was higher than the 
limit of liability, including the new limits established in 2006. We 
separated the vessels involved in the 51 spills into four types 
(tankers, tank barges, cargo and freight ships, and other vessels such 
as fishing boats); determined the average spill costs for each type of 
vessel; and compared the costs with the average limit of liability for 
these same vessels under both the 1990 and 2006 limits. As figure 10 
shows, the 15 tank barge spills and the 12 fishing/other vessel spills 
had average costs greater than both the 1990 and 2006 limits of 
liability. For example, for tank barges, the average cost of $23 
million was higher than the average limit of liability of $4.1 million 
under the 1990 limits and $10.3 million under the new 2006 limits. The 
nine spills involving tankers, by comparison, had average spill costs 
of $34 million, which was considerably lower than the average limit of 
liability of $77 million under the 1990 limits and $187 million under 
the new 2006 limits.[Footnote 34] 

Figure 10: Average Spill Costs and Limits of Liability for Major Oil 
Spill Vessels, 1990-2006: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

In a January 2007 report examining spills in which the limits of 
liability had been exceeded, the Coast Guard had similar findings on 
the adequacy of some of the new limits.[Footnote 35] Based on an 
analysis of 40 spills in which costs had exceeded the responsible 
party's liability limit since 1991, the Coast Guard found that the 
Fund's responsibility would be greatest for spills involving tank 
barges, where the Fund would be responsible for paying 69 percent of 
costs. The Coast Guard concluded that increasing liability limits for 
tank barges and nontank vessels--cargo, freight, and fishing vessels-- 
over 300 gross tons would positively impact the Fund balance. With 
regard to making specific adjustments, the Coast Guard said dividing 
costs equally between the responsible parties and the Fund was a 
reasonable standard to apply in determining the adequacy of liability 
limits.[Footnote 36] However, the Coast Guard did not recommend 
explicit changes to achieve either that 50/50 standard or some other 
division of responsibility. 

Liability Limits Have Not Been Adjusted for Inflation: 

Although OPA requires adjusting liability limits to account for 
significant increases in inflation, no adjustments to the limits were 
made between 1990 and 2006, when the Congress raised the limits in the 
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act. During those years, the 
Consumer Price Index rose approximately 54 percent.[Footnote 37] OPA 
requires the President, who has delegated responsibility to the Coast 
Guard, through the Secretary of Homeland Security, to issue regulations 
not less often than every 3 years to adjust the limits of liability to 
reflect significant increases in the Consumer Price Index.[Footnote 38] 
We asked Coast Guard officials why no adjustments were made between 
1990 and 2006. Coast Guard officials stated that they could not 
speculate on behalf of other agencies as to why no adjustments had been 
made prior to 2005 when the delegation to the Coast Guard was made. 

The decision to leave limits unchanged had financial implications for 
the Fund. Raising the liability limits to account for inflation would 
have the effect of reducing payments from the Fund, because responsible 
parties would be responsible for paying costs up to the higher 
liability limit. Not making adjustments during this 16-year period thus 
had the effect of increasing the Fund's financial liability. Our 
analysis showed that if the 1990 liability limits had been adjusted for 
inflation during the 16-year period, claims against the Fund for the 51 
major oil spills would have been reduced 16 percent, from $252 million 
to $213 million. This would have meant a savings of $39 million for the 
Fund. 

Certification of Compliance with the New Liability Limits Is Not in 
Place: 

Certificates of Financial Responsibility have not been adjusted to 
reflect the new liability limits. The Coast Guard requires Certificates 
of Financial Responsibility, with few exceptions, for vessels over 300 
gross tons or any vessels that are lightering or transshipping oil in 
the Exclusive Economic Zone as a legal certification that vessel owners 
and operators have the financial resources to fund spill response up to 
the vessel's limit of liability. Currently, Certificate of Financial 
Responsibility requirements are consistent with the 1990 limits of 
liability and, therefore, there is no assurance that responsible 
parties have the financial resources to cover their increased 
liability.[Footnote 39] The Coast Guard is currently making 
Certificates of Financial Responsibility consistent with current limits 
of liability. The Coast Guard plans to initiate a rule making to issue 
new Certificate of Financial Responsibility requirements. Coast Guard 
officials indicated their goal is to publish a Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking by the end of 2007, but the officials said they could not be 
certain they would meet this goal. 

Other Challenges Could Also Affect the Fund's Condition: 

The Fund also faces several other potential challenges that could 
affect its financial condition: 

* Additional claims could be made on spills that have already been 
cleaned up: Natural resource damage claims can be made on the Fund for 
years after a spill has been cleaned up. The official natural resource 
damage assessment conducted by trustees can take years to complete, and 
once it is completed, claims can be submitted to the NPFC for up to 3 
years thereafter.[Footnote 40] For example, the NPFC recently received 
and paid a natural resource damage claim for a spill in U.S. waters in 
the Caribbean that occurred in 1991. 

* Costs and claims may occur on spills from previously sunken vessels 
that discharge oil in the future: Previously sunken vessels that are 
submerged and in threat of discharging oil represent an ongoing 
liability to the Fund. There are over 1,000 sunken vessels that pose a 
threat of oil discharge.[Footnote 41] These potential spills are 
particularly problematic because, in many cases, there is no viable 
responsible party that would be liable for removal costs. Therefore, 
the full cost burden of oil spilled from these vessels would likely be 
paid by the Fund. 

* Spills may occur without an identifiable source and therefore, no 
responsible party: Mystery spills also have a sustained impact on the 
Fund, because costs for spills without an identifiable source--and 
therefore no responsible party--may be paid out of the Fund. Although 
mystery spills are a concern, the total cost to the Fund from mystery 
spills was lower than the costs of known vessel spills in 2001 through 
2004. Additionally, none of the 51 major oil spills was the result of a 
discharge from an unknown source. 

* A catastrophic spill could strain the Fund's resources: Since the 
1989 Exxon Valdez spill, which was the impetus for authorizing the 
Fund's usage, no oil spill has come close to matching its 
costs.[Footnote 42] Cleanup costs for the Exxon Valdez alone totaled 
about $2.2 billion, according to the vessel's owner. By comparison, the 
51 major oil spills since 1990 cost, in total, between $860 million and 
$1.1 billion. The Fund is currently authorized to pay out a maximum of 
$1 billion on a single spill. Although the Fund has been successful 
thus far in covering costs that responsible parties did not pay, it may 
not be sufficient to pay such costs for a spill that has catastrophic 
consequences. 

Conclusions: 

The "polluter pays" system established under OPA has been generally 
effective in ensuring that responsible parties pay the costs of 
responding to spills and compensating those affected. Given that 
responsible parties' liability is not unlimited, the Fund remains an 
important source of funding for both response and damage compensation, 
and its viability is important. The Fund has been able to meet all of 
its obligations, helped in part by the absence of any spills of 
catastrophic size. This favorable result, however, is no guarantee of 
similar success in the future. Even moderate spills can be very 
expensive, especially if they occur in sensitive locations or at 
certain times of the year. 

Increases in some liability limits appear warranted to help ensure that 
the "polluter pays" principle is carried out in practice. For certain 
vessel types, such as tank barges, current liability limits appear 
disproportionately low relative to their historic spill costs. The 
Coast Guard has reached a similar conclusion but so far has stopped 
short of making explicit recommendations to the Congress about what the 
limits should be. Absent such recommendations, the Fund may continue to 
pay tens of millions of dollars for spills that exceed the responsible 
parties' limits of liability. As the agency responsible for the Fund, 
it is important that the Coast Guard regularly assess whether and how 
the limits of liability for all vessel types should be adjusted--and 
recommends a course of action to the Congress on the adjustments that 
are warranted. Further, to date, liability limits have not been 
adjusted for significant changes in inflation. Consequently, the Fund 
was exposed to about $39 million in liability claims for the 51 major 
spills between 1990 and 2006 that could have been saved if the limits 
had been adjusted for inflation. Authority to make such adjustments was 
specifically designated to the Coast Guard in 2005, and with this clear 
authority, it is important for the Coast Guard to periodically adjust 
the limits of liability for inflation, as well. Without such actions, 
oil spills with costs exceeding the responsible parties' limits of 
liability will continue to place the Fund at risk. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve and sustain the balance of Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, 
we recommend that the Commandant of the Coast Guard take the following 
two actions: 

* Determine whether and how liability limits should be changed, by 
vessel type, and make specific recommendations about these changes to 
the Congress: 

* Adjust the limits of liability for vessels every 3 years to reflect 
significant changes in inflation, as appropriate. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Department of Homeland 
Security (DHS), including the Coast Guard and NPFC, for review and 
comment. DHS provided written comments, which are reprinted in appendix 
II. In its letter, DHS agreed with both recommendations. Regarding our 
recommendation that the Coast Guard review limits of liability by 
vessel type and make recommendations to the Congress, DHS stated that 
it has met the intent of the recommendation by issuing the first of its 
annual reports, in January 2007, on limits of liability. As stated in 
our report, however, our concern is that the current annual report made 
no specific recommendations to the Congress regarding liability limit 
adjustments. Therefore, we continue to recommend that in its next 
annual report to the Congress on limits of liability, the Coast Guard 
make explicit recommendations, by vessel type, on how such limits 
should be adjusted. Regarding our recommendation that the Coast Guard 
adjust the limits of liability for vessels every 3 years to reflect 
significant changes in inflation, DHS stated that the Coast Guard will 
make adjustments to limits as appropriate. In response to other 
concerns that DHS expressed, we modified the report to clarify the 
Coast Guard's responsibility for adjusting liability limits in response 
to Consumer Price Index increases, and to deal with the Coast Guard's 
concern that the report not imply that responsible parties' liability 
is unlimited. 

In addition, we provided a draft report to several other agencies--the 
Departments of Commerce, Transportation, DOI and EPA--for review and 
comment, because some of the information in the report was obtained 
from these agencies and related to their responsibilities. The agencies 
provided technical clarifications, which we have incorporated in this 
report, as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Departments of Homeland 
Security, including the Coast Guard; Transportation, Commerce, DOI, and 
EPA; and appropriate congressional committees. We will also make copies 
available to others upon request. In addition, the report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me at 
flemings@gao.gov or (202) 512-4431. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this report. Key contributors to this report are listed in 
appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Susan A. Fleming: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Overview: 

To address our objectives, we analyzed oil spill removal cost and 
claims data from the National Pollution Funds Center (NPFC); the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Damage 
Assessment, Remediation, and Restoration Program; and the Department of 
the Interior's (DOI) Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration 
Program; and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). We also analyzed 
data obtained from vessel insurers, and in contract with Environmental 
Research Consulting.[Footnote 43] We interviewed NPFC and NOAA 
officials and state officials responsible for oil spill response, as 
well as industry experts and representatives from key industry 
associations and a vessel operator. In addition, we selected five oil 
spills that represented a variety of factors such as geography, oil 
type, and spill volume for an in-depth review. During this review, we 
interviewed NPFC officials involved in spill response for all five 
spills, as well as representatives of private-sector companies involved 
in the spill and spill response; we also conducted a file review of 
NPFC records of the federal response activities and costs associated 
with spill cleanup. We also reviewed documentation from the NPFC 
regarding the Fund balance and vessels' limits of liability. Based on 
reviews of data documentation, interviews with relevant officials, and 
tests for reasonableness, we determined that the data were sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of our study. This report focuses on oil 
spills that have occurred since the enactment of OPA--August 18, 1990-
-for which removal costs and damage claims exceeded $1 million, and we 
refer to such spills as major oil spills. We conducted our review from 
July 2006 through August 2007 in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. 

Our Categorization of Oil Spill Costs: 

For the purposes of this review, we included removal (or response) 
costs and damage claims that are considered OPA compensable; that is, 
the OPA-stipulated reimbursable costs that are incurred for oil 
pollution removal activities when oil is discharged into the navigable 
waters, adjoining shorelines, and the Exclusive Economic Zone of the 
United States, as well as costs incurred to prevent or mitigate the 
substantial threat of such an oil discharge. OPA compensable removal 
costs include containment and removal oil from water and shorelines; 
prevention or minimization of a substantial threat of discharge; 
contract services (e.g., cleanup contractors, incident management 
support, and wildlife rehabilitation); equipment used in removals; 
chemical testing required to identify the type and source of oil; 
proper disposal of recovered oil and oily debris; costs for government 
personnel and temporary government employees hired for the duration of 
the spill response, including costs for monitoring the activities of 
responsible parties; completion of documentation; and identification of 
responsible parties. OPA compensable damage claims include 
uncompensated removal costs, damages to natural resources, damages to 
real or personal property, loss of subsistence use of natural 
resources, loss of profits or earning capacity, loss of government 
revenues, and increased cost of public services.[Footnote 44] 

Available Data: 

In order to present the best available data on spill costs, we gathered 
cost information from a number of sources, including federal agencies, 
vessel insurance companies and other private-sector companies involved 
in oil spill response, and Environmental Research Consulting--a private 
consultant. 

* Federal agencies: We gathered federal data on OPA compensable oil 
spill removal costs from the NPFC. Additionally, we gathered federal 
data on OPA compensable third-party damage claims from the NPFC, and 
natural resource damage claims from NOAA's Damage Assessment, 
Remediation, and Restoration Program, DOI's Natural Resource Damage 
Assessment and Restoration Program, and FWS. 

* Insurers and other private-sector companies: We collected the best 
available data for OPA-compensable removal costs and damage claims from 
private-sector sources, including vessel insurers such as the Water 
Quality Insurance Syndicate and the International Group of Protection 
and Indemnity Clubs; oil spill response organizations, including the 
Alaska Chadux Corporation and Moran Environmental Recovery; and a 
vessel operator. We made many attempts to contact and interview the 
responsible parties involved in the five spills we reviewed in-depth. 
One was willing to speak to GAO directly. 

* Environmental Research Consulting: Environmental Research Consulting 
is a consulting firm that specializes in data analysis, environmental 
risk assessment, cost analyses, and the development of comprehensive 
databases on oil/chemical spills and spill costs. Environmental 
Research Consulting supplied cost estimates based on reviews of court 
documents, published reports, interviews with responsible parties, and 
other parties involved with major oil spills. In addition, 
Environmental Research Consulting verified its data collection by 
relying exclusively on known documented costs, as opposed to estimated 
costs. Environmental Research Consulting, therefore, did not include 
general estimates of spill costs, which can be inaccurate. 

A complete and accurate accounting of total oil spill costs for all oil 
spills is unknown, primarily because there is no uniform mechanism to 
track responsible party spill costs, and there are no requirements that 
private sector keep or maintain cost records. The NPFC tracks federal 
costs to the Coast Guard and other federal agencies, which are later 
reimbursed by the Fund, but does not oversee costs incurred by the 
private sector. There is also no legal requirement in place that 
requires responsible parties to disclose costs incurred for responding 
to a spill.[Footnote 45] We cannot be certain that all private-sector 
cost information we gathered included only OPA-compensable costs. 
However, we explicitly outline which costs are included in our review. 
Furthermore, private-sector data were obtained primarily from insurance 
companies, and one official told us that insurance coverage for 
pollution liability usually defines compensable losses in the same 
manner as OPA. For instance, while responsible parties incur costs 
ancillary to the spill response, such as public relations and legal 
fees, these costs are not generally paid by oil spill insurance 
policies. In addition, spill costs are somewhat fluid and accrue over 
time, making it sometimes difficult to account for the entire cost of a 
spill at a given time. In particular, the natural resource and third- 
party damage claims adjudication processes can take many years to 
complete. 

Based on consultation with committee staff, we agreed to present the 
best available data for major oil spills between 1990 and 2006, and we 
determined that the data gathered were sufficiently reliable for the 
purposes of our study. Because of the imprecise nature of oil spill 
cost data, and the use of multiple sources of data, the data described 
in this report were combined and grouped into cost ranges. Using ranges 
of costs to provide upper and lower estimates of total costs and damage 
claims allows us to report data on major oil spills from all reliable 
sources. 

Universe of Major Oil Spills: 

To establish the universe of vessel spills that have exceeded $1 
million in total removal costs and damage claims since 1990, we used-- 
in consultation with oil spill experts--a combination of readily 
available data and reasoned estimation. Since federal government cost 
data are available, we first established an estimate of the probable 
share of spill costs between the federal government and the private 
sector to determine what amount of federal costs might roughly indicate 
the total costs were over $1 million. We interviewed Environmental 
Research Consulting, as well as agency officials from the NPFC and 
NOAA, to determine a reasonable estimated share of costs between the 
private and public sectors. The officials with whom we spoke estimated 
that in general, at least 90 percent of all spill costs are typically 
paid by the private sector. Based on that estimation, any spill with at 
least $100,000 in federal oil spill removal costs and damage claims 
probably cost at least $1 million in total---that is, 90 percent of the 
total costs being paid by the private sector, and the remaining 10 
percent paid by the public sector. Therefore, we initially examined all 
spills with at least $100,000 in federal oil spill removal costs and 
damage claims. We obtained these data on federal oil spill removal 
costs and damage claim payments from the NPFC. 

Of 3,389 federally managed spills since 1990, there were approximately 
184 spills where the federal costs exceeded $100,000. From this group 
of spills, we limited our review to spills that occurred after the 
enactment of OPA on August 18, 1990. Additionally, we omitted (1) spill 
events in which costs were incurred by the federal government for 
measures to prevent a spill although no oil was actually spilled and 
(2) spills of fewer than 100 gallons, where, according to the NPFC, the 
likelihood of costs exceeding $1 million was minimal.[Footnote 46] 
Lastly, in consultation with Environmental Research Consulting, we used 
estimated spill costs and additional research to determine spills that 
were unlikely to have had total costs and claims above $1 million. 
Through this process, we concluded that since the enactment of OPA, 51 
spills have had costs and claims that have exceeded $1 million. 

Data Analysis and Case Studies: 

To assess the costs of oil spills based on various factors, we 
collected data from federal government, private sector, and a 
consultant, and combined the data into ranges. In addition to 
collecting data on removal costs and damage claims, we collected 
additional information on major oil spills. We categorized and grouped 
spill costs based on the vessel type, time of year, location, and oil 
type to look for discernable trends in costs based on these 
characteristics. We collected information on the limits of liability of 
the vessels at the time of the spill and the limits of liability for 
vessels after changes in liability limits in the Coast Guard and 
Maritime Transportation Act of 2006. In addition, to analyze the 
effects of inflation on the Fund and liability limits, using the 
Consumer Price Index, we calculated what the limits of liability would 
have been at the time of each spill if the OPA-stipulated limits had 
been adjusted for inflation. We used the Consumer Price Index as the 
basis for inflationary measures because OPA states that limits should 
be adjusted for "significant increases in the Consumer Price Index." 

In reporting spill cost data by year and by certain categories, we use 
ranges, including the best available data. For certain statistics, such 
as the public-sector/private-sector cost share, where costs are 
aggregated for all spills, we calculated percentages based on the mid- 
point of the cost ranges. To test the reliability of using the mid- 
point of the ranges, we performed a sensitivity test, analyzing the 
effects of using mid-point versus the top and bottom of the cost range. 
We determined that presenting the certain figures based on the mid- 
point of the ranges is reliable and provides the clearest 
representation of the data. 

To supplement our data analysis and in order to determine the factors 
that affect the costs of major oil spills, we interviewed officials 
from the NPFC, NOAA, and EPA regarding the factors that affect major 
oil spill costs. We also interviewed state officials responsible for 
oil spill response from Alaska, California, New York, Rhode Island, 
Texas, and Washington to determine the types of costs incurred by 
states when responding to oil spills and the factors that affect major 
oil spills costs. Additionally, we interviewed industry experts and a 
vessel insurer about the factors that affect major oil spill costs. To 
determine the implications of major oil spills on the Fund, we 
interviewed agency officials from the NPFC and the Coast Guard as well 
as vessel insurers and industry experts to get the private sector's 
perspective on the major oil spills' impact on the Fund. In addition, 
we reviewed recent Coast Guard reports to Congress on the status of the 
Fund and limits of liability.[Footnote 47] 

Lastly, we conducted in-depth reviews of five oil spills. The spills 
were selected to represent a variety of factors that potentially affect 
the costs of spills--geography, oil type, and spill volume. During this 
review, we interviewed the NPFC case officers who were involved with 
each spill, state agency officials; insurance companies; and private- 
sector companies, such as oil spill response organizations that were 
involved in the spill and the spill response. To the best of our 
ability, we attempted to interview the responsible parties involved in 
each spill. We were able to speak with one vessel operator. Our 
interviews were designed to gain perspectives on the response effort 
for each spill, the factors that contributed to the cost of the spill, 
and what actual costs were incurred by the responsible party. Finally, 
we also conducted a file review of NPFC records of federal response 
activities, removal costs, and damage claims made to the Fund for each 
of the five spills we reviewed in-depth. 

We conducted our review from July 2006 through August 2007 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards, 
including standards for data reliability. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

Homeland Security: 

August 20, 2007: 

Ms. Susan A. Fleming: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 
441 G Street, NW: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Fleming: 

RE: Draft Report GAO-07-1085, Maritime Transportation: Major Oil Spills 
Occur Infrequently, but Risks to the Federal Oil Spill Fund Remain (GAO 
Job Code 544127): 

The Department of Homeland Security and Coast Guard appreciate the 
opportunity to review and comment on the draft report referenced above. 
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) recommends that the 
Commandant of the Coast Guard take two actions to improve and sustain 
the balance of the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund: (1) determine 
whether and how liability limits should be changed, by vessel type, and 
make specific recommendations about these changes to the Congress; and 
(2) adjust the limits of liability for vessels every 3 years to reflect 
changes in inflation, as appropriate.

Coast Guard agrees with the first recommendation and believes it has 
met the recommendation's intent to the extent that Coast Guard 
officials have already addressed liability limits in the January 2007 
report to Congress titled U.S. Department of Homeland Security, United 
States Coast Guard, Report on Oil Pollution Act Liability Limits. Coast 
Guard personnel intend to update the report annually. In response to 
the second recommendation, Coast Guard will make adjustments in 
liability limits to reflect inflation as appropriate. 

We have some general clarifying comments regarding GAO's conclusions. 
The "polluter pays" principle should be understood in the context of 
the broader Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA) regime which provides for 
responsible party strict liability (regardless of fault). That 
liability is not unlimited. The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (Fund) 
is intended to pay where costs and damages exceed an applicable 
responsible party liability limit. Therefore any suggestion in the 
conclusions that limits of liability should be increased to ensure 
polluters always pay, rather than the Fund, would be a significant 
course change in the public policy purposes underlying OPA. 

It should be understood that while any increase to liability limits 
would present a corresponding reduction to the exposure of the Fund, 
adjustments to liability limits alone cannot ensure the viability of 
the Fund given the broader picture of the Fund's expenses and revenues 
which were alluded to in GAO's draft report, but not addressed in any 
detail. The January 5, 2007 Congress titled U.S. Department of Homeland 
Security, United States Coast Guard, Report on Oil Pollution Act 
Liability Limits provides a more complete picture of how limits of 
liability impact the Fund. 

Coast Guard has specific concerns about statements in the draft report 
regarding adjustments in liability limits for inflation. The language 
[page 29, paragraph 1, final three sentences] suggests the Coast Guard 
views increases to limits for CPI increases as a policy decision for 
Congress. To clarify, the Coast Guard is proceeding to adjust certain 
OPA liability limits for CPI increases pursuant to OPA section 
1004(d)(4) and is not delaying such adjustments pending further action 
by Congress. In addition, Coast Guard officials are not aware of any 
decision to leave limits unchanged as GAO implies. 

Finally, GAO notes that the Coast Guard is in the process of making 
certificates of financial responsibility consistent with current limits 
of liability and plans to "initiate a rulemaking to issue new 
Certificate of Financial Responsibility requirements." While a 
regulatory project to adjust Certificate of Financial Responsibility 
limits is ongoing, at this time the Coast Guard cannot predict with any 
reasonable degree of certainty that the Notice of Proposed Rule Making 
will be published by the end of 2007. This remains a goal and Coast 
Guard and Department officials are working diligently to this end. 

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Steven J. Pecinovsky: 
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Susan Fleming, (202) 512-4431 or flemings@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Nikki Clowers, Assistant 
Director; Michele Fejfar; Simon Galed; H. Brandon Haller; David Hooper; 
Anne Stevens; Stan Stenersen; and Susan Zimmerman made key 
contributions to this report. 

Footnotes: 

[1] The Exxon Valdez spill ranks as the 35th largest spill by spill 
volume for all spills since 1967 on the list of international tanker 
spills. 

[2] Responsible parties are liable without limit, however, if the oil 
discharge is the result of gross negligence, or a violation of federal 
operation, safety, and construction regulations. 

[3] Environmental Research Consulting is a private consulting firm that 
specializes in data analysis, environmental risk assessment, cost 
analyses, expert witness research and testimony, and development of 
comprehensive databases on oil and chemical spills in service to 
regulatory agencies, nongovernmental organizations, and industry. 

[4] The National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency 
Plan states that any oil discharge that poses a substantial threat to 
public health or welfare of the United States or the environment or 
results in significant public concern shall be classified as a major 
spill. For the purposes of this report, however, major spills are 
defined as spills with total removal costs and damage claims that 
exceed $1 million. 

[5] Another potential factor is the size of the spill. Although a 
larger spill will require an extensive and expensive cleanup effort, 
officials reported that compared with the factors presented here, spill 
volume is less important to the costs of oil spill response. 

[6] OPA has required since 1990 that the President--and through several 
delegations to the Secretaries of Transportation and Homeland Security 
and a redelegation to the Coast Guard in 2005--adjust liability limits 
at least every 3 years to account for significant increases in 
inflation. However, the executive branch has never made such 
adjustments. 

[7] OPA applies to oil discharged from vessels or facilities into 
navigable waters of the United States and adjoining shorelines. OPA 
also covers substantial threats of discharge, even if an actual 
discharge does not occur. 

[8] When responsible parties' costs exceed their limit of liability and 
the limit is upheld--because there was no gross negligence or 
violations of federal regulations by the vessel owner or operator--the 
responsible party is entitled to file a claim on the Fund to be 
reimbursed for costs in excess of the limit. NPFC reviews the claim to 
determine which costs are OPA-compensable and the responsible party is 
reimbursed from the Fund. 

[9] Title VI of the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 
2006. Public Law 109-241, § 603 (c)(3). 

[10] 33 C.F.R. §138. The U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone extends 200 
nautical miles offshore. 

[11] The prior federal laws regarding oil pollution included the 
Federal Water Pollution Control Act, the Deepwater Port Act, the Trans-
Alaska Pipeline System Authorization Act, and the Outer Continental 
Shelf Lands Act Amendments of 1978. The Congress created the Fund in 
1986 but did not authorize collection of revenue or use of the money 
until it passed OPA in 1990. 

[12] The tax expired in December 1994. Besides the barrel tax, the Fund 
also receives revenue in the form of interest on the Fund's principal 
and fines and penalties. 

[13] Recent related GAO products include GAO, U.S. Coast Guard National 
Pollution Funds Center: Improvements Are Needed in Internal Control 
Over Disbursements, GAO-04-340R (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 13, 2004) and 
GAO, U.S. Coast Guard National Pollution Funds Center: Claims Payment 
Process Was Functioning Effectively, but Additional Controls Are Needed 
to Reduce the Risk of Improper Payments, GAO-04-114R (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 3, 2003). 

[14] The Energy Policy Act of 2005. Public Law 109-58 §1361. The barrel 
tax is scheduled to be in place until 2014. 

[15] OPA authorizes the United States, states, and Indian tribes to act 
on behalf of the public as natural resource trustees for natural 
resources under their respective trusteeship. Trustees often have 
information and technical expertise about the biological effects of 
pollution, as well as the location of sensitive species and habitats 
that can assist the federal on-scene coordinator in characterizing the 
nature and extent of site-related contamination and impacts. Federal 
Trustees include Commerce, DOI, the Departments of Agriculture, 
Defense, Energy, and other agencies authorized to manage or protect 
natural resources. 

[16] The Incident Command System (ICS) is a standardized response 
management system that is part of the National Interagency Incident 
Management System. The ICS is organizationally flexible so that it can 
expand and contract to accommodate spill responses of various sizes. 
The ICS typically consists of four sections: operations, planning, 
logistics, and finance/administration. 

[17] For a full description of the organizational structure and 
procedures for preparing for and responding to discharges of oil, see 
The National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan, 
40 C.F.R. § 300. 

[18] Although this report focuses on vessels, and most vessel spills 
are in the Coast Guard zone of jurisdiction, EPA is the lead on-scene 
coordinator in the inland zone, and the Coast Guard is lead on-scene 
coordinator in the coastal zone. 

[19] State governments can seek reimbursement directly from responsible 
parties or from the Fund. State officials in Alaska, California, New 
York, Rhode Island, Texas, and Washington said that state agencies 
recover almost all of their costs, either directly from responsible 
parties or from the NPFC. Officials in Texas said that the 
reimbursement rate for oil spill costs may be as high as 98 percent. 

[20] These 13 organizations are American Steamship Owners Mutual 
Protection and Indemnity Association, Inc; Assuranceforeningen Gard; 
Assuranceforeningen Skuld; the Britannia Steam Ship Insurance 
Association Limited; the Japan Ship Owners' Mutual Protection & 
Indemnity Association; the London Steam-Ship Owners' Mutual Insurance 
Association Limited; the North of England Protection and Indemnity 
Association, Limited; the Shipowners' Mutual Protection and Indemnity 
Association (Luxembourg); the Standard Steamship Owners' Protection and 
Indemnity Association (Bermuda), Limited; the Steamship Mutual 
Underwriting Association (Bermuda), Limited; the Swedish Club; United 
Kingdom Mutual Steam Ship Assurance Association (Bermuda), Limited; and 
the West of England Ship Owners Mutual Insurance Association 
(Luxembourg). 

[21] The primary function of the National Response Center is to serve 
as the sole national point of contact for reporting all oil, chemical, 
radiological, biological, and etiological discharges into the 
environment anywhere in the United States and its territories. 

[22] We established the universe of major oil spills since 1990, based 
on available public and private sector data in consultation with NPFC, 
Environmental Research Consulting, and other industry experts. 
Additionally, we gathered removal costs and damage claims data from 
federal agencies involved in spill response, claims payments, and 
conducting natural resource damage assessments (Coast Guard, NOAA, DOI, 
and FWS); and to the best of our ability, we gathered private-sector 
cost data from vessel insurers, and in contract with Environmental 
Research Consulting. For more information on our scope and methodology, 
see appendix I. 

[23] Under regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. 229, companies that are publicly 
traded must disclose any outstanding liabilities, including liabilities 
such as oil spill removal costs or claims made against the company for 
natural resource or third-party damages incurred. However, many vessel 
owners or operators are not publicly traded companies. 

[24] Officials from the state of Alaska told us that although costs to 
mobilize crews and equipment to respond to spills in Alaska are 
generally higher due to its remote nature, in this case, response crews 
were already nearby responding to a previous spill, which resulted in 
mobilization and equipment costs that were lower than would have been 
expected. 

[25] CRS: Oil Spills in U.S. Coastal Waters: Background, Governance, 
and Issues for Congress, (Apr. 24, 2007). Testimony of Rear Admiral 
Thomas Gilmour (U.S. Coast Guard), in U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure, Subcommittee on Coast Guard and 
Maritime Transportation, Implementation of the Oil Pollution Act, 
hearings, 109th Cong., 2nd sess., (Apr. 27, 2006). 

[26] For the purposes of this report, we used the following geographic 
classifications to group the major oil spills. Inland refers to spills 
that occurred on U.S. navigable waters within the continental United 
States; Pacific refers to spills that occurred in or around Hawaii, 
American Samoa, and Saipan; West Coast refers to spills that occurred 
along the coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington; East Coast 
refers to spills that occurred along the east coast of the United 
States, including Florida's Atlantic Coast; Caribbean refers to spills 
in U.S. territorial waters of the Caribbean Sea; Gulf States refers to 
spills that occurred along the coasts of the states bordering the Gulf 
of Mexico, including the Gulf Coast of Florida; and Alaska refers to 
spills that occurred in Alaskan coastal waters. 

[27] This does not mean that spills that occur on the East Coast will 
necessarily be more expensive. Rather, only among these 51 spills, the 
particular location of East Coast spills had a sizeable effect. 

[28] We categorized the "times of year" as fall: September to November; 
winter: December to February; spring: March to May; and summer: June to 
August. 

[29] National Research Council of the National Academies, Oil in the 
Sea III: Inputs, Fates, and Effects (Washington, D.C.: 2003). Numbers 
do not add to 100 percent due to rounding. 

[30] Lightering is the process of transferring oil at sea from a very 
large or ultra-large carrier to smaller tankers that are capable of 
entering the port. 

[31] Additional spills had costs in excess of the vessel's limit of 
liability, but either the limit was not upheld or no claim was filed by 
the responsible party. 

[32] This figure is based on all spills with claims on the Fund, 
currently under adjudication, not just the 51 major spills. U.S. Coast 
Guard, Report on Oil Pollution Act Liability Limits, (Jan. 5, 2007). 
Like our report, the Coast Guard's report was prepared in response to a 
provision in the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act. 

[33] OPA requires that all tank vessels (greater than 5,000 gross tons) 
constructed (or that undergo major conversions) under contracts awarded 
after June 30, 1990, operating in U.S. navigable waters must have 
double hulls. Of the 51 major oil spills, all 24 major spills from tank 
vessels (tankers and tank barges) involved single-hull vessels. 

[34] The average limits of liability for the spills involving tankers 
are much greater than the average liability for tank barges because the 
liability is based on the volume of the vessel, and tankers generally 
have much higher volumes than tank barges. 

[35] U.S. Coast Guard, Report on Oil Pollution Act Liability Limits, 
(Jan. 5, 2007). 
 
[36] We did not assess the reasonableness of adopting such a standard 
in determining liability limits. 

[37] The new limits, which increased an average of 125 percent for the 
51 vessels involved in major oil spills, were substantially higher than 
the rise in inflation during the period. 

[38] Congress reiterated this requirement in the Coast Guard and 
Maritime Transportation Act by requiring that regulations be issued 3 
years after the enactment of the act (July 11, 2006) and every 3 years 
afterward to adjust the limits of liability to reflect significant 
increases in the Consumer Price Index. 

[39] According to the NPFC, while liable parties are not required to 
establish an ability to pay at the higher amended limits until the 
certificate of financial responsibility rule is published as required 
by OPA, those parties are liable for the higher amounts. 

[40] Federal response costs for spills that resulted from hurricanes 
Katrina and Rita were paid from the Stafford Act Disaster Relief Funds. 
However, private parties can seek reimbursement from the Fund for 
cleanup costs and damages in the future. According to NPFC, it is 
difficult to estimate future liabilities to the Fund as a result of 
hurricanes Katrina and Rita, but as of July 2007, there are no claims 
pending in connection with these hurricanes. 

[41] Michel, J., D. Etkin, T. Gilbert, J. Waldron, C. Blocksidge, and 
R. Urban; 2005. Potentially Polluting Wrecks in Marine Waters: An Issue 
Paper Prepared for the 2005 International Oil Spill Conference. 

[42] The Exxon Valdez only discharged about 20 percent of the oil it 
was carrying. A catastrophic spill from a vessel could result in costs 
that exceed those of the Exxon Valdez, particularly if the entire 
contents of a tanker were released in a 'worst-case discharge' 
scenario. 

[43] Environmental Research Consulting is a private consulting firm 
that specializes in data analysis, environmental risk assessment, cost 
analyses, expert witness research and testimony, and development of 
comprehensive databases on oil and chemical spills in service to 
regulatory agencies, nongovernmental organizations, and industry. 

[44] Additionally, a responsible party may also submit claims to the 
NPFC if the total of all removal cost and damage claims is more than 
the responsible party's statutory liability limit or if the spill was 
caused solely by a third party, an act of God, or an act of war. 

[45] Under regulation S-K, 17 C.F.R. 229, companies that are publicly 
traded must disclose any outstanding liabilities, including liabilities 
such as oil spill removal costs or claims made against the company for 
natural resource or third-party damages incurred. However, many vessel 
owners or operators are not publicly traded companies. 

[46] The Coast Guard categorizes instances, in which no oil was 
actually spilled, as an oil spill when the Fund is used to pay for 
actions taken to prevent a spill from occurring. 

[47] U.S. Coast Guard, Report on Oil Pollution Act Liability Limits,( 
Jan. 5, 2007); U.S. Coast Guard, Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (OSLTF) 
Funding for Oil Spills, (January 2006); U.S. Coast Guard, Report on 
Implementation of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, (May 2005). 

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