The US Department of Justice has announced that under a consent decree, a Louisiana company will pay $615,000 in federal penalties for crude oil spills and other Clean Water Act violations, pay Louisiana $100,000 for civil penalties and response costs, and carry out remedial measures to prevent future spills. Among other things, the company was accused of failure to comply with a US Coast Guard order addressing one of the cleanup efforts.
In the most recent federal-state coordinated enforcement efforts against oil spills in and around the Gulf of Mexico, ORB Exploration LLC (ORB) has agreed to pay civil penalties and state response costs and to implement corrective measures to resolve alleged violations of the Clean Water Act and state environmental laws stemming from three crude oil spills that occurred in 2013 and 2015 from two of ORB’s Louisiana facilities at Frog Lake and Crocodile Bayou – both located in the Atchafalaya River Basin – as well as violations of Spill Prevention, Control and Countermeasure (SPCC) regulations at ORB’s Frog Lake oil storage barge, announced the Department of Justice, U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Under a consent decree lodged today in federal court, ORB will pay $615,000 in federal civil penalties for the spills and other Clean Water Act violations, pay the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) $100,000 for civil penalties and response costs and carry out injunctive relief measures to improve spill response preparedness and prevent future oil spills.
“This settlement holds ORB accountable for the harms to the environment caused by its oil spills into threatened, sensitive natural areas and requires the company to take important corrective measures including improving its environmental compliance and preventing future spills from its oil production facilities,” said Assistant Attorney General John C. Cruden for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “I am grateful for the close relationship with our federal and state partners that brought such a successful resolution to this case”
“Discharges of oil into the navigable waters of the United States are an ongoing concern as they pose an obvious and serious risk to the marine environment,” said Rear Admiral Dave Callahan, Eighth Coast Guard District Commander. “This enforcement action emphasizes our dedication to protecting our natural resources and preventing future pollution from these facilities.”
“Louisiana’s wetlands are vital to the state’s economy, communities and ecology, providing protection from storm surges and habitat for wildlife,” said Regional Administrator Ron Curry for EPA. “Companies must be held accountable when their actions threaten these important natural resources.”
“This joint action shows that LDEQ is committed to pursuing anyone who does something to harm our state’s environment,” said Dr. Chuck Carr Brown, LDEQ Secretary. “Our mission is to protect human health and the environment and those two things are too precious to risk by allowing unscrupulous operators to flout environmental laws in the name of profit.”
As part of a joint action filed with LDEQ, the complaint alleges that ORB spilled over 1,000 barrels of Louisiana crude oil into the Atchafalaya River Basin during the three spills. The largest occurred at Frog Lake in 2013, after a corroded oil transfer pipeline ruptured in a flooded wetland area. The cleanup took over a year and a half and required significant state-federal cooperation. The other two releases occurred in September and October of 2015, from ORB’s Frog Lake and Crocodile Bayou oil production facilities into bayou waters surrounding the facilities.
Source: US Department of Justice