Tag: Financial assurance

  • Green But Not Clean

    Recycling may be the right thing to do, but it carries its own set of risks.

    By: Susannah Levine  Risk & Insurance

    The recycling industry is poised to continue growing as humans put greater stress on the planet, and technology allows more efficient extraction of useful materials from spent products.

    Although recycling may be green, the process is not clean, and it carries many of the same risks as other heavy industries, plus some additional pollution exposures.

    Even as environmental laws and regulations grow more restrictive, many recyclers still underinsure their operations for pollution.

    Typically, the recycling industry’s claims look like the claims affecting any heavy industry’s. The risks to recyclers of a product are similar to the manufacturer of that product, experts said.

    “When a pollution claim hits, it hits big,” said Daniel Curran, director of underwriting for several of Willis’ environmental programs, including RecycleGuard.

    Many recycling companies underestimate their environmental liability exposure and take a pass on the insurance.

    Even so, the market for pollution insurance is a “sizable” $1 billion — a rough estimate, since hard numbers don’t exist, said Mary Ann Susavidge, environmental chief underwriting officer at XL Insurance.

    The law requires more regulated companies, such as landfills and hazardous waste recyclers, to buy environmental insurance, while others, including “R2 certified” electronic recyclers, are contractually obliged to buy it.

    There are also larger companies that see environmental insurance as true asset protection even if they are not required to purchase it.

    Then, there are some less regulated companies, including paper and scrap recyclers, that tend to have operations of $5 million or less. Those companies often regard pollution coverage as a discretionary expense, experts said.

    “Fifty percent of the accounts I look at gamble on their general liability covering an environmental spill, fire or contamination and they don’t protect their assets,” said Matt Gartner, assistant vice president of underwriting at XL Insurance.

    “They don’t expect an incident, but bad things happen to good people,” he said.

    Stacy Brown, president and managing partner of Freberg Environmental Insurance, recalled a small business with a large above-ground storage tank that dislodged during one of the increasingly frequent major floods on the East Coast.

    The tank floated downstream, struck a tree and spilled five thousand gallons of oil into a river. Fortunately, the company had pollution insurance, which covered the million-dollar-plus remediation that would otherwise have forced it into bankruptcy.

    Many insurance companies request an environmental audit to limit their losses to catastrophic “acts of God.”

    When Brown underwrites a facility, he looks for the company’s degree of compliance with federal, state and local environmental laws. Even before he walks in the door, he looks at publicly available records, compliance histories, permits, and Google Earth, which shows the physical plant, stacks of recovered materials and above-ground storage tanks.

    Regulations guide the underwriting process. If the company handles hazardous materials, are they stored in the proper tanks? Does it have a storm-water management plan? Where does it store used oil?

    “I look at cleanliness. Housekeeping tells a lot about how a company is run,” Brown said. He looks at records, since companies may accumulate certain waste materials for only a certain time, and whether they’re filed neatly or jumbled in a desk drawer.

    He interviews management to understand how tightly they run the facility and line workers to understand how they do their jobs. Are they draining fluids the right way?

    The consultation with compliance experts is collaborative, not confrontational, he said.

    Noncompliant companies eventually get shut down and expose themselves to expensive engineering remedies. They also suffer reputational loss, which can be as crippling as the cost of corrective action.

    “It’s cheaper to stay in compliance,” Brown said.

    Bad Company

    And it’s cheaper to do business with compliant recyclers. Under Superfund Section 107, said Bill McElroy, senior vice president at Liberty International Underwriters, the chain of liability extends from material producers, through transporters, waste brokers, recyclers, and the people who buy the recovered materials.

    For example, 255 defendants — mostly upstream industrial producers — were named in United States vs. Chemetco Inc. et al., in which a now-bankrupt recycler of copper-bearing scrap and manufacturing residue pleaded guilty in 2001 to violating the Clean Water Act by secretly installing a pipe that illegally dumped metal-filled wastewater into a creek for a decade.

    The plaintiffs were fined $3.8 million, and the property is now a Superfund site.

    Not only do upstream producers have liability under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) for the misdeeds of the rare recycling “bad actor,” said Kim Ferraro, a senior staff attorney with the Hoosier Environmental Council, an Indiana environmental advocacy group, but so do responsible buyers of a site contaminated by previous owners.

    Ferraro represented the plaintiffs in Adkins et al. vs. VIM Recycling, which couldn’t keep up with the volume of waste — engineered woods, plastics, steel, padding, drywall, etc. — from nearby recreational vehicle manufacturers in Elkhart, Ind.

    The waste accumulated in 100-foot-high piles, Ferraro said, and rotted noxiously when exposed to the elements, sickening neighbors with its smell and dust emissions, and contaminating the groundwater.

    When a spark ignited in a dirty grinder, the plant went up in flames, killing one worker and injuring another. VIM did not have the permits to do business legally, let alone pollution insurance, Ferraro said.

    The RV producers whose waste VIM putatively recycled may have had liability under RCRA, which establishes responsibility for solid waste that creates endangerment. Ferraro considered naming them in the case, but finally did not.

    The neighbors cheered when the court reached a default judgment against VIM, which failed to defend itself in court and went out of business.

    The assets of the operation were purchased by Soil Solutions, which makes animal bedding and landscape mulch from recycled wood chips.

    Although it obtained the proper permits and set up a responsible shop, said its attorney, Ed Sullivan, a partner with the international law firm of Faegre Baker Daniels, the company found itself hobbled by the hostility of the community, as well as lingering problems from VIM’s many failures to satisfy state standards.

    Soil Solutions was added as a defendant to an existing class-action lawsuit claiming the operations were a nuisance and health hazard. As part of an out-of-court settlement, it agreed to process and remove many of VIM’s contaminants.

    The settlement halts the litigation, and allows Soil Solutions to operate on the site for up to five years.

    Lessons learned? Beyond complying with regulations, Ferraro said, it’s important to have cordial relations with the community. Legitimately listen and address the concerns of neighbors.

    And second, she said, don’t buy a business that is being sued.

    Sullivan agreed on the importance of good community relations. “My client tried to do that,” he said, “but the plaintiffs decided early that Soil Solutions was just like VIM.”

    Any kind of environmental operation that creates odor, such as composting yard and waste processing, creates third-party liability and is fertile ground for plaintiffs’ attorneys — even if the operator does everything correctly and has all its permits, said Ken Cornell, executive vice president, chief environmental lines underwriter with Aspen Insurance

    Plaintiffs’ attorneys may comb through regulatory databases and inspections for violations, even administrative errors such as posting the right notice in the right place.

    “Good relations with your neighbors, and make darn sure your record is clean,” he advised. “Have a methodology for dealing with complaints up-front before the neighbors get attorneys.”

  • Look Out Below

    environmental Strategist, between the lines:  Exacerbate:  means to make worse, aggravate, intensify.  If you exacerbate a pollution incident, under federal law you can be held accountable and have to expense defense dollars, claims management, clean up costs, business interruption, bodily injury, property damage, reputational risk….Contractors pollution liability insurance covers the insured should they cause or exacerbate a pollution incident.

    USA Today is doing a series of pieces on our infrastructure and below are some links to give you some insight why. Contractors, real estate owners, municipalities, or owners or operators of our county’s infrastructure are all potentially at risk (i.e. oil and gas pipelines, water / sewer / storm water pipes, roads, bridges…)  The United States is falling apart and most of it is out of sight so out of mind.

    Exacerbation liabilities have put many a business out of business because they elected to self insure their environmental exposures.  Our aging infrastructure creates a huge exacerbation environmental exposure for those that own, work on or live near our aging infrastructure.  What is your financial assurance strategy?

    http://www.usatoday.com/longform/news/nation/2014/09/23/gas-pipes-cast-iron-deaths-explosions-investigation/15783697/

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/local/2014/09/23/pensacolas-aged-gas-mains-cause-concern/16112477/

  • Lead tests close downtown Helena DEQ building

    environmental Strategist™ (eS), between the lines:   Caught the fox in the hen house!

    I had an accountant many years ago and the first time I went into pick up my paper work for filing my taxes we spent some time getting to know each other.  During the conversation he told he never balanced his own check book.  I thought to myself do I want to depend upon someone with my finances who did not even perform the most basic of accounting functions, balancing your own check book?  Needless to say I switched accounts.

    When it comes to managing the environmental exposures impacting businesses, we need to be on the same page that in today’s business environment, government environmental regulation is just a bump in the road.  Private business understands to compete in today’s business environment, managing the environmental exposures impacting your operations has become part of “Best Practices”.

    Besides do you want to put your company’s future in the hands of someone that can’t follow the most basic of environmental principals, or what government regulation calls environmental due diligence.  Environmental site assessments (Phase I, Phase II…) are performed so you can determine if you are buying an asset or a liability.  Try getting a commercial property loan from a bank without evidence of environmental due diligence.    Not everyone is as fortunate as the Montana DEQ with access to the tax payers pocket book to take care of their lack of following their own environmental regulations.

    For more on managing your environmental exposures to drive growth and profits go to www.estrategist.com.

    eS Risk Management Strategy:  As this article points out the cost to investigate and test for environmental liabilities can get to be very expensive.  Just a few of the benefits of environmental insurance versus self insuring is environmental insurance can pay for claims investigations such a lead testing, medical screenings, along with third party bodily injury, first and third party business income, remediation costs, legal fees….  When it comes to managing and transferring a business’s environmental exposures there is just one question a business needs to answer.  Question:  Based upon our business model, are we better off transferring our environmental exposures for fractions of a cent on the dollar or self insure and wait until an environmental loss occurs and pay 100 cents on the dollar out of our pocket for claims management, legal fees, investigation costs, third party bodily injury, third party property damage, first party clean up….

    October 28, 2013 3:30 pm  •  By MATT VOLZ Associated Press

    HELENA – The state Department of Environmental Quality closed its downtown Helena building on Monday after finding lead levels up to 40 times higher than federal standards in ceilings throughout the former National Guard armory.

    The results have prompted testing of the air and surfaces in the building’s work areas to find out whether employees have been exposed to lead, DEQ director Tracy Stone-Manning said. The results are due Wednesday.

    “Out of an abundance of caution, we chose to close the building,” Stone-Manning said.

    The employees are on paid leave through Wednesday. They and former employees who worked at the location are being asked to take free blood tests to determine whether they have been exposed, Department of Administration Director Sheila Hogan said.

    Exposure to high levels of the toxic metal can result in lead poisoning, which can eventually lead to brain and kidney damage and anemia, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Even low levels of exposure can damage an unborn child’s nervous system and affect behavior and intelligence, according to the CDC.

    DEQ officials are asking employees who were pregnant or nursing when they worked in the building to test their children.

    The state took over the building at the intersection of Last Chance Gulch and Euclid Avenue in 2002, and it now houses nearly 100 workers of the DEQ’s remediation division.

    The remediation division, which oversees investigations and cleanup of contaminated sites across the state, now finds itself looking for a temporary home while its own offices are tested for contamination.

    “The irony is not lost on us,” Stone-Manning said. “But the reason we are asking these detailed questions is because we are the DEQ and the remediation division.”

    It is unclear if or when the workers will return to the building. Even if the additional tests turn up acceptable airborne lead levels, the lead found in the initial tests above the ceiling tiles must be cleaned and abated, DEQ officials said in a memo to staff.

    The building was constructed in 1942 and housed a firing range for the Montana National Guard. The range was closed in 1994 and remediated for lead, Hogan said.

    But only the range was tested and cleaned, not the rest of the building.

    Medical screenings of field employees in August 2012 showed higher than average levels of zinc protoporphyrin, an indicator of possible elevated lead levels in the blood, in six to eight workers, DEQ spokeswoman Lisa Peterson said.

    Previous tests had been conducted from 1994 to 2009 in individual rooms after employees there reported health complaints, she said.

    “We have had employees inform us of symptoms, however, we have no evidence at this time that they were related to lead exposure,” Peterson said.

    Rather, DEQ officials identified lead testing as a “data gap” in their information, and this month’s initial tests were conducted as part of a plan to identify any and all environmental hazards in the building.

    The plenum, or the area above the ceiling tiles, was tested in 22 areas of the building on Oct. 16 and 18. On Friday, the results found lead dust levels higher than the federal standard for commercial properties of 40 micrograms per square foot in 14 of those 22 areas, according to a copy of the laboratory results.

    One area above the second-floor men’s bathroom tested for 1,600 micrograms per square foot, which is 40 times the federal standard.

    Stone-Manning said there are many questions still to answer, including why it took more than 10 years to find out about the potential lead hazards. She said officials will put together a scientific and historical analysis to answer those questions.