Posted - September 3, 2012 - National Law Forum Blog
Varnum LLP‘s Timothy J. Lundgren recently had an article, Coast Guard Proposes New Rule on Discharges in the Great Lakes, published in The National Law Review:
The Coast Guard is proposing to
replace its interim rule with a new rule to regulate the operation of
U.S. and foreign vessels carrying bulk dry cargo (e.g., limestone, iron
ore, coal) on U.S. waters of the Great Lakes, and the operation of U.S.
bulk dry cargo vessels anywhere on the Great Lakes. The new requirements
address the discharge of bulk dry cargo residue (“DCR”). The proposed
rule would continue to allow non-hazardous and non-toxic discharges of
bulk DCR in limited areas of the Great Lakes. However, vessel owners and
operators would need to minimize DCR discharges and document their
methods for doing so in DCR management plans. Certain additional DCR
discharges currently allowed would be restricted.
The potential for DCR discharges to encourage non-native species, the
interaction of this regulation with EPA’s Vessel General Permit and the
states’ coastal zone management plans as well as various other laws and
treaties, and a variety of other topics are covered in the Federal Register Notice. Comments on the proposed rule can be submitted to the online docket on or before October 29, 2012.
Post to be found at:
http://nationallawforum.com/2012/09/03/coast-guard-proposes-new-rule-on-discharges-in-the-great-lakes
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