EPA to delay
deadline for spill control regulation of bulk milk tanks
By Agri-Pulse Staff
© Copyright Agri-Pulse Communications, Inc.
Arlington, VA, June 11 – The National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) praised the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Friday for “taking a sensible approach to regulating dairy farms under the Spill, Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure (SPCC) regulations by pushing back the deadline for farms’ compliance with those regulations.”
In a letter to NMPF dated June 9th, the EPA
committed to finalizing the SPCC exemption for bulk milk storage “as
expeditiously as possible …to have that process completed by early 2011.”
In addition, EPA will be extending the compliance deadline for dairy producers
until that time.
Last month, NMPF requested EPA to take such actions to
provide certainty in the SPCC regulations so that dairy producers could
appropriately make decisions on their need for regulatory compliance. EPA
first proposed to exempt milk containers and associated piping and equipment
constructed according to current applicable 3-A Sanitary Standards and subject
to the current, applicable Grade ‘A’ Pasteurized Milk Ordinance (PMO), or an
equivalent state dairy regulatory requirement, from the SPCC regulations on
January 15, 2009.
The goal of the SPCC program is to prevent oil spills into
waters of the
A farm with less than 10,000 gallons of total storage
capacity and no single storage greater than 5,000 gallons can self-certify
their SPCC plan. Farms that do not meet this exemption must have a plan
certified by a professional engineer. NMPF’s concern is that this
regulation could require a significant number of farms to require outside
certification of their facilities.
“The commitment to
finalize the bulk milk storage exemption and extend the compliance deadline for
NMPF’s letter and EPA’s response can be viewed online at www.nmpf.org.
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