After EPA Rule Changes, Which ASTM Phase I ESA Standard Should You Use?

On November 1, 2021, ASTM International released its revised standard for Phase I Environmental Site Assessments. On March 14, 2022, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (the “EPA”) published a Direct Final Rule that confirmed the new ASTM standard, ASTM E1527-21, could be used to satisfy the EPA’s All Appropriate Inquiry (“AAI”) regulations. That, in turn, would mean that satisfying the ASTM E1527-21 standard could help a potential buyer of contaminated property satisfy some of the EPA’s requirements to qualify as a Bona Fide Prospective Purchaser, which may lead to being protected from liability under the federal Superfund statute.

However, on May 2, 2022, EPA withdrew the Final Rule it had published on March 14, 2022, and indicated it would address the comments it received concerning the previously Final Rule in a subsequent final action.

Why the change and, more importantly, which ASTM standard should a potential purchaser of contaminated property use when having a Phase I Site Assessment prepared?

EPA withdrew its Direct Final Rule in response to the negative comments it received concerning that rule. EPA had planned to allow both the November 2021 ASTM standard and its predecessor from 2013 (the ASTM E1527-13 standard) to be used to satisfy certain AAI requirements. Those commenting said that approach would lead to confusion in the marketplace, and would allow reports that did not meet the ASTM E1527-21 standard to be considered adequate, even though the 2021 ASTM standard represented what the real estate and environmental community had determined to be good commercial and customary practice. In other words, because the 2021 standard required a more rigorous approach to the relevant environmental due diligence work needed to prepare a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment, EPA’s approach would have meant that less thorough reports could have been deemed sufficient.  As noted in the comment letter submitted to the EPA by the Environmental Bankers Association, “ASTM E1527-21 includes important updates that will reduce the risk of Users [of the ESA report] failing to identify conditions indicative of hazardous substance releases, potentially jeopardizing landowner [and prospective purchaser] liability protections to [potential] CERCLA [liability].” All of that makes sense: the better the environmental due diligence, the less risk of unpleasant surprises later.

But, where does that leave potential purchasers of contaminated real estate? Should they have their consultants prepare their Phase I Site Assessment reports based on the 2021 ASTM standard, or its 2013 predecessor, or both?

Contaminated real estate buyers, and any other parties involved in the transaction, such as lenders and equity investors, should require their environmental consultants to prepare their Phase I Environmental Site Assessment in conformance with the ASTM E1527-13 standard, because that is the ASTM standard that is currently referenced in EPA’s AAI regulations. It is necessary to do so, at least for now, in order to be able to qualify for Bona Fide Prospective Purchaser protection from CERCLA liability.

Those parties should also consider having their environmental consultants prepare the same Phase I Environmental Site Assessment in conformance with the updated ATSM E1527-21 standard. While some additional cost may be involved, nonetheless it may be worthwhile in order to meet what ASTM sees as the current standard of practice regarding these reports.

Another important consideration in the preparation of these reports is whether additional issues that are not formally included in the scope of either the ASTM E1527-13 or the ASTM E1527-21 standard should be addressed. For example, as noted in an appendix to the E1527-21 standard, petroleum products are within the scope of the practice “because they are of concern with respect to commercial real estate, and current custom and usage is to include an inquiry into the [past or present] presence of petroleum products when doing an environmental site assessment of commercial real estate.” That is so even though petroleum products generally do not lead to liability under CERCLA.

The non-scope issues appendix to the ASTM E1527-21 standard also addresses “substances not defined as hazardous substances” and does a good job addressing why a user of an ASTM-compliant report should at least consider whether to include certain emerging contaminants such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS, within its scope. The point is to think about whether to evaluate potential environmental liability for PFAS on a case-by-case basis in light of state law considerations, even though PFAS compounds have not yet been designated “hazardous substances” under CERCLA.

EPA’s recent rule-making activities have not provided clear guidance for potential purchasers of contaminated property regarding which ASTM standard should be used in preparing environmental site assessment reports that comply with EPA’s AAI regulations. At the moment, what seems to make the most sense is to have these reports prepared so that they comply with the ASTM E1527-13 standard and to consider whether to comply with the E1527-21 standard in addition. The user should also carefully evaluate whether certain considerations, such as potential PFAS contamination, should be included within the scope of the report.

2022 Goulston & Storrs PC.

A Hitchhiker’s Guide to What’s New in All Appropriate Inquiries

ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials) due diligence standards have been updated to address environmental conditions not widely recognized in 2013 but EPA’s “all appropriate inquiry” regulations have yet to conform.

ASTM International (ASTM) issued its seventh version of Environmental Site Assessment (ESA) standards, E1527-21, on Nov. 1, 2021. These ASTM standards provide the leading source of guidance on minimum standards for Phase I ESAs for commercial and industrial property acquisitions. While ASTM E1527-21 improves upon the predecessor E1527-13, the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) “all appropriate inquiry” regulations (40 CFR § 312.11(b)) currently codify E1527-13 as setting the appropriate due diligence standard. As a matter of course, EPA is expected to amend its regulations to replace the reference to E1527-13 with a reference to E1527-21. However, until EPA amends its rules, buyers should recognize that the improved commercial standard for due diligence is based on E1527-21, but the regulatory safe harbor for complying with “all appropriate inquiry” standards for purposes of meeting EPA requirements remains E1527-13.

The changes in E1527-21 make it more stringent than E1527-13 and make E1527-13 insufficient for current transactions. Because rigorous ESAs provide important pre-acquisition business information, as well as statutory liability protection, we recommend, until EPA updates its Section 312 regulations, that purchasers immediately require that ESAs be performed to meet both E1527-13 and E1527-21 requirements. And following such EPA rulemaking, buyers should require ESAs meet E1527-21 requirements (presuming that is the outcome of the rulemaking).

E1527-21 identifies new requirements to be addressed in Phase I ESAs, including the following:

  • Enhanced research into the history of both the subject and adjoining properties.
  • Enhanced site recon investigation.
  • Definition changes to clarify what is or is not a recognized environmental condition (REC). For instance, a closure of an underground storage tank site may not have been remediated in the past to current regulatory standards. So there is now a requirement to look beyond, for example, a prior No Further Action letter. This is now a REC requiring further due diligence analysis.
  • Examples of RECs, such as poorly stacked drums and bulging tanks, are provided in new Appendix X.4.
  • Clarification of property use limitations and significant data gaps, which respectively may impair future site use or render an assessment’s findings of no RECs questionable.
  • Clarification on when the shelf life of a Phase I ESA commences, e.g., with an early record review component (or after a timely update) as opposed to using the final report date of the ESA.
  • Caveats about emerging issues like PFAS. See “Not So PFAS,” National Law Review (Nov. 2, 2021).
  • Clarification that the user is responsible for identifying environmental liens or land use or property use restrictions in a title search going back to 1980.

The environmental professional remains responsible for reporting to users on title search information and for finding institutional or engineering control records.

A systemic flaw in the E1527 standard is that it treats compliance issues like stepchildren, or not at all, by relying on users to add non-scope items such as wetland, air, water, and waste permit compliance. While this absence may be prudent for commercial properties and “green fields,” industrial properties require more. Compliance audits, including air, water, and waste compliance review, are needed for them. Unfortunately, the ASTM standard for those audits is only consultant process oriented (see ASTM E2107-20) and not sufficiently detailed, in our opinion.

However, the new E1527-21 standard will produce more conservative ESAs, perhaps increasing the cost of closing or raising additional cleanup concerns.

© 2022 Jones Walker LLP

Article By Robert Holden and Stanley A. Millan of Jones Walker LLP

For more articles on the ATSM, visit the NLR Environmental, Energy & Resources section.