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31 Jul 2009
One of the world's largest container terminal companies is being penalized $47,100 for violations of its stormwater permit at the Port of Los Angeles over more than three years, the U.S. EPA has announced. APM Terminals Pacific Limited discharged industrial-activity
stormwater at its marine shipping container terminal facility between
October 1, 2004 and January 17, 2008, the federal agency charges.
These discharges are in violation of the federal Clean Water Act and
the California National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
"Controlling stormwater pollution is key to improving Southern
California water quality," said Alexis Strauss, Water Division director
for the EPA's Pacific Southwest region. "Many tools to control
stormwater pollution are simply good housekeeping and continued
maintenance," she said.
The penalty action is part of a larger enforcement initiative focusing
on ports to ensure their tenants comply with stormwater requirements.
The U.S. EPA and the Los Angeles Regional Quality Control Board
conducted a stormwater audit of the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach
in May 2007, and issued 20 administrative orders to the Ports' tenants,
including APM Terminals Pacific Limited.
APM Terminals operates the Port's largest container terminal, the
484-acre Pier 400, where the largest on-dock railyard at the Port of
Los Angeles is located.
Strauss points out that discharges like those from the APM facility can
carry pollutants such as metals, oil and grease, acidic wastewater,
bacteria, and trash into nearby waters. The EPA requires industrial
facilities to prevent such water pollution by complying with federal
and state water pollution requirements. The federal Clean Water Act
requires that industrial facilities discharging wastewater or
stormwater from a point source into a waterway must obtain a National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System, NPDES, permit. All NPDES
permits are written to ensure the receiving waters meet water quality
standards, the EPA says. But, said the agency, APM Terminals Pacific
Ltd. failed to implement best management practices at its Port of Los
Angeles facility and also failed to develop an adequate stormwater
pollution prevention plan for company operations at the Port.
At the Port of Los Angeles, APM Terminals operates an administration
building; vessel operations building; rail operations building; and a
maintenance and repair facility/multi-purpose dock. The on-dock service
is designed for 12 loading tracks with a total capacity of 126
railcars; a transportation corridor for rail and highway traffic; three
advanced gate complexes with 36 inbound lanes and 20 outbound lanes;
and 1,800 refrigerated container plugs With world headquarters in The
Hague, The Netherlands, APM Terminals operates a global terminal
network of over 50 ports in 34 countries. The company, a subsidiary of
the Danish shipping line Maersk, provides port management and
operations to over 60 liner shipping customers who serve importers and
exporters of containerized cargo.
According to company statements, APM Terminals had over $3 billion in
revenues in 2008 and invested $723 million in new ports and port
projects.
The proposed settlement is subject to a 30-day public comment period.
Source: ENS