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EPA
Reaffirms Clean Water Permits Not Needed for Water Transfers
News for Release:
Monday,
June 9, 2008
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Contact Information:
Shakeba Carter-Jenkins, (202)
564-4355 / carter-jenkins.shakeba@epa.gov
(Washington
,
D.C.
-
June
9, 2008)
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is announcing a rule to
clarify that permits are not required for transfers of water from one
body of water to another. Such transfers include routing water through
tunnels, channels, or natural stream courses for public water supplies,
irrigation, power generation, flood control, and environmental
restoration.
"EPA's Water Transfer Rule gives communities greater certainty and
makes clear they have the flexibility to protect water quality and
promote the public good without going through a new federal permitting
process," said Assistant Administrator for Water Benjamin H.
Grumbles. "Clean water permits should focus on water pollution, not
water movement. EPA is committed to working with our state, tribal, and
local partners to reduce environmental impacts associated with transfers
and will continue to use all appropriate tools such as standards, best
management practices, and watershed plans."
Thousands of water transfers currently in place across the country are
vital to the nation's water supply and infrastructure systems. Whether a
permit is needed under the Clean Water Act's National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) has been an issue in numerous court
cases in recent years. The final rule defines water transfers as an
activity that conveys or connects waters of the
United
States
without
subjecting the transferred water to intervening industrial, municipal,
or commercial use. Pollutants introduced by the water transfer activity
itself to the water being transferred would still require an NPDES
permit under today's rule. Furthermore, this rule does not prevent
states or tribes from using their own authorities to address water
transfers, including the use of non-NPDES permits.
In 2004, the question of whether NPDES permits were necessary for water
transfers went before the U.S. Supreme Court in South Florida Water
Management District v. Miccosukee Tribe of Indians. The court did
not rule directly on the issue, which left unresolved the uncertainty
many felt about the need for an NPDES permit. EPA issued an interpretive
statement in 2005 explaining that Congress intended water
resource-management agencies and other state authorities to oversee
water transfers, not the NPDES permitting program. This rulemaking
codifies that position.
Over the last several years, EPA has been advancing water quality
improvements related to water transfers and other hydrologic
modifications through watershed planning and management measures.
For example, last summer EPA issued the National Management
Measures to Control Nonpoint Source Pollution from Hydromodification
guidance that provides recommended best management practices for
addressing the effects of changes in flow. The recently released
Handbook for Developing Watershed Plans to Restore and Protect Our
Waters can assist communities as they analyze water quality priorities
in their watersheds and identify management measures to reduce causes of
impairments.
More information on the rule: http://www.epa.gov/npdes/agriculture
R145
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