eCFR for Part 254

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30 CFR 254, Oil-Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located Seaward of the Coast Line

eCFR for Part 254

OMB: 1014-0007

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Title 30 → Chapter II → Subchapter B → Part 254
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Title 30: Mineral Resources

PART 254—OIL-SPILL RESPONSE REQUIREMENTS FOR FACILITIES LOCATED SEAWARD OF THE COAST LINE
Contents
Subpart A—General
§254.1   Who must submit an oil spill response plan (OSRP)?
§254.2   When must I submit an OSRP?
§254.3   May I cover more than one facility in my OSRP?
§254.4   May I reference other documents in my OSRP?
§254.5   General response plan requirements.
§254.6   Definitions.
§254.7   How do I submit my OSRP to the BSEE?
§254.8   May I appeal decisions under this part?
§254.9   Authority for information collection.
Subpart B—Oil-Spill Response Plans for Outer Continental Shelf Facilities
§254.20   Purpose.
§254.21   How must I format my OSRP?
§254.22   What information must I include in the “Introduction and OSRP contents” section?
§254.23   What information must I include in the “Emergency response action plan” section?
§254.24   What information must I include in the “Equipment inventory” appendix?
§254.25   What information must I include in the “Contractual agreements” appendix?
§254.26   What information must I include in the “Worst case discharge scenario” appendix?
§254.27   What information must I include in the “Dispersant use plan” appendix?
§254.28   What information must I include in the “In situ burning plan” appendix?
§254.29   What information must I include in the “Training and drills” appendix?
§254.30   When must I revise my OSRP?
Subpart C—Related Requirements for Outer Continental Shelf Facilities
§254.40   Records.
§254.41   Training your response personnel.
§254.42   Exercises for your response personnel and equipment.
§254.43   Maintenance and periodic inspection of response equipment.
§254.44   Calculating response equipment effective daily recovery capacities.
§254.45   Verifying the capabilities of your response equipment.
§254.46   Whom do I notify if an oil spill occurs?
§254.47   Determining the volume of oil of your worst case discharge scenario.
Subpart D—Oil-Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located in State Waters Seaward of the Coast Line
§254.50   Spill response plans for facilities located in State waters seaward of the coast line.
§254.51   Modifying an existing OCS OSRP.
§254.52   Following the format for an OCS OSRP.
§254.53   Submitting an OSRP developed under State requirements.
§254.54   Spill prevention for facilities located in State waters seaward of the coast line.
§254.55   Spill response plans for facilities located in Alaska State waters seaward of the coast line in the Chukchi and Beaufort
Seas.
Subpart E—Oil-Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located on the Arctic OCS

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§254.65   Purpose.
§§254.66-254.69   [Reserved]
§254.70   What are the additional requirements for facilities conducting exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS?
§§254.71-254.79   [Reserved]
§254.80   What additional information must I include in the “Emergency response action plan” section for facilities conducting
exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS?
§§254.81-254.89   [Reserved]
§254.90   What are the additional requirements for exercises of your response personnel and equipment for facilities conducting
exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS?
AuthoritY: 33 U.S.C. 1321.
Source: 76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, unless otherwise noted.

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Subpart A—General
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§254.1   Who must submit an oil spill response plan (OSRP)?
(a) If you are the owner or operator of an oil handling, storage, or transportation facility, and it is located seaward of the
coast line, you must submit an oil spill response plan (OSRP) to BSEE for approval. Your OSRP must demonstrate that you can
respond quickly and effectively whenever oil is discharged from your facility. Refer to §254.6 for the definitions of oil, facility, and
coast line if you have any doubts about whether to submit a plan.
(b) You must maintain a current OSRP for an abandoned facility until you physically remove or dismantle the facility or until
the Chief, Oil Spill Preparedness Division (OSPD) notifies you in writing that a plan is no longer required.
(c) Owners or operators of offshore pipelines carrying essentially dry gas do not need to submit a plan. You must, however,
submit a plan for a pipeline that carries:
(1) Oil;
(2) Condensate that has been injected into the pipeline; or
(3) Gas and naturally occurring condensate.
(d) If you are in doubt as to whether you must submit a plan for an offshore facility or pipeline, you should check with the
Chief, OSPD.
(e) If your facility is located landward of the coast line, but you believe your facility is sufficiently similar to OCS facilities that
it should be regulated by BSEE, you may contact the Chief, OSPD, offer to accept BSEE jurisdiction over your facility, and
request that BSEE seek from the agency with jurisdiction over your facility a relinquishment of that jurisdiction.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36151, June 6, 2016]

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§254.2   When must I submit an OSRP?
(a) You must submit, and BSEE must approve, an OSRP that covers each facility located seaward of the coast line before
you may use that facility. To continue operations, you must operate the facility in compliance with the OSRP.
(b) Despite the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section, you may operate your facility after you submit your OSRP while
BSEE reviews it for approval. To operate a facility without an approved OSRP, you must certify in writing to the Chief, OSPD
that you have the capability to respond, to the maximum extent practicable, to a worst case discharge or a substantial threat of
such a discharge. The certification must show that you have ensured by contract, or other means approved by the Chief,
OSPD, the availability of private personnel and equipment necessary to respond to the discharge. Verification from the
organization(s) providing the personnel and equipment must accompany the certification. BSEE will not allow you to operate a
facility for more than 2 years without an approved OSRP.
[81 FR 36151, June 6, 2016]

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§254.3   May I cover more than one facility in my OSRP?
(a) Your OSRP may be for a single lease or facility or a group of leases or facilities. All the leases or facilities in your plan
must have the same owner or operator (including affiliates) and must be located in the same BSEE Region (see definition of

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Regional OSRP in §254.6).
(b) Regional OSRPs must address all the elements required for an OSRP in subpart B, or subpart D of this part, as
appropriate.
(c) When developing a Regional OSRP, you may group leases or facilities subject to the approval of the Chief, OSPD, for
the purposes of:
(1) Calculating response times;
(2) Determining quantities of response equipment;
(3) Conducting oil-spill trajectory analyses;
(4) Determining worst case discharge scenarios; and
(5) Identifying areas of special economic and environmental importance that may be impacted and the strategies for their
protection.
(d) The Chief, OSPD, may specify how to address the elements of a Regional OSRP. The Chief, OSPD, also may require
that Regional OSRPs contain additional information if necessary for compliance with appropriate laws and regulations.
[81 FR 36151, June 6, 2016]

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§254.4   May I reference other documents in my OSRP?
You may reference information contained in other readily accessible documents in your OSRP. Examples of documents
that you may reference are the National Contingency Plan (NCP), Area Contingency Plan (ACP), BSEE or BOEM
environmental documents, and Oil Spill Removal Organization (OSRO) documents that are readily accessible to the Chief,
OSPD. You must ensure that the Chief, OSPD, possesses or is provided with copies of all OSRO documents you reference.
You should contact the Chief, OSPD, if you want to know whether a reference is acceptable.
[81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.5   General response plan requirements.
(a) The OSRP must provide for response to an oil spill from the facility. You must immediately carry out the provisions of
the OSRP whenever there is a release of oil from the facility. You must also carry out the training, equipment testing, and
periodic drills described in the OSRP, and these measures must be sufficient to ensure the safety of the facility and to mitigate
or prevent a discharge or a substantial threat of a discharge.
(b) The OSRP must be consistent with the National Contingency Plan and the appropriate Area Contingency Plan(s).
(c) Nothing in this part relieves you from taking all appropriate actions necessary to immediately abate the source of a spill
and remove any spills of oil.
(d) In addition to the requirements listed in this part, you must provide any other information the Chief, OSPD, requires for
compliance with appropriate laws and regulations.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.6   Definitions.
For the purposes of this part:
Adverse weather conditions means, for the purposes of this part, weather conditions found in the operating area that make
it difficult for response equipment and personnel to clean up or remove spilled oil or hazardous substances. These conditions
include, but are not limited to: fog, inhospitable water and air temperatures, wind, sea ice, extreme cold, freezing spray, snow,
currents, sea states, and extended periods of low light. Adverse weather conditions do not refer to conditions under which it
would be dangerous or impossible to respond to a spill, such as a hurricane.
Arctic OCS means the Beaufort Sea and Chukchi Sea Planning Areas (for more information on these areas, see the
Proposed Final OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program for 2012-2017 (June 2012) at http://www.boem.gov/Oil-and-Gas-EnergyProgram/Leasing/Five-Year-Program/2012-2017/Program-Area-Maps/index.aspx).
Area Contingency Plan means an Area Contingency Plan prepared and published under section 311(j) of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act (FWPCA).
Chief, OSPD means the Chief, BSEE Oil Spill Preparedness Division or designee.

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Coast line means the line of ordinary low water along that portion of the coast which is in direct contact with the open sea
and the line marking the seaward limit of inland waters.
Discharge means any emission (other than natural seepage), intentional or unintentional, and includes, but is not limited to,
spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, or dumping.
District Manager means the BSEE officer with authority and responsibility for a district within a BSEE Region.
Facility means any structure, group of structures, equipment, or device (other than a vessel) which is used for one or more
of the following purposes: Exploring for, drilling for, producing, storing, handling, transferring, processing, or transporting oil. The
term excludes deep-water ports and their associated pipelines as defined by the Deepwater Port Act of 1974, but includes other
pipelines used for one or more of these purposes. A mobile offshore drilling unit is classified as a facility when engaged in
drilling or downhole operations.
Ice intervention practices mean the equipment, vessels, and procedures used to increase oil encounter rates and the
effectiveness of spill response techniques and equipment when sea ice is present.
Maximum extent practicable means within the limitations of available technology, as well as the physical limitations of
personnel, when responding to a worst case discharge in adverse weather conditions.
National Contingency Plan means the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan prepared and
published under section 311(d) of the FWPCA, (33 U.S.C. 1321(d)) or revised under section 105 of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (42 U.S.C. 9605).
National Contingency Plan Product Schedule means a schedule of dispersants and other chemical or biological products,
maintained by the Environmental Protection Agency, that may be authorized for use on oil discharges in accordance with the
procedures found at 40 CFR 300.910.
Oil means oil of any kind or in any form, including but not limited to petroleum, fuel oil, sludge, oil refuse, and oil mixed with
wastes other than dredged spoil. This also includes hydrocarbons produced at the wellhead in liquid form (includes distillates or
condensate associated with produced natural gas), and condensate that has been separated from a gas prior to injection into a
pipeline. It does not include petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction thereof, which is specifically listed or designated as a
hazardous substance under paragraphs (A) through (F) of section 101(14) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (42 U.S.C. 9601) and which is subject to the provisions of that Act. It also does not include
animal fats and oils and greases and fish and marine mammal oils, within the meaning of paragraph (2) of section 61(a) of title
13, United States Code, and oils of vegetable origin, including oils from the seeds, nuts, and kernels referred to in paragraph (1)
(A) of that section.
Oil spill removal organization (OSRO) means an entity contracted by an owner or operator to provide spill-response
equipment and/or manpower in the event of an oil or hazardous substance spill.
OSRP means an Oil Spill Response Plan.
Outer Continental Shelf means all submerged lands lying seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable
waters as defined in section 2 of the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301) and of which the subsoil and seabed appertain to
the United States and are subject to its jurisdiction and control.
Owner or operator means, in the case of an offshore facility, any person owning or operating such offshore facility. In the
case of any abandoned offshore facility, it means the person who owned such facility immediately prior to such abandonment.
Pipeline means pipe and any associated equipment, appurtenance, or building used or intended for use in the
transportation of oil located seaward of the coast line, except those used for deep-water ports. Pipelines do not include vessels
such as barges or shuttle tankers used to transport oil from facilities located seaward of the coast line.
Qualified individual means an English-speaking representative of an owner or operator, located in the United States,
available on a 24-hour basis, with full authority to obligate funds, carry out removal actions, and communicate with the
appropriate Federal officials and the persons providing personnel and equipment in removal operations.
Regional Response Plan means a spill-response plan required by this part which covers multiple facilities or leases of an
owner or operator, including affiliates, which are located in the same BSEE Region.
Regional Supervisor means the BSEE official with responsibility and authority for operations or other designated program
functions within a BSEE Region.
Remove means containment and cleanup of oil from water and shorelines or the taking of other actions as may be
necessary to minimize or mitigate damage to the public health or welfare, including, but not limited to, fish, shellfish, wildlife,
public and private property, shorelines, and beaches.
Spill is synonymous with “discharge” for the purposes of this part.
Spill management team means the trained persons identified in an OSRP who staff the organizational structure to manage
spill response.
Spill-response coordinator means a trained person charged with the responsibility and designated the commensurate
authority for directing and coordinating response operations.
Spill-response operating team means the trained persons who respond to spills through deployment and operation of oilspill response equipment.
State waters located seaward of the coast line means the belt of the seas measured from the coast line and extending

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seaward a distance of 3 miles (except the coast of Texas and the Gulf coast of Florida, where the State waters extend seaward
a distance of 3 leagues).
You means the owner or the operator as defined in this section.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016; 81 FR 46563, July 15, 2016]

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§254.7   How do I submit my OSRP to the BSEE?
You must submit the number of copies of your OSRP that the appropriate BSEE regional office requires. If you prefer to
use improved information technology such as electronic filing to submit your plan, ask the Chief, OSPD, for further guidance.
(a) Send OSRPs for facilities located seaward of the coast line of Alaska to: Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Enforcement, Oil Spill Preparedness Division, Attention: Senior Analyst, 3801 Centerpoint Drive, Suite #500, Anchorage, AK
99503-5823.
(b) Send OSRPs for facilities in the Gulf of Mexico or Atlantic Ocean to: Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement,
Oil Spill Preparedness Division, Attention: GOM Section Supervisor, 1201 Elmwood Park Boulevard, New Orleans, LA 701232394.
(c) Send OSRPs for facilities in the Pacific Ocean (except seaward of the coast line of Alaska) to: Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement, Oil Spill Preparedness Division, Attention: Senior Analyst, 760 Paseo Camarillo, Suite 201,
Camarillo, CA 93010-6002.
[81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.8   May I appeal decisions under this part?
See 30 CFR part 290 for instructions on how to appeal any order or decision that we issue under this part.
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§254.9   Authority for information collection.
(a) The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has approved the information collection requirements in this part under
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. OMB assigned the control number 1014-0007. The title of this information collection is “30 CFR part
254, Oil Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located Seaward of the Coast line.”
(b) BSEE collects this information to ensure that the owner or operator of an offshore facility is prepared to respond to an
oil spill. BSEE uses the information to verify compliance with the mandates of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA). The
requirement to submit this information is mandatory. No confidential or proprietary information is collected.
(c) An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control number.
(d) Send comments regarding any aspect of the collection of information under this part, including suggestions for reducing
the burden, to the Information Collection Clearance Officer, Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, 45600 Woodland
Road, Sterling, VA 20166.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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Subpart B—Oil-Spill Response Plans for Outer Continental Shelf Facilities
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§254.20   Purpose.
This subpart describes the requirements for preparing OSRPs for facilities located on the OCS.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.21   How must I format my OSRP?
(a) You must divide your OSRP for OCS facilities into the sections specified in paragraph (b) of this section and explained
in the other sections of this subpart. The OSRP must have an easily found marker identifying each section. You may use an
alternate format if you include a cross reference table to identify the location of required sections. You may use alternate
contents if you can demonstrate to the Chief, OSPD that they provide for equal or greater levels of preparedness.
(b) Your OSRP must include:
(1) Introduction and OSRP contents.
(2) Emergency response action plan.
(3) Appendices:
(i) Equipment inventory.
(ii) Contractual agreements.
(iii) Worst case discharge scenario.
(iv) Dispersant use plan.
(v) In situ burning plan.
(vi) Training and drills.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.22   What information must I include in the “Introduction and OSRP contents” section?
The “Introduction and OSRP contents” section must provide:
(a) Identification of the facility the OSRP covers, including its location and type;
(b) A table of contents;
(c) A record of changes made to the OSRP; and
(d) A cross-reference table, if needed, because you are using an alternate format for your OSRP.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.23   What information must I include in the “Emergency response action plan” section?
The “Emergency response action plan” section is the core of the OSRP. Put information in easy-to-use formats such as
flow charts or tables where appropriate. This section must include:
(a) Designation, by name or position, of a trained qualified individual (QI) who has full authority to implement removal
actions and ensure immediate notification of appropriate Federal officials and response personnel.
(b) Designation, by name or position, of a trained spill management team available on a 24-hour basis. The team must
include a trained spill-response coordinator and alternate(s) who have the responsibility and authority to direct and coordinate
response operations on your behalf. You must describe the team's organizational structure as well as the responsibilities and
authorities of each position on the spill management team.
(c) Description of a spill-response operating team. Team members must be trained and available on a 24-hour basis to
deploy and operate spill-response equipment. They must be able to respond within a reasonable minimum specified time. You
must include the number and types of personnel available from each identified labor source.
(d) A planned location for a spill-response operations center and provisions for primary and alternate communications
systems available for use in coordinating and directing spill-response operations. You must provide telephone numbers for the
response operations center. You also must provide any facsimile numbers and primary and secondary radio frequencies that
will be used.
(e) A listing of the types and characteristics of the oil handled, stored, or transported at the facility.
(f) Procedures for the early detection of a spill.
(g) Identification of procedures you will follow in the event of a spill or a substantial threat of a spill. The procedures should
show appropriate response levels for differing spill sizes including those resulting from a fire or explosion. These will include, as
appropriate:
(1) Your procedures for spill notification. The plan must provide for the use of the oil spill reporting forms included in the

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Area Contingency Plan or an equivalent reporting form.
(i) Your procedures must include a current list which identifies the following by name or position, corporate address, and
telephone number (including facsimile number if applicable):
(A) The qualified individual;
(B) The spill-response coordinator and alternate(s); and
(C) Other spill-response management team members.
(ii) You must also provide names, telephone numbers, and addresses for the following:
(A) OSRO's that the plan cites;
(B) Federal, State, and local regulatory agencies that you must consult to obtain site specific environmental information;
and
(C) Federal, State, and local regulatory agencies that you must notify when an oil spill occurs.
(2) Your methods to monitor and predict spill movement;
(3) Your methods to identify and prioritize the beaches, waterfowl, other marine and shoreline resources, and areas of
special economic and environmental importance;
(4) Your methods to protect beaches, waterfowl, other marine and shoreline resources, and areas of special economic or
environmental importance;
(5) Your methods to ensure that containment and recovery equipment as well as the response personnel are mobilized and
deployed at the spill site;
(6) Your methods to ensure that devices for the storage of recovered oil are sufficient to allow containment and recovery
operations to continue without interruption;
(7) Your procedures to remove oil and oiled debris from shallow waters and along shorelines and rehabilitating waterfowl
which become oiled;
(8) Your procedures to store, transfer, and dispose of recovered oil and oil-contaminated materials and to ensure that all
disposal is in accordance with Federal, State, and local requirements; and
(9) Your methods to implement your dispersant use plan and your in situ burning plan.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.24   What information must I include in the “Equipment inventory” appendix?
Your “Equipment inventory appendix” must include:
(a) An inventory of spill-response materials and supplies, services, equipment, and response vessels available locally and
regionally. You must identify each supplier and provide their locations and telephone numbers.
(b) A description of the procedures for inspecting and maintaining spill-response equipment in accordance with §254.43.
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§254.25   What information must I include in the “Contractual agreements” appendix?
Your “Contractual agreements” appendix must furnish proof of any contracts or membership agreements with OSRO's,
cooperatives, spill-response service providers, or spill management team members who are not your employees that you cite in
the OSRP. To provide this proof, submit copies of the contracts or membership agreements or certify that contracts or
membership agreements are in effect. The contract or membership agreement must include provisions for ensuring the
availability of the personnel and/or equipment on a 24-hour-per-day basis.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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§254.26   What information must I include in the “Worst case discharge scenario” appendix?
The discussion of your worst case discharge scenario must include all of the following elements:
(a) The volume of your worst case discharge scenario determined using the criteria in §254.47. Provide any assumptions
made and the supporting calculations used to determine this volume.

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(b) An appropriate trajectory analysis specific to the area in which the facility is located. The analysis must identify onshore
and offshore areas that a discharge potentially could affect. The trajectory analysis chosen must reflect the maximum distance
from the facility that oil could move in a time period that it reasonably could be expected to persist in the environment.
(c) A list of the resources of special economic or environmental importance that potentially could be impacted in the areas
identified by your trajectory analysis. You also must state the strategies that you will use for their protection. At a minimum, this
list must include those resources of special economic and environmental importance, if any, specified in the appropriate Area
Contingency Plan(s).
(d) A discussion of your response to your worst case discharge scenario in adverse weather conditions. This discussion
must include:
(1) A description of the response equipment that you will use to contain and recover the discharge to the maximum extent
practicable. This description must include the types, location(s) and owner, quantity, and capabilities of the equipment. You also
must include the effective daily recovery capacities, where applicable. You must calculate the effective daily recovery capacities
using the methods described in §254.44. For operations at a drilling or production facility, your scenario must show how you will
cope with the initial spill volume upon arrival at the scene and then support operations for a blowout lasting 30 days.
(2) A description of the personnel, materials, and support vessels that would be necessary to ensure that the identified
response equipment is deployed and operated promptly and effectively. Your description must include the location and owner of
these resources as well as the quantities and types (if applicable);
(3) A description of your oil storage, transfer, and disposal equipment. Your description must include the types, location and
owner, quantity, and capacities of the equipment; and
(4) An estimation of the individual times needed for:
(i) Procurement of the identified containment, recovery, and storage equipment;
(ii) Procurement of equipment transportation vessel(s);
(iii) Procurement of personnel to load and operate the equipment;
(iv) Equipment loadout (transfer of equipment to transportation vessel(s));
(v) Travel to the deployment site (including any time required for travel from an equipment storage area); and
(vi) Equipment deployment.
(e) In preparing the discussion required by paragraph (d) of this section, you must:
(1) Ensure that the response equipment, materials, support vessels, and strategies listed are suitable, within the limits of
current technology, for the range of environmental conditions anticipated at your facility; and
(2) Use standardized, defined terms to describe the range of environmental conditions anticipated and the capabilities of
response equipment. Examples of acceptable terms include those defined in American Society for Testing of Materials (ASTM)
publication F625-94, Standard Practice for Describing Environmental Conditions Relevant to Spill Control Systems for Use on
Water, and ASTM F818-93, Standard Definitions Relating to Spill Response Barriers.
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§254.27   What information must I include in the “Dispersant use plan” appendix?
Your dispersant use plan must be consistent with the National Contingency Plan Product Schedule and other provisions of
the National Contingency Plan and the appropriate Area Contingency Plan(s). The plan must include:
(a) An inventory and a location of the dispersants and other chemical or biological products which you might use on the oils
handled, stored, or transported at the facility;
(b) A summary of toxicity data for these products;
(c) A description and a location of any application equipment required as well as an estimate of the time to commence
application after approval is obtained;
(d) A discussion of the application procedures;
(e) A discussion of the conditions under which product use may be requested; and
(f) An outline of the procedures you must follow in obtaining approval for product use.
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§254.28   What information must I include in the “In situ burning plan” appendix?
Your in situ burning plan must be consistent with any guidelines authorized by the National Contingency Plan and the
appropriate Area Contingency Plan(s). Your in situ burning plan must include:

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(a) A description of the in situ burn equipment including its availability, location, and owner;
(b) A discussion of your in situ burning procedures, including provisions for ignition of an oil spill;
(c) A discussion of environmental effects of an in situ burn;
(d) Your guidelines for well control and safety of personnel and property;
(e) A discussion of the circumstances in which in situ burning may be appropriate;
(f) Your guidelines for making the decision to ignite; and
(g) An outline of the procedures you must follow to obtain approval for an in situ burn.
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§254.29   What information must I include in the “Training and drills” appendix?
Your “Training and drills” appendix must:
(a) Identify and include the dates of the training provided to members of the spill-response management team and the
qualified individual. The types of training given to the members of the spill-response operating team also must be described.
The training requirements for your spill management team and your spill-response operating team are specified in §254.41. You
must designate a location where you keep course completion certificates or attendance records for this training.
(b) Describe in detail your plans for satisfying the exercise requirements of §254.42. You must designate a location where
you keep the records of these exercises.
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§254.30   When must I revise my OSRP?
(a) You must review your OSRP at least every 2 years and submit all resulting modifications to the Chief, OSPD. If this
review does not result in modifications, you must inform the Chief, OSPD, in writing that there are no changes.
(b) You must submit revisions to your OSRP for approval within 15 days whenever:
(1) A change occurs which significantly reduces your response capabilities;
(2) A significant change occurs in the worst case discharge scenario or in the type of oil being handled, stored, or
transported at the facility;
(3) There is a change in the name(s) or capabilities of the oil spill removal organizations cited in the OSRP; or
(4) There is a significant change to the Area Contingency Plan(s).
(c) The Chief, OSPD, may require that you resubmit your OSRP if the OSRP has become outdated or if numerous
revisions have made its use difficult.
(d) The Chief, OSPD, will periodically review the equipment inventories of OSRO's to ensure that sufficient spill removal
equipment is available to meet the cumulative needs of the owners and operators who cite these organizations in their OSRPs.
(e) The Chief, OSPD, may require you to revise your OSRP if significant inadequacies are indicated by:
(1) Periodic reviews (described in paragraph (d) of this section);
(2) Information obtained during drills or actual spill responses; or
(3) Other relevant information the Chief, OSPD, obtained.
[81 FR 36152, June 6, 2016]

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Subpart C—Related Requirements for Outer Continental Shelf Facilities
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§254.40   Records.
You must make all records of services, personnel, and equipment provided by OSRO's or cooperatives available to any
authorized BSEE representative upon request.

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§254.41   Training your response personnel.
(a) You must ensure that the members of your spill-response operating team who are responsible for operating response
equipment attend hands-on training classes at least annually. This training must include the deployment and operation of the
response equipment they will use. Those responsible for supervising the team must be trained annually in directing the
deployment and use of the response equipment.
(b) You must ensure that the spill-response management team, including the spill-response coordinator and alternates,
receives annual training. This training must include instruction on:
(1) Locations, intended use, deployment strategies, and the operational and logistical requirements of response equipment;
(2) Spill reporting procedures;
(3) Oil-spill trajectory analysis and predicting spill movement; and
(4) Any other responsibilities the spill management team may have.
(c) You must ensure that the qualified individual is sufficiently trained to perform his or her duties.
(d) You must keep all training certificates and training attendance records at the location designated in your OSRP for at
least 2 years. They must be made available to any authorized BSEE representative upon request.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.42   Exercises for your response personnel and equipment.
(a) You must exercise your entire OSRP at least once every 3 years (triennial exercise). You may satisfy this requirement
by conducting separate exercises for individual parts of the OSRP over the 3-year period; you do not have to exercise your
entire OSRP at one time.
(b) In satisfying the triennial exercise requirement, you must, at a minimum, conduct:
(1) An annual spill management team tabletop exercise. The exercise must test the spill management team's organization,
communication, and decision making in managing a response. You must not reveal the spill scenario to team members before
the exercise starts.
(2) An annual deployment exercise of response equipment identified in your OSRP that is staged at onshore locations. You
must deploy and operate each type of equipment in each triennial period. However, it is not necessary to deploy and operate
each individual piece of equipment.
(3) An annual notification exercise for each facility that is manned on a 24- hour basis. The exercise must test the ability of
facility personnel to communicate pertinent information in a timely manner to the qualified individual.
(4) A semiannual deployment exercise of any response equipment which the BSEE Regional Supervisor requires an owner
or operator to maintain at the facility or on dedicated vessels. You must deploy and operate each type of this equipment at least
once each year. Each type need not be deployed and operated at each exercise.
(c) During your exercises, you must simulate conditions in the area of operations, including seasonal weather variations, to
the extent practicable. The exercises must cover a range of scenarios over the 3-year exercise period, simulating responses to
large continuous spills, spills of short duration and limited volume, and your worst case discharge scenario.
(d) BSEE will recognize and give credit for any documented exercise conducted that satisfies some part of the required
triennial exercise. You will receive this credit whether the owner or operator, an OSRO, or a Government regulatory agency
initiates the exercise. BSEE will give you credit for an actual spill response if you evaluate the response and generate a proper
record. Exercise documentation should include the following information:
(1) Type of exercise;
(2) Date and time of the exercise;
(3) Description of the exercise;
(4) Objectives met; and
(5) Lessons learned.
(e) All records of spill-response exercises must be maintained for the complete 3-year exercise cycle. Records should be
maintained at the facility or at a corporate location designated in the OSRP. Records showing that OSROs and oil spill removal
cooperatives have deployed each type of equipment also must be maintained for the 3-year cycle.
(f) You must inform the Chief, OSPD of the date of any exercise required by paragraph (b)(1), (2), or (4) of this section at
least 30 days before the exercise. This will allow BSEE personnel the opportunity to witness any exercises.

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(g) The Regional Supervisor periodically will initiate unannounced drills to test the spill response preparedness of owners
and operators.
(h) The Chief, OSPD may require changes in the frequency or location of the required exercises, equipment to be deployed
and operated, or deployment procedures or strategies. The Chief, OSPD may evaluate the results of the exercises and advise
the owner or operator of any needed changes in response equipment, procedures, or strategies.
(i) Compliance with the National Preparedness for Response Exercise Program (PREP) Guidelines will satisfy the exercise
requirements of this section. Copies of the PREP document may be obtained from the Chief, OSPD.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.43   Maintenance and periodic inspection of response equipment.
(a) You must ensure that the response equipment listed in your OSRP is inspected at least monthly and is maintained, as
necessary, to ensure optimal performance.
(b) You must ensure that records of the inspections and the maintenance activities are kept for at least 2 years and are
made available to any authorized BSEE representative upon request.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.44   Calculating response equipment effective daily recovery capacities.
(a) You are required by §254.26(d)(1) to calculate the effective daily recovery capacity of the response equipment identified
in your OSRP that you would use to contain and recover your worst case discharge. You must calculate the effective daily
recovery capacity of the equipment by multiplying the manufacturer's rated throughput capacity over a 24-hour period by 20
percent. This 20 percent efficiency factor takes into account the limitations of the recovery operations due to available daylight,
sea state, temperature, viscosity, and emulsification of the oil being recovered. You must use this calculated rate to determine if
you have sufficient recovery capacity to respond to your worst case discharge scenario.
(b) If you want to use a different efficiency factor for specific oil recovery devices, you must submit evidence to substantiate
that efficiency factor. Adequate evidence includes verified performance data measured during actual spills or test data gathered
according to the provisions of §254.45(b) and (c).
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.45   Verifying the capabilities of your response equipment.
(a) The Regional Supervisor may require performance testing of any spill-response equipment listed in your OSRP to verify
its capabilities if the equipment:
(1) Has been modified;
(2) Has been damaged and repaired; or
(3) Has a claimed effective daily recovery capacity that is inconsistent with data otherwise available to BSEE.
(b) You must conduct any required performance testing of booms in accordance with BSEE-approved test criteria. You may
use the document “Test Protocol for the Evaluation of Oil-Spill Containment Booms,” available from BSEE, for guidance.
Performance testing of skimmers also must be conducted in accordance with BSEE approved test criteria. You may use the
document “Suggested Test Protocol for the Evaluation of Oil Spill Skimmers for the OCS,” available from BSEE, for guidance.
(c) You are responsible for any required testing of equipment performance and for the accuracy of the information
submitted.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.46   Whom do I notify if an oil spill occurs?
(a) You must immediately notify the National Response Center (1-800-424-8802) if you observe:
(1) An oil spill from your facility;
(2) An oil spill from another offshore facility; or

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(3) An offshore spill of unknown origin.
(b) In the event of a spill of 1 barrel or more from your facility, you must orally notify the Regional Supervisor without delay.
You also must report spills from your facility of unknown size but thought to be 1 barrel or more.
(1) If a spill from your facility not originally reported to the Regional Supervisor is subsequently found to be 1 barrel or more,
you must then report it without delay.
(2) You must file a written follow up report for any spill from your facility of 1 barrel or more. The Chief, OSPD must receive
this confirmation within 15 days after the spillage has been stopped. All reports must include the cause, location, volume, and
remedial action taken. Reports of spills of more than 50 barrels must include information on the sea state, meteorological
conditions, and the size and appearance of the slick. The Regional Supervisor may require additional information if it is
determined that an analysis of the response is necessary.
(c) If you observe a spill resulting from operations at another offshore facility, you must immediately notify the responsible
party and the Regional Supervisor.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.47   Determining the volume of oil of your worst case discharge scenario.
You must calculate the volume of oil of your worst case discharge scenario as follows:
(a) For an oil production platform facility, the size of your worst case discharge scenario is the sum of the following:
(1) The maximum capacity of all oil storage tanks and flow lines on the facility. Flow line volume may be estimated; and
(2) The volume of oil calculated to leak from a break in any pipelines connected to the facility considering shutdown time,
the effect of hydrostatic pressure, gravity, frictional wall forces and other factors; and
(3) The daily production volume from an uncontrolled blowout of the highest capacity well associated with the facility. In
determining the daily discharge rate, you must consider reservoir characteristics, casing/production tubing sizes, and historical
production and reservoir pressure data. Your scenario must discuss how to respond to this well flowing for 30 days as required
by §254.26(d)(1).
(b) For exploratory or development drilling operations, the size of your worst case discharge scenario is the daily volume
possible from an uncontrolled blowout. In determining the daily discharge rate, you must consider any known reservoir
characteristics. If reservoir characteristics are unknown, you must consider the characteristics of any analog reservoirs from the
area and give an explanation for the selection of the reservoir(s) used. Your scenario must discuss how to respond to this well
flowing for 30 days as required by §254.26(d)(1).
(c) For a pipeline facility, the size of your worst case discharge scenario is the volume possible from a pipeline break. You
must calculate this volume as follows:
(1) Add the pipeline system leak detection time to the shutdown response time.
(2) Multiply the time calculated in paragraph (c)(1) of this section by the highest measured oil flow rate over the preceding
12-month period. For new pipelines, you should use the predicted oil flow rate in the calculation.
(3) Add to the volume calculated in paragraph (c)(2) of this section the total volume of oil that would leak from the pipeline
after it is shut in. Calculate this volume by taking into account the effects of hydrostatic pressure, gravity, frictional wall forces,
length of pipeline segment, tie-ins with other pipelines, and other factors.
(d) If your facility which stores, handles, transfers, processes, or transports oil does not fall into the categories listed in
paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section, contact the Chief, OSPD for instructions on the calculation of the volume of your worst
case discharge scenario.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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Subpart D—Oil-Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located in State Waters
Seaward of the Coast Line
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§254.50   Spill response plans for facilities located in State waters seaward of the coast line.
Owners or operators of facilities located in State waters seaward of the coast line must submit a spill-response plan to
BSEE for approval. You may choose one of three methods to comply with this requirement. The three methods are described in
§§254.51, 254.52, and 254.53.

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§254.51   Modifying an existing OCS OSRP.
You may modify an existing response plan covering a lease or facility on the OCS to include a lease or facility in State
waters located seaward of the coast line. Since this OSRP would cover more than one lease or facility, it would be considered a
Regional Response Plan. You should refer to §254.3 and contact the appropriate regional BSEE office if you have any
questions on how to prepare this Regional Response Plan.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.52   Following the format for an OCS OSRP.
You may develop a response OSRP following the requirements for plans for OCS facilities found in subpart B of this part.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.53   Submitting an OSRP developed under State requirements.
(a) You may submit a response plan to BSEE for approval that you developed in accordance with the laws or regulations of
the appropriate State. The OSRP must contain all the elements the State and OPA require and must:
(1) Be consistent with the requirements of the National Contingency Plan and appropriate Area Contingency Plan(s).
(2) Identify a qualified individual and require immediate communication between that person and appropriate Federal
officials and response personnel if there is a spill.
(3) Identify any private personnel and equipment necessary to remove, to the maximum extent practicable, a worst case
discharge as defined in §254.47. The plan must provide proof of contractual services or other evidence of a contractual
agreement with any OSRO's or spill management team members who are not employees of the owner or operator.
(4) Describe the training, equipment testing, periodic unannounced drills, and response actions of personnel at the facility.
These must ensure both the safety of the facility and the mitigation or prevention of a discharge or the substantial threat of a
discharge.
(5) Describe the procedures you will use to periodically update and resubmit the plan for approval of each significant
change.
(b) Your plan developed under State requirements also must include the following information:
(1) A list of the facilities and leases the plan covers and a map showing their location;
(2) A list of the types of oil handled, stored, or transported at the facility;
(3) Name and address of the State agency to whom the plan was submitted;
(4) Date you submitted the plan to the State;
(5) If the plan received formal approval, the name of the approving organization, the date of approval, and a copy of the
State agency's approval letter if one was issued; and
(6) Identification of any regulations or standards used in preparing the plan.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.54   Spill prevention for facilities located in State waters seaward of the coast line.
In addition to your OSRP, you must submit to the Regional Supervisor a description of the steps you are taking to prevent
spills of oil or mitigate a substantial threat of such a discharge. You must identify all State or Federal safety or pollution
prevention requirements that apply to the prevention of oil spills from your facility, and demonstrate your compliance with these
requirements. You also should include a description of industry safety and pollution prevention standards your facility meets.
The Chief, OSPD may prescribe additional equipment or procedures for spill prevention if it is determined that your efforts to
prevent spills do not reflect good industry practices.
[76 FR 64462, Oct. 18, 2011, as amended at 81 FR 36153, June 6, 2016]

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§254.55   Spill response plans for facilities located in Alaska State waters seaward of the coast line in the Chukchi and
Beaufort Seas.
Response plans for facilities conducting exploratory drilling operations from a MODU seaward of the coast line in Alaska
State waters in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas must follow the requirements contained within subpart E of this part, in addition
to the other requirements of this subpart. Such response plans must address how the source control procedures selected to
comply with State law will be integrated into the planning, training, and exercise requirements of §§254.70(a), 254.90(a), and
254.90(c), in the event that the proposed operations do not incorporate the capping stack, cap and flow system, containment
dome, and/or other similar subsea and surface devices and equipment and vessels referenced in those sections.
[81 FR 46563, July 15, 2016]

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Subpart E—Oil-Spill Response Requirements for Facilities Located on the Arctic OCS
Source: 81 FR 46564, July 15, 2016, unless otherwise noted.

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§254.65   Purpose.
This subpart describes the additional requirements for preparing OSRPs and maintaining oil spill preparedness for facilities
conducting exploratory drilling operations from a mobile offshore drilling unit (MODU) on the Arctic OCS.
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§§254.66-254.69   [Reserved]
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§254.70   What are the additional requirements for facilities conducting exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic
OCS?
In addition to meeting the applicable requirements of this part, your OSRP must:
(a) Describe how the relevant personnel, equipment, materials, and support vessels associated with the capping stack, cap
and flow system, containment dome, and other similar subsea and surface devices and equipment and vessels will be
integrated into oil spill response incident action planning;
(b) Describe how you will address human factors, such as cold stress and cold related conditions, associated with oil spill
response activities in adverse weather conditions and their impacts on decision-making and health and safety; and
(c) Undergo plan-holder review prior to handling, storing, or transporting oil in connection with seasonal exploratory drilling
activities, and all resulting modifications must be submitted to the Regional Supervisor. If this review does not result in
modifications, you must inform the Regional Supervisor in writing that there are no changes. The requirements of this paragraph
(c) are in lieu of the requirements in §254.30(a).
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§§254.71-254.79   [Reserved]
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§254.80   What additional information must I include in the “Emergency response action plan” section for facilities
conducting exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS?
In addition to the requirements in §254.23, you must include the following information in the emergency response action
plan section of your OSRP:
(a) A description of your ice intervention practices and how they will improve the effectiveness of the oil spill response
options and strategies that are listed in your OSRP in the presence of sea ice. When developing the ice intervention practices
for your OSRP, you must consider, at a minimum, the use of specialized tactics, modified response equipment, ice
management assist vessels, and technologies for the identification, tracking, containment and removal of oil in ice.

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(b) On areas of the Arctic OCS where a planned shore-based response would not satisfy §254.1(a):
(1) A list of all resources required to ensure an effective offshore-based response capable of operating in adverse weather
conditions. This list must include a description of how you will ensure the shortest possible transit times, including but not limited
to establishing an offshore resource management capability (e.g., sea-based staging, maintenance, and berthing logistics); and
(2) A list and description of logistics resupply chains, including waste management, that effectively factor in the remote and
limited infrastructure that exists in the Arctic and ensure you can adequately sustain all oil spill response activities for the
duration of the response. The components of the logistics supply chain include, but are not limited to:
(i) Personnel and equipment transport services;
(ii) Airfields and types of aircraft that can be supported;
(iii) Capabilities to mobilize supplies (e.g., response equipment, fuel, food, fresh water) and personnel to the response
sites;
(iv) Onshore staging areas, storage areas that may be used en-route to staging areas, and camp facilities to support
response personnel conducting offshore, nearshore and shoreline response; and
(v) Management of recovered fluid and contaminated debris and response materials (e.g., oiled sorbents), as well as waste
streams generated at offshore and on-shore support facilities (e.g., sewage, food, and medical).
(c) A description of the system you will use to maintain real-time location tracking for all response resources while
operating, transiting, or staging/maintaining such resources during a spill response.
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§§254.81-254.89   [Reserved]
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§254.90   What are the additional requirements for exercises of your response personnel and equipment for facilities
conducting exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS?
In addition to the requirements in §254.42, the following requirements apply to exercises for your response personnel and
equipment for facilities conducting exploratory drilling from a MODU on the Arctic OCS:
(a) You must incorporate the personnel, materials, and equipment identified in §254.70(a), the safe working practices
identified in §254.70(b), the ice intervention practices described in §254.80(a), the offshore-based response requirements in
§254.80(b), and the resource tracking requirements in §254.80(c) into your spill-response training and exercise activities.
(b) For each season in which you plan to conduct exploratory drilling operations from a MODU on the Arctic OCS, you must
notify the Regional Supervisor 60 days prior to handling, storing, or transporting oil.
(c) After the Regional Supervisor receives notice pursuant to §254.90(b), the Regional Supervisor may direct you to deploy
and operate your spill response equipment and/or your capping stack, cap and flow system, and containment dome, and other
similar subsea and surface devices and equipment and vessels, as part of announced or unannounced exercises or compliance
inspections. For the purposes of this section, spill response equipment does not include the use of blowout preventers,
diverters, heavy weight mud to kill the well, relief wells, or other similar conventional well control options.
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