Current Issues |
Petroleum Brownfields Action Plan: Promoting Revitalization And Sustainability (PDF) (11 pp, 161K, About PDF)
UST And LUST Program Performance Measures
(data such as the number of active and closed tanks, releases reported, cleanups initiated and completed, inspections, and facilities in compliance with UST requirements)
FY 2007 Annual Report On The Underground Storage Tank Program
Underground Storage Tanks Program Web Site For Indian Tribes
Underground Storage Tank Provisions Of The Energy Policy Act Of 2005
- Grant Guidelines, Tribal Strategy, And Indian Country USTs Report To Congress
- State Delivery Prohibition Programs
Regulatory Status of E85 Tanks (PDF) (2 pp, 19K, About PDF)
What are USTs and why do we regulate them? - About 625,000 underground storage tanks (USTs) nationwide store petroleum or hazardous substances that can harm the environment and human health if the USTs release their stored contents. This link will connect you with information sources that describe the development of UST regulations and their effectiveness today in protecting us and our environment from leaking USTs.
How can an abandoned gas station potentially revitalize your community? - This link will connect you with a developing story of how cooperative stakeholders are putting together public-private partnerships to clean up petroleum contaminated sites, which may also help revitalize these sites by returning them to productive economic and public use. This page also contains information to aid in the development of future reuse projects.
How can we prevent USTs from leaking? - USTs that are installed, operated, and maintained properly should not leak, thus avoiding future contamination and cleanup problems. This link will connect you with a variety of efforts that are aimed at making sure – as much as reasonably possible – that UST systems do not leak.
How can UST leaks be cleaned up? - Leaking USTs can leave considerable cleanup problems. This link will connect you with cleanup technologies and strategies stakeholders use to make contaminated UST sites safe and productive again, from USTfields to pay-for-performance agreements to more traditional approaches.