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API Publication 1835, formally titled Site-Specific Assessment of Environmental Liability, was released in 1997 by the American Petroleum Institute. This publication provides a structured, technically sound framework for petroleum companies, environmental consultants, and legal professionals to assess the potential costs and risks associated with contaminated or potentially contaminated property. Unlike prescriptive regulatory protocols, API 1835 focuses on estimating financial liability in the context of business transactions, mergers, divestitures, and environmental due diligence. The guidance is intended to be flexible yet rigorous, allowing users to adapt the assessment based on site complexity, data quality, and the intended use of the liability estimate.
The primary audience includes environmental managers, corporate counsel, risk assessors, and third-party consultants who need a defensible methodology for evaluating environmental cleanup costs, third-party claims, and natural resource damages. It emphasizes a site-specific approach, recognizing that generic assumptions often fail to capture the unique conditions of petroleum industry facilities, including marketing stations, refineries, terminals, and production sites.
API Publication 1835 organizes the liability estimation process into four interconnected phases: (1) Preliminary Screening, (2) Initial Site Characterization, (3) Detailed Risk and Exposure Assessment, and (4) Financial Liability Estimation. Each phase feeds into the next, although iteration is encouraged as new data become available. The methodology draws from existing risk assessment principles (e.g., EPA Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund) and adapts them for financial decision-making. The user is guided in selecting appropriate analytical values, exposure assumptions, and regulatory cost benchmarks.
A successful assessment under API 1835 depends on robust data collection. The publication recommends a tiered data approach, starting with historical records, site inspections, and existing environmental reports. If data gaps exist, a limited subsurface investigation may be warranted. Key data elements include:
The document outlines a streamlined risk evaluation tailored to liability quantification. Rather than calculating absolute risk, it focuses on the probability and magnitude of adverse effects that could lead to cleanup obligations, property value diminution, or third-party claims. For each contaminant–receptor pathway, the user estimates a “liability factor” that reflects regulatory standards, legal precedents, and site-specific conditions. This step parallels concepts in ASTM E2137 but is calibrated to petroleum operations.
The final phase converts technical findings into monetary costs. A discounted cash-flow approach is recommended, considering the timing of remediation actions, operating and maintenance costs, and legal expenses. The publication provides suggested discount rates, inflation factors, and typical cost ranges for common scenarios (e.g., pump and treat, soil vapor extraction, monitored natural attenuation). The output can be presented as a single point estimate or, more defensibly, a high‑low range with most probable value. Table 1 summarizes the four main components accounted for in the liability model.
| Component | Description | Typical Cost Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Remediation Costs | Direct expenses for cleanup | Technology selection, site size, contaminant mass, regulatory endpoint |
| Legal & Regulatory Costs | Fees for oversight, permits, litigation | Level of enforcement, duration, third-party involvement |
| Property Value Impact | Diminution of asset value due to stigma | Market conditions, type of property, public perception |
| Natural Resource Damages | Compensation for injury to ecosystems | Ecological sensitivity, recovery duration, assessment costs |
To successfully implement API 1835, organizations should establish a cross-functional team comprising environmental engineers, risk assessors, financial analysts, and legal counsel. The publication is best used as a “process guide” rather than a prescriptive standard; thus professional judgment plays a central role. Key implementation steps include:
Note that API 1835 is not a standalone environmental regulation; it is a voluntary practice. However, its methodology is frequently referenced in court cases, lender due diligence, and state agency reviews as an industry-accepted standard of care.
Because API Publication 1835 is a voluntary industry publication, it does not carry the force of law. However, its application can demonstrate due diligence and may be used in litigation to support or challenge liability estimates. Environmental regulators occasionally request to review assessments performed under this guidance to evaluate the adequacy of financial assurances. It is essential to cross‑check the assumed cleanup criteria and timeframes against current federal, state, and local requirements, which may have changed since 1997.
Practitioners should be aware of the following limitations when relying on API 1835:
In summary, API Publication 1835 (1997) remains a foundational reference for site‑specific environmental liability estimation in the petroleum sector despite its age. Its tiered, flexible methodology provides a starting point for business‑oriented environmental assessments. However, users must adapt its recommendations to modern regulatory landscapes, incorporate advances in exposure science, and document all adjustments transparently. When applied correctly, it effectively bridges the gap between technical environmental data and financial decision-making.
© 2026 – This technical summary is provided for informational purposes. Always consult official API documents and current regulatory guidance for authoritative requirements.