1970s–1980s — The UST Crisis and the Birth of Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL)
Event Date: Late 1970s–1980s Category: Environmental Liability • Pollution Exclusions • EPA Regulation • Specialty Lines • Risk Evolution
Summary
The modern environmental‑liability market began not with Superfund lawsuits or industrial catastrophes, but with something far more ordinary: underground storage tanks (USTs) buried beneath nearly every gas station in America.
By the late 1970s, regulators discovered that hundreds of thousands of steel tanks were leaking gasoline into soil and groundwater. The insurance industry had never priced this exposure, the CGL was never designed to cover it, and the cleanup costs were staggering.
The crisis forced insurers to create the first generation of Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL) policies — narrow, manuscripted, expensive forms that became the foundation of today’s environmental‑liability market.
Background: A Hidden National Hazard Beneath Every Gas Station
From the 1950s through the 1970s:
- Gas stations installed single‑wall steel tanks with no corrosion protection.
- Leak detection was nonexistent.
- Groundwater monitoring didn’t exist.
- Tanks were expected to last forever — and no one budgeted for replacement.
By the late 1970s, state regulators began investigating and discovered:
A silent, nationwide environmental disaster.
Tens of thousands of tanks were leaking petroleum into aquifers, drinking‑water supplies, and soil.
This was the first time environmental contamination was mass‑market, not industrial.
Insurance Shock: The CGL Was Never Designed for This
Before the UST crisis:
- Pollution was covered under the CGL only if it was “sudden and accidental.”
- Slow leaks — the kind USTs produced — were not contemplated.
- Insurers had no reserves for long‑tail cleanup costs.
- Claims arrived decades after the tanks were installed.
The industry realized:
USTs were an unpriced, unbounded, and uninsurable exposure under the traditional liability model.
This triggered:
- the first wave of pollution exclusions
- the rise of specialty environmental underwriting
- the birth of EIL policies
The Birth of Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL)
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, insurers began offering Environmental Impairment Liability policies — the first standalone environmental‑liability products.
Early EIL policies were:
- manuscripted
- narrow in scope
- expensive
- written by only a handful of specialty carriers
- focused on sudden & accidental releases
- often claims‑made
- heavily underwritten with site inspections and engineering reports
They were imperfect, but they were the first attempt to insure environmental exposures outside the CGL.
The Regulatory Hammer: 1984–1988
The UST crisis forced Congress to act.
1984 — RCRA Amendments (HSWA)
For the first time, EPA was required to regulate underground tanks.
1988 — EPA UST Regulations
Mandated:
- tank registration
- leak detection systems
- corrosion protection
- spill and overfill prevention
- tank replacement schedules
- financial responsibility requirements
The last item was the game‑changer:
Every gas station had to prove it had insurance or financial assurance for cleanup costs.
Demand for environmental liability insurance exploded overnight.
Impact on the Insurance Market
The UST crisis:
- created the first mass‑market environmental liability exposure
- forced insurers to develop site‑specific pollution policies
- accelerated the adoption of pollution exclusions in the CGL
- laid the groundwork for the 1986 Absolute Pollution Exclusion
- pushed environmental underwriting into the mainstream
- led to modern products like Contractors Pollution Liability (CPL) and Site Pollution Liability (SPL)
It was the moment environmental insurance stopped being theoretical and became a core specialty line.
Why This Matters in the Timeline
The UST crisis is a hinge event because it:
- exposed a nationwide environmental hazard hiding in plain sight
- revealed the limits of the CGL for long‑tail pollution exposures
- forced the creation of the first environmental liability policies
- reshaped underwriting, actuarial assumptions, and policy language
- set the stage for Superfund litigation and the absolute pollution exclusion
- marked the birth of modern environmental insurance
It is the quiet origin point of an entire sector of the insurance industry.
Related Entries
- 1970 — EPA & the Clean Air Act — the regulatory catalyst that set up modern environmental‑liability exposures
- 1970s–1980s — Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL): The First Modern Pollution‑Liability Architecture — the early specialty‑line framework that UST‑driven risks would plug into
- 1980 — CERCLA / Superfund — the federal liability regime that amplified cleanup‑cost and long‑tail pollution claims
- 1986 — Absolute Pollution Exclusion (CGL) — the policy‑language shift that pushed pollution out of the CGL
- 1990s — Modern Environmental Liability Market Forms — the decade when environmental insurance became a mature, structured specialty market