Toward a Superfund cost allocation principle Autor Mandelbaum D. Título de serie The Environmental Lawyer | Vol. 3(1); 117 - 147; 31 p. Fecha 1996 Fuente IUCN (ID: ANA-059359) Editor | Lugar de publicación The George Washington University National Law Center | Washington, DC, USA Idioma Inglés País/Territorio Estados Unidos de América Materia Desechos y sustancias peligrosas Palabra clave Residuos peligrosos Asignación de costas ambientales Descontaminación de suelos Resumen The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act requires parties who cause the incurrence of response costs at a hazardous waste site to fund the site's cleanup. Potentially responsible parties often cannot agree upon an allocation of costs because each party has its own concept of what is fair. As a result, parties litigate over what allocation is the most equitable. Congress and the courts have provided sparse guidance regarding what constitutes an equitable allocationn Moreover, most CERCLA allocation actions involve the special problem of jointly caused costs. In order to ensure that lawyers and parties do not talk past each other in settlement negotiations and in court, Superfund practitioners need to make explicit the principle upon which their allocation arguments are based. this article proposes that unrelated arrangers who are jointly and severally liable under CERCLA should be responsible for thee costs for which their waste streams are a 'but-for' cause.