This post was guest authored by Stoel Rives summer associate Nina Neff.

Because of the increasing frequency of significant, often multimillion-dollar, environmental claims against businesses and individuals under environmental statutes such as the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, it is important for any potentially liable entity to fully explore how the costs may be shifted in whole or in part to others. Washington insurance law has traditionally been highly favorable to policyholders, broadly interpreting the insurer’s duty to defend so that remedial investigation costs are covered under the insurer’s duty to defend. Washington’s law has had important benefits for individuals and public and private entities, who without insurance coverage may be bankrupted by cleanup liability, and has also benefited taxpayers and the general public by promoting prompt cleanups.
Continue Reading Could voluntarily performing environmental cleanup threaten insurance coverage?