40 CFR §122.6
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)EPA permits. When EPA is the permit-issuing authority, the conditions of an expired permit continue in force under 5 U.S.C. 558(c) until the effective date of a new permit (see § 124.15) if:
- (1)The permittee has submitted a timely application under § 122.21 which is a complete (under § 122.21(e)) application for a new permit; and
- (2)The Regional Administrator, through no fault of the permittee does not issue a new permit with an effective date under § 124.15 on or before the expiration date of the previous permit (for example, when issuance is impracticable due to time or resource constraints).
- (b)Effect. Permits continued under this section remain fully effective and enforceable.
- (c)Enforcement. When the permittee is not in compliance with the conditions of the expiring or expired permit the Regional Administrator may choose to do any or all of the following:
- (1)Initiate enforcement action based upon the permit which has been continued;
- (2)Issue a notice of intent to deny the new permit under § 124.6. If the permit is denied, the owner or operator would then be required to cease the activities authorized by the continued permit or be subject to enforcement action for operating without a permit;
- (3)Issue a new permit under part 124 with appropriate conditions; or
- (4)Take other actions authorized by these regulations.
- (d)State continuation.
- (1)An EPA-issued permit does not continue in force beyond its expiration date under Federal law if at that time a State is the permitting authority. States authorized to administer the NPDES program may continue either EPA or State-issued permits until the effective date of the new permits, if State law allows. Otherwise, the facility or activity is operating without a permit from the time of expiration of the old permit to the effective date of the State-issued new permit.