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General Liability Coverage for remediation contractors

Third-party bodily injury and property damage coverage for your remediation operations — site access injuries, equipment damage to third-party property, completed operations, and contractual liability for the indemnity agreements in your remediation contracts. Works alongside CPL, not instead of it.

General Liability Coverage — environmental remediation

What it covers

  • Third-party bodily injury on project sites and premises
  • Property damage caused during remediation operations
  • Completed operations coverage for claims arising after project completion
  • Contractual liability for indemnity agreements in remediation contracts
  • Defense costs and legal fees for covered claims
  • Products liability for materials supplied in remediation work

Who it's for

  • All remediation contractors (GL is the baseline commercial coverage)
  • Contractors required to provide GL certificates for project bids
  • Operations with subcontractors who may trigger contractual liability
  • Contractors whose GL forms need to coordinate with CPL without gaps

Why CCA

  • GL structured to coordinate with CPL so there are no gaps between policies
  • Contractual liability coverage for the indemnity language in government contracts
  • Completed operations with a reporting period that fits remediation timelines
  • Additional insured endorsements for PRPs, property owners, and project owners
General Liability Coverage — FAQ

Common questions about general liability coverage

Yes. CPL covers pollution-related claims; GL covers the rest — bodily injury from a slip and fall, property damage from equipment operations, and contractual liability from your project indemnity agreements. They work together, not instead of each other.

GL covers third-party property damage caused during your operations — including damage to utilities, structures, or equipment at a remediation site. The key is ensuring your GL isn't carved down by exclusions that would apply to remediation work.

Completed operations covers claims that arise after your remediation project is finished. In remediation, contamination migration or incomplete cleanup can surface years after project completion. Completed operations coverage is essential — and the reporting period should match the long tail of environmental claims.

Government environmental remediation contracts often contain broad indemnity language requiring you to defend and indemnify the client. Contractual liability coverage under GL picks up your assumed liability under those indemnity agreements — which can otherwise create uncovered exposure.

Cost is driven by project types, annual revenue, crew size, states you work in, CPL limits required, and loss history. We quote your actual operation in about 15 minutes — never a ballpark from a generic contractor form.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and writes remediation programs nationwide — Texas, California, the Northeast, Midwest, Mountain States, and everywhere environmental remediation contractors operate.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. Larger or more complex programs may take a day or two to place with the right markets, but we move fast and set expectations up front.

Often yes. We have admitted and E&S environmental markets for contractors declined over prior contamination losses, regulatory actions, or high-hazard project types. Bring us your situation and we'll find a market.

Usually yes. A coordinated program closes gaps between policies and is typically cheaper than separate policies from separate carriers — and far easier to manage at claim time and certificate issuance.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength and ability to pay claims. We place coverage with A-rated (and A+ where possible) carriers so the coverage is there when a contamination claim, regulatory action, or Superfund cost recovery hits.

Yes. Superfund NCP projects have specific CPL, GL, and umbrella requirements. We work with specialty environmental markets that understand CERCLA contractor risk and can meet the specific limit and coverage requirements of NCP contracts.

Project types (soil cleanup, UST removal, hazmat, brownfield), annual revenue, crew size and HAZWOPER training status, states you work in, vehicles, current coverage and CPL retroactive date, and loss history. The more detail, the more accurate the quote.

Your CPL and GL cover your own operations. Subcontractors should carry their own CPL and GL — and your contract should require it. We help structure blanket additional insured requirements and review subcontractor coverage requirements for your projects.

Yes. If you design remedial action plans, conduct Phase I or Phase II assessments, provide remediation consulting, or give technical recommendations, professional liability (E&O) covers errors in those services. It's separate from CPL and GL.

Occurrence CPL covers incidents that occur during the policy period, regardless of when the claim is made. Claims-made CPL covers claims made during the policy period for incidents that occurred after the retroactive date. Most CPL is written on a claims-made basis. The retroactive date selection is critical.

Yes. If you work on multiple sites simultaneously, use subcontractors, or need blanket additional insured for PRPs and property owners, we build one coordinated program covering all locations and projects with no gaps.

Commercial umbrella sits above your GL, CPL, and commercial auto policies — providing excess limits when a primary policy limit is exhausted. Many Superfund NCP contracts and government environmental remediation agreements require combined limits that need an umbrella to achieve.

Yes. We understand the specific COI requirements for remediation contracts — additional insured endorsements, waiver of subrogation, specific limit requirements, and CPL endorsements. We issue certificates quickly and correctly.

Ready to protect your remediation operation?

Get a 15-minute quote from specialists who understand environmental remediation — contractor pollution liability, CERCLA exposure, Superfund contracts, and hazmat workers' comp.