delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by merchant shipowners and operators, world shipping associations, members of the Florida coastal barge and towing industry, and owners and operators of oil terminal facilities and heavy industries located in Florida, to enjoin application of the Florida Oil Spill Prevention and Pollution Control Act, Fla. Laws 1970, c. 70-244, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 376.011 et seq. (Supp. 1973) (hereinafter referred to as the Florida Act). Officials responsible for enforcing the Florida Act were named as defendants, but the State of Florida intervened as a party defendant, asserting that its interests were much broader than those of the named defendants. A three-judge court was convened pursuant to 28 U. S. C. § 2281.
The Florida Act imposes strict liability for any damage incurred by the State or private persons as a result of an oil spill in the State’s territorial waters from any waterfront facility used for drilling for oil or handling the transfer or storage of oil (terminal facility) and from any ship destined for or leaving such facility. Each owner or operator of a terminal facility or ship subject to the Act must establish evidence of financial responsibility by insurance or a surety bond. 1 In addition, the Florida Act provides for regulation by the State Department of Natural Resources with respect to con *328 tainment gear and other equipment which must be maintained by ships and terminal facilities for the prevention of oil spills.
Several months prior to the enactment of the Florida Act, Congress enacted the Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970, 84 Stat. 91, 33 U. S. C. § 1161
et seq.
(hereinafter referred to as the Federal Act).
1a
This Act subjects shipowners and terminal facilities to liability without fault up to $14,000,000 and $8,000,000, respectively, for cleanup costs incurred by the Federal Government as a result of oil spills. It also authorizes the President to promulgate regulations requiring ships and terminal facilities to maintain equipment for the prevention of oil spills. It is around that Act and the federally protected tenets of maritime law evidenced by
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Jensen,
The case is here on direct appeal. We reverse. We find no constitutional or statutory impediment to permitting Florida, in the present setting of this case, to establish any “requirement or liability” concerning the impact of oil spillages on Florida’s interests or concerns. To rule as the District Court has done is to allow federal admiralty jurisdiction to swallow most of the police power of the States over oil spillage — an insidious form of pollution of vast concern to every coastal city or port *329 and to all the estuaries on which the life of the ocean and the lives of the coastal people are greatly dependent.
It is clear at the outset that the Federal Act does not preclude, but in fact allows, state regulation. Section 1161 (o) provides that:
“(1) Nothing in this section shall affect or modify in any way the obligations of any owner or operator of any vessel, or of any owner or operator of any onshore facility or offshore facility to any person or agency under any provision of law for damages to any publicly-owned or privately-owned property resulting from a discharge of any oil or from the removal of any such oil.
“(2) Nothing in this section shall be construe as preempting any State or political subdivisio thereof from imposing any requirement or liabilit with respect to the discharge of oil into any waters within such State.
“(3) Nothing in this section shall be co strued ... to affect any State or logal law not conflict with this section.” (Emphasis added.)
According to the Conference Report, “any State would be free to provide requirements and penalties similar to those imposed by this section or additional requirements and penalties. These, however, would be separate and independent from those imposed by this section and would be enforced by the States through its courts.” 2 (Emphasis added.) The Florida Act covers a wide range of “pollutants,” § 3 (7), and a restricted definition of pollution. § 3 (8). We have here, however, no question concerning any pollutant except oil.
I
*330 The Federal Act, to be sure, contains a pervasive system of federal control over discharges of oil “into or upon the navigable waters of the United States, adjoining shorelines, or into or upon the waters of the contiguous zone.” §1161 (b)(1). So far as liability is concerned, an owner or operator of a vessel is liable to the United States for actual costs incurred for the removal of oil discharged in violation of § 1161 (b) (2) in an amount “not to exceed $100 per gross ton of such vessel or $14,000,000, whichever is lesser,” § 1161 (f)(1), except for discharges caused solely by an act of God, act of war, negligence of the United States, or act or omission of another party. With like exceptions the owner or operator of an onshore or offshore facility is liable to the United States for the actual costs incurred by the United States in an amount not to exceed $8,000,000. § 1161 (f)(2)-(3). But in each case the owner or operator is liable to the United States for the full amount of the costs where the United States can show that the discharge of oil was “the result of willful negligence or willful misconduct within the privity and knowledge of the owner.” Comparable provisions of liability spell out the obligations of “a third party” to the United States for its actual costs incurred in the removal of the oil. § 1161 (g).
So far as vessels are concerned the federal Limited Liability Act, 46 U. S. C. §§ 181-189, extends to damages caused by oil spills even where the injury is to the shore.
Richardson
v.
Harmon,
Section 12 of the Florida Act makes all licensees 3 of *331 terminal facilities “liable to the state for all costs of cleanup or other damage incurred by the state and for damages resulting from injury to others,” it not being necessary for the State to plead or prove negligence. 4 There is no conflict between § 12 of the Florida Act and § 1161 of the Federal Act when it comes to damages to property interests, for the Federal Act reaches only costs of cleaning up. As respects damages, § 14 of the Florida Act requires evidence of financial responsibility of a terminal facility or vessel — a provision which does not conflict with the Federal Act.
The Solicitor General says that while the Limited Liability Act, so far as vessels are concerned, would override § 12 of the Florida Act by reason of the Supremacy Clause, the Limited Liability Act has no bearing on “facilities” regulated by the Florida Act. Moreover, § 12 has not yet been construed by the Florida courts and it is susceptible of an interpretation so jar as vessels are concerned which would be in harmony with the Federal Act. Section 12 does not in terms provide for unlimited liability.
Moreover, while the Federal Act determines damages measured by the cost to the United States for cleaning up oil spills, the damages specified in the Florida Act relate in part to the cost to the State of Florida in cleaning up the spillage. Those two sections are harmonious parts of an integrated whole. Section 1161 (c) (2) directs the President to prepare a National Con *332 tingency Plan for the 'containment, dispersal, and removal of oil. The plan must provide that federal agencies “shall” act “in coordination with State and local agencies.” Cooperative action with the States is also contemplated by § 1161 (e), which provides that “[i]n addition to any other action taken by a State or local government” the President may, when there is an imminent and substantial threat to the public health or welfare, direct the United States Attorney of the district in question to bring suit to abate the threat. The reason for the provision in § 1161 (o)(2), stating that nothing in § 1161 pre-empts any State “from imposing any requirement or liability with respect to the discharge of oil into any waters within such State,” is that the scheme of the Act is one which allows — though it does not require — cooperation of the federal regime with a state regime.
If Florida wants to take the lead in cleaning up oil spillage in her waters, she can use § 12 of the Florida Act and recoup her costs from those who did the damage. Whether the amount of costs she could recover from a wrongdoer is limited to those specified in the Federal Act and whether in turn this new Federal Act removes the pre-existing limitations of liability in the Limited Liability Act are questions we need not reach here. Any opinion on them is premature. It is sufficient for this day to hold that there is room for state action in cleaning up the waters of a State and recouping, at least within federal limits, so far as vessels are concerned, her costs.
Beyond that is the potential claim under § 12 of the Florida Act for “other damage incurred by the state and for damages resulting from injury to others.” The Federal Act in no way touches those areas. A State may *333 have public beaches ruined by oil spills. Shrimp may be destroyed, and clam, oyster, and scallop beds ruined and the livelihood of fishermen imperiled. 5 The Federal *334 Act takes no cognizance of those claims but only of costs to the Federal Government, if it does the cleaning up.
We held in
Skiriotes
v.
Florida,
Similarly, in
Manchester
v.
Massachusetts,
Florida in her brief accurately states that no remedy under the Federal Act exists for state or private property owners damaged by a massive oil slick such as hit England and France in 1967 in the Torrey Canyon disaster. The Torrey Canyon carried 880,000 barrels *335 of crude oil. 6 Today not only is more oil being moved by sea each year but the tankers are much larger.
“The average tanker used during World War II had a capacity of 16,000 tons, but by 1965 that average had risen to 27,000 tons, and new tankers delivered in 1966 averaged about 76,000 tons. A Japanese company has launched a 276,000-ton tanker, and other Japanese yards have orders for tankers as large as 312,000 tons. More than sixty tankers of 150,000 tons or more are on order throughout the world, tankers of 500,000 to 800,000 tons are on the drawing boards, and those of more than one million tons are thought to be feasible. On the new 1,010 foot British tanker 'Esso Mercia' two officers have been issued bicycles to help patrol the decks of the 166,890 ton vessel.
“The size of the tanker fleet itself is growing at a rate that rivals the growth in average size of new tankers. In 1955 the world tanker fleet numbered about 2,500 vessels. By 1965 it had increased to 3,500, and in 1968 it numbered some 4,300 ships. At the present time nearly one ship out of every five in the world merchant fleet is engaged in transporting oil, and nearly the entire fleet is powered by oil.'' 7
Our Coast Guard reports 8 that while in 1970 there were 3,711 oil spills in our waters, in 1971 there were 8,736. The damage to state interests already caused by oil spills, the increase in the number of oil spills, and the risk of ever-increasing damage by reason of the size of modern tankers underlie the concern of coastal States.
While the Federal Act is concerned only with actual cleanup costs incurred by the Federal Government, the *336 State of Florida is concerned with its own cleanup costs. Hence there need be no collision between the Federal Act and the Florida Act because, as noted, the Federal Act presupposes a coordinated effort with the States, and any federal limitation of liability runs to “vessels,” not to shore “facilities.” That is one of the reasons why the Congress decided that the Federal Act does not pre-empt the States from establishing either “any requirement or liability” respecting oil spills.
Moreover, since Congress dealt only with “cleanup” costs, it left the States free to impose “liability” in damages for losses suffered both by the States and by private interests. The Florida Act imposes liability without fault. So far as liability without fault for damages to state and private interests is concerned, the police power has been held adequate for that purpose. State statutes imposing absolute liability on railroads for
all
property lost through fires caused by sparks emitted from locomotive engines have been sustained.
St. Louis & San Francisco R. Co.
v.
Mathews,
Nor can we say at this point that regulations of the Florida Department of Natural Resources requiring “con
*337
tainment gear” pursuant to § 7 (2) (a) of the Florida Act would be
per se
invalid because the subject to be regulated requires uniform federal regulation. Cf.
Huron Cement Co.
v.
Detroit,
II
And so, in the absence of federal pre-emption and any fatal conflict between the statutory schemes, the issue comes down to whether a State constitutionally may exercise its police power respecting maritime activities concurrently with the Federal Government.
The main barriers found by the District Court to the Florida Act are
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Jensen,
But those decisions have been limited by subsequent holdings of this Court. As stated by Mr. Justice Frankfurter in
Romero
v.
International Terminal Co.,
Moreover, in
Just
v.
Chambers,
*340 Mr. Chief Justice Hughes added that our decisions as of 1941, the date of Just v. Chambers, gave broad “recognition of the authority of the States to create rights and liabilities with respect to conduct within their borders, when the state action does not run counter to federal laws or the essential features of an exclusive federal jurisdiction.” Id., at 391.
Historically, damages to the shore or to shore facilities were not cognizable in admiralty. See,
e. g., The Plymouth,
On June 19, 1948, Congress enacted the Admiralty Extension Act, 46 U. S. C. § 740.
10
The Court considered the Act in
Victory Carriers, Inc.
v.
Law,
The Admiralty Extension Act has survived constitutional attack in the lower federal courts
12
and was applied without question by this Court in
Gutierrez
v.
Waterman S. S. Corp.,
Even though Congress has acted in the admiralty area, state regulation is permissible, absent a clear conflict with the federal law. Thus in
Kelly
v.
Washington,
“A vessel which is actually unsafe and unseaworthy in the primary and commonly understood sense is not within the protection of that principle. The State may treat it as it may treat a diseased animal or unwholesome food. In such a matter, the State may protect its people without waiting for federal action providing the state action does not come into conflict with federal rules. If, however, the State goes farther and attempts to impose particular standards as to structure, design, equipment and operation which in the judgment of its authorities may be desirable but pass beyond what is plainly essential to safety and seaworthiness, the State will encounter the principle that such requirements, if imposed at all, must be through the action of Congress which can establish a uniform rule. Whether the State in a particular matter goes too far must be left to be determined when the precise question arises.” Id., at 15.
That decision was rendered before the Admiralty Extension Act was passed.
Huron Cement Co.
v.
Detroit,
“The ordinance was enacted for the manifest purpose of promoting the health and welfare of the city’s inhabitants. Legislation designed to free from pollution the very air that people breathe clearly falls within the exercise of even the most traditional concept of what is compendiously known as the police power. In the exercise of that power, the states and their instrumentalities may act, in many areas of interstate commerce and maritime activities, concurrently with the federal government.” Id., at 442.
The Court reasoned that there was room for local control since federal inspection was “limited to affording protection from the perils of maritime navigation,” while the Detroit ordinance was aimed at “the elimination of air pollution to protect the health and enhance the cleanliness of the local community.” Id., at 445. The Court, in reviewing prior decisions, noted that a federally licensed vessel was not exempt (1) “from local pilotage laws”; (2) “local quarantine laws”; (3) “local safety inspections”; or (4) “local regulation of wharves and docks.” Id., at 447.
It follows, a fortiori, that sea-to-shore pollution — historically within the reach of the police power of the States — is not silently taken away from the States by the Admiralty Extension Act, which does not purport to supply the exclusive remedy.
As discussed above, we cannot say with certainty at this stage that the Florida Act conflicts with any federal Act. We have only the question whether the waiver *344 of pre-emption by Congress in § 1161 (o) (2) concerning the imposition by a State of “any requirement or liability” is valid.
It is valid unless the rule of
Jensen
and
Knickerbocker Ice
is to engulf everything that Congress chose to call “admiralty,” pre-empting state action.
Jensen
and
Knickerbocker Ice
have been confined to their facts,
viz.,
to suits relating to the relationship of vessels, plying the high seas and our navigable waters, and to their crews. The fact that a whole system of liabilities was established on the basis of those two cases, led us years ago to establish the “twilight zone” where state regulation was permissible. See
Davis
v.
Department of Labor,
Jensen
thus has vitality left. But we decline to move the
Jensen
line of cases shoreward to oust state law from situations involving shoreside injuries by ships on navigable waters. The Admiralty Extension Act does not pre-empt state law in those situations. See
Nacirema Operating Co.
v.
Johnson,
The judgment below is
Reversed.
Notes
At the hearing on plaintiffs-appellees’ application for a temporary restraining order, it was indicated that none of the plaintiffs had attempted to comply with the Florida Act. Shipowners and operators had threatened to divert their vessels from Florida ports.
The Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970 was amended after this case was docketed by the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, 86 Stat. 816, 33 U. S. C. §§ 1251-1376. Since the sections of the 1970 Act cited in the opinion have not been substantially changed, references to the 1970 Act have been retained.
H. R. Conf. Rep. No. 91-940, p. 42.
Those required to obtain a license are those who operate a terminal facility. §6(1). But licenses to terminal facilities include *331 “vessels used to transport oil, petroleum products, their by-products, and other pollutants between the facility and vessels within state waters.” § 6 (4).
Section 12 also provides that the pilot or the master of any vessel or person in charge of any licensee’s terminal facility who fails “to give immediate notification of a discharge to the port manager and the nearest coast guard station” may be imprisoned for not more than two years or fined not more than $10,000.
As to the damages of oil spills to ecological factors it was recently said in 10 Harv. Int’l L. J. 316, 321-323 (1969):
“Some damage to marine life is obvious in the wake of a disaster such as the one which befell the ‘Torrey Canyon.’ Surface feeding fishes die when they swim into floating oil, and even slight, non-fatal contact may render their flesh inedible. Shellfish, among others, are also vulnerable to oil pollution. When the tanker ‘P. W. Thirtle’ grounded off Newport, Rhode Island, 31,000 gallons of heavy black oil were discharged from her tanks in an effort to refloat the ship; the result of this was the virtual destruction of the entire oyster fishery of Narragansett Bay. The most serious consequences of oil pollution, however, may not be those which are immediately obvious.
“According to Dr. Erwin S. Iversen, a marine biologist:
“ ‘The greatest problem may be the toxic effects on the intertidal animals that serve as food for the other more important fishes. . . . I don’t think the effect is merely that of killing large populations of commercial fishes. Worse than that, it interrupts the so-called food chain.’
“There have been few specific studies of the effect that oil accumulation has on this food chain. One study, conducted by Dr. Paul Galtsoff of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, found that the diatoms on which oysters feed will not grow where there is even a slight trace of oil on the water. The effect of oil on such microscopic marine plant life may be of great importance, because it is estimated that it takes as much as ten pounds of plant matter to produce one pound of fish.
“Large scale oil pollution, such as that which occurred when the ‘Torrey Canyon’ ran into the Seven Stones Reef, results in huge losses of water birds. Aside from humane and aesthetic considerations, these birds play a vital role in the ecology of the seashore, a role which profoundly affects the fishing industry. The uncertainty as to the actual extent of the damage done to marine life by oil pollution makes it difficult to estimate the economic effect of such damage, but the importance of the fishing industry within the world’s economy is not in doubt and is steadily increasing. Between 1958 and 1963, for example, there was a 42% rise in the world catch. Be *334 cause of the increasing importance of seafood protein, future damage to marine life will have progressively greater economic consequences.
“Perhaps the most noticeable damage caused by oil pollution is the fouling of recreational beaches and shorefront property. One-half million tons of oil are washed ashore each year, rendering beaches unfit for swimming and filling the air with unpleasant odors. Besides the annoyance that this causes a vacationing public seeking relief from urban life, economic loss may be considerable. It is estimated, for example, that a serious oil spill off Long Island during the summer months would cost resort and beach operators thirty million dollars. Oil spills also create navigational and fire hazards in harbors, ports and marinas.” (Footnotes omitted.)
Brief for Appellants 25.
10 Harv. Int’l L. J., at 317-318 (footnotes omitted).
Polluting Incidents In and Around U. S. Waters, Calendar Year 1971, Environmental Protection, Commandant U. S. Coast Guard.
A statement we recently quoted with approval in
Executive Jet Aviation, Inc.
v.
City of Cleveland,
It provides in relevant part: “The admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States shall extend to and include all cases of damage or injury, to person or property, caused by a vessel on navigable water, notwithstanding that such damage or injury be done or consummated on land.”
The Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U. S. C. § 901 et seq., recently was amended to cover employees working on shoreside areas customarily used by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing, or building a vessel. Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act Amendments of 1972, Pub. L. 92-576, §2, 86 Stat. 1251.
See Victory Carriers, supra, at 209 n. 9.
See H. R. Rep. No. 1523, 80th Cong., 2d Sess.; S. Rep. No. 1593, 80th Cong., 2d Sess.
