OPINION
This appeal presents a question of first impression whether “owner and operator” status under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(1), is determined at the time that cleanup costs are incurred or instead at the time that a recovery lawsuit seeking reimbursement is filed. We hold that the owner of the рroperty at the time cleanup costs are incurred is the current owner for purposes of determining CERCLA liability-
I
In 1999, Hearthside Residential Corporation (“Hearthside”) bought an undeveloped tract of wetlands known as the Fieldstone Property in Huntington Beach, California. The Fieldstone Property was adjacent to several residential parcels (“Residential Site”) that Hearthside never owned or occupied. When Hearthside purchased the Fieldstone Property, it knew that the property was contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, a man-made substance considered toxic to humans and animals.
In 2002, Hearthside entered into a consent order with the State of Cаlifornia Department of Toxic Substance Control (“Department”) by which Hearthside agreed to remediate the PCB contamination on the Fieldstone Property. The Department determined that the adjacent Residential Site was also contaminated *912 with PCBs, which the Department alleged had leaked onto the Residential Site from the Fiеldstone Property. The Department considered Hearthside responsible for investigating and remediating the Residential Site in addition to the Fieldstone Property, but Hearthside disagreed that it bore responsibility for the Residential Site and limited its cleanup to the Fieldstone Property. The Department certified that the Fieldstone Property cleanup was complete on December 1, 2005, and within the same month Hearthside sold the Fieldstone Property to the California State Lands Commission.
Following Hearthside’s disclaimer of responsibility for the PCBs on the Residential Site, the Department itself contracted to clean those parcels and incurred cleanup expenses between July 2002 and October 2003. In October 2006, the Department filed a complaint against Hearthside seeking, in relevant part, reimbursement for the Residential Site cleanup on the basis of (1) the Department’s allegation that the Fieldstone Property was the source of the Residential Site contamination, and (2) Hearthside’s ownership of the Fieldstonе Property at the time the Residential Site was cleaned. Under the Department’s view, Hearthside was the “owner” of the contamination source at the time of the cleanup, and thus was responsible for the remediation costs under CERCLA. See 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a). Hearthside disputed liability, arguing that “owner” status was determined at the time the recovery suit was filed — not at thе time cleanup costs were incurred — and that Hearthside was not responsible for the Residential Site cleanup costs because it sold the Field-stone Property before the Department filed suit.
The district court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the Department on the limited issue of whether Hearthside was an “owner and operator” of the Fieldstone Property.
1
After finding a “dearth of meaningful or controlling case law,” the district court concluded that the purposes of CERCLA support a holding that “owner” status is determined at the time a response-recovery claim accrues, not at the time the lawsuit is initiated. The district court also granted the parties’ joint request that the question be certified for immediate appeal, and we exercised our discretion to permit the appeal.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). We review pure questions of law decided on summary judgment de novo.
Bjustrom v. Trust One Mortgage Corp.,
II
CERCLA imposes “strict liability for environmental contamination” upon four classes of potentially responsible parties.
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. United States,
— U.S. -,
At issue here is one type of potentially responsible pаrty: “the owner and operator of a vessel or a facility.” 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(1). We interpret this category
*913
to refer to “current” owners or operators.
See Carson Harbor Vill, Ltd. v. Unocal Corp., 270
F.3d 863, 881 (9th Cir.2001) (en banc);
accord, e.g., United States v. Capital Tax Corp.,
A
There is no controlling or persuasive precedent that answers the precise question before us. Both parties direct us to cases containing a rule statement phrased in their favor. The cases marshaled by the Department state that ownership is measured from the cleanup date, but a review of those decisions reveals that the statements were made in passing, where the сritical date was not in dispute.
See, e.g., AM Int’l, Inc. v. Int’l Forging Equip. Corp.,
The same can be said of the Eleventh Circuit’s opinion in
United States v. Fleet Factors Corp.,
901 F.2d
1550
(11th
Cir.
1990), which Hearthside heavily relies upon in support of its view that ownership is measured from the date a recovеry action is filed. In
Fleet Factors,
the owner at the time the United States filed its recovery lawsuit was exempt from liability under CERCLA because it was a county government that had involuntarily acquired the title to the contaminated property.
Id.
at 1555 (citing 42 U.S.C. § 9601(20)(A)(iii)). While the Eleventh Circuit did state that it “construe[s] the present owner and operator of a facility as that individual or entity owning or operating the facility at the time the plaintiff initiated the lawsuit by filing a complaint,”
id.
at 1554, the thrust of the court’s analysis was its interpretation of the phrase “immediately beforehand” in CERCLA’s ownership definition, as that provision fixes liability when the current owner is a state or local government immune from cleanup liability,
id.
at 1555. Thus, because the county government could not be held liable, the Eleventh Circuit had no occasion to decide the question now before us: Which of two potentially responsible parties — one that owned the property when the recovery claim accrued and the other that owned it when suit was filed — is the “current owner” under CERCLA? Instead, the Eleventh Circuit’s statement оf law was made casually, without analysis, and as “a prelude to another legal issue
*914
that commanded] the panel’s full attention,” and we do not find the statement persuasive.
3
See United States v. Johnson,
B
In determining in the first instance when current-ownership status is measured under CERCLA, we observe that the definition of “owner and operator” is silent on the date from which ownership is measured.
See
42 U.S.C. § 9601(20). Because the plain text of the statute does not admit of a clear answer to this dispute, we look to the statutory context and CERCLA’s purposes to determine how Congress intended ownership to be measured.
4
See, e.g., Carson Harbor Vill.,
Considering first the broader context of CERCLA liability, we conclude that the Department’s view that ownershiр is measured at the time of cleanup best aligns with CERCLA’s statute of limitations. The parties agree, as they must, that the applicable statute of limitations for a cost-recovery action is triggered (1) at the completion of a “removal” action, or (2) at the initiation of an on-site “remedial” action.
5
42 U.S.C. § 9613(g)(2). Because statutes of limitations аre intended in part to protect defendants, it is reasonable to assume that Congress meant the statute of limitations to run against (and protect) the owner of the property at the time cleanup occurs.
See, e.g., United States v. Hagege,
An analysis of CERCLA’s purposes yields the same conclusion — that current ownership is meаsured at the time of cleanup. First, CERCLA encourages responsible parties to remediate hazardous facilities without delay.
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
Another important purpose of CERCLA is to encourage early settlement between potentially responsible parties and environmental regulators.
See, e.g., Carson Harbor Vill.,
Hearthside contends that the lawsuit-filing date would establish a simple and clear date from which to measure. Hearthside urges that measuring ownership from the time of cleanup wоuld require factual determinations about when cleanup commenced, when cleanup was completed, and when enough response costs were incurred so as to give rise to a recovery cause of action. We agree that in some cases factual determinations may be necessary to determine currеnt ownership. 6 Nonetheless, we are not persuaded that the limited factfinding required to determine when a recovery action accrued is burdensome enough to require a different outcome. As we previously noted, a CERCLA recovery action accrues at the point that recovery costs are incurred, and the statute of limitations runs from the time a removal action is completed or a remedial action is begun on the site. 42 U.S.C. § 9613(g)(2). Thus, factual questions surrounding the relevant cleanup dates are a routine and familiar component of CERCLA actions, and courts are well equipped to resolve such factual questions without great difficulty. Given that CERCLA’s policies prоmoting settlement and efficient cleanup support the Department’s position, we are not persuaded that the possible necessity of determining the accrual date is sufficient to tip the balance in favor of Hearthside’s preferred construction. We hold that current ownership for purposes of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(1) is measured frоm the time the recovery action accrues. Because there is no dispute that Hearthside was the owner of the Fieldstone Property at all times relevant to the remediation of the Residential Site, Hearthside is a current owner under 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(1).
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm district court’s partial summary judgment grant and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court originally ruled for Hearthside on the ownership issue, but changed course after a renewed motion for summary judgment by the Department that focused more expansively on this issue.
. The district court noted that the only case containing some analysis of the ownership-measurement issue is
Elementis Chemicals, Inc. v. T H Agriculture & Nutrition, L.L.C.,
. We also disagree with Hearthside's argument that Congress necessarily "approved” of the ownеrship-measurement language in
Fleet Factors
when it amended CERCLA in response to the
Fleet Factors
holding regarding the liability of property managers.
See Monarch Tile, Inc. v. City of Florence,
. As we have previously observed, the direct evidence of CERCLA’s legislative history includes "few truly relevant documents,” perhaps because of the last-minute compromise that resulted in a "hastily assembled” final bill.
Carson Harbor Vill.,
. Although these events trigger the statute of limitations, a remediator need not wait until removal is cоmplete or remediation is initiated to file suit. A CERCLA recovery action accrues "at any time after [recovery] costs have been incurred.” 42 U.S.C. § 9613(g)(2).
. No factual determinations are needed to determine current ownership in this case. Hearthside owned the Fieldstone Property at the time the Department requested remediation of the Residential Site, as well as during the entire cleanup of the Residential Site by the Department. Therefore, there is no question that Hearthside was the current owner of the Fieldstone Property at the time the Residential Site was remediated. We express no view, of course, on the remaining questions about whether the Fieldstone Property actually leaked contaminants onto the Residential Site or whether other responsible parties, as defined by 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a), may be liable for cleanup costs.
