Phase I Environmental Site Assessment
Phase I ESA in Practice
A sponsor puts an $8,500,000 infill industrial building under contract with a 30-day due diligence period. The Phase I, ordered the day the term sheet is signed, comes back in three weeks flagging a former machine shop on site as a recognized environmental condition. The lender requires a Phase II with soil sampling before commitment, adding four to six weeks, and the buyer uses the finding to negotiate a due diligence extension and a seller credit rather than losing the deal entirely.
Phase I ESA: What the Market Actually Requires
Lenders require the Phase I for two reasons: contamination destroys collateral value, and the federal liability regime makes property owners, and potentially lenders, responsible for cleanup regardless of fault. A compliant Phase I preserves the legal defenses available to buyers under the All Appropriate Inquiries rule, which is why the report must be current: as a convention, lenders treat a Phase I as fresh for 180 days, usable to one year with updates, and stale after that. The report also must run to the right party; a buyer cannot simply borrow the seller's old Phase I, both because it may be stale and because the consultant's liability runs only to named users, so lenders require a reliance letter naming them and the borrower.
Requirements vary by capital source. Banks order the Phase I through approved consultants and, on recourse loans, may accept modest findings a non-recourse lender would not. Agency lenders run their own prescribed environmental protocols with defined report formats. CMBS lenders are strict on scope and sometimes resolve marginal findings with environmental insurance rather than further testing. SBA lending has its own rulebook: certain historically risky uses, gas stations and dry cleaners most famously, trigger mandatory deeper investigation no matter what the initial screen says. Bridge lenders move fastest but still will not close over an unresolved recognized environmental condition.
The borrower playbook is simple: order the Phase I the day the term sheet is signed, use a consultant your likely lenders accept, and budget a Phase II contingency into the timeline on any industrial, automotive, or older urban asset. Environmental is the third-party report most likely to blow a closing date, and it is the one whose timeline you control least once a finding surfaces.
Why It Matters for Your Loan
No Phase I, no loan; an unresolved recognized environmental condition stops nearly every capital source. The practical stakes are timing and negotiation: a finding mid-escrow can add four to six weeks for Phase II testing, and a stale or non-reliance report gets rejected outright, forcing a reorder. Handled early, the Phase I is also leverage, since documented findings support price reductions, seller escrows, or environmental insurance structures that keep the deal closable. On industrial and older urban assets, assume the environmental timeline drives the closing date.
Phase I ESA: FAQ
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