Upon approval by the court, the decree will bring to an end a set of complex litigations that commenced in 2010. In particular the settlement will provide contribution protection to NCR that will foreclose Superfund litigation claims brought against it by the other companies that themselves had contributed to the pollution of the river. Those other companies will bear sole and/or primary responsibility for aspects of the remediation work not being assumed by NCR.
The cleanup work is expected to be performed over the next 20 years. NCR will seek significant contribution from NCR’s indemnitors as it has in the past for other projects.
The resolution includes NCR’s commitment to undertake or fund clean-up of certain parts of the river that were contaminated with PCBs in the 1950s through the 1970s, primarily from so-called carbonless copy paper (CCP) “broke” or remnants. NCR never had a facility on the river and did not dispose of PCB-containing products into it, and ceased use of PCBs in 1971, several years before the Government banned the product.
NCR is happy to have this matter resolved (upon approval) and to avoid the significant cost associated with the litigation of this matter.
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Investor Contact
Michael Nelson
NCR Corporation
678-808-6995
michael.nelson@ncr.com
Media Contact
Scott Sykes
NCR Corporation
212-589-8428
scott.sykes@ncr.com