A. An environmental covenant is perpetual unless it is:
1. By its terms limited to a specific duration or terminated by the occurrence of a specific event;
2. Terminated by consent pursuant to § 10.1-1246;
3. Terminated pursuant to subsection B;
4. Terminated by foreclosure of an interest that has priority over the environmental covenant; or
5. Terminated or modified in an eminent domain proceeding, but only if:
a. The agency that signed the covenant is a party to the proceeding;
b. All persons identified in subsections A and B of § 10.1-1246 are given notice of the pendency of the proceeding; and
c. The court determines, after hearing, that the termination or modification will not adversely affect human health or the environment.
B. If the agency that signed an environmental covenant has determined that the intended benefits of the covenant can no longer be realized, a court, under the doctrine of changed circumstances, in an action in which all persons identified in subsections A and B of § 10.1-1246 have been given notice, may terminate the covenant or reduce its burden on the real property subject to the covenant. The agency's determination or its failure to make a determination upon request is subject to review pursuant to the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq.).
C. Except as otherwise provided in subsections A and B, an environmental covenant may not be extinguished, limited, or impaired through issuance of a tax deed, foreclosure of a tax lien, or application of the doctrine of adverse possession, prescription, abandonment, waiver, lack of enforcement, or acquiescence, or a similar doctrine.
2010, c. 691.