ExxonMobil has been asked to pay up $92.2 million as environmental damages from the 1989 Exxon valdez disaster.
The Alaska Department of Law and the U.S. Department of Justice made the demand not covered in the previous $900 million settlement with Exxon.
The settlement made in 1991 allowed the state and federal government to seek additional damages not foreseen at the time of the settlement.
Alaska and federal officials said in May they would seek additional damages and had until Friday to make their demand of Exxon's successor company, ExxonMobil.
Exxon Mobil is expected to contest the demand since it has said that there are no lingering environmental damages not covered in the 1991 settlement.
If Exxon Mobil does fight the additional damages, the U.S. District Court for Alaska will hear the case.
The Exxon Valdez supertanker grounded on a reef in 1989, spilling about 11 million gallons of crude oil that reached over 1,200 coastline miles making it one ofr the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history.
In addition to the 1991 settlement, Exxon and its successor Exxon Mobil have paid more than $2 billion in cleanup costs, as well as $300 million in claims to affected fishermen.
But it continues to contest a punitive damages verdict of $5 billion issued by a U.S. District Court jury in 1994 in the class-action case brought by fishermen, Alaska Natives and others.
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