ENVIRONMENTAL DEFENSE, PETITIONER v. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, RESPONDENT
No. 05-1446
Unitеd States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued March 20, 2007 Decided June 19, 2007
Before: HENDERSON, ROGERS and GRIFFITH, Circuit Judges.
On Petition for Review of a Final Rule of the Environmental Protection Agency
Michael C. Augustini, Attorney, United States Department of Justice, argued the cause for the respondent. John C. Cruden, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, and Brian L. Doster, Counsel, Unites States Environmental Protection Agency, were on brief.
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
KAREN LECRAFT HENDERSON, Circuit Judge: As part of the Clean Air Act (CAA), the Congress created a program entitled “Prevention of Significant Deterioration of Air Quality” (PSD), which is designed to protect air quality in national parks and
I.
The CAA requires that EPA promulgate a primary and a secondary National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for each air pollutant for which EPA has issued “air quality criteria” pursuant to
In 1977, the Congress amended the CAA to add the PSD provisions in order to “protect the air quality in national parks
Class I—comprising mainly large national parks and national wilderness areas; Class II—regions where the ambient air quality levels more than meet the national standards; and Class III—regions meeting the definition of Class I or Class II areas but redesignated at the behest of a state for higher levels of industrial development.
Envtl. Def. Fund, 898 F.2d at 185 (citing
For “Set I” pollutants—i.e., sulfur oxide and particulate matter—CAA § 163 establishes for each Class “maximum allowable increases“—called “increments” and expressed in micrograms per cubic meter (μg/m3)—“over baseline concentrations.”
For “Set II” pollutants—namely, hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, photochemical oxidants and, at issue here, NOx—the Congress declined to set specific incremental or other limits,
A. 1988 PSD Rule
EPA issued a proposed rule for PSD of NOx on February 8, 1988.2 Prevention of Significant Deterioration for Nitrogen Oxides, 53 Fed. Reg. 3698 (Feb. 8, 1988). On October 17, 1988, EPA issued the final rule, in which it decided to adopt an increment limitation system for NOx similar to the increment
B. Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. EPA
In Environmental Defense Fund, the court reviewed the 1988 Rule аnd found it failed to comply with the Congress‘s directives in two respects.
First, the court concluded that EPA‘s incremental approach was incomplete. The court approved as reasonable EPA‘s construction of subsection 166(d)‘s mandate that EPA “provide specific measures at least as effective as the increments established in section 7473,”
While rejecting an absolute safe harbor, the court did endorse a contingent safe harbor approach (among three hypothesized interpretations). The court explained that EPA‘s selected increment methodology would provide a safe harbor “if but only if the Administrator determines (without being arbitrary and capricious) that the criteria under subsection (c) do not call for a more, or a less, stringent standard.” Id. at 189 (footnote omitted). The court then concluded it could not uphold EPA‘s regulations based on the contingent safe harbor theory: “The reading that we have hypothesized of § 166(d) as a contingent
Second, the court found fault with EPA‘s promulgating an increment based solely on the NAAQS, which “resulted in EPA‘s defining increments for only one compound of nitrogen oxides (NO2), and defining them only in terms of annual averages.” Id. at 190. The court concluded EPA‘s decision ignored the different natures of the NAAQS and the PSD measures, noting that the NAAQS provisions “seem to encompass everything imaginable,” id. (citing
Based on these two shortcomings, the court remanded the 1988 Rule to EPA “to develop an interpretation of § 166 that considers both subsections (c) and (d), and if necessary to take new evidence and modify the regulations.” Id. It did not vacate the regulations, which have therefore remained in effect.3
C. 2005 PSD Rule
On February 23, 2005, EPA issued a proposed rule, Prevention of Significant Deterioration for Nitrogen Oxides, 70 Fed. Reg. 8880 (Feb. 23, 2005), in which it “responded to the court‘s opinion” in Environmental Defense Fund and proposed to adopt the contingent safe harbor interpretation of subsections 166(c) and (d) endorsed by the court and, based thereon, NOx increments as in the 1988 Rule. Final Rule, 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,586. On October 12, 2005, EPA issued its final rule, which followed the same path. EPA there set out “five central elements” as the basis for its regulations. Id.
First, EPA “read section 166 of the Act to direct EPA to conduct a holistic analysis that considers how a complete system of regulations will collectively satisfy the applicable criteria, rather than evaluating one individual part of a regulatory scheme in isolation.” Id. Accordingly, it “did not look at increments in isolation, but also considered how these increments work in conjunction with other measures“—namely, “[Air Quality Related Values] review in Class I areas, additional impacts analysis, and [Best Available Control Technology] requirements“—“to satisfy the statutory criteria.” Id.4
Second, EPA determined that the contingent safe harbor approach reflects a reasonable interpretation of subsection 166, which, it concluded, can bе read to require that EPA first, pursuant to subsection (d), “identify a minimum level of effectiveness, or safe harbor, for the body of pollutant-specific PSD regulations adopted under section 166” and then “conduct further review to determine whether, based on the criteria in subsection (c), EPA‘s pollutant-specific PSD regulations under section 166 should contain measures that deviate from the minimum ‘safe harbor’ identified under subsection (d),” which
Third, EPA identified “eight statutory factors that EPA must apply when promulgating pollutant-specific regulations to prevent significant deterioration of air quality.” Id. at 59,586. The first three are based on the “three stand-alone criteria in section 166(c),” which “indicate that PSD regulations fоr specific pollutants should provide (1) specific numerical measures for evaluating permit applications; (2) a framework for stimulating improved control technology; and (3) protection of air quality values.” Id. at 59,587 (citing
- to protect public health and welfare from any actual or potential adverse effect which in the Administrator‘s judgment may reasonably be anticipate [sic] to occur from air pollution or from exposures to pollutants in other media, which pollutants originate as emissions to the ambient air) [sic], notwithstanding attainment and maintenance of all national ambient air quality standards;
- to preserve, protect, and enhance the air quality in national parks, national wilderness areas, national monuments, national seashores, and other areas of special national or regional natural, recreational, scenic, or historic value;
to insure that economic growth will occur in a manner consistent with the preservation of existing clean air resources; - to assure that emissions from any source in any State will not interfere with any portion of the applicable implementation plan to prevent signifiсant deterioration of air quality for any other State; and
- to assure that any decision to permit increased air pollution in any area to which this section applies is made only after careful evaluation of all the consequences of such a decision and after adequate procedural opportunities for informed public participation in the decisionmaking process.
Fourth, EPA interpreted the requirement that it “simultaneously satisfy each of these factors to establish a balancing test in cases where certain objectives may be at odds with each other.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,586. Specifically, EPA noted the need to strike a balance between the potentially conflicting goals set out in section 160(3): “to simultaneously protect air quality and maximize opportunities for economic growth,” id. at 59,588.
Fifth, EPA recognized that “the requirements of section 166 may be satisfied by adopting other measures besides an increment and that EPA may allow States to demonstrate that
Based on these five elements, EPA announced it was “retaining the existing NO2 increments without change” and “amending the text of [its] PSD regulations at 40 CFR 51.166 to clarify that any State may employ an alternative approach to the NO2 increments if the State‘s approach meets certain requirements.” Id. at 59,595-96 (footnote omitted). See 40 C.F.R. § 51.166(c)(2) (new subsection allowing State to “demonstrate that it has alternative measures in its plan other than maximum allowable increases that satisfy the requirements in sections 166(c) and 166(d) of the Clean Air Act for nitrogen oxides“). EPA then set out in detail the balancing analysis it had conducted, explaining how six components of its NOx PSD regulations advance the eight statutory factors it had identified. See 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,596-99.
1. Increment System: First, EPA determined that using an increment system fulfills “[t]wo of the factors applicable under section 166(c)“: (1) the “obligation . . . to provide ‘specific numerical measures against which permit applications may be evaluated’ ” because each increment is “a quantitative value that establishes the ‘maximum allowable increase’ for a particular pollutant” and “functions, therefore, as a specific numerical measure that can be used to evaluate whether an applicant‘s proposed project will cause or contribute to air pollution in еxcess of allowable levels,” id. at 59,596; and (2) the requirement of “providing ‘a framework for stimulating improved control technology’ ” because increments “establish an incentive to apply more stringent control technologies in order to avoid violating the increment,” id.
2. Area Classifications: Second, EPA determined that setting increments “at different levels for each class of PSD area” also fulfills two of the applicable factors: (1) “Establishing the most stringent increments in Class I areas helps fulfill
3. Permitting Procedures: Third, EPA determined that its pre-construction “permitting procedures” for new major sources and major modifications of existing sources fulfill the goals set out in CAA section 160(4) and 160(5), which “require that PSD programs in one State not interfere with the PSD programs in other States and that PSD programs assure that any decision to permit increased air pollution is made after careful evaluation and public participation in the decisionmaking process.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,597.
6. Installation of Best Available Control Technology: Sixth, EPA determined that requiring new and modified sources to use the Best Available Control Technology (BACT) also helps “satisfy the factors in sections 166(c) and 160(2)” because the BACT standard “is rigorous and in practice has required significant reductions in the pollutant emissions from new and modified sources” and “helps to protect air quality values, public health and welfare, and parks and other special areas.” Id. at 59,599.
Finally, EPA justified its decision to prescribe increments for NO2 only and based on the NAAQS on the ground that the NO2 increment, in conjunction with EPA‘s impending fine particulate matter increment rule, will limit emissions of other nitrogen oxide compounds as well.
II.
Because “we read the ambiguities and perplexities of the statute as delegating to the agency a broad interpretive authority, as we must under Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, 467 U.S. 837, 843-44 (1984),” Envtl. Def. Fund, 898 F.2d at 189 (parallel citation omitted), we defer to EPA‘s “permissible construction of the statute,” Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843. Where, as here, the Congress “has explicitly left a gap for the agency to fill, there is an express delegation of authority to the agency to elucidate a specific provision of the statute by regulation” and “[s]uch legislative regulations are given controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or manifestly contrary to the statute.” Id. at 843-44. Applying this deferential standard, we uphold EPA‘s 2005 PSD Rule as reflecting a reasonable statutory interpretation.
As our summary of EPA‘s 2005 PSD Rule demonstrates, on remand EPA scrupulously followed the court‘s instructions in Environmental Defense Fund. EPA expressly adopted the court‘s contingent safe harbor approach (in lieu of EPA‘s earlier absolute safe harbor), explaining in detail how the NAAQS-based increments, along with other measures, fulfill the PSD‘s statutory goals (expressed as eight “factors“), as section 166(c) requires. EPA also explained why it did not promulgate standards, incremental or otherwise, for nitrogen oxide compounds other than NO2. Nonetheless, the petitioner challenges the 2005 PSD Rule on several grounds.
A. Duty to Preserve, Protect and Enhance Air Quality
The petitioner‘s primary objection is that EPA violated its duty under section 160(2), as incorporated into section 166, to make a finding that the NOx PSD regulations fulfill the statutory goal to “preserve, protect and enhance” the air quality in parks
First, EPA did expressly find that the PSD regulations fulfill the statutory goal to preserve, protect, and enhance air quality—among the several goals EPA is called upon to balance. See Envtl. Def. Fund, 898 F.2d at 189 (“subsection (c) commands a broad weighing of factors“). In particular EPA must, as it recognized in the 2005 Rule, see 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,588, balance the potentially conflicting goals in subsections 160(2) and 160(3) to protect air quality and to promote economic growth. See 898 F.2d at 184 (“The stated purpose of these ‘PSD’ provisions was (roughly) tо protect the air quality in national parks and similar areas of special scenic or recreational value, and in areas where pollution was within the national ambient standards, while assuring economic growth consistent with such protection.” (citing
For the second part of its argument, the petitioner relies largely on the historical evidence that in the fifteen years since the Set II increments were first promulgated in 1988, air quality in parks and natural areas has deteriorated. We see two flaws in the petitioner‘s reasoning.
First, it overlooks the Congress‘s apparent intent when it expressly adopted an increment program for Set I pollutants in section 163 and authorized EPA to do so for Set II pollutants in section 166. By its nature, such an increment limitation system does not reduce existing concentration levels but rather limits increases. Thus, EPA reasonably viewed the statutory PSD program as “designed to be a growth management program that limits the deterioration of air quality beyond baseline levels that may be caused by the construction of major new and modified sources.” Id. at 59,589. The petitioner‘s real beef is with EPA‘s determination that this goal is met by using the same increment methodology for Set II pollutants (and NOx in particular) that the Congress used for Set I and thereby setting the significant deterioration bar at the same level as the Congress did for Set I. Given EPA‘s adherence to the statute‘s requirements, as the court delineated them in Environmental Defense Fund, we do not believe that in doing so EPA abused the considerable discretion that section 166 grants it to establish Set II PSD measures.
Second, in the 2005 Rule, EPA noted thаt the deterioration that has occurred has not been nationwide but is limited to specific areas, “primarily in the West,” id. at 59,603, a problem EPA did not believe could be directly alleviated through the PSD program because the Congress intended EPA to establish nationally uniform PSD measures (as the Congress itself established for Set II pollutants). EPA explained:
We continue to believe that the PSD program is intended to allow the air quality in each area of the country attaining the NAAQS, and with the same area classification, to “deteriorate” by the same amount for each subject pollutant, regardless of the existing air quality when the increment is initially triggered in a particular area, as long as such growth allowed within the constraints of the increment does not cause adverse impacts on sitе-specific AQRVs or other important values. In this way, the PSD increments avoid having a disproportionate impact on growth that might disadvantage some communities, recognizing that the increments in themselves would not address existing negative impacts but cannot allow significant new adverse impacts. Congress established the foundation for uniform national increments when it created increments for SO2 and PM under section 165 of the Act.
Id. at 59,601 (footnote omitted); see also id. at 59,602 (“[W]e do not believe it is permissible or appropriate for us to establish uniform increments at levels so stringent that they prevent any adverse impact on the most sensitive receptors in any part of the U.S.“). EPA‘s construction of the statute is consistent with the path the Congress chose in mandating specific uniform national increments for Set I pollutants in section 163. It is also supported by the legislative history of section 163, which indicates that the Congress deliberately selected uniform increments because it deemed locally individualized increments to be inequitable. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294, at 153 (1977) (expressing belief that “the adoption of increments based on percentage of the national standards means equity for all areas of a similar class” and rejecting “suggestions . . . that the pollution increments should be calculated as a function of existing levels of pollution in each area” because “the inequities inherent in such an approach are readily evident“); S. Rep. No.
B. PSD Regulations for Ozone and Particulate Matter
Next, the petitioner contends EPA unlawfully “ignored the contribution of NOx to formation of ozone and fine particulate matter,” Pet‘r Br. at 31, which are secondary pollutants “formed in part by reactions of NOx emissions with other pollutants in the atmosphere,” 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,590. We believe that EPA reasonably justified its decision not to address either fine particulate matter or ozone in the NOx PSD regulations on the ground that the statutory PSD provisions require EPA to establish regulations specific to both fine particulate matter,
C. Promulgating Only NO2 Increment
Finally, the petitioner asserts EPA arbitrarily adopted increments for NO2 only, based on the NO2 NAAQS, objecting in particular to EPA‘s decision not to consider other NOx compounds. In Environmental Defense Fund, the court noted EPA had “regulated only one nitrogen oxide compound, nitrogen dioxide or NO2, as this is the only compound for which it had established an ambient standard,” 898 F.2d at 185, and concluded that EPA‘s basis for choosing NO2 only was inadequate because “the ‘goals and purposes’ of the PSD program, set forth in § 160, are not identical to the criteria on which the ambient standards are based,
On remand, EPA “decided not to add any additional increments based on other forms of NOx to the existing increments for NO2.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,606. This time, however, EPA did not rely on a rote conversion of the NO2 NAAQS to a corresponding increment. EPA concluded “it is not feasible to develop broader-based increments for NO at this time,” largely because “the available scientific and technical evidence available for [its] consideration did not exist . . . to adequately establish a quantifiable relationship between NOx emissions (NO/NO2) and nitrogen deposition products, including nitrates.” Id. at 59,606-07. In any event, EPA explained, it is “not necessary to adopt individual increments for nitrate” because: (1) “anthropogenic emissions of NOx predominantly originate as NO and quickly oxidize into NO2,” id. at 59,606; (2) “the existing NO2 increments, which limit the allowable increase of NO2 in a given area, serve also to limit the amount of nitrate
EPA has offered a reasonable scientific justification for adopting only NO2 increments, and we may not second-guess its judgment. See Am. Coke & Coal Chems. Inst. v. EPA, 452 F.3d 930, 941-42 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (“The court owes particular deference to EPA when its rulemakings rest upon matters of scientific and statistical judgment within the agency‘s sphere of special competence and statutory jurisdiction.“) (citing West Virginia v. EPA, 362 F.3d 861, 871 (D.C. Cir. 2004); Small Refiner Lead Phase-Down Task Force v. EPA, 705 F.2d 506, 535 (D.C. Cir. 1983); Kennecott v. EPA, 780 F.2d 445, 447-48 (4th Cir. 1985)). And EPA‘s decision is consistent with the court‘s discussion in Environmental Defense Fund. The court there recognized that, although the petitioner “m[ight] still . . . make the argument on remand that under subsеction (c) short-term increments or increments for other nitrogen oxide compounds are needed to ‘protect[ ] air quality values, and fulfill the goals and purposes’ of the statute,” “[n]evertheless the ambient standards are the ‘basic measure of air quality under the [Clean Air Act],’ Proposed Rules, 53 Fed. Reg. at 3700/3, and the controlling standards by no means exclude any value that is
In sum, the Congress expressly conferred on EPA broad discretion to establish PSD limitation measures and EPA did so in conformance with the statutory directives. Under our deferential standard of review, we therefore uphold the 2005 Rule for Prevention of Significant Deterioration for Nitrogen Oxides as a reasonable implementation of the Set II PSD statutory provisions and, accordingly, deny the petition for review.
So ordered.
In the fifteen years between this court‘s remand in Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. EPA, 898 F.2d 183 (D.C. Cir. 1990), and promulgation of the 2005 Rule, air quality has deteriorated seriously. See 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,593-95. One of the express purposes of the PSD program adopted by Congress in the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977 was “to preserve, protect, and enhance the air quality” in national parks, wilderness areas, and similar scenic and recreational areas.
In 1990, the court noted that if EPA had kept to the statutory two-year deadline for issuing Set II PSD limits and “piggybacked the PSD increments on the ambient [air quality] standards . . . , the increments would have been at risk of being rendered obsolete almost immediately after promulgation.” Envtl. Def. Fund, 898 F.2d at 190. By waiting fifteen years, EPA has promulgated a rule with no change in the increments that may already be obsolete, especially because no other programs, such as reviews by the Federal Land Manager and State permitting authority, have prevented substantial environmental deterioration in the interim, see 70 Fed. Reg. at
EPA deflects petitioner‘s individual criticisms of its approach by responding that its holistic approach “satisf[ies]” the statutory requirements. See 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,596, 59,605. No doubt, a holistic approach is permissible. But the parts of a holistic rule must still comport with the statutory requirements, and EPA offers no opinion that its balancing approach will ameliorate the decline in air quality experienced in the last fifteen years much less enhance air quality, as the statute contemplates, see
To the extent EPA relies in the 2005 Rule on programs to bring about improvements in the future, e.g., the Clean Air Interstate Rule (“CAIR“), 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,600, its interpretation of the statutory goal of enhancement of air quality as extending only to improving visibility in national parks, wilderness areas, and other Class I areas and to remedying violations of PSD increments, id. at 59,589, and its interpretation of regional increments as inconsistent with congressional intent, id. at 59,601, means that its chosen holistic approach bears a heavy burden to fulfill Congress‘s mandatеs,
Nonetheless, as the court observes, EPA has adhered to the interpretation deemed permissible by the court in 1990, see Op. at 2, 15, 17, 21; Envtl. Def. Fund, 898 F.2d at 188-89, and considered the relevant statutory factors, see Op. at 22; 70 Fed. Reg. at 59,596-99. Additionally, there are expert judgments that underlie the 2005 Rule, see Op. at 21, and EPA has offered a minimally cogent explanation of its approach, see id. at 20-22. Accordingly, the petition for review fails to show that EPA‘s interpretation is not permissible under Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-44 (1984).
Notes
Some additional insight can be gained from the following description in legislative history:
The term “air quality related values” of Federal lands designated as class I includes the fundamental purposes for which such lands have been established and preserved by the Congress and the responsible Federal agency. For example, under the 1916 Organic Act to establish the National Park Service (16 U.S.C. 1), the purpose of such national park lands “is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein and tо provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”
Id. (quoting S. Rep. No. 95-127 at 36 (1977)).
