Section 112(0 of the 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act permits the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) to delegate its authority and responsibility to implement various air-pollution requirements to a state if that state’s program to regulate air pollution receives the EPA approval. See 42 U.S.C. § 7412(0. In a rule-making pursuant to this section, see 40 C.F.R. § 63.90-.96, the EPA established procedures to use in deciding whether it should approve state rules or programs and in governing the ramifications of such approval. See 40 C.F.R. § 63.90. Three petitioners have challenged these “delegation rules,” alleging that the rules are illegal for various reasons, including that the rules violate the Clean Air Act or constitute an improper delegation of federal power.
BACKGROUND
Under the Clean Air Act as amended, see Amendments to the Clean Air Act, Pub.L. No. 101- 549, Title III, § 301, 104 Stat. 2531 (1990), as codified at 42 U.S.C. § 7412 (1995), the EPA is authorized and required, inter alia, to “promulgate regulations establishing emissions standards for” a full range of major sources of hazardous air pollutants. 42 U.S.C. § 7412(d). After establishing these federal standards, the EPA is authorized to enforce them through appropriate administrative, civil, or (with the cooperation of the Attorney General) criminal actions. 42 U.S.C. § 7413(a)(3). In addition to mandating federal regulation of emissions of air pollutants, the Act expressly does not preempt states from adopting and enforcing their own regulations, with certain exceptions not here pertinent. 42 U.S.C. § 7416. Indeed, section 7412© declares that each state may develop and submit to the Administrator “a program for the implementation and enforcement ... of emissions standards and other requirements” for covered air pollutants.
The Act further empowers the Administrator of the EPA to approve or disapprove such state implementation plans based on statutory criteria, including the adequacy of the authorities contained in the program to assure compliance by emissions sources with applicable standards, regulations, and requirements. 42 U.S.C. § 7412(i)(5). In 1993, the EPA promulgated regulations to establish the standards the EPA will use in determining whether to approve a state’s plan. See 40 C.F.R. § 63.90. These delegation rules, adopted pursuant to section 7412(0, make clear that federal authorities will enforce an approved state program “in place of” the otherwise applicable federal regulations. Id. Three groups of petitioners challenge these delegation rules.
The first group, who style themselves “the environmental petitioners,” are Louisiana Environmental Action Network, Manasota88 and the Natural Resources Defense Council (collectively “LEAN”). The environmental petitioners claim that the delegation rules do not adequately comply with the Clean Air Act, arguing that the Act mandates that state standards could not be less stringent than applicable federal standards, and that the delegation rules do not adequately assure compliance with this congressional mandate. Indeed, these petitioners argue that EPA’s rules permit states to exempt sources of air pollution within their borders from the detailed requirements of the Clean Air Act.
The second group of petitioners, “the utilities petitioners,” are Alabama Power Company, the Edison Electric Institute, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the American Public Power Association, and a number of individual electric utilities (collectively “Alabama Power”). The utilities petitioners contend that the EPA’s rules are invalid because they allow the agency to exceed its powers under the Act by making federally enforceable standards that are more stringent than the Act mandates. Alternatively, they contend that if the EPA’s rules correctly interpret section 7412©, then section 7412(i) is an unconstitutional standardless delegation of power.
The third petition is a joint petition by trade associations, specifically, the Clean Air Implementation Project, the Chemical Manufacturers Association, and the American Automobile Manufacturers Association, Inc. (collectively “CAIP”). This petition echoes the claims of Alabama Power and adds that the delegation rules arbitrarily permit state and federal authorities to compel compliance with newly approved, more stringent state
Because these petitions present troubling questions of justiciability, we directed the parties to file additional briefs on standing. After reviewing the arguments of the parties, we conclude, for the reasons set out below, that only CAIP even arguably has standing, and that the claim of CAIP is not prudentially ripe.
DISCUSSION
“Article III of the Constitution confines the federal courts to adjudicating actual ‘cases’ and ‘controversies.’ ” Allen v. Wright,
These limits on the authority of the federal judiciary have given rise to several “ ‘doctrines that cluster about Article III— ... standing!,] mootness, ripeness, political question, and the like ...,’” by which we test the fitness of controversies for judicial resolution. Allen,
In its supplemental brief addressing the question of standing, LEAN argued that, because the delegation rales permit the EPA not to enforce federal air-pollution standards in a particular state as soon as the EPA approves that state’s proposed program, the rules permit a potentially harmful enforcement gap if a state seeks section 7412 approval prior to that state putting its proposed program into effect. Assuming, for purposes of standing, that LEAN is correct on the merits, see In re Thornburgh,
At first glance, LEAN’S claimed injury may be thought to collapse of its own unmanageable size. Fundamental standing doctrine instructs that, “when the asserted harm is a ‘generalized grievance’ shared in substantially equal measure by all or a large class of citizens, that harm alone normally does not warrant exercise of jurisdiction.” Warth,
The precedential slate on standing, however, is hardly uncluttered. See Allen v. Wright,
But this precedent hardly compels us to find that LEAN has in fact established standing in this case. To demonstrate an injury sufficient for standing, a litigant must show some “invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
LEAN has not established that an enforcement gap will concretely and personally affect it (or its members). See, e.g., Defenders of Wildlife,
Nor has LEAN established that an enforcement gap is imminent. See Defenders of Wildlife,
Like LEAN, Alabama Power also does not state a genuine injury that a federal court can constitutionally address. Alabama Power conceives its injury in terms of the invasion of its rights that would occur if the EPA, under the challenged regulations, approved a state requirement and enforced it as a federal requirement, even though that requirement was more stringent than the EPA could implement on its own under the
The phrasing of the petitioner’s own argument on standing illustrates its insufficiency. Throughout its brief, Alabama Power described the dire consequences that would befall it if a state were to adopt a requirement more stringent than the EPA itself could promulgate and if the EPA were then to federalize it. Yet, Alabama Power has identified no state — never mind a state in which one of the utilities petitioners operates — that has adopted any more stringent rule which is or is about to be federalized by the EPA. Instead, it has relied on only hypothetical harms to the petitioning utilities. Should some state whose laws personally affect any of the utility petitioners actually seek section 7412 approval for some more stringent state regulation, then perhaps that may establish a concrete injury. If so, that will be soon enough to determine the merits of this type of claim.
Admittedly, our dismissal of Alabama Power’s claim may partake of ripeness as well as of standing. That ripeness considerations should influence our standing analysis, however, is neither surprising nor troublesome. As the Supreme Court has observed, these threshold doctrines “relate ... in different though overlapping ways to an idea, which is more than an intuition but less than a rigorous or explicit theory, about the constitutional and prudential limits to the powers of an unelected, unrepresentative judiciary in our kind of government.” Allen,
Moreover, even if we assumed that a state whose regulations would personally affect one of the utility petitioners would seek federal enforcement of its requirements, the enforcement of state regulations by state and federal agents, instead of solely by state agents, hardly impends certain injury to Alabama Power. See National Min. Ass’n v. Dep’t of Interior,
Of the three sets of petitioners, then, CAIP comes closest to establishing justiciability. CAIP has presented a galaxy of likely circumstances in which its members could be trapped in the intolerable position of being unable to comply with new state standards that receive EPA approval under § 7412 shortly before some compliance deadline, thus leaving insufficient time for CAIP’s members to respond accordingly. This statement of injury, unlike the multi-tiered conjectures of LEAN and of Alabama Power, may in fact approach a showing of injury sufficient for standing. In the end, however, we need not determine whether CAIP has shown constitutional standing, as CAIP’s claim is assuredly prudentially unripe.
Although we would be reluctant to pretermit a jurisdictional question in order to reach a merits question, see Cross-Sound Ferry Services, Inc. v. ICC,
If a court confronts an institutional reason why it should not review a petitioner’s claim at that time, the court should reject the claim as not ripe unless “postponing review .... impose[s] a hardship on the complaining party that is immediate, direct, and significant.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Dole,
Nor is there any pressing concern that compels us to decide this matter at this time. CAIP’s claim itself does not demand immediate relief because the primary injury it alleges “is not a present hardship resulting from the regulations themselves, but rather a future injury that may result” from programs that are approved under the regulations. Cronin v. FAA,
We have held in other cases involving the confrontation between a statutory bar and a claim not yet prudentially ripe that a “time limitation on petitions for judicial review ... can run only against challenges ripe for review.” Baltimore Gas & Elec. Co. v. ICC,
As a number of courts have observed, the threshold issues of constitutional standing and judicial prudence, though nominally distinct, often blur in practice. See Flast v. Cohen,
