MACK TRUCKS, INC. and Volvo Group North America, LLC, Petitioners v. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent. Navistar, Inc., Intervenor.
Nos. 12-1077, 12-1078, 12-1099
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 14, 2012. Decided June 12, 2012.
682 F.3d 87
So ordered.
Christopher T. Handman argued the cause for petitioners. With him on the briefs were R. Latane Montague, Sean Marotta, Timothy K. Webster, Samuel I. Gutter, Karen K. Mongoven, Alec C. Zacaroli, and Julie R. Domike.
Cary R. Perlman and Laurence H. Levine were on the brief intervenor Navistar, Inc. in support of respondents.
Before: SENTELLE, Chief Judge, BROWN and GRIFFITH, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge BROWN.
BROWN, Circuit Judge:
In January 2012, EPA promulgated an interim final rule (IFR) to permit manufacturers of heavy-duty diesel engines to pay nonconformance penalties (NCPs) in exchange for the right to sell noncompliant engines. EPA took this action without providing formal notice or an оpportunity for comment, invoking the “good cause” exception provided in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Because we find that none of the statutory criteria for “good cause” are satisfied, we vacate the IFR.
I
In 2001, pursuant to Section 202 of the Clean Air Act (“the Act“), EPA enacted a rule requiring a 95 percent reduction in the emissions of nitrogen oxide from heavy-duty diesel engines. 66 Fed.Reg. 5,002 (Jan. 18, 2001). By delaying the effective date until 2010, EPA gave industry nine years to innovate the necessаry new technologies. Id. at 5,010. (EPA and manufacturers refer to the rule as the “2010 NOx standard.” 77 Fed.Reg. 4,678, 4,681 (Jan. 31, 2012).) During those nine years, most manufacturers of heavy-duty diesel engines, including Petitioners, invested hundreds of millions of dollars to develop a technology called “selective catalytic reduction.” This technology converts nitrogen oxide into nitrogen and water by using a special aftertreatment system and a diesel-based chemical agent. With selective catalytic reduction, manufаcturers have managed to meet the 2010 NOx standard.
One manufacturer, Navistar, took a different approach. For its domestic sales, Navistar opted for a form of “exhaust gas recirculation,” but this technology proved less successful; Navistar‘s engines do not meet the 2010 NOx standard. All else being equal, Navistar would therefore be unable to sell these engines in the United States—unless, of course, it adopted a different, compliant technology. But for the last few years, Navistar has been able to lawfully forestall that result and continue selling its noncompliant engines by using banked emission credits.1 Simply put, it bet on finding a way to make exhaust gas recirculation a feasible and compliant technology before its finite supply of credits ran out.
Navistar‘s day of reckoning is fast approaching: its supply of credits is dwindling and its engines remain noncompliant. In October 2011, Navistar informed EPA that it would run out of credits sometime in 2012. EPA, estimating that Navistar “might have as little as three to four months” of available credits before it “would be forced to stop introducing its engines into commerce,” leapt into action.2 Resp‘t Br. at 2-3. Without formal notice
To issue NCPs under its regulations, EPA must first find that a new emissions standard is “more stringent” or “more difficult to achieve” than a prior standard, that “substantial work will be required to meet the standard for which the NCP is offered,” and that “there is likely to be a technological laggard.”
Having determined that NCPs are appropriate, EPA proceeded to set the amount of the penalty and establish the “upper limit” of emissions permitted even by a penalty-paying manufacturer. The IFR provides that manufacturers may sell heavy-duty diesel engines in model years 2012 and 2013 as long as they pay a penalty of $1,919 per engine and as long as the engines emit fewer than 0.50 grams of nitrogen oxide per horsepower-hour. Id. at 4,682-83. This “upper limit” thus permits emissions of up to two-and-a-half times the 0.20 grams permitted under the 2010 NOx standard with which Navistar is meant to comply and with which Petitioners do comply. See id. at 4,681.
EPA explained its decision to forego notice and comment procedures by invoking the “good cause” exception of the APA, id. at 4,680, which provides that an agency may dispense with formal notice and comment procedures if the agency “for good cause finds ... that notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest,”
Petitioners each requested administrative stays of the IFR, protesting that EPA lacked good cause within the meaning of the APA. Petitioners also objected to the substance of the NCP, arguing that EPA misapplied its own regulatory criteria for determining when such a penalty is warranted, and that EPA arbitrarily and ca-
II
Navistar, which has intervened on behalf of EPA, claims Petitioners lack standing to challenge the IFR. EPA does not make such a claim but, of course, we have the independent “obligation to satisfy [оurselves]” of our own jurisdiction before proceeding to the merits. Dominguez v. UAL Corp., 666 F.3d 1359, 1362 (D.C. Cir. 2012).
Navistar‘s sole argument is that Petitioners’ lack procedural standing. We have no need to reach this question, however, since Petitioners clearly have standing as direct competitors of Navistar: they allege the IFR “authorizes allegedly illegal transactions that have the clear and immediate potential to compete with [their] own sales.” Sherley v. Sebelius, 610 F.3d 69, 72-73 (D.C. Cir. 2010). Navistar admits it is using NCPs to sell competitive engines, see Nаvistar Motion, at 3, so this injury is anything but conjectural. Petitioners’ injury is also “clear[ly]” traceable to the IFR which authorizes that allegedly illegal competition, and is redressable by a vacatur of the IFR. Sherley, 610 F.3d at 72. Finally, because “NCP provisions mandate that penalties ... remove any competitive disadvantage to manufacturers whose engines or vehicles achieve the required degree of emission reduction,” Petitioners’ “interest in avoiding anticompetitive injury plainly falls within the zone of interests Congress sought to protect.” Nat‘l Petrochemical & Refiners Ass‘n, 287 F.3d at 1148. Even Navistar does not suggest otherwise in its brief.
We therefore proceed to the merits.
III
Petitioners argue first that Section 206 of the Act requires notice and comment; alternatively, they claim EPA lacked good cause in any event. The APA provides that, “[e]xcept when notice or hearing is required by statute,” an agency is relieved of its obligation to provide notice and an opportunity to comment “when the agency for good cause finds (and incorporates the finding and a brief statement of reasons therefor in thе rules issued) that notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.”
A
Is notice or hearing expressly required by statute? Section 206(g)(1) of the Act,
Subsection (g)(2), the very next paragraph, says that “no [NCP] may be issued under paragraph (1) ... if the degree by which the manufacturer fails to meet any standard ... exceeds the percentage determined under regulations promulgated by the Administrator to be practicable. Such regulations ... shall be promulgated not later than one year after August 7, 1977.”
Contrary to Petitioners’ fears, the Act‘s lack of a notice and comment requirement does not mean that no procedures are statutorily required when NCPs are issued. The APA‘s general rule requiring notice and comment—absent identified exceptions—still obviously applies. Indeed, EPA has always argued that the IFR is justified under the good cause exception, not that it is justified because notice and comment is never required. See 77 Fed.Reg. at 4,680.
B
Because the Act does not contain any notice-and-comment requiremеnt applica-
We have repeatedly made clear that the good cause exception “is to be narrowly construed and only reluctantly countenanced.” Util. Solid Waste Activities Grp., 236 F.3d at 754; Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co. v. FERC, 969 F.2d 1141, 1144 (D.C. Cir. 1992); New Jersey v. EPA, 626 F.2d 1038, 1045 (D.C. Cir. 1980); see also Jifry, 370 F.3d at 1179 (“The exception excuses notice and comment in emergency situations, or where delay could result in serious harm.“); Am. Fed. of Gov‘t Emps. v. Block, 655 F.2d 1153, 1156 (D.C. Cir. 1981) (“As the legislative history of the APA makes clear, moreover, the exceptions at issue here are not ‘escape clauses’ that may be аrbitrarily utilized at the agency‘s whim. Rather, use of these exceptions by administrative agencies should be limited to emergency situations....“).
First, an agency may invoke the impracticability of notice and comment.
By contrast, the context of this case reveals that the only purpose of the IFR is, as Petitioners put it, “to rescue a lone manufacturer from the folly of its own choices.” Pet. Br. at 29; see 77 Fed.Reg. at 4,680 (expressing EPA‘s concern that providing notice and comment would mean “the possibility of an engine manufacturer [Navistar] ... being unable to certify a complete product line of engines for model year 2012 and/or 2013“). The IFR does not stave off any imminent threat to the environment or safety or national security. It does not remedy any real emergenсy at all, save the “emergency” facing Navistar‘s bottom line. Indeed, all EPA points to is “the serious harm to Navistar and its employees” and “the ripple effect on its customers and suppliers,” Resp‘t Br. at 28, but the same could be said for any manufacturer facing a standard with which its product does not comply.
EPA claims the harm to Navistar and the resulting up- and down-stream impacts should still be enough under our precedents. The only case on which it relies, however, is one in which an entire industry аnd its customers were imperiled. See
Second, an agency may claim notice and comment were “unnecessary.”
EPA‘s remaining argument thаt notice and comment were “unnecessary” is that the IFR was essentially ministerial: EPA simply input numbers into an NCP-setting formula without substantially amending the NCP regime. Resp‘t Br. at 36; 77 Fed.Reg. at 4,680. But even if it were true that EPA arrived at the level of the penalty and the upper limit in this way (and Petitioners strenuously argue that EPA actually amended the NCP regime in order to arrive at the upper limit level in the IFR5), that argument does not account for how EPA determined NCPs were warranted in this case in the first place—another finding to which Petitioners object. EPA‘s decision to implement an NCP, perhaps even more than the level of the penalty itself, is far from inconsequential or routine, and EPA does not even attempt to defend it as such.
Finally, an agency may invoke the good cause exception if providing notice and comment would be contrary to the public interest.
IV
Because EPA lacked good cause to dispense with required notice and comment procedures, we conclude the IFR must be vacated without reaching Petitioners’ alternative arguments. We are aware EPA is currently in the process of promulgating a final rule—with the benefit of notice and comment—on this precise issue. However, we strongly reject EPA‘s claim that the challenged errors are harmless simply becausе of the pendency of a properly-noticed final rule. Were that true, agencies would have no use for the APA when promulgating any interim rules. So long as the agency eventually opened a final rule for comment, every error in every interim rule—no matter how egregious—could be excused as a harmless error.
We do recognize the pending final rule means our vacatur of the IFR on these procedural grounds will be of limited practical impact. Before thе ink is dry on that final rule, we offer two observations about the parameters of this rulemaking. First, NCPs are meant to be a temporary bridge to compliance for manufacturers that have “made every effort to comply.” United States v. Caterpillar, Inc., 227 F.Supp.2d 73, 88 (D.D.C. 2002). As EPA itself has explained, NCPs are not designed to bail out manufacturers that voluntarily choose, for whatever reason, not to adopt an existing, compliant technology. See 77 Fed.Reg. 4,736, 4,739 (Jan. 31, 2012) (“NCPs have always been intended for manufacturers that cannot meet an emission standard for technological reasons rather than manufacturers choosing not to comply.“); 50 Fed.Reg. 35,402, 35,403 (Aug. 30, 1985) (stating that NCPs are inappropriate “if many manufacturers’ vehicles/engines were already meeting the revised standard or could do so with relatively minor calibration changes or modifications“). Based solely on what EPA has offered in the IFR, it at least appears to us that NCPs are likely inappropriate in this case.
Second, we emphasize that “no legislation pursues its purposes at all costs,”
That being said, EPA is certainly free to make whatever findings it deems appropriate in the pending final rulemaking—subject, of course, to this Court‘s review. For now, therefore, we simply hold that EPA lacked good cause for not providing formal notice-and-comment rulemaking, and accordingly vacate the IFR and remand for further proceedings.
So ordered.
JANICE ROGERS BROWN
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
