MEMORANDUM OPINION
[# 25 and 26]
The Natural Resources Defense Council and certain local affiliates (collectively, “NRDC”) bring this action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against the United States Department of State and various officers acting in their official capacity (collectively, “State Department”) on the ground that the State Department violated the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321-4370f, by issuing a presidential “permit” to defendant-intervenor TransCanada Keystone Pipeline, LP (“Keystone”) for a cross-border oil pipeline between the United States and Canada based on an inadequate assessment of the environmental impacts. 2 The State Department and Keystone (collectively, “defendants”) move to dismiss the action for lack of jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), or for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), because no cause of action exists under NEPA or any other federal statute to challenge the State Department’s actions in this case. For the following reasons, the Court agrees with the defendants and therefore GRANTS their respective Motions to Dismiss.
BACKGROUND
Executive Order 13,337 delegates to the State Department the President’s authority to issue permits for the construction of an oil pipeline across the border of the United States if it finds that issuance of the permit to the applicant “would serve the national interest.” Exec. Order No. 13,337, § 1(g), 69 Fed. Reg. 25,299 (Apr. 30, 2004). Before issuing the permit, the State Department must consult with various departments and agencies specified in the Order. Id. § l(b)(ii). If any of those departments or agencies disagrees with the State Department’s proposed decision, then the State Department must refer the permit application to the President “for consideration and a final decision.” Id. § l(i). Otherwise, the State Department makes the final decision.
Over three years ago, Keystone filed an application with the State Department for a presidential permit to build an oil pipeline across the United States — Canadian border. (Amend. Comp. [# 21] at ¶ 41). As part of its review process, the State
The NRDC brought this action against the State Department, which Keystone joined as an intervenor-defendant, on the ground that the State Department violated NEPA by issuing the presidential permit to Keystone based on a deficient EIS. (Id. at ¶ 71). NEPA directs that “all agencies of the Federal Government shall ... include in every recommendation or report on proposals for legislation and other major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, a detailed statement” on environmental impacts. 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). The NRDC claims that the State Department’s final EIS did not comply with NEPA and its implementing regulations for numerous reasons, the details of which are not relevant now. (Amend. Comp. [# 21] at ¶¶ 65-71). As a result, the NRDC seeks a declaration that the State Department’s failure to prepare an adequate EIS violated NEPA and that the State Department’s decision to issue the presidential permit based on that EIS violated the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). (Id. at 19). The NRDC also seeks an injunction directing the State Department to revoke the permit and to require that Keystone remove the portion of the pipeline subject to the permit and that it cease any further construction or activity until the State Department complies with NEPA and the APA. (Id.).
ANALYSIS
Defendants move to dismiss the NRDC’s Amended Complaint on the ground that no legal basis exists to challenge State Department decisions on behalf of the President to issue presidential permits under Executive Order 13,337. Defendants assert that the NRDC cannot point to any statutory authority that creates a cause of action by which this Court may review the State Department’s conduct in this case. Defendants further argue that a private right of action is expressly foreclosed by the Executive Order itself.
See
Exec. Order No. 13,337, § 6,
Although defendants couch their motion primarily as a jurisdictional challenge under Rule 12(b)(1), the more appropriate procedural vehicle is Rule 12(b)(6). The NRDC claims a violation of NEPA and the APA, both of which raise a federal question covered by 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
3
The crux of defendants’ various arguments is not whether the NRDC has presented federal claims, but whether those claims are enforceable against the State Department when it is acting on behalf of the President pursuant to Executive Order 13,337.
4
The NRDC argues, as it must, that it is entitled to relief under the APA. It is well-established that NEPA does not create a private right of action.
Pub. Citizen v. U.S. Trade Representative,
The NRDC’s argument thus rises or falls on the existence of an APA cause of action in this particular case. Defendants argue that agency action pursuant to a delegation of the President’s inherent constitutional authority over foreign affairs is tantamount to an action by the President himself. I agree. The State Department, here, is not acting pursuant to any congressional delegation of power, nor is it even acting pursuant to an Executive Order that was promulgated to carry out a particular congressional mandate.
5
To the contrary, the State Department is acting solely on behalf of the President, and in doing so, it is exercising purely presidential prerogatives. Defendants have amply documented the long history of Presidents exercising their inherent foreign affairs power to issue cross-border permits, even in the absence of any congressional authorization.
(See
State Dept. Mot. to Dismiss [# 26-2] at 11-13; Keystone Mot. to Dismiss [# 25] at 2-4). Because the President is not an “agency” for purposes of the APA, presidential action is not subject to judicial review under that statute.
Franklin v. Massachusetts,
The NRDC contends, not surprisingly, that agency action is not presidential action unless there is some requirement that the President review the agency action before it takes legal effect. The NRDC argues that this result follows from
Bennett v. Spear,
which held an agency action to be final by distinguishing
Franklin
and
Dalton
on the ground that the challenged agency actions in those cases “were purely advisory and in no way affected the legal rights of the relevant actors” without final action by the President.
The NRDC errs by conflating the question of whether a particular action is final with the question of whether a particular action is presidential. To the extent that it has immediate legal effect, issuance of a presidential permit, to be sure, is a final action, but that does not end the inquiry. The question that remains, and the question that this Court must now answer, is whether issuance of a presidential permit by the State Department pursuant to an executive order, which is derived from the President’s inherent constitutional power and not from any congressional command, is a presidential action immune from judicial review under the APA.
Bennett
sheds
Franklin
involved a statute, 13 U.S.C. § 141(b), that directed the Secretary of Commerce to issue a report to the President tabulating the apportionment results from the decennial census.
The Supreme Court similarly held in
Dalton
that the report of the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission was not a final agency action under the APA because the President retained final authority to reject or approve the report.
Franklin
and
Dalton,
of course, are not directly analogous to this case. No agency action had any legal effect in either case until the President affirmatively acted. Nevertheless, the reasoning of both cases is instructive. The Supreme Court distinguished reviewable agency action from unreviewable presidential action by the nature of the President’s authority over agency decisions, not by whether or how the President exercised that authority. Unlike ministerial or ceremonial authority, the President’s exercise of significant discretionary authority over agency decisions constitutes presidential action, which is shielded from judicial review under the APA out of concern for the separation of powers. Whether the President carries out the final action himself and the manner in which he does so are considerations that certainly bear on whether the President’s duties are ministerial or discretionary, but there is no reason to think that these
In this case, the President has complete, unfettered discretion over the permitting process. No statute curtails the President’s authority to direct whether the State Department, or any other department for that matter, issues a presidential permit. Nor does any statute bind the President to any State Department decision granting or denying a permit. The State Department acts solely at the behest of the President and in accordance with the President’s guidance as set forth in Executive Order 13,337. The NRDC makes much of the fact that the Executive Order “does not contemplate the President’s involvement in the permitting process,” except in those cases when a permit application is referred directly to the President for a final decision because of inter-agency disagreement. (NRDC Op. [# 36] at 10). That the President chose to retain ultimate authority to settle any inter-agency dispute signals his belief that the issuance of presidential permits is ultimately a presidential action. The Executive Order’s division of responsibilities is merely a device for managing the President’s decision-making process. Simply stated, the State Department stands in the President’s shoes by exercising the President’s inherent discretionary power under the Constitution to issue cross-border permits. No permit can issue without, at the very least, the President’s acquiescence, and the President’s acquiescence is itself an exercise of discretion that constitutes unreviewable presidential action. Therefore, to challenge the issuance of a presidential permit, whether by the President himself or by the State Department as the President’s delegee, is to challenge a presidential act, which is not reviewable under the APA.
See Tulare County v. Bush,
To expose permitting decisions, which are unreviewable if exercised by the President himself, to judicial review under the APA just because the President assigned this power to a subordinate agency would run afoul of the separation of powers concerns that underlie the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Franklin
and
Dalton.
Indeed, the separation of powers interests at stake in this case are even greater because the President and his delegee here are acting pursuant to the President’s inherent foreign affairs power, not pursuant to any enabling statute.
See Mountain States Legal Found. v. Bush,
Here, there is no statute that curtails or otherwise governs the President’s discretion to issue presidential permits.
6
Not even the EIS requirement of NEPA applies to the President.
See Tulare County,
Simply stated, an act need not be carried out by the President personally to
Notes
. "Permit" as used here is not a standardized form issued pursuant to a formalized regulatory process. Rather, it is the written imprimatur of the President issued through the State Department authorizing the applicant to proceed with the cross-border project.
. This statute confers on federal district courts original subject matter jurisdiction over "civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.”
. The State Department raises only one truly jurisdictional issue. It contends that the NRDC lacks Article III standing because its claims are not redressable. This argument, however, is unavailing. The redressability requirement is satisfied if the plaintiff can show that it is "likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
. According to the plain terms of Executive Order 13,337, the President issued the Order by “the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 301 of title 3, United States Code.” Exec. Order No. 13,337, 69 Fed. Reg. 25,299. The only statute that the Order references is 3 U.S.C. § 301, which merely authorizes the President to delegate to agencies or executive branch officials the performance of “any function which is vested in the President by law.” Such delegations are “revocable at any time by the President in whole or in part.” Id.
. In this respect, this case is unlike
Corus Group PLC v. Int’l Trade Comm’n,
a case the NRDC cited, which applied
Bennett
instead of
Franklin
and
Dalton
because the President did "not have complete discretion under the [relevant enabling] statute.”
. Generally, judicial review of agency action is presumed and cannot be withheld "absent some clear and convincing evidence of legislative intention to preclude review.”
Japan Whaling Ass’n v. Am. Cetacean Soc’y,
