In this аppeal concerning the requirements of the federal Clean Air Act,
I. FACTS
A. BACKGROUND
Holland operates three electric generation plants, one of which is the James
B. HOLLAND’S ANALYSIS
During the Department’s public comment period, petitioners submitted comments, including an objection that Holland had failed to conduct a “best available control technology” analysis on clean fuels, contrary to federal law. Petitioners requested that Holland analyze “clean fuels” such as wood and biomass.
On August 17, 2009, Holland provided additional information to the Department, including a best available control technology analysis for different types of fuel. The analysis identified six possible fuels that the boiler could burn without significant modification, including biomass (which in turn included wood), petrolеum coke or “petcoke,” tire-derived fuel, and varieties of coal. The analysis considered seven specific characteristics for each fuel: heating value, ash content, sulfur content, chroline content, mercury content, fluorine content, and lead content.
Concerning particulate matter, the analysis noted that “[sjome fraction of the volatile organic compounds emitted from the unit will contribute to condensable particulate, which may be higher for the biomass fuels that are more difficult to combust.” It indicated that western sub-bituminous coal has a lower sulfur and mercury content than eastern coal, but that the supply of this coal is limited by long-term contracts. Concerning carbon monoxide, the analysis stated thаt biomass has a higher moisture content, which is likely to cause increased carbon monoxide formation. The analysis determined that “[w]ith the exception of biomass, increased usage of varying amounts of coal, petcoke, and [tire-derived fuel] is not likely to have an effect on the formation of [carbon monoxide].”
The analysis also compared a variety of technologies, and the effects the technologies would have on various emissions. The analysis ultimately determined that a fabric filter, limestone injection, and the use of fuel to control sulfur oxides would result in the best available control technology.
C. THE MANDAMUS ACTION
In August 2010, the Department denied Holland’s permit application on the grounds that Holland failed to demonstrate thаt it needed the improvement to meet its projected capacity requirements. In September 2010, Holland sought a writ of mandamus, pursuant to which the circuit court remanded the case to the Department to base its decision on whether the application met the air quality requirements in effect on August 20, 2010. The Department ultimately granted Holland a permit to install.
D. PETITIONERS’ APPEAL IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
In May 2011, рetitioners petitioned the circuit court to review the Department’s issuance of the permit on several grounds. Pertinent to this appeal, petitioners contended that Holland failed to comply with the requirements of the Clean Air Act and federal and state regulations. Petitioners asserted that these statutes and regulations required the Department to evaluаte
The circuit court granted Holland’s motion to intervene. At the hearing on the petition, the circuit court commented on the “enormous administrative record” and opined that it could not substitute its judgment for the Deрartment’s as long as the Department’s decision was supported by substantial evidence. The circuit court also determined that the agency’s decision was authorized by law, and it affirmed the Department’s issuance of the permit.
Petitioners now appeal, arguing that (1) the circuit court failed to apply the proper standard of review and (2) the Department’s pеrmit was not authorized by law because the “best available control technology” analysis did not comply with the Clean Air Act.
II. HOLLAND’S JURISDICTIONAL CHALLENGE
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo whether this Court has subject-matter jurisdiction to hear an appeal, because it is a question of law.
B. LEGAL STANDARDS
Statutes and court rules determine the jurisdiction of this Court.
[a]n appeal shall lie from any order, decision, or opinion of any state board, commission, or agency, authorized under the laws of this state to promulgate rules from which an appeal or other judicial review has not otherwise been provided for by law.... Suсh appeals shall be made in accordance with the rules of the supreme court.
MCR 7.203(A)(1)(a) provides that this Court does not have jurisdiction over an appeal of right from an order of the circuit court issued after an appeal to that court from a tribunal:
(A) Appeal of Right. The court has jurisdiction of an appeal of right filed by an aggrieved party from the following:
(1) A final judgment or final order of the circuit court, or court of claims,. .. except a judgment or order of the circuit court
(a) on appeal from any other court or tribunal.... [Emphasis supplied.]
C. APPLYING THE STANDARDS
Holland argues that this Court does not have subject-matter jurisdiction to hear this appeal because it is from “any other court or tribunal,” and thus MCR 7.203(A)(1)(a) prohibits an appeal of right. We disagree.
Holland primarily relies on the language of the staff comment to MCR 7.203(A)(1)(a), which states: “An appеal from a lower court judgment after review of an agency decision will be by leave only.” (Emphasis added.) However, a staff comment is not part of the court rule and does not bind this Court.
Under MCR 7.203(A)(1)(a), a party does not have an appeal of right in this Court arising out of an order of a tribunal that was appealed in the circuit court. Therefore, the question is whether the Deрartment is acting as a “tribunal” when issuing or denying a permit to install.
“Tribunals include administrative agencies acting in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity[.]”
The hearings in this case wеre public hearings, not adversarial hearings. Indeed, the Department does not have the statutory authority to hold a contested case hearing concerning a permit to install.
III. THE STANDARD OF REVIEW OF AN AGENCY DECISION NOT SUBJECT TO A CONTESTED CASE HEARING
A. OUR STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether a circuit court applied the appropriate standard of review is a question of law that this Court reviews de novo.
B. THE CIRCUIT COURT’S STANDARD OF REVIEW
When the agency’s governing statute does not require the agency to conduct a contested case hearing, the circuit court may not review the evidentiary support underlying the agency’s determination.*
C. APPLYING THE STANDARDS
Petitioners contend that the circuit court improperly deferred to the Department, rather than reviewing de novo whether the Department’s decision complied with the Clean Air Act. We conclude that, to the extent that the circuit court erred when reviewing the Department’s decision, its error was harmless.
The circuit court opined that the Department’s “expertise in this particular area of regulation is entitled to due deference.” Read in context, the circuit court’s statement abоut any deference that would be due to the Department follows its statement that it could not substitute its judgment for that of the Department unless the Department’s decision was not supported by substantial evidence, and precedes its statement that it must “stick to the record that was made.” From the context of its statement, it is clear that whatever deference the circuit cоurt expressed was toward the Department’s interpretation of the evidence.
The circuit court may have erred in this case because there was no contested case hearing, and therefore the circuit court should not have reviewed the record evidence. But the circuit court’s ruling does not indicate that it applied any standard other than the dе novo standard when it reviewed whether the Department’s decision was authorized by law. The circuit court ruled as follows:
I think the petitioners have brought up some very interesting points, but I also believe that they’ve failed to carry their burden to prove that [the Department’s] decision was not authorized by the law. I do believe the agency’s decision is authorized by law. I believe it wаs not arbitrary and capricious.
We are not convinced from this ruling that the circuit court applied an incorrect standard when reaching these conclusions.
This Court will not overturn a circuit court’s order on the basis of a harmless error.
IV REQUIREMENTS OF THE FEDERAL CLEAN AIR ACT
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
As previously discussed, courts reviеw de novo questions of law, including whether
We note that resolution of this issue requires us to interpret and apply a federal statute. This Court may review an issue of federal law regarding a federal statute, and interpret federal statutory provisions and regulations.
B. STATUTORY BACKGROUND
Under the Clean Air Act’s program designed to prevent the significant deterioration of air quality, a major facility that emits air pollution must obtain a permit before it can install a modification.
Before issuing a permit, the agency must hold a public hearing at which the public may comment on the proposed facility’s “air quality impact of the major source, alternatives to it, the control technology required, and other appropriate сonsiderations.”
C. BEST AVAILABLE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY
Among other requirements, an analysis of the best available control technology must be conducted and the facility must be “subject to the best available control technology for each pollutant subject to regulation under [chapter 85 of the Act, 42 USC 7401 through 7671q] . .. .”
an emission limitation based on the maximum degree of reduction of each pollutant subject to regulation under [chapter 85 of the Act] emitted from or which results from any major emitting facility, which the permitting authority, on a case-hy-case basis, taking into account energy, environmental, and economic impacts and other cоsts, determines is achievable for such facility through application of production processes and available methods, systems, and techniques, including fuel cleaning, clean fuels, or treatment or innovative fuel combustion techniques for control of each such pollutant.[26 ]
D. APPLYING THE STANDARDS
As an initial matter, we note that whether thе Department considered clean fuels, or should have considered a specific blend of fuels, is not at issue in this appeal. Petitioners’ contention is that the Department’s decision was not authorized by law because it did not adequately consider fuels. We conclude that the Department did conduct an adequate best available control technology analysis.
Petitioners primarily base their argument on the Department’s failure to follow the “top-down” model of conducting the best available control technology analysis. The “top-down” method supplied in the Environmental Protection Agency’s New Source Review Workshop Manual
However, this method is not mandatory.
Considering the discretion afforded to state permitting authorities, the United States Supreme Court has stated that “[o]nly when a state agency’s [best available control technology] determination is ‘not based on a reasоned analysis’ may [the United States Department of Environmental Protection] step in to ensure that the statutory requirements are honored.”
We conclude that the Department complied with the requirements of the federal Clean Air Act because the analysis provided a reasoned analysis of each type of fuel that the facility could utilize without major modifications. Though “clean fuels” is one of the control methods the Department must consider under the Act, the Act does not generally require a facility to redesign itself to use the cleanest fuels.
We conclude that the Department’s decision did not violate 42 USC 7479(3) and, therefore, that the permit to install was authorized by law. Accordingly, the trial court properly affirmed the Department’s issuance of the permit.
V CONCLUSIONS
For the reasons we have detailed, we conclude that this Court has subject-matter jurisdiction to hear an appeal of right from the circuit cоurt’s decision to affirm a permit when a party has appealed to the circuit court under MCL 324.5505(8). We also conclude that the circuit court properly determined that the Department’s action was authorized by law, and did not apply an unduly deferential standard when doing so.
We affirm.
Notes
42 USC 7401 et seq.
Lapeer Co Clerk v Lapeer Circuit Judges,
Const 1963, art 6, § 10; Chen,
See People v Petit,
Fort v Detroit,
See Yonder Toorn v Grand Rapids,
Nummer v Dep’t of Treasury,
See id. at 542-543; id. at 558-559 (Mallett, J., dissenting).
Wolverine Power Supply Coop, Inc v Dep’t of Environmental Quality,
Arthur Land Co, LLC v Otsego Co,
Northwestern Nat’l Cas Co v Comm’r of Ins,
Id., quoting Brandon Sch Dist v Mich Ed Special Servs Ass’n,
Id.
Wolverine Power Supply Coop, Inc,
MCR 2.613(A).
See Northwestern Nat’l Cas Co,
Wolverine Power Supply Coop, Inc,
Woodman v Miesel Sysco Food Co,
Id.; Schueler v Weintrob,
42 USC 7475; 42 USC 7479(2)(C); 42 USC 7411(a)(4) (defining “modification”); Alaska Dep’t of Environmental Conservation v Environmental Protection Agency,
MCL 324.5512(1)(b).
Mich Admin Code, R 336.2802(3).
Mich Admin Code, R 336.2817(2)(e); see also 42 USC 7475(a)(2), (4).
Mich Admin Code, R 336.2817(2)(f).
42 USC 7475(a)(3), (4); see also Mich Admin Code, R 336.2810(3).
42 USC 7479(3); see also Mich Admin Code, R 336.2801(f).
Alaska Dep’t of Environmental Conservation,
Environmental Protection Agency, New Source Review Workshop Manual: Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Nonattainment Area Permitting (October, 1990 draft), available at chttp:// www.epa.gov/NSR/ttnnsr01/gen/wkshpman.pdf> (accessed March 21, 2013).
Alaska Dep’t of Environmental Conservation v United States Environmental Protection Agency,
Id.
Id.
Id.
Alaska Dep’t of Environmental Conservation,
See Sierra Club v United, States Environmental Protection Agency,
