RENO-SPARKS INDIAN COLONY; Great Basin Mine Watch, Petitioners, v. UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent, Newmont USA Limited, d/b/a Newmont Mining Corporation; State of Nevada, Division of Environmental Protection, Respondents-Intervenors.
No. 02-71503.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted February 10, 2003. Filed July 16, 2003.
336 F.3d 899
Before: CANBY, O‘SCANNLAIN, and W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judges. Opinion by Judge CANBY.
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Andrew J. Doyle, United States Department of Justice, Environment & Natural Resources Division, Washington, D.C., for the respondent.
Marcy G. Glenn, Denise W. Kennedy, Holland & Hart, L.L.P., Denver, Colorado; William J. Frey, Deputy Attorney General, Carson City, Nevada, for the respondents-intervenors.
OPINION
CANBY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal presents the question whether the Clean Air Act program to prevent deterioration of air quality is administered in Nevada: (1) in large air quality planning units encompassing all or nearly all of the state, or (2) in more than 250 smaller units designated by the State. The importance of the issue arises from the fact that certain pollution controls go into effect for a unit when a major pollution source applies for a permit within that unit. If the unit is very large, then a major source almost certainly has already applied, and new minor sources are subject to the controls in issue. If the unit is but one of hundreds in the State, then many units are not subject to the controls because no major pollution source is located within the unit. Minor sources are then free to begin operating there without the special pollution controls.
Petitioners Reno-Sparks Indian Colony and Great Basin Mine Watch (collectively “Reno-Sparks“) contend that a mine that proposes to operate near the Colony is subject to the controls in issue because the relevant unit is the entire State or nearly so. The EPA issued a rule, however, stating that Nevada is divided into more than 250 units and has been so divided since 1978. See “Designations of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; State of Nevada; Technical Correction,” 67 Fed.Reg. 12474 (Mar. 19, 2002) (“2002 Nevada Rule“). Reno-Sparks now challenges that 2002 Nevada Rule on the grounds that (1) it is arbitrary, capricious and not in accordance with the law, in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“), see
The 2002 Nevada Rule purports to clarify that, in the table listing Nevada‘s Clean Air Act designations for various airborne pollutants, codified at
I
A. Clean Air Act
The Clean Air Act,
In 1977, Congress amended the Act to provide for the achievement, maintenance, and enforcement of these national air quality standards. The amendments created three levels of classification for the different planning areas within a state. Areas were classified as “nonattainment” if they fell below the national air quality standards, and were classified as “attainment” if they exceeded national standards. Areas in which there was not enough data to determine whether they were in attainment or nonattainment were deemed “unclassifiable.”
The planning areas of each state that are designated as attainment, nonattainment or unclassifiable, are known as “baseline areas.” See
The PSD limitations on pollution increases are not triggered for a baseline area until that area‘s baseline date, and therefore the area‘s baseline concentration, has been established. If the baseline concentration for a baseline area has not been triggered, then entities that are not considered major stationary sources of pollution can operate in that area subject only to the NAAQS standards rather than the more stringent PSD standards. As a result, the smaller, and hence more numerous, the baseline areas are, the less likely it is that a major source has applied for a permit within any one area, thereby establishing a baseline date. Consequently, the more baseline areas a state has, the more likely it is that a minor pollution source can find an area in which to operate where it is not subject to the requirements of the PSD program.
B. Nevada‘s Regulatory History
The 1977 amendments to the Clean Air Act required states to submit proposed boundaries and designations for each baseline area to the EPA for approval. See
In 1987, the EPA replaced the listed particulate pollutant TSP with PM-10. In doing so, the EPA stated that it was adopting the same baseline areas for PM-10 that it had used previously for TSP. See 58 Fed.Reg. 31622, 31630 (June 3, 1993).
In 1990, Congress passed another set of amendments to the Clean Air Act, which led to a new series of rules issued by the EPA. As part of that rulemaking, the EPA promulgated a new regulation pertaining to its designation charts, upon which Reno-Sparks heavily relies, stating:
Designated areas which are listed below as attainment (“Better than national standards“) or unclassifiable (“Cannot be classified“) for total suspended particulate (TSP), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), represent potential baseline areas or portions of baseline areas which are used in determining compliance with maximum allowable increases (increments) in concentrations of the respective pollutants for the prevention of significant deterioration of air quality (PSD). With respect to areas identified as “Rest of State” it should be assumed that such reference comprises a single area designation for PSD baseline area purposes. However, for PM-10, the use of the term “Rest of State” is an interim measure to designate as unclassifiable all locations not originally designated nonattainment for PM-10 in accordance with section 107(d)(4)(B) of the Act.
56 Fed.Reg. 56694, 56709 (Nov. 6, 1991) (codified at
C. Factual Background
On December 4, 2001, the Oil-Dri corporation (“Oil-Dri“), the world‘s largest manufacturer of kitty litter, proposed to develop two open-pit mines on lands in Nevada located near the tribal lands of the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony. Worried that the construction and operation of such mines could detrimentally affect the air quality of surrounding areas, Reno-Sparks Tribal Chairman Arlen Melendez wrote to Wayne Nastri, the EPA administrator for Region IX—the region that includes Nevada—to request that the EPA subject Oil-Dri to the PSD regulations of the Clean Air Act. Chairman Melendez based his request on the fact that the lands on which Oil-Dri desired to locate its mines were included in the area listed as “rest of state” or “entire state” in the EPA‘s designation tables. Chairman Melendez asserted that those terms described single baseline areas within which major sources almost certainly already operated, triggering the PSD requirements and their application to Oil-Dri‘s proposed mining operations.
The result was the promulgation of the 2002 Nevada Rule. 67 Fed.Reg. 12474 (Mar. 19, 2002). This Rule contains two parts that are relevant to this dispute. In Part I, the EPA stated that, from its investigation of Nevada‘s PSD regulatory history, it concluded that for the pollution tables for TSP, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxide, the terms “rest of state” or “entire state” referred to more than 250 distinct baseline areas. See id. at 12475. In reaching this conclusion, the EPA noted that, in its original submission to the agency, Nevada identified 254 separate hydrographic areas, each of which constituted its own baseline area, and that the EPA subsequently adopted those hydrographic area designations in 1978. See id. In Part II of the Rule, the EPA drew the same conclusions with respect to PM-10 designations. The EPA recognized “that the term ‘rest of state’ or ‘entire state’ in these tables at
Asserting that the EPA‘s rationale for the 2002 Nevada Rule was mistaken and that the terms “rest of state” or “entire state” referred to single baseline areas, Reno-Sparks filed this petition for review challenging Parts I and II of the 2002 Nevada Rule.5
II
Reno-Sparks argues that the 2002 Nevada Rule is arbitrary and capricious because it mischaracterizes the agency‘s original 1978 boundary designations for Nevada.6 The validity of the 2002 Nevada Rule turns on three factors: (1) whether Nevada initially proposed the creation of 254 baseline areas in its 1977 submission to the EPA; (2) whether the EPA adopted Nevada‘s recommendation with respect to baseline areas; and (3) whether any intervening regulatory action by the EPA changed the nature of Nevada‘s baseline area designations. We uphold the 2002 Nevada Rule because the administrative record supports the EPA‘s interpretation that Nevada originally proposed 254 baseline areas, and that the EPA in 1978 adopted that proposal and never changed it in any relevant respect. Thus in the 2002 Nevada Rule, the EPA properly interpreted the terms “rest of state” and “entire state” as a shorthand reference to more than 250 separate baseline areas based on the state‘s hydrographic areas.
A. TSP, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxide (Part I of the rule)
1) Nevada‘s 1977 Proposal
In Nevada‘s original 1977 submission to the EPA, it proposed the creation of 254 distinct baseline areas, corresponding with hydrographic areas it previously had identified. Nevada‘s submission classifies air-quality status according to sub-basin (hydrographic area), and identifies each designation area by sub-basin number, indicating that it intended to use the sub-basin as the relevant baseline unit. Other state documents that were issued contemporaneously with the state‘s submission to the EPA clarified that the sub-basin was the appropriate baseline area unit. In a June 8, 1978 letter to the EPA, the state discussed “[t]he present classification method of using hydrographic sub-basins.” Thus, the record leaves no room for doubt that Nevada intended to create 254 separate baseline areas, and made its submission accordingly.7
2) The EPA‘s 1978 designations
The record also supports the EPA‘s interpretation that it adopted Nevada‘s designations without changing their size, notwithstanding the agency‘s use of the terms “rest of state” and “entire state” in the Nevada tables.8 First, in an internal agency memorandum, the EPA stated that it had adopted Nevada‘s classifications, and later reaffirmed its statement in a 1979 rule. See 44 Fed.Reg. 16388, 16391 (Mar. 19, 1979).
Second, there is no indication that the EPA changed the baseline area designations after Nevada submitted them. In the EPA‘s 1978 rule listing the initial designation areas and their classifications, the EPA noted that, if its final designations differed from a state‘s proposed designations, either with respect to area size or classification, those changes would be noted in the tables with an asterisk. 43 Fed. Reg. at 8964. In the Nevada tables, several listings contain an asterisk to note that the EPA changed Nevada‘s proposed designation. In each instance, however, the EPA changed only the classification status of the baseline area (e.g., from attainment to unclassifiable) and left the area boundaries unchanged. 43 Fed.Reg. at 9012-13. Significantly, the listings labeled “rest of state” or “entire state” in each table do not contain an asterisk, see id., indicating that the use of those terms was never intended to combine Nevada‘s proposed designations into a single baseline area. Moreover, each area that was separately listed in the Nevada tables was designated by its sub-basin name and number (e.g., “San Emido Desert (22)“) contained in Nevada‘s submission, suggesting that each sub-basin constituted a separate baseline area. See id. Thus, the EPA reasonably concluded in 2002 that it had established 254 separate baseline areas in Nevada in 1978 rather than single baseline areas denoted by the terms “rest of state” and “entire state.”
Finally, in each table the EPA used “rest of state” or “entire state” only once, and used it in reference to whichever classification encompassed the majority of baseline areas. For example, Nevada‘s TSP table lists separately every nonattainment area, and every unclassifiable area, using the hydrographic baseline areas. It is unlikely that, after so employing the smaller units, the EPA would in a single term created an entirely different type of unit for the remaining areas that were in attainment. The more reasonable interpretation is that the EPA used the term “rest of state” or “entire state” as a collective reference to small units too numerous to identify individually with convenience.
3) Subsequent Regulatory History
Reno-Sparks argues that regardless of the EPA‘s intent in 1978, the 2002 Nevada Rule is arbitrary and capricious because it directly contradicts the agency‘s 1991 regulation stating that the term “rest of state” should be “assumed” to constitute a single baseline area. See
The 1991 regulation was directed to all the listed states, and did not directly address the Nevada designations. It contained no operative language changing the Nevada designations. There is no indication that the disputed “assumption” took account of the use of the terms “rest of state” and “entire state” in the Nevada tables, or of the history surrounding the original 1978 baseline designations for Nevada. There also is no indication that the EPA intended the regulation to effect what would be a sweeping change in Nevada‘s baseline area designations. The fact that the 1991 reference to an assumption of single large units drew no comment during the regulatory process suggests that no such drastic change was contemplated or occurred. As a result, it was reasonable for the EPA to conclude in 2002 that the 1991 regulation effected no change in Nevada‘s system of more than 250 baseline units.
Second, the 1991 rule indicates only that it should be “assumed,” rather than mandated, that “rest of state” comprises a single designation area.
There is no doubt that the reference in the 1991 regulation to the “assumption” concerning the meaning of “rest of state” caused considerable confusion, not only among petitioners but also among officials in the EPA. That unfortunate consequence does not reflect well on the EPA‘s draftsmanship in 1991. But the 1991 regulation did not change the fact that the EPA created 254 separate baseline areas in Nevada in 1978, nor did the 1991 regulation purport to amend those areas. We conclude that it was not arbitrary or capricious for the EPA to conclude, in its 2002 Nevada Rule, that the original designation of more than 250 areas still stands today.
B. PM-10 (Part II of the Rule)
For similar reasons, we uphold Part II of the 2002 Nevada Rule, which states that Nevada has 256 baseline areas for PM-10.
After the EPA added PM-10 as a regulated pollutant in 1993, it stated that the baseline areas used for TSP would also be used for PM-10. See 58 Fed.Reg. 31622, 31630 (June 3, 1993) (“EPA continues to believe that it is appropriate to retain the original TSP baseline dates and baseline areas as part of the program for implementing the PM-10 increments.“);
Reno-Sparks argues that a rule adopted on November 13, 2002, after promulgation of the 2002 Nevada Rule, illustrates that for PM-10, Nevada had just one statewide baseline area. In that rule, the EPA approved “a request from the State of Nevada... to redesignate the current single unclassifiable area for [PM-10] into numerous individual areas to be consistent with area definitions for other pollutants.” 67 Fed.Reg. 68769 (Nov. 13, 2002). Reno-Sparks argues that this statement demonstrates that, prior to the November 13, 2002, Nevada had only one baseline area for PM-10.9
The EPA‘s explanation for its action in the November 13 rulemaking, however, demonstrates that it was not making any changes to Nevada‘s baseline areas. One of the submitted comments regarding the November 13, 2002 rule expressed the concern that breaking down a single baseline area into many other baseline areas would allow industries to pollute more. See id. at 68769-70. In response, the EPA stated that the commenter‘s fear was “based on the incorrect belief ... that prior to the EPA‘s present action, the State consisted of a single PSD baseline area for PM-10. Prior to the EPA‘s action ... the State‘s 253 hydrographic areas had already been established as the PSD baseline areas for particulate matter.... Today‘s rule has no effect on the PSD baseline areas for PM-10 in the State....” Id. at 68770. The November 13 rule accordingly casts no doubt on our conclusion upholding as reasonable the EPA‘s 2002 Nevada Rule specifying 256 PM-10 units in Nevada.10
III
We reject Reno-Sparks’ argument that the EPA violated the APA by issuing the 2002 Nevada Rule without allowing for notice and comment.11 The APA requires an agency proposing a new rule to provide notice of the rule and an opportunity for interested parties to comment.
IV
The EPA‘s 2002 Nevada Rule specifying that Nevada was divided into more than 250 baseline areas for purposes of the PSD program was neither arbitrary nor capricious nor out of accordance with law. See
PETITION FOR REVIEW DENIED.
