Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Sabre, Inc. petitions for review of a final rule promulgated by the Department of Transportation that, as relevant, states that an independent computer reservation system (“CRS”) not owned by an air carrier or foreign air carrier is a “ticket agent” as defined within the Federal Aviation Act (“FAA”), 49 U.S.C. § 40102(a)(45) (2000 and West Supp.2005), and therefore subject to the regulatory authority of the Department under FAA . section 411, 49 U.S.C. § 41712(a). See Computer Reservations System Regulations, 69 Fed.Reg. 976, 995-98 (January 1, 2004) (“Final Rule”). Sabre, an independent CRS unconnected to an airline, contends that it is not a statutory “ticket agent” and asks that those portions of the Final Rule in which the Department asserts the authority to regulate independent CRSs under section 411 be set aside. The Department responds that the petition should be dismissed because Sabre has suffered no injury in fact and therefore lacks standing, and its pre-enforcement challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority is not ripe. Alternatively, the Department maintains that its interpretation of the statutory definition, and hence of its authority under section 411, is consistent with the plain language of the definition or, in any event, is reasonable.
Although no regulations promulgated by the Department currently constrain Sabre’s business activity and no relevant enforcement actions are pending against any independent CRS, we hold that Sabre has standing in view of the combination of three circumstances. In the Final Rule, the Department claims that it has jurisdiction over independent CRSs under section 411; its statements indicate a very high probability that it will act against a practice that Sabre would otherwise find financially attractive; and it has statutory authority to impose daily civil penalties on Sabre for violation of section 411, which the Department plausibly asserts it may enforce without prior warning by rulemak-ing or cease-and-desist order. We also hold that Sabre’s challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority under section 411 is fit for review based on undisputed facts, including the risk of incurring civil penalties should Sabre proceed to implement certain marketing plans. We conclude, however, that Sabre’s challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority under section 411 lacks merit. Accordingly, we deny the petition.
I.
Section 411 of the FAA provides:
On the initiative of the Secretary of Transportation or the complaint of an air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent, and if the Secretary considers it is in the public interest, the Secretary may investigate and decide whether an air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent has been or is engaged in an unfair or deceptive practice or an unfair method of competition in air transportation or the sale of air transportation. If the Secretary, after notice and an opportunity for a hearing, finds that an air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an unfair or deceptive practice or unfair method of competition, the Secretary shall order the air *1116 carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent to stop the practice or method.
49 U.S.C. § 41712(a) (emphases added). The term “ticket agent” is defined as
a person (except an air carrier, a foreign air carrier, or an employee of an air carrier or foreign air carrier) that as a principal or agent sells, offers for sale, negotiates for, or holds itself out as selling, providing, or arranging for, air transportation.
Id. § 40102(a)(45). Upon finding a violation of section 411, the Department may impose civil penalties. Id. § 46301(a)(1)(A), (a)(2), (a)(5)(D), & (c).
In 2004, in the Final Rule, the Department removed the rules that had long governed the CRS industry. Concluding that “market forces are beginning to discipline the [CRS]s’ prices and terms for airline participation” and that “the [CRS]s’ competition for subscribers is in large part eliminating contract provisions that substantially restrict travel agents from using alternative electronic sources of airline information and booking capabilities,” Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 985, the Department allowed the sunset on January 31, 2004 of its CRS regulations. Id. at 976. Two of its rules — prohibiting “display bias” 1 and certain contractual arrangements — were extended for a six-month transition period beyond the sunset date, until July 31, 2004. Id. (codified at 14 C.F.R. § 255.8 (2005)). In promulgating the Final Rule, the Department stated that all CRSs remain subject to Department authority under section 411. Id. Specifically, even those CRSs that are not owned by statutory “air carriers” (i.e., “independent CRSs”) are deemed statutory “ticket agent[s],” and thus remain the subject of possible Department enforcement actions under section 411. Id. at 995-998.
II.
Sabre petitions for review of the Department’s jurisdictional claim in the Final Rule and vacation of that part of the rule. Sabre contends that the Department’s “novel interpretation” that independent CRSs are “ticket agents” ignores both the plain meaning of the statutory definition of “ticket agent” and its own prior interpretation
of
that term and rewrites Congress’s purpose in 1952 when it included “ticket agent[s]” in the scope of section 411. Before reaching Sabre’s challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority under section 411, we must first address the Department’s contentions that Sabre lacks standing and that its challenge is not ripe.
See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
A.
Article III of the Constitution limits the role of the federal courts to decide “cases” and “controversies.” U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2. To ensure there is a justiciable dispute, Sabre must demonstrate standing, by showing that (1) it has suffered an “injury in fact,” that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2) the injury is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the Department; and (3) a favorable decision on the judicial relief requested is likely to redress the injury.
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs., Inc.,
The Department takes the position that Sabre offers only speculation as to whether and how the Department might in the future regulate independent CRSs under section 411, which the Department contends is “completely unknown and cannot constitute a present injury for standing purposes.” Br. of Respondent at 21-22. The Department maintains that no relevant legal obligations continue to bind Sabre because it is unreasonable to assume that the Department would seek to enforce regulations, such as the prohibition on display bias, that the Department has specifically allowed to sunset. If the Department considered such practices to violate section 411 in all instances, the Department maintains that it would have preserved or modified these prohibitions. Id. at 22-23. Sabre is thus, according to the Department, “free to operate its business as it wishes.” Id. at 26.
We conclude that Sabre has demonstrated a sufficiently concrete and particularized injury in fact due to the Final Rule’s immediate impact on Sabre’s ability to make business decisions about the products it will offer in the market. This comes about as the result of a combination of three circumstances:
. First, in the Final Rule, the Department unambiguously claims jurisdiction over independent CRSs. It stated that it will continue to take “appropriate action[s]” under section 411 against deceptive trade practices and unfair methods of competition by CRSs, irrespective of whether the CRS is connected through ownership with an air carrier. Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 991, 998. At oral argument, the Department acknowledged that its claim of jurisdiction in the Final Rule is definitive, not tentative.
Second, the Department’s statements, taken as a whole, indicate a very high probability that it will act against a practice that Sabre would otherwise find financially attractive, namely the sale of display bias. In the Final Rule, the Department has made clear that it strongly condemns display bias while giving no indication of how the practice would ever be lawful. Specifically, the Department considers the sale of display bias to be categorically anti-competitive and unfair, at least under current market conditions. Id. at 992, 998. It rejects arguments that display bias may have social benefits, id. at 993, and that display bias may not be harmful, id. at 992-94. Although the Department offers some indications that future market conditions might cause the sale of display bias to become less pernicious, id., it offers only oblique indications of how that might be the case, such as when travel agents use the internet to check the quality of CRS *1118 information, id. at 993, and no indication of how it might become beneficial. “Display bias does not promote competition on the merits,” the Department explains, because “[i]nstead, it is designed to suppress competition by causing consumers and their travel agents to select inferior airline services over other available services that would better suit their needs.” Id. at 998; see supra n. 1. Thus, the Department concludes, depending upon market conditions, CRS biasing may be “unlawful” both under section 411 as well as section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 (2000). Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 998. These statements occur in the context of the Department’s assertion that “display bias has been a concern since CRSs were first developed,” id. at 992, and that CRSs “clearly wish to be able to sell bias,” id. at 993.
Third, the Department has the Statutory authority to impose daily civil penalties on Sabre, after notice and an opportunity to be heard, for violations of section 411 and has asserted, subject only to the limits of constitutional Due Process, the right to do so without prior warning, rulemaking, or cease and desist order. See 49 U.S.C. § 46301(a)(2), (a)(4), (c)(1)(A). Although the Department’s history of enforcement actions has been premised on regulatory violations, 2 and the Final Rule suggests that the Department might readopt regulations barring display bias, 69 Fed.Reg. at 998, the Department asserted in the Final Rule that regardless:
[e]ven without specific regulations, any such [anti-competitive] practices could be unfair methods of competition and thus unlawful. We retain the authority to bring enforcement cases against firms that violate the statutory prohibition.
Id.
at 978. As Sabre points out, the Department has taken the position in another context that, as a matter of its statutory authority, “a violation of [section 411] may be enforced by civil penalty as well as by order.”
American Airlines, Inc.,
Docket OST-2003-15046-18,
In light of the Final Rule’s pronouncements, Sabre realistically expects that its marketing of display bias will be perceived by the Department as a violation of section 411.
Cf. Clinton v. City of New York,
In addition, Sabre has established that this injury is actual, not conjectual or hypothetical. Sabre has proffered evidence in a sealed supplemental declaration that confirms the present existence of marketing plans, which it could otherwise implement presumably at considerable profit, that might very well result in enforcement actions and consequent civil fines. The Final Rule does not entail the type of flat prohibition involved in
Navegar, Inc. v. United States,
We hold, under these circumstances, that Sabre has demonstrated, as a consequence of the Final Rule and its status as an independent CRS, a “sufficient likelihood of economic injury to establish "standing.”
Clinton,
Finally, Sabre’s petition, which is a challenge to an administrative rulemaking, falls within the relevant zone of interests under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (2000), and the FAA, and therefore satisfies the prudential limitations on standing.
See Bennett v. Spear,
B.
A related component of justiciability in pre-enforcement review of agency action focuses on the timing of judicial review rather than the parties seeking review. The ripeness doctrine is designed “to prevent the courts, through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements over administrative policies, and also to protect the agencies from judicial interference until an administrative decision has been formalized and its effects felt in a concrete way by the challenging parties.”
Abbott Labs. v. Gardner,
Regarding the first prong of the ripeness analysis, Sabre’s challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority under section 411 presents the court with a purely legal question of statutory
*1120
construction.
See Abbott Labs.,
As regards the second prong of the analysis, while the court recognizes the possibility of overlap between the injury-in-fact for purposes of standing and the hardship prong for purposes of ripeness,
Navegar, Inc. v. United States,
From the court’s perspective, pre-en-forcement review of jurisdictional challenges serves a distinct purpose. “In our overall pattern of government the judicial branch has the function of requiring the executive (or administrative) branch to stay within the limits prescribed by the legislative branch.”
Nat’l Automatic Laundry,
Therefore, because the Department’s jurisdictional claim is sufficiently crystalized for judicial review and neither the Department nor the court has a significant interest in delay, we hold that Sabre’s challenge to the Department’s claim of section 411 jurisdiction over independent CRSs is ripe.
III.
In the Final Rule, the Department observed that in adding the term “ticket agent” in section 411 Congress intended the definitional phrase “as principal or agent” to ensure that all persons conducting the listed functions were covered, and concluded that independent CRSs operate as principals in the offering for sale and arranging for air transportation inasmuch as “they act as independent firms that are involved in the distribution of airline services.” 69 Fed.Reg. at 996. It followed that because the independent CRSs are “ticket agent[s],” the Department has authority over them under section 411. Id. at 998.
Sabre contends that the Department’s identification of independent CRSs as statutory “ticket agents” is invalid because this interpretation is incompatible with the plain language of the statute. Maintaining that independent CRSs do not act as “principals” in arranging for air transportation, nor are they authorized “agents” of air carriers, Sabre revives the contention rejected in the Final Rule that independent CRSs are simply information intermediaries who provide fare, route, and seat availability data to travel agents, who then book and sell tickets. Id. at 996. According to Sabre, the legislative history indicates that Congress was concerned only with regulating as principals “ticket agents” who held themselves out to the public as air carriers and misrepresented themselves in the fraudulent sale of air transportation, and this meaning is reflected in precedent of the Civil Aeronautics Board (“CAB”), which is the Department’s predecessor in this regulatory arena, see Civil Aeronautics Board Sunset Act of 1984, Pub.L. 98-443, 98 Stat. 1703 (1984).
Under the familiar two-step analysis of
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
There are three conditions compounded in the definition of “ticket agent.” A statutory “ticket agent” is a “person” who, (1) either “as a principal or agent,” (2) “sells, offers for sale, negotiates for, or holds itself out as selling, providing, or arranging for,” (3) air transportation. 49 U.S.C. § 40102(a)(45). The Department reasoned, citing the common meaning of “sell” and “offer,” that CRSs sell and offer for sale air transportation as principals because they “present the travel agent with air service options that the agent can purchase through the system”; each system “enables the travel agent to book the seat and pay for it on the customer’s behalf by entering specified keystrokes”; and when the travel agent follows the applicable procedures, “the airline is obligated by its contract [with the system] to accept the booking as valid, whether or not any record of the transaction appears in the airline’s internal reservations system.” Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 996.
Sabre maintains that by construing “ticket agent” to reach independent CRSs, the Department’s interpretation reads out of the definition the restrictive clause “as a principal or agent,” because the term “ticket agent” under the Department’s interpretation covers all parties involved in selling, offering for sale, or arranging for air transportation, no matter what status they have or tasks they perform. This is not true: Congress’s use of “principal” and “agent” in the disjunctive does not necessarily indicate that Congress intended to limit the broad applicability of the two words. Legislative drafters often use apparently redundant language in order to emphasize that a broad delegation may not evaded so as to frustrate a statute’s purpose. Cf. Shook v. District of Columbia Fin. Responsibility and Mgmt. Assistance Auth., 132 F.3d 775, 782 (D.C.Cir. 1998). The legislative history illustrates these points and also undercuts any force in Sabre’s attempt to limit the meaning of “principal” or “agent” to agency law. Congress was concerned about deceptive sales practices by entities that were not already subject to federal regulation, see H.R. Rep. 82-2420, as reprinted in 1952 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2158, at 2162-63, and that were neither air carriers nor the fiduciary agents of either carriers or travel customers, but which presented themselves either as the merchants or brokers of travel services, or as carriers themselves, see id. at 2158-59. Rather than suggesting that Congress had agency law in mind when it amended section 411 to add the term “ticket agent,” the history indicates that Congress used both “principal” and “agent” in order to cover all intermediary entities that hold themselves out as “selling, providing, or arranging for air transportation.” Id. at 2158-63. Thus, the Department could permissibly identify an independent CRS as a “principal or agent” in the broad sense of a travel intermediary.
Although Sabre protests that it is not selling air transportation but only selling “information, communications, and data processing” to airlines and travel agents, *1123 Br. of Petitioner at 27, the Department also could reasonably conclude the independent CRSs do more. Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. 996. As Intervenor Amadeus points out, CRS contracts with airlines “authorize CRSs to display their services for sale, confirm reservations, price itineraries, accept payment information, process credit cards authorizations, provide e-ticketing information, and physically issue tickets on their behalf.” Amadeus Reply Comments at 34-35, In the Matter of CRS Regulations; Statements of General Policy, Docket No. OST-97-2881 et al. (D.O.T. June 9, 2003). Most significantly, CRSs are not paid for providing information but for making bookings, i.e, for selling airline inventory. American West Comments at 12, In the Matter of CRS Regulations; Statements of General Policy, Docket No. OST-97-2881 et al. (D.O.T. March 17, 2003). Most of the CRSs’ revenues come from payments made by airlines for individual bookings. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (“NPRM”), 65 Fed.Reg. 45,552, at 69,370 (2000); Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 995. In addition, under productivity pricing arrangements between CRSs and many travel agencies, the latter obtain incentive payments from the CRS (or pay penalties) based on meeting (or not) a monthly booking quota. Id. at 997. The CRSs also charge airlines for booking records made by travel agents that do not involve any communication with an airline’s internal reservation system. NPRM, 65 Fed.Reg. at 69,400; Final Rule, 69 Fed.Reg. at 997.
Because the statutory definition does not require that a ticket agent offer to sell air transportation directly to the public,
id.
at 996, the Department could reasonably conclude that Sabre’s offerings to travel agencies satisfy the holding-out requirement,
see United Air Lines,
Sabre’s reliance on
United Air Lines
is unavailing. In that 1985 case, the Seventh Circuit observed that the CAB has no regulatory authority over independent CRSs not owned by airlines.
United Air Lines,
' As to Sabre’s contention that the Department’s interpretation of the term “ticket agent” is contrary to agency precedent, it is true that the definition as now codified and the relevant language of section 411 have remained largely unchanged since 1952.
3
However, the nature of the CRS industry has changed. When the CAB first promulgated rules to regulate CRSs in 1984,
see
Carrier-Owned Computer Reservations Systems, 49 Fed.Reg. 32540 (1984), all CRSs were controlled by air carriers, which were subject to regulation under section 411, Final Rule,
Additionally, with the change in the nature of the CRS industry, the fact that the CAB acted when CRSs were owned by airline carriers does not mean the Department is now barred from interpreting section 411’s broad delegation of authority in a manner reasonably consistent Congress’s original intention, which was to curb deceptive and unfair practices in' the air travel industry. The Supreme Court has repeatedly observed that “ ‘the fact that a statute can be applied in situations not expressly anticipated by Congress does not demonstrate ambiguity. It demonstrates breadth.’ ”
PGA Tour, Inc.
*1125
v. Martin,
Accordingly, we hold that although the court has jurisdiction to address Sabre’s petition because Sabre has standing and Sabre’s preenforcement challenge to the Department’s interpretation of its authority under section 411 is ripe, Sabre’s challenge fails on the merits, and we deny the petition for review.
Notes
. Display bias involves the ability of a CRS to affect the presentation of information in ways that are not readily apparent to the user, which, in the Department's view, prejudices airline competition and causes travel agents to give misleading or incomplete advice to their customers. 69 Fed.Reg. at 992, 998. The user sees the CRS's presentation but does not necessarily grasp the criteria that have influenced the presentation, such as payments by airlines. The Department explained:
Display bias is possible because of the way in which [CRSs] present information on airline service options. [CRSs] display information on computer screens. Each screen can display only a limited number of [airline] flights, so a system must use criteria for ranking the available flights. Display position is important, because travel agents are more likely to book the flights that are displayed first.
Id.; cf. United Air Lines, Inc. v. Civil Aeronautics Board,
.
See, e.g., TFI Tours International, Ltd. Violations of 49 U.S.C. § 41712 and 14 CFR 399.84,
Order 2004-2-5,
. Section 411 was first enacted in 1938 and did not apply to "ticket agent[s]” but only to "air carrier[s].” See Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, ch. 601, § 411, 52 Stat. 973, 1003 (1938). In 1952, Congress amended section 411 to prohibit unfair and deceptive trade practices by "ticket agent[s].” See An Act to Amend the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, Pub.L. No. 82-538, 66 Stat 628 (1952). The current definition of "ticket agent” in 49 U.S.C. § 40102(a)(45) differs only in unimportant ways from the definition enacted in 1952, which read:
“Ticket agent” means any person, not an air carrier or a foreign air carrier and not a bona fide employee of an air carrier or foreign air carrier, who, as principal or agent, sells or offers for sale any air transportation, or negotiates for, or holds himself out by solicitation, advertisement, or otherwise as one who sells, provides, furnishes, contracts or arranges for, such transportation.
Upon enacting the FAA in 1958, Congress repealed the 1938 Act but left section 411 unchanged. Pub.L. No. 85-726, §§ 101 & 411, 72 Stat. 731, 739-40, 769 (1958).
