Lead Opinion
This matter comes on for consideration of the Petitioners' Unopposed Motion to Clarify the Court's Opinion . The motion is construed as a petition for rehearing. See Fed. R. App. P. 2 ("On its own or a party's motion, a court of appeals may-to expedite its decision or for other good cause-suspend any provision of these rules in a particular case and order proceedings as it directs ....); 10th Cir. R. 2.1 (The court may suspend any part of these rules in a particular case on its own or on a party's motion."). As so construed, the motion is granted. The Clerk is directed to accordingly amend the opinion issued on August 15, 2017.
This order shall act as a supplement to the mandate issued on October 10, 2017.
In an amendment to the Clean Air Act (CAA), Congress directed the EPA to operate a Renewable Fuel Standards Program (the RFS Program) to increase oil refineries' use of renewable fuels. But for small refineries that would suffer a "disproportionate economic hardship" in complying with the RFS Program, the statute required the EPA to grant exemptions on a case-by-case basis.
We conclude the EPA has exceeded its statutory authority under the CAA in interpreting the hardship exemption to require a threat to a refinery's survival as an ongoing operation. That interpretation is outside the range of permissible interpretations of the statute and therefore inconsistent with Congress's statutory mandate. Because we find that the EPA exceeded its statutory authority, we vacate the EPA's decisions and remand to the EPA for further proceedings.
I. Background
In the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Congress amended the CAA to encourage the use of renewable fuels. The statute's RFS program requires oil refineries to either produce a sufficient proportion of renewable fuels as part of their output or purchase credits generated by other refineries to meet their increased renewable-fuel obligations.
See
A. The Renewable Fuel Standards Program
Through the RFS Program, Congress prescribed annual target volumes for renewable fuel sales, which increase each year until reaching a maximum level in 2022.
Under the EPA's accompanying regulations, an obligated party must satisfy its Renewable Volume Obligation each year
by holding sufficient credits, known as Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs), at the end of each compliance year. A RIN is created when a producer makes a gallon of renewable fuel, blends the renewable fuel with petroleum-based fuel, and sells the resulting product domestically.
B. Small Refinery Exemptions
Congress was aware the RFS Program might disproportionately impact small refineries because of the inherent scale advantages of large refineries and therefore created three classes of exemptions to protect these small refineries.
First, the statute exempted all small refineries from the RFS Program until 2011.
Second, in the meantime, Congress directed DOE to conduct a study "to determine whether compliance [with the RFS Program] ... would impose a disproportionate economic hardship on small refineries" after the program's implementation.
Third, after the exemption period expired, Congress provided a process for small refineries to petition the EPA "at any time" for an extension of the initial exemption "for reason of disproportionate economic hardship."
This third exemption is at issue in this case.
C. Sinclair's Petitions for Small Refinery Exemptions
Sinclair owns and operates two refineries in Wyoming: one located in Sinclair, Wyoming, and another in Casper, Wyoming. Both fall within the RFS Program's definition of "small refinery" and were exempt from the RFS requirements until 2011. Those exemptions were extended until 2013 after DOE found Sinclair's Wyoming refineries to be among the 13 of 59 small refineries that would continue to face "disproportionate economic hardship" if required to comply with the RFS Program.
Sinclair then petitioned the EPA to extend their small-refinery exemptions, arguing that both refineries would continue to suffer "disproportionate economic hardship" under the RFS Program. The EPA denied Sinclair's petitions in two separate decisions, finding that both refineries appeared to be profitable enough to pay the cost of the RFS Program. Sinclair filed a timely petition for review with this court. We grant Sinclair's petition for review, vacate the EPA's decisions for both of Sinclair's refineries, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
II. Analysis
We review Sinclair's petitions under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The APA requires courts to consider agency action in conformity with the agency's statutory grant of power, and agency action is unlawful if it is "in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right."
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo.
EnergySolutions, LLC v. Utah
,
A. Judicial Review of Agency Action
When a court reviews an agency's legal determination, it generally applies the analysis set out by the Supreme Court in
Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council
,
In some circumstances, however, a court never reaches the
Chevron
analysis. In such cases, we do not need to answer the step one or step two questions. As the Supreme Court explained in
United States v. Mead Corp.
,
In
Mead
, the Court held that
Chevron
applies only where "it appears that Congress delegated authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the force of law, and that the agency interpretation claiming deference was promulgated in the exercise of that authority."
Mead
,
In situations where
Chevron
does not apply,
Mead
requires us to examine the persuasiveness of agency action with no thumb on the scale of judicial deference. As
Mead
explained, we follow the analysis set forth in
Skidmore v. Swift & Co.
,
Following
Mead
, the Court examined agency action that was less formal than notice-and-comment rulemaking when it reviewed an opinion letter issued by the Social Security Administration.
See
Barnhart v. Walton
,
The question we must answer, then, is whether to apply Chevron or Skidmore deference to the EPA's use of informal adjudications to resolve Sinclair's petitions.
See
WildEarth Guardians v. Nat'l Park Serv.
,
As a preliminary matter, we acknowledge that the EPA's decisions resolving Sinclair's hardship petitions were conducted via informal adjudication (the same procedure employed by the U.S. Customs Service in Mead ). The parties do not seriously contest this conclusion. The decisions were adjudications because they were specific to the parties at issue-in fact, they were specific even to the individual refineries at issue (the EPA produced separate decisions for the Sinclair, Wyoming and Casper, Wyoming refineries)-and were resolving petitions for Sinclair's exemptions from the RFS Program. The decisions were also informal because they were resolved on the basis of Sinclair's submissions and involved no oral argument, opportunity for cross-examination, or other "trial-like" procedures generally required by the APA. See Pierce, supra , at Vol. 1 § 8.2 (describing the trial-like procedures the APA requires for formal adjudications); see also J.A. Vol. 1 at 31 (the Casper, Wyoming refinery opinion describing Sinclair's submission).
Under
Mead
, we conclude that
Skidmore
deference applies to the EPA's decision here. First of all, Congress specifically authorized the EPA to promulgate regulations on aspects of the RFS Program, but not for the small refinery exemptions. This means the agency did not have the benefit of notice-and-comment about its interpretation of the term "disproportionate economic hardship."
See, e.g.
,
Additionally, the decisions were not made by the head of the EPA but instead by a mid-level Agency official.
See
Aplt. Supp. Br. at 7-8;
see also, e.g.
,
Groff v. United States
,
Next, the decisions hold no precedential value for third parties. Indeed, the decisions have no precedential value even for the refiner , since each petition must be resolved on a case-by-case basis (again, the EPA produced two decisions, one for each of Sinclair's refineries). Nor do third parties have access to the decisions, since the EPA does not publicly release its decisions because they contain confidential business information. Aple. Supp. Br. at 8.
Finally, the EPA's viability analysis is not a longstanding practice, but is, instead, only a few years old.
Thus, Mead and Barnhart compel our conclusion that Congress did not intend the EPA's interpretation of "disproportionate economic hardship" to have the "force of law." We therefore apply Skidmore deference in reviewing the EPA's interpretation.
B. The "Disproportionate Economic Hardship" Exemption
In analyzing Congress's grant of power to the EPA to administer the RFS Program, we begin, as always, with the statutory text. "Unless otherwise defined, statutory terms are generally interpreted in accordance with their ordinary meaning."
BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Burton
,
1. The Statutory Requirement
As previously mentioned, Congress provided that small refineries could petition the EPA to extend their initial exemption from the RFS Program "for reason of disproportionate economic hardship."
(B) Petitions based on disproportionate economic hardship
(i) Extension of exemption
A small refinery may at any time petition the [EPA] Administrator for an extension of the exemption under subparagraph (A) for the reason of disproportionate economic hardship .
(ii) Evaluation of petitions
In evaluating a petition under clause (i), the [EPA] Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Energy, shall consider the findings of the study under subparagraph (A)(ii) and other economic factors .
Although Congress did not define the term "disproportionate economic hardship" in the statute, the provision makes clear that Congress provided the EPA with a comprehensive directive in analyzing and evaluating RFS Program exemptions. The statute prescribes the overall process: (1) when petitions can be made: "at any time"; (2) the relevant agency actors: the EPA must make decisions in "consultation with" DOE; (3) the relevant question: whether a refinery will suffer "disproportionate economic hardship" if it is required to participate in the RFS Program for a given year; and (4) the methodology the agency is to use: the EPA must consider the findings of DOE's 2011 study and "other economic factors."
With this statutory background, we turn to whether the EPA's decisions comport with Congress's directive to grant exemptions when a small refinery demonstrates that complying with the RFS Program would cause it to suffer a "disproportionate economic hardship."
2. The EPA's Decisions
Prior to considering a refinery's petition for a hardship exemption, the EPA receives a recommendation on the petition from DOE. In its 2011 study, DOE created a scoring matrix for determining its recommendations for granting exemptions. The first part of the matrix assesses the "disproportionate structural and economic" impacts of the RFS Program on the refinery, looking both at (1) "disproportionate structural impact metrics" (a refinery's percentage of diesel production, access to credit, local market acceptance of renewable fuels, etc.) and (2) "disproportionate economic impact metrics" (the firm's relative refining margin, the degree to which the refiner can blend renewable fuels, whether RINs are a net source of revenue, etc.). J.A. Vol. 1 at 99-102 (DOE's 2011 Small Refinery Exemption Study).
The second part of DOE's matrix assigns scores for three "viability metrics": "(1) whether the cost of compliance 'would reduce the profitability of the firm enough to impair future efficiency improvements;' (2) whether 'individual special events' have had 'a temporary negative impact on the ability of the refinery to comply;' and (3) whether compliance costs are 'likely to lead to shutdown' of the refinery." Aplt. Br. at 13-14 (quoting J.A. Vol. 1 at 103-04).
DOE's interpretation of its methodology does not require that the cost of compliance threaten a refinery's long-term viability. Instead, DOE recommends a 50 percent waiver if the ranking meets a certain threshold on either side of the matrix, although the DOE previously required the ranking meet certain thresholds on
both
sides of the matrix. J.A. Vol. 1 at 17. DOE's scoring change "is due to language included in an explanatory statement accompanying the 2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act," which instructed the DOE as follows: " 'If the Secretary finds that either of these two components exists, the Secretary is directed to recommend to the EPA Administrator a 50 percent waiver of RFS requirements for the petitioner.' "
Here, DOE applied its matrix methodology and recommended the EPA provide a 50 percent waiver of the RFS Program's requirements for both of Sinclair's refineries. See J.A. Vol. I at 15-17 (Sinclair, Wyoming refinery decision); J.A. Vol. I at 35-37 (Casper, Wyoming refinery decision).
The EPA rejected DOE's recommendations and denied both petitions.
In denying Sinclair's exemption for the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery, the EPA explained its view that "disproportionate economic hardship" requires a threat to the "longer term prospects" of a refinery:
EPA believes viability continues to be an important economic factor for determining "disproportionate economic hardship." .... We consider whether [the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery] will remain a competitive and profitable refinery while satisfying its RFS obligations. EPA notes that it considers profitability not merely in the context of a single year's financial statements, but also in the context of assessing the longer term prospects for the refinery. EPA also evaluates viability using metrics considered by DOE in its viability index: (a) compliance costs eliminate efficiency gains (impairment); (b) individual special events; and (c) compliance costs likely to lead to shut down. In reaching our conclusion, we consider all of this information on viability, and additional relevant information as available, to determine whether [the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery] faces a "disproportionate economic hardship " from compliance, and not merely an economic impact .
J.A. Vol. 1 at 18-19 (quoting DOE 2011 Small Refinery Study) (citations omitted) (emphasis added in first sentence);
see also
In applying this long-term viability interpretation, the EPA rejected DOE's matrix scores for both Sinclair refineries. The EPA concluded that "viability" meant only that program costs threatened the "long-term" survival of the refinery, not a short-term comparison to other industry actors:
In the discussion that follows, EPA independently reviews the information as we consider other economic factors in our analysis, including, but not limited to, profitability, net income, cash flow and cash balances, gross and net refining margins, ability to pay for refinery improvement projects, corporate structure, debt and other financial obligations, RIN prices, and the cost of compliance through RIN purchases. After considering all of this information, EPA finds [the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery] will not experience "disproportionate economic hardship" from compliance with the RFS program.
As an initial matter, EPA recognizes its decision differs from DOE's recommendation . The CAA requires that EPA act on a small refinery's petition "in consultation with" DOE, "consider[ing] the findings of" the DOE Small Refinery Study and "other economic factors." EPA gives weight to DOE's technical evaluation and scoring of the refinery, recognizing that DOE has more experience in assessing, e.g., the impact of a particular special event, and how to balance short-term events with longer term planning and concerns over viability. However, EPA has responsibility for making the ultimate decision after considering DOE's evaluation and recommendation, and continues to believe that the proper interpretation of the statutory prerequisite-disproportionate economic hardship-involves " examining the impact of compliance costs on a refinery's ability to maintain profitability and competitiveness-i.e. viability-in the long term. "
J.A. Vol. 1 at 17-18 (quoting CAA section 211(o)(9)(B)(ii) and, in last sentence,
Hermes Consol., LLC v. EPA
,
Thus, according to the EPA, to show "disproportionate economic hardship" a small refinery must demonstrate an existential threat: it "faces RFS compliance costs that would '
significantly impact the operation of the firm, leading eventually to an inability to increase efficiency to remain competitive, eventually resulting in closure
.' "
As we discuss next, the EPA's long-term threat of closure requirement is inconsistent with the plain meaning of "disproportionate economic hardship."
3. The Plain Meaning of "Disproportionate Economic Hardship"
Sinclair claims the EPA's position is that "no matter how disproportionate
the economic
impact
of the RFS Program on other refineries, there can be no 'disproportionate economic
hardship
' unless compliance with the RFS Program is so costly that it will eventually force a small refinery to shut down," and argues that this position is contrary to the plain language of the term "disproportionate economic hardship." Aplt. Br. at 34. Sinclair also maintains that the EPA's "viability" test not only fails the agency's statutory duty to compare the refinery at issue with its competitors, but also requires significantly more "hardship" to the refinery than the statute instructs.
The statutory text at issue allows a range of linguistic possibilities in defining "disproportionate economic hardship." But as we discuss below, the EPA's interpretation falls outside the boundaries of permissible choice. It chose a definition of economic hardship plainly at odds with Congress's statutory command by reading a "viability" requirement into the statute and the "disproportionate" requirement out of it.
We first evaluate Sinclair's argument that the EPA improperly imported a condition of future long-term viability into the statutory language. This question is hardly in dispute, because the EPA admits as much. The EPA concluded its decision for the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery with the following statement:
EPA does not doubt that Sinclair incurred costs, both planned and unplanned, which affected profitability. However, as discussed above, EPA believes that it is necessary to show that RFS compliance will have an impact on the refinery's ongoing future viability to be eligible for an exemption . After considering the full financial picture of [the Sinclair, Wyoming refinery] for 2014 and prior years, EPA does not find that compliance with RFS for 2014 would threaten [the Sinclair refinery]'s viability. Given [the Sinclair refinery]'s situation, we do not believe that an RFS exemption for [the Sinclair refinery] is justified under the statutory requirement of a disproportionate economic hardship.
J.A. Vol. 1 at 20-21 (emphasis added); see also id. at 39-40 (similar language in the Casper, Wyoming refinery opinion).
The EPA's use of the word "necessary" proves Sinclair's point. If long-term "viability" was merely one element the EPA considered in its "disproportionate economic hardship" analysis, that would be a different story. But by stating that future viability (meaning whether the firm will go out of business) is necessary to-in effect, the sine qua non of-its decision, the EPA demonstrates it will not grant an exemption unless there is a threat to a refinery's long-term viability.
The EPA's interpretation takes the statutory language too far. First, as a matter of textual exegesis, a " 'hardship' " is something that "makes one's life hard or difficult-not just something that makes continued existence impossible." Aplt. Br. at 35; see Oxford English Dictionary (2017) (defining "hardship" as "[s]omething which is hard to bear"); Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining "hardship" as "[p]rivation; suffering or adversity"); Webster's Third New Int'l Dictionary 1033 (1971) (defining "hardship" as "something that causes or entails suffering or privation").
"[V]iability," on the other hand, is the "ability to continue or be continued; the state of being financially sustainable." Oxford English Dictionary (2017); see also Webster's Third New Int'l Dictionary 2548 (1971) (defining "viability" as "the quality or state of being viable," and defining "viable," in turn, as "capable of living"). As a matter of common sense, an experience that causes hardship is less burdensome than an experience that threatens one's very existence. Our law clerks, for example, might say their first year of law school was a "hardship" they suffered, but they could hardly claim that the experience of learning the law threatened their very "viability" (we hope).
The EPA argues that "viability" and "hardship" are the same, since "hardship" can be defined as "suffering" and "privation." Aple. Br. at 38. But as we just explained, "suffering" and "privation" may be difficult to bear, but they do not necessarily rise to the level of threatening one's very existence. And the EPA's interpretation of "viability" is akin to a death knell, not simple privation. In any event, DOE's matrix analysis supplied three "viability metrics" that collectively determine hardship: (1) reduced profitability; (2) temporary negative events; and (3) risk of closure. See J.A. Vol. 1 at 103. The EPA's interpretation ignores two-thirds of this analysis and selects only risk of closure as the appropriate measure of hardship. This is not a reasonable interpretation of the statutory term. In short, the EPA's equation of "hardship" and "viability" improperly transforms Congress's statutory text into something far beyond what Congress plausibly intended.
The statute also commands the EPA to consider the
disproportionate
impact of the RFS Program, which inherently requires a comparative evaluation. The EPA must compare the effect of the RFS Program compliance costs on a given refinery with the economic state of other refineries. The EPA's viability test involves no such comparison, but instead looks at each refinery in isolation and asks whether the cost of long-term compliance with the RFS Program would force the refinery to shut down. By making long-term viability a necessary factor in its analysis, the EPA impermissibly reads the word "disproportionate" out of the statute.
See
Clark v. Rameker
, --- U.S. ----,
The EPA's narrow viability evaluation is also not supported by contextual clues in the statutory scheme. Congress, in fact, directed the EPA to apply a closure test for another part of the CAA involving primary nonferrous smelter orders.
The EPA places significant weight on two recent circuit court decisions addressing § 7545(o)(9)(B)(ii), which it claims support its interpretation of the statute:
Hermes Consolidated, LLC v. EPA
,
In
Lion Oil
, the Eighth Circuit also rejected the refinery's
Chevron
step one argument. The court stated that since the statute does not define "disproportionate economic hardship," and Congress delegated authority to the agency to implement an ambiguous statute, the court was " 'required to accept the agency's statutory interpretation, so long as it is reasonable.' "
But these cases are distinguishable. As an initial matter, neither the D.C. Circuit nor the Eighth Circuit considered whether Mead should control its interpretation of the statute; instead, both courts assumed that Chevron applied. Regardless, as we explained above, Mead instructs us that Skidmore deference is the appropriate standard of review to apply to an informal adjudication that does not carry "the force of law."
The petitioner in
Hermes
argued that mere "[c]onsideration of a viability index" was "inconsistent with [the EPA's] statutory mandate."
As for
Lion Oil
, the Eighth Circuit's decision does not make clear whether the petitioner argued it was impermissible for the EPA to consider viability as
a factor
in its analysis (as in
Hermes
) or as the
sole factor
in its analysis (as in this case).
See
Mead
instructs us to defer to agency interpretations of a statute only to the extent those decisions have the "power to persuade."
III. Conclusion
By reading a necessary "viability" requirement into its statutory directive to evaluate a refinery's petition for exemption from the RFS program based on "disproportionate economic hardship," the EPA exceeded its statutory authority. We therefore GRANT Sinclair's petition for review, VACATE the EPA's decisions for Sinclair's two Wyoming refineries, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Sinclair's June 24, 2016 motion to seal the docketing statement and agency decision documents and its September 9, 2016 motion to seal all the briefs and the joint deferred appendix are GRANTED.
The RFS Program is codified as Clean Air Act § 211(o),
DOE actually completed its first study in 2009, concluding that no small refineries would suffer "disproportionate economic hardship" if they were required to comply with the RFS Program. But Congress was unhappy with DOE's methodology and directed the Agency to conduct a new study, requiring it to "seek and invite comment from small refineries on the RFS exemption hardship question, assess RFS compliance impacts on small refinery utilization rates and profitability, evaluate the financial health and ability of small refineries to meet RFS requirements, study small refinery impacts and regional dynamics by PADD, and reassess the accuracy of small refinery compliance costs through the purchase of renewable fuel credits."
See
S. Rep. No. 111-45, at 109 (2009),
DOE completed its second study in 2011, concluding that "[i]f certain small refineries must purchase RINs that are far more expensive than those that may be generated through blending, this will lead to disproportionate economic hardship for those effected entities." J.A. Vol. 1 at 69 (alteration incorporated).
We note that neither party discussed the Supreme Court's decision in
City of Arlington v. Federal Communications Commission
,
Although the record does not indicate exactly how long the EPA's interpretation of "disproportionate economic hardship" has been in place, as a matter of logic, the EPA's interpretation must have been derived in 2011 at the earliest (the year that DOE released its second study).
The dissent describes this sentence as "regrettably inartful," claiming that the EPA did not mean what it said, but rather applied DOE's viability metrics in a "nuanced analysis." Diss. at 1. But, as we have shown above, we do not read this sentence in isolation. And, in any event, the EPA repeats this language in its advocacy before us, using it to describe the test it applied in resolving Sinclair's petitions.
"Viability" is a term of art for purposes of EPA's assessment of petitions for small refinery exemptions. ... EPA has also described this factor as requiring a small refinery to "show that it faces RFS compliance costs that would 'significantly impact the operation of the firm, leading eventually to an inability to increase efficiency to remain competitive, eventually resulting in closure.' "
Aple. Br. at 40 n.11 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added).
We reject the EPA's argument that Sinclair "waived" its statutory interpretation argument by failing to raise it during the administrative proceedings.
See
Aple. Br. at 32-33. Sinclair fully explained its understanding of the statutory term as informed by DOE's exemption study and recommendation that Sinclair was eligible for a 50 percent exemption. And, in any event, statutory interpretation is the specialization of the courts, not the agencies.
See
Frontier Airlines, Inc. v. Civil Aeronautics Bd.
,
Dissenting Opinion
My majority colleagues predicate their opinion on the premise that the Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") has impermissibly adopted a test under which a refinery can demonstrate disproportionate economic hardship only upon a showing of an existential threat to ongoing operations. Whether that presumed test would pass muster may present an interesting question, but it is quite academic to the real issue before us. Assuredly, the EPA decisions include a regrettably inartful sentence-a partial quote from the 2011 Small Refinery Exemption Study issued by the Department of Energy (the "Department"). However, when construed as a whole, those decisions demonstrate that EPA applies a more nuanced analysis. Rather than adopting a one-factor test looking solely to whether a shutdown is likely, it seems clear to me that EPA is applying the three-pronged "viability metrics" developed by the Department. Under those standards, a refinery can establish economic hardship under four different circumstances, only one of which requires a threat of shutdown. Because the majority proceeds on a misconstruction of the EPA analysis, I must respectfully dissent.
I
In its decisions in this case, EPA discussed the Department's study at length.
In resolving the two components of cost and sufficiency of the effect, the Department considers numerous factors which are grouped into two categories-structural and viability. In assessing "disproportionate structural impacts," the Department scores a refinery on eight metrics: percentage of diesel production, access to capital/credit, availability of other cash flows, local market, state regulation, relative refining margin, blending capability, and niche market. Under the "viability" category, the Department considers three metrics: whether compliance costs "would reduce the profitability of the firm enough to impair future efficiency improvements"; "[r]efinery specific events (such as a shutdown due to an accident, and subsequent loss of revenue) in the recent past that have a temporary negative impact on the ability of the refinery to comply"; and whether compliance costs are "likely to lead to shut down." Each metric is scored either 0, 5, or 10. Subtotal scores for the structural and viability categories are then averaged and divided by 2. The Department's study determined that an exemption would be warranted only if a refinery had an overall score of 1 or higher in both categories. For the viability category, a refinery can qualify with a score of 10 on any single metric, or with an intermediate score of 5 on both the efficiency and specific event metrics.
After providing background information on Sinclair Wyoming Refinery's operations, the EPA decision reproduces the Department's scoring matrix for the facility. That metric calculated a score of 1.6 on the structural impact category, and 0 for the viability category. Then, EPA evaluated "viability using the metrics considered by [the Department] in its viability index: (a) compliance costs eliminate efficiency gains (impairment); (b) individual special events; and (c) compliance costs likely to lead to shut down." Considering the Department's score of zero on all three viability factors, EPA concluded that Sinclair Wyoming Refinery "remains fully able to comply with its 2014 RFS obligations without causing a significant impairment of the refinery's operations," and thus compliance would not threaten its "viability." EPA specifically considered Sinclair's argument that a fire at the refinery caused a large one-time loss-an argument clearly directed toward the specific event metric. And it discussed the RFS program's impact on efficiency gains as relevant to the first metric.
The majority opinion does not consider this lengthy discussion. If it had, it would be abundantly clear that EPA considers all three of the Department's viability factors. Importantly, a refinery can qualify for an exemption under the Department's matrix without showing that compliance costs would lead to a shutdown. Rather than considering EPA's nuanced approach, the majority opinion focuses on the statement that a refinery must show that compliance costs would "significantly impact the operation of the firm, leading eventually to an inability to increase efficiency to remain competitive, eventually resulting in closure." (Majority Op. 995.) Read in context,
that statement does not support the assertion that EPA applies a single-factor test under which a refinery must show a shutdown is likely.
The statement at issue is a direct quote from the Department's Small Refinery Exemption Study. In describing its three viability metrics, the Department explained that the term "viability refers to the ability of the refiners to remain competitive and profitable," which "requires sufficient profits to make investments in the refinery." That statement quoted by EPA explains that "under some circumstances, a small refinery may face compliance costs that would significantly impact the operation of the firm, leading eventually to an inability to increase efficiency to remain competitive, eventually resulting in closure." Read together with the Department's explanation of the metrics, the quoted passage shows that eventual closure is not required. Refineries may receive points under the efficiency metric because "significant constraints on efficiency improvements would eventually leave many small refineries at risk." And the individual special events metric is specifically aimed to provide relief to refineries that have suffered incidents causing "a temporary negative impact on the ability of the refinery to comply with the RFS."
In discussing "viability" in the challenged decisions, EPA is referring to all three metrics-not just the possibility of refinery closure. The majority opinion's reliance on the ordinary usage definition of "viability," and its claim that EPA ignored the first two of the Department's viability metrics, (Majority Op. 996-97, 997-98), cannot be squared with the text of the challenged decisions. Those decisions unequivocally state that EPA "evaluates viability using the metrics considered by [the Department] in its viability index: (a) compliance costs eliminate efficiency gains (impairment); (b) individual special events; and (c) compliance costs likely to lead to shut down." Therefore, the appropriate question in reviewing the decisions at issue is whether that multi-factor analysis is consistent with the statute.
II
Regardless of the standard of review applied, EPA's adoption of the Department's three-part viability test should be upheld.
See
Edelman v. Lynchburg Coll.
,
Consideration of a refinery's overall health makes sense in light of the statute's use of the term "hardship." § 7545(o)(9)(B)(i). As the EPA decision notes, a refinery must show it "faces a 'disproportionate economic hardship ' from compliance, and not merely an economic impact ." A refinery that spends $5 million per year to meet its RFS obligations and suffers net annual operating losses of $1 million per year would experience more of a "hardship" than a refinery that spends $10 million per year on RFS compliance but nevertheless operates at a profit.
In an "Explanatory Statement" contained in the 2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act, Congress directed the Department to recommend a 50% waiver for refineries that score above 1 on the Department's matrix for either the viability or structural impact categories.
See
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016, Pub. L. No. 114-113,
Finally, reliance on the Department's study necessarily incorporates a disproportionality element. That study applied the Department's metrics to a broad cross-section of small refineries and found thirteen qualified for an exemption. Under that matrix, Sinclair's refineries do not qualify for an exemption for compliance year 2014. Even if the Department was required to depart from the study's findings due to an appropriations act requirement, EPA followed the statute when it relied on the Department's study in making these evaluations. The agency was mandated to consider both the study and the Department's recommendation. § 7545(o)(9)(B)(ii).
Two other circuits have approved EPA's approach.
See
Lion Oil Co. v. EPA
,
There are two EPA decisions at issue, one denying an exemption to the Sinclair Wyoming Refinery and one denying an exemption to the Sinclair Casper Refinery. This dissent quotes from the former decision, but the latter is identical in all material respects.
As the majority notes, EPA's brief repeats this statement in a footnote. (Majority Op. 18 n.5.) But as with the decisions at issue, the statement must be read in context. EPA's brief strenuously rejects the reading of its decisions urged by Sinclair and adopted by the majority. After quoting Sinclair's argument that a refinery must demonstrate that RFS compliance "will eventually force a small refinery to shut down," EPA states: "This is not an accurate characterization of EPA's interpretation because it gives the incorrect impression that the Agency will grant the exemption only if it concludes that the refinery will have to close if it has to comply with its RFS requirements." (Resp't Br. 40.) Instead, consistent with its decisions, EPA explains that "[t]he viability factor addresses three types of metrics that could impact long-term competitiveness, none of which necessarily would cause a closure of the facility in the near term." ( Id. at 38-39.)
