The Governor and Attorney General of Utah, along with Utah environmental and transportation officials, appeal the district court’s ruling that the state’s statutes regulating the storage and transportation of spent nuclear fuel are preempted by federal law.
See Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians v. Leavitt,
We agree with the district court’s resolution of the standing question. Private Fuel Storage (PFS) and the Skull Valley Band have properly asserted that their legally protected interests have been injured by the challenged statutes and that these injuries are likely to be redressed by a favorable decision. Moreover, in light of the D.C. Circuit’s recent resolution of the Utah officials’ challenge to federal statutes and regulations concerning spent nuclear fuel,
see Bullcreek v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
On the merits, we agree with the district court’s ruling that the Utah statutes are preempted by federal law. We therefore affirm the district court’s decision.
I. BACKGROUND
This case is one of many arising out the vexing problem of transporting and storing the spent nuclear fuel (SNF) that is generated by nuclear power plants. Because SNF remains radioactive for thousands of years, long-term storage strategies are essential. However, the search for the safest solution has been long and difficult.
In 1982, Congress passed the Nuclear Waste Policy Act (NWPA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 10101-10270. The NWPA requires the United States Department of Energy to construct a permanent storage facility for the disposal of SNF. The NWPA also establishes a federally monitored temporary storage program in the event that a permanent facility is not available by the deadline.
Under NWPA, the United States Department of Energy and various utility companies controlling nuclear reactors entered into agreements to accept SNF no later than January 31,1998. However, the Department of Energy has estimated that, at the earliest, it will not have a permanent repository to receive SNF until 2010. See Final Interpretation of Nuclear Waste Acceptance Issues, 60 Fed.Reg. 21,793, 21,-794 (May 3, 1995). Unless Congress, the Department of Energy, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) take heroic steps, even this date is optimistic. See John Karl Gross, Nuclear Native America: Nuclear Waste and Liability on the Skull Valley Goshute Reservation, 7 B.U.J. SCi & Tech. L. 140, 147-48 n.64 (2001) (reporting estimates that a permanent storage facility may not be available until 2015 or perhaps 2025).
PFS is a consortium of utility companies, which formed in order to seek temporary storage options for the SNF storage *1228 problem. In May 1997, PFS entered into a lease of Skull Valley Band tribal land located fifty miles from Salt Lake City. PFS sought to build an SNF storage facility there. The Bureau of Indian Affairs of the United States Department of Interior has conditionally approved the lease, 1 and PFS has submitted an application for li-censure of the facility with the NRC, which remains pending. Under the federal regulations, the proposed facility is characterized as an “independent spent fuel storage installation,” see 10 C.F.R. § 72.3, and must satisfy detailed requirements before it may be constructed. See 10 C.F.R. § 72.1 (noting that “the regulations in this part establish requirements, procedures, and criteria for the issuance of licenses to receive, transfer, and possess” SNF).
The Utah officials intervened in the NRC proceedings, arguing that the NRC lacked the authority to license the proposed facility. The NRC rejected that argument, concluding that “Congress, in enacting the Atomic Energy Act, gave the NRC authority to license privately owned, away-from-reactor facilities and did not repeal that authority when it later enacted the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982.”
In re Private Fuel Storage, L.L.C.,
In addition to contesting the licensing proceedings before the NRC, the state of Utah passed a series of statutes between 1998 and 2001 that regulate the storage and transportation of SNF. As the district court explained, the statutes are comprised of four general categories: (1) amendments to Utah’s Radiation Control Act, which establish state licensing requirements for the storage of SNF, and which revoke statutory and common law grants of limited liability to stockholders in companies engaged in storing SNF; (2) “the County Planning Provisions,”
Skull Valley,
A. The Utah Licensing Scheme for SNF Storage Facilities
In Senate Bills 81, 177, and 196, the Utah legislature added Part 3 to Utah’s Radiation Control Act. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 19-3-301-317. Part 3 begins with a sweeping prohibition of the transfer, storage, treatment, and disposal of high-level nuclear waste in Utah. It then establishes an alternative licensing scheme for SNF: If the NRC issues a license to an *1229 SNF storage facility, if the NRC’s authority to issue such a license is upheld by a court of competent jurisdiction, and if a federal government agency transports the waste to a facility in Utah, then the governor, in consultation with county officials and with the concurrence of the state legislature, may approve the storage of SNF in Utah.
Part 3 further provides that SNF storage facilities must be licensed by the state Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ). In order to obtain such a license, the applicant must provide an analysis of groundwater conditions, a security plan, health risk assessments, a quality assurance program, a radiation safety program, and an emergency plan. Am applicant must also demonstrate that the facility “will not cause or contribute to an increase in mortality, an increase in illness, or pose a present or potential hazard to human health or the environment.” Id. § 19-3-306(3). A license is limited to a term of twenty years and may be extended only by approval of the governor, the legislature and the DEQ.
Additionally, an applicant must enter into a benefits agreement with the DEQ to “offset adverse environmental public health, social and economical impacts.” Id. § 19-3-310(1). Any transportation of SNF must meet with approval from the State Department of Transportation.
Part 3 also imposes substantial application and licensing fees. In order to have its application considered, a party seeking to store SNF in Utah must pay an initial non-refundable application fee of five million dollars. The applicant must also pay an additional fee to cover the costs of reviewing the application and must post a cash bond of at least two billion dollars.
Once an applicant receives a license, it must also pay an amount equal to at least 75% of the “unfunded potential liability” of the project. Id. § 19 — 3—319(3)(a). That amount is determined by the DEQ, based upon “the health and economic costs expected to result from a reasonably foreseeable accidental release [of SNF].” Id. § 19-3-301(5)(a).
Part 3 also includes a section that revokes statutory and common-law limited liability for officers, directors, and equity-interest owners of companies operating SNF storage facilities in Utah. That section explains that
[a]n organization engaging in [the transportation and storage of SNF in Utah] has significant potential to affect the health, welfare, or best interests of the state and should not have limited liability for its equity interest holders. To shield equity interest owners from the debts and obligations of an organization ... would have the effect of attracting capital to, enterprises whose goals are contrary to the state’s interests.
Id. § 19-3-318(2)(b).
Finally, Part 3 provides for civil and criminal penalties for those who violate or facilitate the violation of its provisions. The Utah Attorney General is authorized to seek an injunction barring any activity that violates the statute. In addition, a court may impose a civil penalty of up to $10,000 per day for each violation. Part 3 also states that the violation of its provisions is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by a maximum fine of $10,000 per day.
B. The County Planning Provisions
As part of its attempt to regulate SNF storage and transportation, the Utah legislature also passed statutes imposing requirements upon government officials in counties in which SNF storage facilities are proposed. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 17-27-102(2), -301(3), -303(4), -303(5)(b),-303(7), and -308; 17-34-1(3), and -34-6. These statutes give the county officials two options. First, the county may adopt an *1230 ordinance stating that all proposals for transporting or storing SNF will be rejected. The state will then indemnify the county from any claims arising out of the county’s decision. In the alternative, a county may allow the transportation and storage of SNF within its borders. However, in that event, the county must adopt a comprehensive land use plan that contains detailed information regarding the effects of any proposed SNF site upon the health and general welfare of citizens of the State. The plan must require “specific measures to mitigate the effects of high-level nuclear waste and greater than class C radioactive waste and guarantee the health and safety of the citizens of the state.” Id. § 17 — 27—3 01 (3) (a) (iii). The county must also conduct a public hearing on any proposal to-allow SNF transportation and storage.
The County Planning Provisions also prohibit county governments from providing “municipal-type services” to SNF transportation and storage facilities within the county. Id. § 17-34-l(3)(a). Those services are defined to include fire protection, waste and garbage disposal, planning and zoning, water, sewer, electricity, and law enforcement. Id. § 19-3-303(6) (defining “[m]unicipal-type services”).
C. The Road Provisions
The Road Provisions amend the Utah statutes regulating the construction of railroad crossings. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 54-4-15, 72-3-301, 72-4-125(4), and 78-34-6(5). Although the discretion to grant petitions for railroad crossings is generally vested in the State Department of Transportation, the Utah legislature added a provision in 1999 that states that the resolution of any dispute regarding a petition filed by an entity engaged in SNF storage and transportation “requires the concurrence of the governor and the legislature in order to take effect.” Id. § 54-4-15(4)(b). A second provision designates certain county roads and trails near the Skull Valley Reservation “statewide public safety interest highways,” id. § 72-3-301, and provides that the state Department of Transportation has jurisdiction and control over them. A third provision divests the county of control over the only road permitting access to the Skull Valley Reservation and PFS’s proposed facility, designating the road a state highway. Finally, a fourth provision states that before the Department of Transportation may exercise eminent domain to grant a right of way to a company engaged in the transportation or storage of SNF, the governor and the legislature must concur.
D. The District Court Proceedings
PFS and the Skull Valley Band filed this action in 2001 in the United States District Court for the District of Utah, challenging the Utah statutory scheme on various grounds and seeking a declaratory judgment and an injunction bariing the application of the statutes to the proposed SNF storage facility on the Skull Valley Band’s land. In particular, PFS and the Skull Valley Band alleged that the statutes violate (1) the Supremacy Clause (because they are preempted by federal law); (2) the Commerce Clause; (3) principles of Indian sovereignty and the Indian Commerce Clause; (4) the Contracts Clause; and (5) the First, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments. They named Utah Governor Michael O. Leavitt, Utah Attorney General Mark L. Shurtleff, and officials from the Utah Departments of Environmental Quality and Transportation as defendants.
The defendant officials sought dismissal of the complaint on standing and ripeness grounds. They asserted counterclaims arguing that the NRC had no authority to license private storage facilities for SNF located away from the nuclear reactor that *1231 produced it and challenging the approval of the lease by the Skull Valley Band and the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
The district court rejected the defendants’ standing challenge. It concluded that “[t]his suit involves the Plaintiffs’ constitutional right to seek a government benefit, a license from the NRC, free from allegedly preempted state laws.”
Skull Valley Band,
The district court also rejected the defendants’ argument that the case was not ripe. “Whether the NRC ultimately grants or denies Plaintiffs a license,” the court stated, “is not material to this lawsuit.” Id. As a result, there were no uncertain or contingent events that rendered the case unfit for judicial resolution. Id.
As to the defendants’ counterclaims, the district court ruled that: (1) to the extent that they had challenged the authority of the NRC to license the proposed facility, those claims must be resolved on appeal of the NRC proceedings under the Hobbs Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2342-51; (2) the defendants lacked standing to challenge the Skull Valley Band’s alleged failure to properly approve the lease; and (3) because the challenge to the conditional approval of the lease by the BIA had already been rejected by this circuit as not ripe,
see Utah v. United States Dep’t of Interior,
On the merits of the plaintiffs’ Supremacy Clause claim, the court applied the preemption standard set forth in
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation & Development Commission,
However, the district court did uphold the “the Miscellaneous Provisions” (concerning employee drug testing and the determination of water rights), which PFS and the Skull Valley Band had challenged only on Commerce Clause grounds. The court reasoned that the provisions had only indirect and incidental effects on interstate commerce and were supported by important local concerns. Id. at 1251.
II. Justiciability
On appeal, the defendant Utah officials first contend that PFS and the Skull Valley Band lack standing to challenge the Utah statutes regulating SNF transportation and storage. The officials then argue that the case is not ripe for review.
These challenges are based primarily on the Utah officials’ contention that federal law does not allow away-from-the-reactor storage of SNF in privately owned facilities. The Utah officials advanced that argument unsuccessfully in the NRC’s licensing proceedings. Earlier this year, in an appeal from the NRC’s ruling on that issue, the D.C. Circuit rejected that argu
*1232
ment as well.
See Bullcreek,
Because the D.C. Circuit’s ruling forecloses the majority of the Utah officials’ standing and ripeness challenges, we begin with an overview of that decision. Then we proceed to the remaining standing and ripeness arguments.
A. The D.C. Circuit’s Ruling
In the NRC proceedings, the D.C. Circuit appeal, and in this case, the Utah officials have invoked a provision of the NWPA that provides:
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, nothing in this chapter shall be construed to encourage, authorize, or require the private or Federal use, purchase, lease, or other acquisition of any storage facility located away from the site of any civilian nuclear power reactor and not owned by the Federal Government on January 7,1983.
42 U.S.C. § 10155(h).
According to the Utah officials, this language establishes that PFS had no right to obtain a license from the NRC for the proposed SNF storage facility. Thus, they reason, it is not the Utah statutes here at issue that have deprived PFS and the Skull Valley Band of a legally cognizable interest but rather a federal statute. Accordingly, they conclude, PFS and the Skull Valley Band lack standing to assert their claims.
In rejecting the challenge to.the NRC’s licensing authority, the D.C. Circuit concluded that a previously enacted statute, the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2011-2297g-4, authorizes the NRC to license privately-owned, away-from-reactor storage facilities such as the one proposed by PFS.
See Bullcreek,
We are persuaded by the D.C. Circuit’s opinion and will thus not revisit the issues surrounding the NRC’s authority to license away-from-reactor SNF storage facilities such as the one at issue here. However, to the extent that the Utah officials raise standing and ripeness challenges based on other arguments, we will now address them.
B. Standing
In addition to contending that the NRC lacks authority to license away-from-reactor storage facilities, the Utah officials challenge PFS’s and the Skull Valley Band’s standing on other grounds. They argue that PFS and the Skull Valley Band have alleged a mere “procedural injury” and that they have failed to present any evidence they suffered the kind of concrete injury necessary to establish standing. Moreover, the defendant officials contend, the district court erred in concluding that PFS and the Skull Valley Band had standing without first addressing the fundamental question of whether federal law authorized the NRC to license the kind of facility at issue here. We consider these questions of standing de novo.
See Lee v. United States Air Force,
The Utah officials’ arguments are based on clause 2 of Article III of the United States Constitution, which provides that federal courts may only adjudicate actual cases or controversies. The Su
*1233
preme Court has observed that perhaps the most important aspect of this case or controversy requirement is that the party invoking the jurisdiction of the federal court must have standing to do so.
Allen v. Wright,
The district court found that PFS and the Skull Valley Band had established these elements. The court reasoned that the plaintiffs were not asserting the right to own and operate an SNF storage facility. Instead, “[wjhat Plaintiffs claim here is that the Utah laws harm them by (1) hindering their licensing efforts before the NRC and by (2) creating uncertainty as to the utility of proceeding with their licensing efforts before the NRC.”
Skull Valley,
Moreover, the court concluded, it could properly adjudicate the case without reaching the merits of the Utah officials’ challenge to the NRC’s legal authority to license away-from-reactor storage facilities or awaiting the results of PFS’s pending licensing proceeding before the NRC. The court invoked decisions holding that “ ‘[wjhether a plaintiff has a legally protected interest (and thus standing) does not depend on whether he can demonstrate that he will succeed on the merits.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Claybrook v. Slater,
1. “Procedural Injury”
In arguing that PFS and the Skull Valley Band have alleged injury to only a “procedural right” that is insufficient to establish standing, the Utah officials rely on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Lujan
concerns the claim of several environmental groups that an Interior Department regulation violated a statute requiring agencies to consult with “affected States” before taking an action that might threaten an endangered species.
The Supreme Court rejected that view. The Court explained that it had “consistently held that a plaintiff raising only a generally available grievance about government ... and seeldng relief that no more directly and tangibly benefits him than it does the public at large — does not state an Article III case or controversy.”
Id.
at 573-74,
Our decision in
Integra Realty,
Here, PFS’s and the Skull Valley Band’s alleged injury is much more than a generally available grievance about the government or a tactical disadvantage. Instead, they have alleged that the Utah statutes have affected them concretely. In particular, PFS has alleged that the statutes impose substantial burdens upon it because of the SNF storage project that it has proposed (requiring, for example, the payment of a five million dollar nonrefundable application fee, compliance with complex state regulatory requirements, and the posting of a two billion dollar bond). The Skull Valley Band has alleged that the Utah statutes infringe upon its “inherent tribal sovereignty.” Aplts’ App. at 39. Moreover, according to PFS and the Skull Valley Band, the extensive obligations created by the Utah statutes are preempted by federal law.
We agree with PFS and the Skull Valley Band that a party seeking a license from a governmental agency generally has standing to challenge an allegedly invalid law that either imposes substantial burdens upon the applicant or flatly prohibits the activity in question. Several courts have suggested that conclusion in addressing ripeness challenges, and, although “standing and ripeness are technically different doctrines, they are closely related in that each focuses on whether the harm asserted has matured sufficiently to warrant judicial intervention.”
Johnson v. Missouri,
For example, in
Gary D. Peake Excavating Inc., v. Town Board of the Town of Hancock,
In
Triple G. Landfills, Inc. v. Board of Commissioners of Fountain County,
Here, the Utah statutes place PFS in circumstances similar to the plaintiffs in
Peake Excavating
and
Triple G. Landfills,
imposing a second burdensome and costly licensing scheme. The validity of that scheme is an important and perhaps even a dispositive factor in determining whether the proposed SNF facility is viable. As the district court recognized, PFS and the Skull Valley Band thus have standing to challenge that scheme.
See ANR Pipeline v. Corp. Comm’n of Okla.,
2. Evidence of Injuries
The Utah officials’ argument that PFS and the Skull Valley Band have failed to present sufficient evidence that they have suffered concrete injuries as a result of the Utah statutes is also unpersuasive. As the Supreme Court observed in
Lujan,
“[w]hen the suit is one challenging the legality of government action or inaction, the nature and extent of facts that must be averred ... or proved ... in order to establish standing depends considerably upon whether the plaintiff is himself an object of the action (or forgone action) at issue.”
Lujan,
Here, PFS and the Skull Valley Band are indeed “the subject of the challenged action” — the allegedly preempted Utah statutes. The obligations and burdens imposed by those statutes speak for themselves, and no additional evidence is necessary to establish standing.
Cf. Heckler v. Mathews,
S. The Timing of the District Court’s Ruling
Finally, we conclude that the district court acted properly in resolving the standing question without first addressing the Utah officials’ challenge to the NRC’s authority to license away-from-reactor storage facilities. Under the Administrative Orders Review (or Hobbs) Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2341-51, the court of appeals has “exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin, set
*1236
aside, suspend (in whole or in part) or to determine the validity of’ final orders of the NRC. 28 U.S.C. § 2342;
see Fla. Power & Light Co. v. Lorion,
However, even though the district court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the Utah officials’ challenge to the NRC’s authority, that limitation does not undermine its conclusion that PFS and the Skull Valley Band had standing to challenge the Utah statutes before the issue of NRC’s authority was finally resolved. To be sure, if the Utah officials had ultimately prevailed on their contention that federal law does not permit the NRC to license away-from-reactor storage facilities owned by private parties, one might well conclude that PFS and the Skull Valley Band lacked “a legally protected interest” that could be vindicated in a lawsuit.
See City of Jacksonville,
Here, at the time the district court issued its summary judgment ruling, PFS’s and the Skull Valley Band’s claims did have “a foundation in law.”
Claybrook,
C. Ripeness
The Utah officials also argue that this case is not ripe for judicial review. As the district court observed, the doctrine of ripeness is intended to prevent the courts, through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements. In determining whether a claim is ripe, a court must look at “[1] the
fitness
of the issue for judicial resolution and [2] the
hardship
to the parties of withholding judicial consideration.”
United States v. Wilson,
Under the first prong of the ripeness inquiry — fitness for judicial resolution— the court must determine whether the matter involves uncertain events which may not happen at all, and whether the issues involved are based on legal questions or factual ones. If there are factual issues that need further development, the matter may not be fit for resolution.
See id.
at 1214. Fitness for judicial resolution may depend upon whether it is “purely legal, whether consideration of the issue would benefit from a more concrete setting, and whether the agency’s action is sufficiently final.”
Clean Air Implementation Project v. EPA
Under the second prong of the ripeness inquiry — the potential hardship of withholding judicial resolution — we examine “whether the challenged action creates a direct and immediate dilemma for the parties.”
New Mexicans for Bill Richardson v. Gonzales,
Here, the Utah officials’ have based their ripeness challenge in part upon the uncertainty concerning the NRC’s authority to issue away-from-reaetor licenses. The D.C. Circuit’s decision in Bullcreek resolves that question and thus forecloses that particular argument. However, the Utah officials have also argued that the case is not ripe because (1) the NRC has not yet granted a license to PFS for the SNF storage facility and issues surrounding the Department of the Interior’s review of the lease have not yet been finally resolved and (2) PFS failed to offer evidence that it would suffer any injury if the district court deferred its ruling until the NRC’s final decision on the license application.
In rejecting those arguments, the district court addressed both prongs of the ripeness inquiry. The court first concluded that there were no uncertain or contingent events that would render this ease unfit for resolution. It characterized the remedy sought by PFS as “the right to proceed before the NRC without interference from the Utah laws.”
Skull Valley,
*1238
As to the second prong of the ripeness inquiry, the hardship upon the parties, the court observed that, in the proceedings before the NRC, Utah officials had invoked the statutory provision prohibiting county governments from providing services to SNF storage facilities. That provision, the court concluded, subjected PFS to immediate harm in the NRC licensing proceeding. Next, the district court found that the Utah laws created uncertainty about the future costs of constructing and maintaining the storage facility. The court cited various provisions of the challenged statutes, including the five million dollar application fee, the 75% transaction fee, and the 75% unfunded liability fee and concluded that, if the state statutory scheme was upheld, “more likely than not PFS would not proceed with the construction of the proposed facility.”
Skull Valley,
We review the district court’s resolution of the ripeness issue de novo.
See Gordon v. Norton,
As to the first prong of the ripeness inquiry — fitness for judicial resolution — we again note that the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Bullcreek has removed many of the uncertainties invoked by the Utah officials. We now have the benefit of a persuasive ruling that the NRC is authorized by federal law to license away-from-reactor storage facilities. 2
Similarly, the other contingencies noted by the Utah officials — such as the possibility that the NRC may deny PFS’s license application or that the Department of the Interior may rescind its conditional approval of the Skull Valley Band’s lease — do not render the case unfit for judicial review. Although such decisions would clearly affect the issue of ultimate concern to the parties — whether the SNF storage facility is constructed — the question of whether the federal licensing proceeding can now proceed without a separate Utah state licensing scheme imposing additional legal requirements upon PFS and the Skull Valley Band is a legal issue that currently affects the parties and may now be decided.
See Pacific Gas,
As to the second prong of the ripeness inquiry — -the hardship that would be suffered by the parties if we do not decide the case now — we agree with the district court that in light of the substantial costs of licensing a PFS storage facility under the Utah statutory scheme, PFS and the Skull Valley Band have alleged “a direct and immediate harm.”
Skull Valley,
There, in rejecting a ripeness challenge to a state statute imposing a moratorium on nuclear plant construction, the Court noted the hardship that would be imposed if a judicial decision were delayed: The utilities who had challenged the state law
*1239
would be required to expend millions of dollars over a number of years without knowing whether that expenditure was entirely futile.
The Supreme Court has recognized that “[t]he construction of new nuclear facilities requires considerable advance planning.”
Pacific Gas,
III. Supremacy Clause Claim
We now proceed to the merits of this dispute. The Utah officials argue that the district court erred in concluding that federal law preempts the challenged statutes. According to the Utah officials, the following statutory provisions are not preempted: (1) the sections of the County Planning Provisions that prohibit counties from offering certain services to SNF storage facilities; (2) the Unfunded Potential Liability Provisions, which require those seeking to create an SNF storage site to “pay to [the state Department of Environmental Quality] not less than 75% of the unfunded potential liability” arising out of the operation of the facility, Utah Code Ann. § 19-3-319(3); (3) the provisions rescinding limited liability for officers and equity interest owners of companies operating SNF storage facilities; (4) the Road Provisions, which vest the governor and the state legislature with control over the area surrounding the proposed SNF site; and (5) specific provisions of the state licensing scheme set forth in Part 3 of Utah’s Radiation Control Act.
We begin by examining general principles of federal preemption. Then we turn to the Utah officials’ specific challenges to the district court’s ruling.
A. Federal Preemption
The district court’s ruling is grounded in the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution, which states that “[t]his Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof ... shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing'in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” U.S. Const, art. VI, cl. 2. The Supremacy Clause “embodies the fundamental principle that in certain areas the United States must act as a single nation, led by the federal government, rather than as a loose confederation of independent sovereign states.”
Abraham v. Hodges,
The preemptive effect of federal law may be apparent from the text of the statute.
See Pacific Gas,
Congress’ intent to supercede state law altogether may be found from a scheme of federal regulation so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room to supplement it because the Act of Congress may touch a field in which the federal interest is so dominant that the federal system will be assumed to preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject, or because the object sought to be obtained by the federal law and character of obligations imposed by it may reveal the same purpose.
Id.
at 203-04,
Even absent such “field preemption,” however, federal law may still preempt state law to the extent that state law actually conflicts with federal law.
Pacific Gas,
In each instance, the question of preemption is one of determining Congressional intent.
Wardair Canada, Inc. v. Fla. Dep’t of Revenue,
B. Federal Regulation of Nuclear Power
Federal regulation of privately-owned nuclear power facilities began with the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. Until that time, the ownership of nuclear technology
remained a federal monopoly.
English v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
In 1957, Congress amended the Atomic Energy Act through the Price-Anderson Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2210. The Price-Anderson Act creates specific protections from tort liability for the operators of nuclear facilities: “(1) an aggregate ceiling on the liability for nuclear tort claims; (2) a channeling of liability provision to protect private entities from liability for their indirect participation in atomic development; and (3) an indemnification program,” under which the federal government requires nuclear facilities to obtain private insurance coverage up to a certain level and indemnifies the facilities above
*1241
that amount, up to a specified liability ceiling.
Farley,
Two years later, Congress again amended the Atomic Energy Act. The purpose of the 1959 amendments was to “ ‘clarify the respective responsibilities ... of the States and the [Federal Government] with respect to the regulation of byproduct, source, and special nuclear materials, and generally to increase the States’ role’ ” by authorizing the Atomic Energy Commission to enter into agreements with state governors authorizing “ ‘coordinated and compatible’ ” state regulation of certain nuclear materials.
English,
retain authority and responsibility with respect to regulation of ... the construction and operation of any production or utilization facility ... and ... the disposal of such ... byproduct, source or special nuclear material as the Commission determines ... should, because of the hazards or potential hazards thereof, not be so disposed of without a license from the Commission.
Pacific Gas,
In 1974, Congress passed the Energy Reorganization Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 5801 et seq., which abolished the Atomic Energy Commission and transferred its licensing and Regulatory functions to the NRC. The 1974 Act also “expanded the number and range of safety responsibilities under the NRC’s charge.”
English,
In-1982, Congress enacted the Nuclear Waste Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 10101-10270. That act was passed “in response to ‘a national problem’ created by the accumulation of spent nuclear fuel from private nuclear generators, as well as radioactive waste from reprocessing such fuel, activities related to medical research, diagnosis, and treatment, and other sources.”
Bullcreek,
Pursuant to these statutes, the Atomic Energy Commission and the NRC have promulgated detailed regulations regarding the operation of nuclear facilities, including the storage of SNF.
See
10 C.F.R. Part 72;
Bullcreek,
C. Supreme Court Decisions
Three Supreme Court decisions have addressed the preemptive effect of this extensive federal regulatory scheme in considerable detail:
Pacific Gas,
In
Pacific Gas,
a utility company sought an injunction barring the enforcement of a state statute imposing a moratorium on the construction of new nuclear power plants in California pending development of a plan for disposal of nuclear waste. Examining the text of the Atomic Energy Act, the Court identified “a field in which the federal interest is ... dominant” — -“the radiological safety aspects involved in the construction and operation of a nuclear plant.”
Accordingly state laws within “the entire field of nuclear safety concerns” are preempted, even if they do not directly conflict with federal law.
Id.
at 212,
The Court concluded that a non-safety rationale supported California’s moratorium: the economic costs of allowing construction of additional nuclear power
*1243
plants before adequate SNF storage facilities could be developed.
Id.
at 216,
The Court also concluded that the moratorium did not conflict with the objectives of federal law. Although the primary purpose of the Atomic Energy Act is the promotion of nuclear power, that power is not to be developed “at all costs.”
Id.
at 222,
In
Silkwood,
The Court acknowledged a tension between the federal government’s exclusive power to regulate “the radiological safety aspects involved in the construction and operation of a nuclear plant,”
Pacific Gas,
The Court added that in certain instances, the recovery of damages for radiation injuries might still be preempted. However:
insofar as damages for radiation injuries are concerned, preemption should not be judged on the basis that the federal government has so completely occupied the field of safety that state remedies are foreclosed but on whether there is an irreconcilable conflict between the federal and state standards or whether the imposition of a state standard in a damages action would frustrate the 6b-jectives of the federal law.
Id.
In
English,
The Court rejected the broad reading of
Pacific Gas
offered by the defendant employer, which suggested that the federal statute protecting nuclear industry employees from retaliation preempted all state tort laws that traditionally have been available to employees alleging outrageous conduct by their employers. Under the preemption inquiry established by
Pacific Gas,
the Court reasoned, “part of the pre
*1244
empted field is defined by reference to the purpose of the state law in question,” and “another part of the field is defined by the state law’s actual effect on nuclear safety.”
Id.
at 84,
The Court then noted that the state tort law at issue was not motivated by safety concerns. Thus, the preemption inquiry should focus upon the effect of the state law, asking whether the law had “some direct and substantial effect on the decisions made by those who build or operate nuclear facilities concerning radiological safety levels.”
Id.
at 85,
Nevertheless, the English court did acknowledge that a state law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress might have some effect on radiological safety decisions:
We recognize that the claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress at issue here may have some effect on these decisions, because liability for claims like petitioner’s will attach additional consequences to retaliatory conduct by employers. As employers find retaliation more costly, they will be forced to deal with complaints by whistle-blowers by other means, including altering radiological safety policies. Nevertheless, we believe that this effect is neither direct nor substantial enough to place petitioner’s claim in the preempted field.
English,
Several other courts have applied the preemption analysis set forth in Pacific Gas, Silkwood, and English to state laws barring the transportation and storage of SNF. Some of these decisions have concluded that the challenged laws are within the preempted field of nuclear safety. 4 Other decisions have concluded that the *1245 challenged state laws conflicted with the objectives of federal law and were thus preempted on that ground. 5
D. Application of Supreme Court Decisions to the , Utah Statutes
In defending the challenged statutes, the Utah officials rely primarily on two parts of the preemption analysis set forth in
Pacific Gas, Silkwood,
and
English.
First, they contend that PFS and the Skull Valley Band have failed to offer sufficient evidence that the statutes have “some direct and substantial effect” on decisions made by those who would operate the SNF storage facility.
English,
1. The County Planning Provisions
The Utah officials challenge the district court’s merits ruling regarding the County Planning Provisions. As we have noted, those provisions allow a county to either (a) adopt an ordinance barring the transportation and storage of SNF, or (b) allow such transportation and storage, but only if the county adopts a comprehensive land use plan containing detailed information regarding the effects of any proposed SNF site upon the health and general welfare of citizens of the State. See Utah Code Ann. § 17-27-301(3) (b),17-27-301(3) (a) (i-iii). Counties are indemnified if they choose the former option. Id. § 17-27-308. The County Planning Provisions also prohibit counties from providing “municipal-type services,” including fire protection, garbage disposal, water, electricity, and law enforcement, to SNF transportation and storage facilities within the county. Id. § 17-34-1(3). According to the Utah officials, the district court erred in holding that these provisions are preempted by federal law.
First, the officials question the district court’s ruling that these provisions would dramatically increase the costs of operating a SNF storage facility by requiring the operator to provide its own “municipal-type services.” They note that the record contains no evidence of such increased costs.
See
Aplts’ Br. at 85-86 (arguing that “Utah, as the nonmoving party in the summary judgment context, is entitled to the inference that the cost to PFS of contracting for local law enforcement services is equal to or more than the cost to PFS of providing the allowed alternative, a private security force”). Second, the Utah officials contrast the costs to PFS of providing such services to the $10 million punitive damages award in
Silkivood.
If such an award did not have a direct and substantial effect on those making radiological decisions, the defendant officials contend, then neither would the challenged restrictions on county services. Third, the Utah officials maintain that the County Planning Provisions are analogous to state laws upheld by other courts. Fourth, the officials
*1246
characterize the County Planning Provisions as concerning “areas that characteristically have been governed by the States.” Aplts’ Br. at 88 (quoting
Pacific Gas,
We agree with the district court that the County Planning Provisions are preempted. In requiring county land use plans to “address the effects of the proposed [SNF storage] site upon the health and general welfare of the citizens of the state,” including “specific measures to mitigate the effects of high-level nuclear waste ... [to] guarantee the health and safety of citizens of the state,” Utah Code Ann. § 17-27-301(3)(a), these provisions address matters of radiological safety that are addressed by federal law and that are the exclusive province of the federal government.
See Pacific Gas,
Although the provision requiring a county to address radiological safety issues in its land use plan may not apply if a county adopts an ordinance banning the storage of high level nuclear waste within its borders,
see
Utah Code Ann. § 17 — 27—301(3)(b), that alternative provision is itself grounded in safety concerns.
See Pacific Gas,
The arguments advanced by the Utah officials here do not undermine our conclusion. We do agree with the defendants that the record does not allow a comparison between the costs that would be incurred by PFS if the county provided municipal services to the storage facility and the costs that would be incurred by the use of private contractors to provide those services. However, we do not agree that the burden that the defendant officials seek to impose upon PFS and the Skull Valley Band is appropriate.
Pacific Gas, Silkwood,
and
English
do not turn the preemption inquiry upon a precise determination of costs imposed upon the operators of nuclear facilities by the application of state law. Although there may be some costs imposed by a statutory scheme that are so minimal that they could not have a “direct and substantial effect” on decisions made by those who operating SNF facilities,
see English,
Silkwood
and
English
do not save the County Planning Provisions. In holding in
Silkwood
that a $10 million award of puni
*1247
tive damages on a state law claim was not preempted, the Court relied upon “ample evidence that Congress had no intention of forbidding the states from providing” “state-law remedies [to] those suffering injuries from radiation in a nuclear plant.”
Silkwood,
Moreover,
Silkwood
and
English,
both involve generally applicable state tort law that existed before Congress began to regulate nuclear power.
See Buckman Co. v. Plaintiffs’ Legal Comm.,
The two other cases on which the Utah officials rely are also distinguishable. In
In re Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit I),
LPB-55-12,
Similarly, in
Citizens for an Orderly Energy Policy v. County of Suffolk,
There is ho analogous legislative history supporting the County Planning Provisions here. Rather than allowing state and local governments to ban SNF transportation and storage or to impose their own licensing requirements, Congress has reserved such regulation to the federal government. Thus, the decisions invoked by the Utah officials do not support their argument.
Finally, we disagree with the Utah officials that the County Planning Provisions are not preempted because they concern “areas that characteristically have been governed by the States.” Aplts’ Br. at 88 (quoting
Pacific Gas,
2. The Unfunded Potential Liability Provisions
Next, the Utah officials argue that the Unfunded Potential Liability Provisions are not preempted. At issue here are the sections of the Utah licensing scheme that require the operator of a SNF storage facility to pay to the state of Utah an amount equal to at least 75% of the “unfunded potential liability” of the project. Utah Code Ann. § 19-3-319(3). That amount is determined by the Department of Environmental Quality, based upon “the health and economic costs expected to result from a reasonably foreseeable accidental release [of SNF].” Id. § l&-3-301(5).
According to the Utah officials, these unfunded liability, provisions are designed to “fill in the gaps” in the liability coverage established by the Price-Anderson Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2010.
See Cook,
In support of their “gap-filling” argument, the Utah officials point to “hot debate and considerable uncertainty,” regarding “just which entities and what kinds of nuclear events the [Price-Anderson] Act covers.” Aplts’ Br. at 91. They characterize the unfunded liability provisions as a legitimate response to this uncertainty.
The Utah officials further explain that “[i]n Utah’s view, this uncertainty inheres in transportation to the proposed PFS waste dump (with the issue perhaps turning on the nature of the license held by the source of SNF), storage at the dump (with the issue perhaps turning on the presence or absence of an ... indemnity agreement [between the PFS and the NRC]), and transportation from the proposed PFS waste dump to a site other than the federal permanent repository (with the issue perhaps turning on the nature of the license held by the original source of the SNF and/or the nature of the license held by the destination).” Aplts’ Br. at 91-92. The Utah officials do not argue with further specificity the extent to which the Price-Anderson Act will apply to the proposed storage facility at issue here.
In considering this argument, we first note that there is some uncertainty as to the proper preemption analysis. In
Silk-wood,
the Supreme Court stated that “insofar as damages for radiation injuries are concerned,”
In these circumstances, the parties disagree as to how to read Silkwood’s limitation upon the preemption inquiry. PFS and the Skull Valley Band argue that field preemption is applicable, while the Utah officials contend that the court should consider only whether a conflict exits between the state’s unfunded liability provisions and federal law or whether, under English, those provisions will have a direct and substantial effect upon decisions regarding radiological safety levels.
In the absence of controlling Supreme Court precedent, we will afford the Utah officials the benefit of the doubt, assuming without deciding, that Utah’s unfunded liability provisions concern “damages for radiation injuries,”
see Silkwood,
That conclusion follows from the response of the NRC’s Atomic Safety and Licensing Board to the potential gaps in the Price-Anderson scheme. In reviewing PFS’s license application, the Licensing Board has recognized that the Price-Anderson Act may not apply to certain aspects of the proposed storage facility.
See In re Private Fuel Storage. L.L.C.,
Thus, in requiring PFS to demonstrate the sufficiency of its insurance coverage regarding operations not necessarily covered’by the Price-Anderson Act, the Licensing Board has itself filled some of the gaps in that regulatory scheme. Those gap-filling measures are authorized by the Atomic Energy Act and accompanying regulations. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 2073, 2092, 2093, 2111, and 2201(b) (granting the NRC regulatory jurisdiction over the constituent materials of spent nuclear fuel); 10 C.F.R. § 72.40(a)(6) (providing, inter alia, that an applicant for a license to store SNF must be “financially qualified” to engage in the proposed activity); id. § 72.44 (providing that the NRC may impose conditions on a license); see also Bullcreek, 359 F.3d at *1250 538 (concluding that the NRC has authority to license and regulate the storage and disposal of SNF).
In light of the "gap-filling" undertaken by the NRC and its Licensing Board, Utah's unfunded liability provisions conflict with the objectives of federal law. See Silkwood, 464 U.s. at 256, 104 5.Ct. 615. Those statutes allow the state of Utah to make an independent determination of "the dollar amount of the health and economic costs expected to result from a reasonably foreseeable accidental release of waste involving a transfer or storage facility, or during transportation of waste, within the exterior boundaries of the state" and subject the operator of an SNF storage facility to the loss of its license unless it pays 75% of that amount to the DEQ. Utah Code Ann. § 19-3-301-(5)(a), 19-3-319(3)(a). Under the federal licensing scheme however, it is not the states but rather the NRC that is vested with the authority to decide under what conditions to license an SNF storage facility. The Utah statutes are thus preempted by federal law. Cf. Brown v. Kerr-McGee Chem. Corp.,
Silkwood
and
English
do not alter this conclusion. As we have noted, those cases rely on evidence that, in enacting the Price-Anderson Act, Congress “assumed that persons injured by nuclear accidents were free to utilize existing state tort law remedies.”
Silkwood,
3. Abolition of Limited Liability
Next, the Utah officials argue that the district court erred in holding that federal law preempts the state statute abolishing limited liability for stockholders in companies operating SNF storage facilities, Utah Code Ann. § 19-3-316. The officials focus on the district court’s conclusion that the abolition of limited liability would impose additional costs upon PFS.
See Skull Valley,
Because Utah’s abolition of limited liability “frustrated the objectives of federal law,”
Silkwood,
In contrast, in enacting the Atomic Energy Act and subsequent amendments, “Congress’ purpose was to remove the economic impediments in order to stimulate the private development of electric energy by nuclear power while simultaneously providing the public compensation in the event of a catastrophic nuclear incident.”
Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Envtl. Study Group, Inc.,
Moreover, we again reject the Utah officials’ contention that the state laws that survived preemption in
Silkwood
and
English
are analogous to. the Utah statute. Here, the abolition of limited liability attempts a .sea change in the law of corporations and is targeted at the nuclear industry only. The statutes do not involve a state tort remedy that existed prior to the enactment of federal legislation regarding nuclear power and that Congress intended to preserve.
See English,
A The Road Provisions
The Utah officials argued that the four Road Provisions are not preempted. As we have explained, these provisions amend the Utah statutes by (1) requiring the concurrence of the governor and the legislature to resolve disputes arising out of the request to construct a railroad crossing made by an entity engaged in SNF storage and transportation; (2) designating certain county roads and trails near the Skull Valley Reservation as “statewide public safety interest highways,” and providing that the state Department of Transportation has jurisdiction and control over them, Utah Code Ann. § 72-3-301; (3) *1252 removing control of the only road permitting access to the Skull Valley Reservation and PFS's proposed facility from the county by designating it as a state highway; and (4) requiring the consent of the governor and the state legislature before the Department of Transportation may grant a right of way to a company engaged in the transportation or storage of SNF. See id. §~ 54-4-15, 72-3-301, § 72-4-125(4), and 54-4-45(4)(b).
According to the Utah officials, the district court erred by failing to explain how these statutes affect radiological safety decisions. The officials also criticize the district court for relying on findings regarding the legislature’s motive in passing these statutes. Finally, the state officials argue that PFS’s preferred method for transporting SNF to the proposed storage site is a rail line, and that, as a result, the statutes will probably not affect access to the storage facility.
These arguments are based largely on this circuit’s decision in
Blue Circle Cement, Inc. v. Board of County Commissioners,
Blue Circle Cement
does not concern the federal law regulating nuclear safety and, as a result, its objective approach, while instructive, is not controlling. Instead, we are required to follow the preemption analysis set forth in
Pacific Gas, Silkwood,
and
English,
which requires consideration of the purpose of the allegedly preempted statute, along with its effects.
See English,
Here, the evidence cited by the district court indicates that the Road Provisions were enacted in order to prevent the transportation and storage of SNF in Utah.
See Skull Valley,
The Utah officials do not attempt to contest any of this evidence; nor is it likely that they could. The record thus establishes that the Road Provisions were enacted for reasons of radiological safety and are therefore preempted.
Cf. Pacific Gas,
The contingencies invoked by the Utah officials — e.g., that a different governor might be in office by the time the facility opened and that PFS might not need road access at all if it proceeds with its plan to construct a rail line — do not alter our conclusion. The Road Provisions create a substantial obstacle to the construction of an SNF storage facility now. The fact that their future impact may be different than PFS now anticipates alters neither the statutes’ current effect on PFS’s decisions nor the fact that they arise out of radiological safety concerns.
5. The Licensing Provisions
Finally, the Utah officials challenge the district court’s ruling as to certain provisions in Part 3 of the state’s Radiation Control Act. Importantly, the officials concede that “some portions of the licensing provisions purport to regulate in areas where federal regulation is present, indeed, exclusive — such as the radiological safety aspects of the proposed PFS facility.” Aplts’ Br. at 103 (internal quotation marks omitted). However, they further maintain that some of the provisions of the state licensing scheme “regulate in areas where federal regulation is absent, that is, in the gaps.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). These gap-filling state law provisions, the officials maintain, are not preempted.
In support of this argument, the Utah officials cite
California Coastal Commission v. Granite Rock Co.,
In rejecting the mining company’s facial challenge, the Court noted that the mining company has alleged that the state agency’s true purpose in enforcing the permit requirement was to prohibit mining entirely. However,
[b]y choosing to seek injunctive and declaratory relief against the permit requirement before discovering what conditions the Coastal Commission would have placed on the permit, [the mining company] has lost the possibility of making this argument in this litigation. [The mining company’s] case must stand or fall on the question [of] whether any possible set of conditions attached to the ... permit requirement would be preempted.
Id.
at 588,
Unfortunately, the Utah officials do not specify which particular provisions of the licensing scheme fill in the gaps of the federal scheme.
See
Aplts’ Br. at 102-06. Moreover,
Granite Rock
does not indicate that a gap-filling approach should be applied here. In
Granite Rock,
the Court noted that the federal statutes and regulations at issue contemplated substantial state and local regulation of land-use matters.
8
However, with regard to matters of
*1254
radiological safety, Congress did not intend such an overlapping system of federal and state regulation.
See Pacific Gas,
As the district court recognized, under the preemption analysis set forth in
Pacific Gas, Silkwood,
and
English,
the licensing provisions set forth in Part 3 of Utah’s Radiation Control Act are “grounded in [radiological] safety concerns,”
Pacific Gas,
IV. CONCLUSION
In holding the Utah statutes preempted, we do not denigrate the serious concerns of Utah’s citizens and lawmakers regarding spent nuclear fuel, a matter which presents complex technological, economic, and political challenges to those seeking effective solutions. However, in the matter of nuclear safety, Congress has determined that it is the federal government, and not the states, that must address the problem. We also note that many of the concerns that Utah has attempted to address through the challenged statutes have been considered in the extensive regulatory proceedings before the NRC, as well as in appeals from the NRC’s decisions. We are hopeful that Utah’s concerns — and those of any state facing this issue in the future — will receive fair and full consideration there.
We thus AFFIRM the district court’s decision.
Notes
. As we have noted in another case involving the lease between PFS and the Skull Valley Band, ''[t]he Superintendent [of the BIA] conditioned his approval of the lease (1) upon the successful completion of an environmental impact statement (EIS) evaluating the environmental impacts of the lease in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C), and (2) upon the issuance of a license by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.”
Utah v. United States Dep’t of the Interior,
. Even though the D.C. Circuit's opinion was not issued until after the district court granted summary judgement to PFS and the Skull Valley Band, we may properly consider it in assessing ripeness.
See Am. Motorists Ins. Co. v. United Furnace Co.,
. Congress substantially amended the Price-Anderson Act in 1966 and 1988. The 1966 amendments "[1] require participants in the nuclear industry to waive certain key defenses to liability that might otherwise be permissible under applicable State or Federal law[;] ... [2] apply[ ] the ... defense waiver provision only to public liability actions arising from an extraordinary nuclear occurrence, [and] ... [3] confer[ ] upon the United States district court in the district in which an extraordinary nuclear occurrence takes place original jurisdiction with respect to any public liability action arising out of such an [occurrence].”
Cook v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
.
See United States v. Kentucky, 252
F.3d 816, 820-21, 823 (6th Cir.2001) (holding that the Atomic Energy Act preempted conditions regarding the disposal of radioactive wastes that had been imposed by a state agency in a landfill permit);
Jersey Cent. Power & Light Co. v. Township of Lacey,
.
See Nevada v. Watkins,
. The NRC affirmed the Licensing Board's decision to "include in PFS's license, as license conditions, promises made by PFS during the licensing process ... including its commitments ... to obtain insurance for off-site liability in the amount of $200 million (the maximum amount commercially available); and, to obtain insurance covering on-site liability in an amount to be determined at hearing.”
See In re Private Fuel Storage,
No. 72-22-ISFSI, CLI-00-13,
. See also Byron F. Egan, Choice of Entity Alternatives, 39 Tex. J. Bus. L. 379, 418-19 (2004) (noting that “[l]imited liability is one of the most important advantages of doing business as a corporation” and that "[i]n corporate law, it is fundamental that shareholders, officers, and directors are ordinarily protected from personal liability arising from the activities of the corporation”); Frank H. East-erbrook & Daniel R. Fischel, Limited Liability and the Corporation, 52 U. CHI. L. REV. 89, 89 (1985) ("Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law.”)
.
See Granite Rock,
