In November 2015, EPA unveiled the final rule: the " Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source Category,"
We consider a challenge to the final rule brought by various environmental petitioners.
The environmental petitioners challenge those portions of the rule under the Administrative Procedure Act and the well-worn
Chevron
test governing review of agency action.
See
Chevron, USA, Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.
,
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Clean Water Act
The Clean Water Act ("CWA" or "Act"),
We have previously detailed the Act's "distinct, though interlocking, regulatory schemes."
Chem. Mfrs. Ass'n v. EPA
,
The Act requires ELGs to be based on technological feasibility rather than on water quality.
Id.
at 927 (citing
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Train
,
The Act prescribes various technological standards to be used in setting effluent limitations. Two are relevant here: "best practicable control technology currently available" ("BPT") and "best available technology economically achievable" ("BAT").
Compare
The stricter of the two standards is BAT, which has applied to existing, direct discharges of toxic and non-conventional pollutants since March 31, 1989.
See
B. The Final Rule
The rule at issue in this case regulates effluent discharges from steam-electric power plants. Those plants burn nuclear or fossil fuels to heat water in boilers, generating steam that drives turbines connected to electric generators.
EPA first promulgated and then revised ELGs for steam-electric power plants in 1974, 1977, and 1982.
See id.
;
see also
The processes employed and pollutants discharged by the industry look very different today than they did in 1982. Many plants, nonetheless, still treat their wastewater using only surface impoundments, which are largely ineffective at controlling discharges of toxic pollutants and nutrients.
The rule addresses these six streams produced by power plants:
1. Flue gas desulfurization (FGD) wastewater
2. Fly ash transport wastewater
3. Bottom ash transport wastewater
4. Flue gas mercury control (FGMC) wastewater ("Hg control waste")
5. Combustion residual leachate (or "Leachate")
6. Gasification wastewater (not depicted in figure below).
EPA thus considered more advanced control methods, which it notes are "affordable technologies that are widely available and already in place at some plants."
• Chemical precipitation means treating wastewater by introducing chemicals that will react with substances currently dissolved or suspended in the water to produce a solid, non-soluble precipitate , which then can be filtered out or left to settle to the bottom of the wastewater. EPA Wastewater Technology Fact Sheet , EPA 832-F-00-018 (Sept. 2000).
• Biological treatment means introducing bacteria or other microorganisms to remove pollutants, specifically"heavy metals, selenium, and nitrates." 80 Fed. Reg. 67,850 .
• Dry handling , for fly ash, means "a dry vacuum system that employs a mechanical exhauster to pneumatically convey the fly ash (via a change in air pressure) from hoppers directly to a silo," without getting the ash wet. Id . at 67,852. For bottom ash, dry handling refers to "a system in which bottom ash is collected in a water quench bath and a drag chain conveyor (mechanical drag system) then pulls the bottom ash out of the water bath on an incline to dewater the bottom ash."Id.
• Evaporation , for FGD wastewater and gasification wastewater, means using "a falling-film evaporator (also known as a brine concentrator) to produce a concentrated wastewater stream (brine) and a distillate stream."Id. at 67,838, 67,853 .
From those options EPA selected the following technologies as BAT for the various wastestreams:
Technology basis for the main Wastestreams BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS regulatory options FGD Wastewater Chemical Precipitation + Biological Treatment Fly Ash Transport Water Dry handling Bottom Ash Transport Water Dry handling/Closed loop FGMC Wastewater Dry handling Gasification Wastewater Evaporation Leachate Impoundment (Equal to BPT)
1. Legacy Wastewater
Legacy wastewater is not a distinct type of wastestream. Instead, as the final rule explains, the term describes wastewater from five of the streams (FGD, fly ash, bottom ash, FGMC, and gasification wastewater) that is "generated prior to" a future date.
The rule imposes much more stringent limits on wastewater from these same streams generated
after
the date to be set by the permitting authority (again, between November 1, 2020 and December 31, 2023). For instance, EPA found that a combination of chemical precipitation and biological treatment was the BAT for treating pollution from non-legacy FGD wastewater, and that "dry handling" (a technique for disposing of fly ash and bottom ash without adding water) was the BAT for non-legacy ash wastestreams.
The rule accounts for the discrepancy between legacy and non-legacy wastewater regulations in various ways. For instance, it explains that legacy wastewater "already exists in wet form" and would thus not be amenable to dry handling, and also that EPA lacked data on whether legacy wastewater could be "reliably incorporated" into a closed-loop process "given the variation in operating practices among surface impoundments containing legacy wastewater."
2. Leachate
The final rule describes leachate as follows:
Leachate includes liquid, including any suspended or dissolved constituents in the liquid, that has percolated through or drained from waste or other materials placed in a landfill, or that passes through the containment structure ( e.g. , bottom, dikes, berms) of a surface impoundment.
The final rule sets BAT for leachate equal to the previous BPT standard established in 1982.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Four separate lawsuits challenging the final rule were originally brought in the Second, Fifth, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits. 12 Different groups of petitioners challenged different parts of the rule. Various power companies ("Industry Petitioners") challenged the regulation of non-legacy FGD and gasification wastewater. 13 Two water company associations ("Water Company Petitioners"), challenged the non-legacy FGD wastewater regulation. 14 Finally, various environmental groups ("Environmental Petitioners" or "petitioners") challenged the regulation of legacy wastewater and leachate. 15 The four cases were consolidated by the United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation and randomly assigned to our court. 16 The Utility Water Act Group ("UWAG") has since intervened to defend those portions of the rule challenged by the Environmental Petitioners.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Environmental Petitioners challenge the legacy wastewater regulation under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"). As relevant here, a court "shall ... hold unlawful and set aside" agency action under the APA if it finds such action was "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law."
Our review under the APA is not toothless, however. We must set aside agency action if the agency "entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise."
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
,
The Environmental Petitioners challenge the leachate regulation under the two-step framework articulated in
Chevron, USA, Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.
,
IV. ANALYSIS
A. Challenge to Legacy Wastewater Regulation
We first consider petitioners' challenge
18
to the final rule's regulation of
1.
Petitioners challenge that decision as arbitrary and capricious under the APA on two grounds. First, they claim the Act does not grant the Administrator authority to base BAT limits on
when
waste is generated, but instead requires setting BAT limits for "categories and classes of point sources" regardless of when waste is generated.
See, e.g.
,
State Farm
,
First, the final rule repeatedly recognizes that impoundments are "largely ineffective" at removing toxins from wastewater.
These conceded defects in impoundments are in critical tension with EPA's choosing them as BAT for legacy wastewater. After all, BAT is supposed to be "the CWA's most stringent standard" for setting discharge limits for existing sources.
Tex. Oil & Gas
,
Second, as the rule also recounts, the flaws of impoundments are precisely why EPA refused to set them as BAT for five of the six wastewater streams at issue here.
See
In other words, for five of the six wastewater streams regulated by the final rule (the one exception is leachate, discussed in V.B.
infra
), EPA affirmatively
rejected
surface impoundments as BAT "because [they] would not result in reasonable further progress toward eliminating the discharge of all pollutants, particularly toxic pollutants."
Third, the final rule explains that the shortcomings of surface impoundments were a key factor in motivating EPA to conduct the 2006-2009 study and revise water pollution regulations for power plants in the first place. The rule describes the previous ELGs from 1974, 1977, and 1982 as "out of date," because they failed to "adequately control the pollutants ... discharged by this industry" and failed to "reflect relevant process and technology advances that have occurred in the last 30-plus years."
The processes employed and pollutants discharged by the industry look very different today than they did in 1982. Many plants, nonetheless, still treat their wastewater using only surface impoundments, which are largely ineffective at controlling discharges of toxic pollutants and nutrients.
Thus, the final rule describes impoundments as an outdated and ineffective pollution control technology, and yet the same rule chooses to freeze impoundments in place as BAT for legacy wastewater. That is inconsistent with the "technology-forcing" mandate of the CWA.
NRDC II
,
Fourth, the final rule strongly indicates that other available technologies are far better than impoundments at removing pollutants from the various streams that comprise legacy wastewater. For instance, after explaining why impoundments are ineffective at removing toxic metals from FGD wastewater, the rule states that a combination of chemical precipitation and biological treatment is better at removing those pollutants. Id. at 67,850-51. Importantly, the rule explicitly concludes that "[c]hemical precipitation and biological treatment are more effective than surface impoundments at removing both soluble and particulate forms of metals." Id. at 67,851 (emphasis added). The rule also relies on that reasoning to justify rejecting impoundments as BAT for fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, and gasification wastewater. Id. at 67,852-53. Moreover, the rule categorically states that more advanced control methods, such as chemical and biological methods, "are affordable technologies that are widely available, and already in place at some plants." Id. at 67,840.
These affirmative findings are difficult, if not impossible, to square with EPA's decision nonetheless to set 1980s-era impoundments as the BAT for legacy wastewater. To be sure, the agency's statements in the final rule do not prove that chemical precipitation or biological treatment (or some combination of the two)
are
BAT for legacy wastewater. That is for the agency to decide. But those statements do cast
Fifth and finally, our court has long recognized that " 'Congress intended [BAT] limitations to be based on the performance of the single best-performing plant in an industrial field.' "
Tex. Oil & Gas
,
These shortcomings in the agency's explanations strongly indicate that its BAT decision simply defaults to the outdated BPT standard that has been demonstrated to be a poor performer by the agency's own analysis. That is antithetical to the statutorily-mandated BAT standard.
See, e.g.
,
Nat'l Lime Ass'n v. EPA
,
In sum, we conclude that the EPA's decision to set surface impoundments as BAT for legacy wastewater was arbitrary and capricious. Far from demonstrating that impoundments are the "best available technology economically achievable" for treating legacy wastewater, the evidence recounted in the final rule shows that impoundments are demonstrably ineffective at doing so and demonstrably inferior to other available technologies. In light of this record, we cannot accept that an outdated, ineffective and inferior technology is BAT when applied to legacy wastewater. No record evidence affirmatively makes that case and, as we have explained, the evidence recounted in the final rule runs in the opposite direction.
2.
EPA defends its choice of impoundments as BAT for legacy wastewater by asserting that "it does not have the data" to justify choosing more advanced pollution control technologies.
First, EPA's arguments about the characteristics of commingled wastewater glide past the key issue before us, which is whether the agency arbitrarily chose
impoundments
as BAT. The agency may lack data on how other technologies interact with commingled wastewater, but it assuredly does not lack data on impoundments. To the contrary, we know that impoundments are ineffective at removing toxic pollutants from the various wastewater streams because the agency's own rule tells us so, repeatedly, based on over three decades of observation and analysis.
See supra
V.B.1. Nor does EPA's criticism of impoundments distinguish "legacy" from "non-legacy" wastewater: instead, the agency categorically states that "surface impoundments ... are largely ineffective at controlling discharges of toxic pollutants and nutrients" from "wastewater."
Second, the agency's "lack of data" excuse is untenable on its own terms. In a footnote, the rule concedes that multiple power plants have in fact been using chemical precipitation to treat commingled legacy wastewater.
See
Third, given EPA's heavy reliance on the characteristics of
commingled
legacy wastewater as a reason for declining stricter regulation, one would expect a different policy for
non-
commingled legacy wastewater.
See
Fourth, even assuming a lack of data prevented EPA from determining BAT for legacy wastewater, nothing required the agency simply to set impoundments as BAT. Instead, EPA could have declined to set nationwide effluent guidelines for legacy wastewater and allowed BAT determinations to be made by each facility's permitting authority through the NPDES permitting process on a site-specific basis.
See
***
In sum, having examined the various justifications set forth for EPA's final rule on legacy wastewater, and finding each of those explanations wanting in light of the agency record, we conclude that EPA's rulemaking was arbitrary and capricious. We therefore set aside that part of the final rule and remand to the agency for reconsideration.
See, e.g.,
Perdue v. FAA
,
We recognize that the agency is entitled to considerable deference in setting BAT limitations.
See, e.g.,
BCCA Appeal Grp.
,
We turn to the challenge to the rule's regulation of combustion residual leachate. As explained,
supra
I.B.2, leachate consists of liquid that percolates through a landfill or impoundment and is eventually discharged into water.
See
The Environmental Petitioners challenge the rule's leachate regulation under the
Chevron
test for reviewing agency interpretations of statutes.
See
Chevron
,
1.
At
Chevron
step one, we ask whether the pertinent statute "unambiguously foreclose[s]" the agency's challenged statutory interpretation; if it does, " 'that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.' "
U.S. Chamber of Commerce v. U.S. Dep't of Labor
,
Petitioners' step one attack targets the agency's justifications for pegging leachate BAT to the same technology set as BPT in 1982-specifically, EPA's explanation that leachate forms a "very small portion" of collective industry discharges and that the rule's stricter BAT for other wastestreams represents reasonable overall progress in the industry.
See
Petitioners' initial step one argument places too much weight on the phrase "all pollutants" in § 1311(b)(2)(A). We cannot agree that this statutory phrase, standing alone, squarely forecloses the agency's decision to maintain leachate BAT at the 1982 BPT standard. To the contrary, we agree with EPA (and with binding precedent) that we must interpret that phrase in context and with reference to the larger statutory scheme.
See, e.g.,
Brown & Williamson
,
shall require the elimination of discharges of all pollutants if the Administrator finds, on the basis of information available to him[,] ... that such elimination is technologically and economically achievable for a category or class of point sources as determined in accordance with regulations issued by the Administrator pursuant to section 1314(b)(2) of this title .
We agree with petitioners, however, that the leachate rule conflates the BAT and BPT standards in a way not permitted by the statutory scheme. The rule pegs BAT for leachate to the decades-old BPT standard, without offering any explanation for why that prior standard is now BAT. That is flatly inconsistent with the Act's careful distinction between the two standards. As explained, the difference between BAT and BPT is critical to the Act's "technology-forcing" scheme.
Supra
I.A (quoting
NRDC I
,
Yet, in the face of this statutory structure, the rule sets BAT for leachate "equal to the [prior] BPT limitation"-
i.e.
, impoundments.
To be sure, we do not say that EPA is precluded by the Act from
ever
setting BAT equivalent to a prior BPT standard. But given the plain distinction between the two standards marked out in the Act, the agency would at least have to offer some explanation for its decision that speaks to the statutory differences between BAT and BPT. Here we are given nothing along those lines. Consequently, the only conclusion we can draw from this record is that, in setting BAT for leachate, the agency simply defaulted to the prior BPT. As explained, however, the statutory scheme does not confer authority on the agency to collapse the carefully-wrought distinction between BAT and BPT in this manner.
See, e.g.,
Texas v. United States
,
We also agree with petitioners that the agency's proffered justifications for the leachate rule are not supported-indeed, are likely incompatible with-the factors set forth under the Act for determining BAT. "The first [
Chevron
step] determines whether Congress intended to give the agency any discretion,"
La Union Del Pueblo Entero v. FEMA
,
The Act specifies the following BAT factors:
[1] the age of equipment and facilities involved, [2] the process employed, [3] the engineering aspects of the application of various types of control techniques, [4] process changes, [5] the cost of achieving such effluent reduction, [6] non-water quality environmental impact (including energy requirements), and [7] such other factors as the Administrator deems appropriate[.]
EPA's principal argument in response is that the Act allows consideration of "other factors as the Administrator deems appropriate,"
In sum, we conclude that the BAT determination for leachate fails step one of Chevron .
2.
Alternatively, we conclude that the leachate regulation fails step two of
Chevron
. For purposes of this analysis, we assume that the CWA is "silent or ambiguous" with respect to the question addressed by the rule, and we ask only "whether the agency's answer is based on a
permissible
construction of the statute."
Acosta
,
Petitioners argue that the agency's decision to set surface impoundments as BAT for leachate is based on an impermissible interpretation of the Act. They raise arguments similar to the ones raised under step one- i.e. , that the agency acted unreasonably by setting a leachate BAT based on its relative size and on the rule's stricter regulation of other streams. Additionally, petitioners argue that the agency rejected more effective, achievable control technologies (like chemical precipitation) in favor of a less effective technology like impoundments, which "is unreasonable because it cannot be squared with Congress's intent for BAT to be more stringent than BPT limits." We agree with petitioners that the leachate regulation is based on an impermissible interpretation of the Act. We therefore hold that the regulation fails Chevron step two and must be vacated on that alternative basis as well.
First, the rule unreasonably sets as BAT a technology the rule itself deems ineffective at controlling toxic discharges from leachate. As already explained,
supra
V.B.1, the final rule categorically recognizes that impoundments are ineffective at removing toxic pollutants from wastewater,
Second, the rule unreasonably declines to set as BAT available technologies that are admittedly more effective at controlling leachate discharges. We have already detailed the rule's affirmation that available modern technologies like chemical precipitation "are more effective than surface impoundments at removing both soluble and particulate forms of metals."
Our decision in
Chemical Manufacturers Association v. EPA
,
Finally, we note that the EPA has described leachate as being chemically similar to FGD wastewater, a wastestream admittedly susceptible to effective treatment by chemical and biological methods.
See
EPA offers two justifications for selecting impoundments as BAT for leachate-the first based on the agency's lack of data about alternatives, and the second based on the relative size of the leachate wastestream. We find neither persuasive.
First, we are unpersuaded by the agency's argument that "[c]ommentators did
We have before declined to accept lack of data as a valid excuse for an agency's failure to regulate activity that concededly creates pollution, and we decline again here. In
API I
, for instance, we rejected EPA's attempt to justify failing to regulate "stripper gas wells" based on its claim that "there was not sufficient data" to justify regulation.
EPA counters this point by asserting that it "identified
no
existing plants using chemical precipitation to treat their leachate." We take EPA at its word, as we must, but the agency misses the point. Under our precedent, a technological process can be deemed "available" for BAT purposes "even if it is not in use at all," or if it is used in unrelated industries.
API II
,
Second, we reject the EPA's argument that its regulation is justified by the fact that leachate pollution constitutes "a very small portion of the pollutants discharged collectively by all steam power plants." 80 Fed Reg. 67,854. As already explained at step one, supra V.B.1, this consideration finds scant support in the statutory scheme given that the relative size of a stream is absent from the statutory BAT factors. But even assuming the statute allows the agency to consider the relative size of a pollution source in setting BAT, we find the EPA's use of that consideration here to be unreasonable.
The agency's argument involves some sleight of hand. Leachate discharges may constitute "a very small portion" of pollutants, 80 Fed Reg. 67,854, but only by comparison to all pollution from the entire steam-electric power plant industry, which is largest collective source of water pollution in the country. Id. at 67,839 -40. 29 In an absolute sense, however, leachate pollution is not a "very small portion" of anything. If leachate were a separate industry, it would rank as the 18th-largest source of water pollution in the United States. See TDD , EPA-821-R-15-007, at 10-39 (table showing toxic-weighted pollution from leachate); Annual Effluent Guidelines Review Report , EPA-821-R-16-002, at 2-26 (listing pollution from other industries). Leachate alone produces more toxic-weighted pound equivalents than the entire coal mining industry, according to the EPA's own records. Id. And EPA's brief grudgingly admits that leachate pollution "might be considered comparable" to the total amount of pollution coming from other industries such as coal mining and sugar processing. Thus, with the distortions stripped away, EPA's "argument" for its leachate regulation turns out to be a mere statement of fact, and an empty one at that. Yes, leachate pollution may form a "very small portion" of a gargantuan source of water pollution. But leachate constitutes a gargantuan source of water pollution on its own terms. Both statements are true. Neither begins to justify the agency's choice of impoundments as BAT. 30
V. CONCLUSION
In the Clean Water Act, Congress afforded EPA considerable policy-making discretion to formulate rules to mitigate pollution in our nation's waters. As a price for that delegation of authority, however, the agency must engage in "reasoned decisionmaking,"
Michigan v. EPA
,
VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Notes
Under the Act "pollutant" means "dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, chemical wastes, biological materials, radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, cellar dirt and industrial municipal, and agricultural waste discharged into water."
See, e.g.
,
CMA
,
A "point source" means "any discernible, confined and discrete conveyance ... from which pollutants are or may be discharged," but "does not include agricultural stormwater discharges and return flows from irrigated agriculture."
The Act is not based solely on technological feasibility standards. It also incorporates water-quality standards into the permitting process that effectuates ELGs.
See, e.g.
,
NRDC II
,
The complete list of BPT factors is:
• Total cost of application of technology in relation to the effluent reduction benefits to be achieved from such application;
• Age of equipment and facilities involved;
• Process employed;
• Engineering aspects of the application of various types of control techniques;
• Process changes;
• Non-water quality environmental impact (including energy requirements); and
• "[S]uch other factors as the Administrator deems appropriate."
33 U.S.C. § 1314 (b)(1)(B).
The complete list of BAT factors is:
• Age of equipment and facilities involved;
• Process employed;
• Engineering aspects of the application of various types of control techniques;
• Process changes;
• Cost of achieving such effluent reduction;
• Non-water quality environmental impact (including energy requirements); and
• "[S]uch other factors as the Administrator deems appropriate."
BAT and BPT standards apply to regulation of
existing
steam-powered electric plants. A standard even stricter than BAT-the "new source performance standard" ("NSPS")-applies to newly built plants. The Act defines this standard as "the greatest degree of effluent reduction which the Administrator determines to be achievable through application of the best available demonstrated control technology, processes, operating methods, or other alternatives, including, where practicable, a standard permitting no discharge of pollutants."
The study produced a 233-page report.
See Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source Category: Final Detailed Study Report
, EPA 821-R-09-008 (Sept. 2009) ("EPA Study Report"). The report vividly describes the harms from water pollution-for instance, one dissolved metal, selenium, can kill fish and other aquatic life at "concentrations below eight parts per billion."
Each stream may be briefly described as follows (
see
• FGD wastewater is produced by systems that remove sulfur dioxide from flue gas using a "sorbent slurry."
• Fly ash wastewater is produced when ash in flue gas is emitted from a boiler, trapped by filters, and then sluiced from hoppers to a surface impoundment.
• Bottom ash wastewater is produced when ash falling to the furnace bottom is sluiced by water from hoppers to an impoundment or dewatering bin.
• FGMC wastewater is produced when carbon is injected into flue gas to facilitate removal of mercury and the resulting waste is wet sluiced with fly ash.
• Leachate is liquid that percolates through or drains from a landfill, or that passes through the containment structure ( e.g. , bottom, dikes, berms) of an impoundment.
• Gasification wastewater is produced by the cleaning of a synthetic gas produced by subjecting coal or coke to high temperature and pressure.
The rule addresses a seventh wastestream-"nonchemical metal cleaning wastes"-not at issue here.
"Indirect" discharges concern pollutants discharged into a "publicly owned treatment work" and are subject to distinct "pretreatment" standards.
See
See
The Industry Petitioners are Utility Water Act Group ("UWAG"), Southwestern Electric Power Company, Union Electric Company dba Ameren Missouri, City of Springfield, Missouri, by and through the Board of Public Utilities, and Duke Energy Indiana, Inc.
The Water Company Petitioners are the American Waterworks Association and the National Association of Water Companies.
The Environmental Petitioners are Waterkeeper Alliance, Inc., the Environmental Integrity Project, and the Sierra Club.
See United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, Order MCP No. 136 (December 8, 2015). The cases were originally captioned as: Waterkeeper Alliance, Inc. et al v. EPA, et al. (2nd Cir. No. 15-3773); Southwestern Elec. Power Co., et al. v. EPA, et al. (5th Cir. No. 15-60821); Union Elec. Co., et al. v. EPA, et al. (8th Cir. No. 15-3658), and Sierra Club v. EPA. (9th Cir. No. 15-73578).
The agency's reconsideration of those aspects of the rule has been challenged in separate lawsuits brought by a coalition of environmental groups, including some of the petitioners in this case. That challenge was brought contemporaneously in the District of Columbia federal district court and the D.C. Circuit. The district court ruled it lacked jurisdiction,
Clean Water Action v. Pruitt
,
While no party contests the issue, we conclude that petitioners have associational standing to challenge the final rule on behalf of their members.
See, e.g.,
La. Landmarks Soc., Inc. v. City of New Orleans
,
Indeed, for treatment of gasification wastewater the inadequacies of surface impoundments appear even more pronounced. EPA found that one of the three existing U.S. plants that produce gasification wastewater previously used surface impoundments but that "the impoundment effluent repeatedly exceeded its NPDES permit effluent limitations necessary to meet applicable [Water Quality Standards]." Id. at 67,853.
Intervenor UWAG argues that "EPA's acknowledgment that other technologies are better at removing
dissolved
metals does not undermine the Agency's conclusion that surface impoundments reflect BAT for [pollutants] in legacy wastewaters." We disagree. In this context, the EPA's pointed criticisms of impoundments fatally undermine its BAT determination. To be sure, an agency has "some leeway reasonably to resolve uncertainty, as a policy matter, in favor of more regulation or less."
Ctr. for Auto Safety v. Fed. Highway Admin.
,
Intervenor UWAG offers a similarly mistaken defense of the rule by arguing that the timing of wastewater generation "profoundly influence[s] the amount of wastewater, the characteristics of that wastewater, and the technologies available to treat it." This may be true, but the question before us is not whether legacy wastewater must be regulated in the same manner as other wastewater. The question is whether impoundments are BAT for legacy wastewater, and the agency's own words cast grave doubt on that conclusion. Additionally, UWAG's argument that treating legacy wastewater as a "separate wastestream" was not itself arbitrary and capricious is beside the point. Our criticism is directed at the BAT determination the agency actually reached for legacy wastewater, not at the decision to establish a separate BAT in the first place.
The final rule attempts to explain away this paradox, but its rationales do not hold water. The rule asserts that, if EPA subjected non-commingled legacy wastewater to stricter controls, plants "would begin commingling other process wastewater with their legacy [non-commingled] wastewater" and thereby circumvent the regulation.
EPA claims that petitioners have waived this deferral argument by failing to raise it during the notice-and-comment period. That argument is foreclosed by our precedent.
See
Am. Forest & Paper Ass'n v. EPA
,
See, e.g.,
Tex. Oil & Gas Ass'n
,
For that reason we also reject petitioners' argument that EPA was required to set chemical precipitation as BAT solely because that method is technologically and economically achievable. Petitioners rely on a statement from
American Petroleum Institute v. EPA
that "the basic requirement for BAT effluent limitations is only that they be technologically and economically achievable[.]"
Riverkeeper
held that a distinct CWA standard-"best technology available for minimizing environmental impact" (or "BTA"),
EPA also argues that "BAT ... must be acceptable on the basis of numerous factors, only one of which is pollution control" (quoting
BP Expl. & Oil, Inc. v. EPA
,
We find additional support for this conclusion in
Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA
,
After steam-electric power plants-the most polluting industry-the remaining nine industries in the top ten for water pollution are: 2) pulp, paper, and paperboard, 3) petroleum refining, 4) nonferrous metals manufacturing, 5) fertilizer manufacturing, 6) organic chemicals, plastics, and synthetic fibers, 7) ore mining and dressing, 8) inorganic chemicals manufacturing, 9) waste combustors, and 10) textile mills. Environmental Assessment Document No. EPA-821-R-15-006, at 3-15.
Additionally, we have previously rejected arguments by EPA that a certain pollution source need not be regulated because it was allegedly small or insignificant. In
API I
,
Relying on
Association of Pacific Fisheries v. EPA
,
