Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge GINSBURG.
The Spirit of the Sage Council, et al., sued the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), challenging the Services’ jointly-issued “No Surprises Rule” on both substantive and procedural grounds. When the FWS subsequently promulgated the closely related “Permit Revocation Rule,” the Council amended its complaint to contest that Rule as well.
In the orders under review, the district court held the FWS had not provided an adequate opportunity for the public to comment upon the Permit Revocation Rule, as required by the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 553. Although the district court did not reach the merits of the Council’s challenge to the No Surprises Rule, the court held that Rule was “sufficiently intertwined with the [Permit Revocation Rule] that it must also be remanded to the agency for consideration as a whole.”
Spirit of the Sage Council, et al. v. Norton,
On appeal the Services do not contest the district court’s conclusion that the Permit Revocation Rule was procedurally defective. Rather, they argue the interim suspension of the No Surprises Rule and *227 the one-year deadline for repromulgation of the Permit Revocation Rule exceeded the court’s authority under the APA.
The Council contends these appeals are moot because the Services have fully complied with the district court’s orders. We agree with the Council and therefore dismiss these appeals and vacate the orders under review pursuant to
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc.,
I. Background
In 1982 the Congress amended the Endangered Species Act to authorize the Secretaries of the Interior and of Commerce, who delegated this authority to the FWS and the NMFS, respectively, to permit the “taking [of an endangered or threatened species] otherwise prohibited by [the Act] if such taking is incidental to, and not the purpose of, the carrying out of an otherwise lawful activity.” 16 U.S.C. § 1539(a)(1)(B). An applicant for a so-called incidental take permit (ITP) must submit a habitat conservation plan (HCP) demonstrating to the satisfaction of the Secretary that:
(i) the taking will be incidental; (ii) the applicant will, to the maximum extent practicable, minimize and mitigate the impacts of such taking; (iii) the applicant will ensure that adequate funding for the [HCP] will be provided; [and] (iv) the taking will not appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild[.]
Id.
In the first decade this procedure was available the Services issued only 14 ITPs. Hoping to encourage more private landowners to enter into HCPs, the Services developed their “No Surprises” policy, which provided that
under no circumstances, including extraordinary circumstances, shall an HCP permittee who is abiding by the terms of their [sic] HCP be required to provide a greater financial commitment or accept additional land use restrictions on property available for economic use or development.
Notice of Availability of Final Handbook for Habitat Conservation Planning and Incidental Take Permitting Process, 61 Fed. Reg. 63,854, 63,857 (Dec. 2,1996).
The new policy had the intended effect. “[B]y September 30, 1998, the Services had issued 243 incidental take permits, and [as of March 1999] approximately 200 HCPs [were] under development.” Notice of Availability of a Draft Addendum to the Final Handbook for Habitat Conservation Planning and Incidental Take Permitting Process, 64 Fed. Reg. 11,485 (March 9, 1999). The new policy was later codified as the No Surprises Rule. See 63 Fed. Reg. 8859 (Feb. 23,1998).
The Council brought suit in July 1998, claiming, among other things, the No Surprises Rule violates the ESA “[b]y precluding the Services from making changes to ITPs/HCPs which may be necessary to ensure the survival and/or recovery of endangered and threatened species.” The Coalition for Habitat Conservation and other organizations representing permit-holders intervened in support of the Services.
In June 1999, while this litigation was underway, the FWS adopted the Permit Revocation Rule, 64 Fed. Reg. 32,706 (June 17, 1999), which provides that an ITP containing an assurance of no surprises may be revoked in the event of unforeseen circumstances that will “appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild,” 16 U.S.C. § 1539(a)(2)(B)(iv), if the Service is not otherwise able to avert the jeopardy to the species, 50 C.F.R. §§ 17.22(b)(8) & *228 17.32(b)(8). Although the NMFS did not adopt a similar rule, it joined the FWS in arguing before the district court that the Permit Revocation Rule was not a modification of the No Surprises Rule, but a mere clarification of how “the Services’ obligations under ... the ESA would be applied to revoke an HCP permit.” Federal Defendants’ Reply Memorandum In Support of Cross-motion for Summary Judgment at 9. The Council then amended its complaint to challenge the Permit Revocation Rule as well.
After rejecting the Services’ arguments that the Council lacked standing to bring a facial challenge to the No Surprises Rule and that the issue was not ripe for review, the court went on to address, and to uphold on the merits, the Council’s procedural claim that the FWS had failed to provide proper notice and an adequate opportunity for public comment before promulgating the Permit Revocation Rule, as required by § 553 of the APA. The district court accordingly vacated and remanded the Permit Revocation Rule, which decision the Services have not appealed.
Without purporting to reach the Council’s substantive challenge to the No Surprises Rule, the district court further concluded that Rule was “sufficiently intertwined with the [Permit Revocation Rule] that it must also be remanded to the agency for consideration as a whole with the [Permit Revocation Rule].”
After this court denied the Services’ motion for a stay pending appeal, the FWS solicited public comment on both the Permit Revocation Rule and its relationship to the No Surprises Rule, as ordered by the district court. See Proposed Rule, Endangered Species Act Incidental Take Permit Revocation Regulations, 69 Fed. Reg. 29,-681, 29,683 (May 25, 2004). On December 10, 2004 the FWS repromulgated the Permit Revocation Rule without substantial change. See Final Rule, 69 Fed. Reg. 71,723.
II. Analysis
The Council argues these appeals are moot because it is now “impossible for the court to grant any effectual relief whatever” to the appellants,
Beethoven.com LLC v. Librarian of Congress,
The Services, on the other hand, maintain this court can still grant effective relief because “the challenged order has ongoing effects” upon the further proceedings required to resolve this case. In the alternative the Services argue these appeals are not moot because the harm of which they complain is one of those “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
So. Pac. Terminal Co. v. ICC,
As for continuing effects, we note again that the Services do not challenge the portion of the district court’s order vacating and remanding the Permit Revocation Rule; we therefore do not consider whether allowing the FWS to recall the new version of that Rule would provide it
*229
any redress.
*
Insofar as the district court suspended and remanded the No Surprises Rule and set a deadline for the completion of the proceedings on remand, its orders were the functional equivalent of a preliminary injunction designed to expedite the court’s further review of the No Surprises Rule while preserving the status quo in the interim. And “an appeal from an order granting a preliminary injunction becomes moot when, because of the defendant’s compliance or some other change in circumstances, nothing remains to be enjoined through a permanent injunction.”
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Gittens,
The Services argue the district court’s ruling nonetheless has a continuing effect because it “provides [the Council] with an opening to argue that the new comments [concerning the proposed repromulgation of the No Surprises Rule]&emdash;and FWS’s responses or lack thereof&emdash;should be considered in the district court’s ongoing review of the [No Surprises] Rule.” The Council, however, has not argued here, and at oral argument represented that it will not argue in the district court, that the Services failed fully to comply with the orders under review, including the requirement to reconsider the No Surprises Rule “in tandem with the ... [Permit Revocation Rule],”
Finally, the Services argue there is a continuing effect because a favorable decision by this court could significantly affect the amount of attorneys’ fees awarded to the Council; specifically, we are told, if the Council obtains “no further relief concerning the [No Surprises Rule, then] the district court would be required to eliminate from the fee award all time spent litigating the [No Surprises Rule] that is distinct from time litigating the [Permit Revocation Rule].” But the Supreme Court has squarely rejected this theory: An “interest in attorney’s fees is ... insufficient to create an Article III case or controversy where none exists on the merits of the underlying claim.”
Lewis v. Cont’l Bank Corp.,
We therefore proceed to consider whether the present controversy falls within the exception to mootness for matters “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
So. Pac. Terminal Co.,
The question is, what does it mean for “the same controversy” to recur? The level of generality with which one describes the controversy will often determine the answer. The inquiry in this case is much simplified, however, because even the Services’ framing of the controversy shows it is not at all likely to recur. According to the Services, the district court exceeded its authority by suspending and remanding the No Surprises Rule without having held it was either procedurally or substantively defective — the court held merely that it was “intertwined with the [defectively promulgated Permit Revocation Rule],”
The Intervenors, for their part, argue that the district court’s threshold rulings— that the Council has standing and that its facial challenge to the No Surprises Rule is ripe for resolution — are alone sufficient to keep these appeals from being moot. The doctrines of standing, ripeness, and mootness, however, all derive from the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III.
See Whitmore v. Arkansas,
III. Conclusion
We hold these interlocutory appeals no longer present a live controversy. Therefore, we dismiss them as moot, vacate the orders under review, see
Munsingwear,
So ordered.
Notes
The Intervenors devote a single footnote in their brief to contesting that ruling but, as we stated in
Hutchins v. District of Columbia,
