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Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper Inc.

Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 556 U.S. 208 (2009), is a decision by the United States Supreme Court that reviewed the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) interpretation of the Clean Water Act regulations with regard to cooling water intakes for power plants. Existing facilities are mandated to use the "Best Technology Available" to "minimize the adverse environmental impact."[1] The issue was whether the agency may use a cost–benefit analysis (CBA) in choosing the Best Available Technology or (BAT) to meet the National Performance Standards (NPS).

Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc.
Argued December 2, 2008
Decided April 1, 2009
Full case nameEntergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., et al.
Docket no.07-588
Citations556 U.S. 208 (more)
129 S. Ct. 1498; 173 L. Ed. 2d 369; 2009 U.S. LEXIS 2498
Case history
Prior475 F.3d 83 (2d Cir. 2007)
Holding
The EPA permissibly relied on cost-benefit analysis in setting the national performance standards in providing for cost-benefit variances from the standards, as part of the Phase II regulations.
Court membership
Chief Justice
John Roberts
Associate Justices
John P. Stevens · Antonin Scalia
Anthony Kennedy · David Souter
Clarence Thomas · Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Stephen Breyer · Samuel Alito
Case opinions
MajorityScalia, joined by Roberts, Kennedy, Thomas, Alito
Concur/dissentBreyer
DissentStevens, joined by Souter, Ginsburg
Laws applied
Clean Water Act

Reversing a lower court opinion, the 5-1-3 ruling upheld the EPA's decision as reasonable to allow CBA to determine the best technology available to maintain national environmental standards.[1]

Parties edit

Petitioner: Entergy Corporation is an energy company engaged primarily in electric power production and retail electric distribution operations. Entergy owns and operates both nuclear and fossil fuel power plants generating an aggregated 30,000 megawatts of electrical capacity. Indian Point Energy Center is a subsidiary of Entergy Corporation operating a three-unit nuclear power plant in Buchanan, New York, the facility at issue in this case.[2]

Respondent: Riverkeeper is a member-supported environmental protection organization dedicated to defending the Hudson River and its tributaries for New York City and Hudson Valley residents. Over the past four decades Riverkeeper has been successful as the public's watchdog in bringing hundreds of pollution violations to justice and protecting drinking water for local communities. Riverkeeper has an ongoing interest in replacing Indian Point nuclear power plant with renewable energy.[3]

This case is a consolidation of three cases for review by the Supreme Court Entergy Corporation v. Riverkeeper, Inc., et al. PSEG Fossil LLC, et al., v. Riverkeeper, Inc., et al. Utility Water Act Group, v. Riverkeeper, Inc., et al.[1]

Background edit

Among the ten major environmental regulatory statutes enacted from the 1960s through the 1980s only the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) and the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) granted authority to weigh the cost and benefits in determining policy requirements. The remainder of the regulations rely mainly on harm-based or technology-based methodologies that clearly exclude cost–benefit analysis (CBA) or at a minimum do not provide for it. The Clean Water Act statute uses technology based methods to meet its standards.[4] (See Note 1.)

Three pre-Entergy Supreme Court decisions offer historical guidance into the possible crafting of the CBA canon. Each of them address the priority of environmental health and safety concerns with the appropriate level of cost-benefit analysis.

Various States and environmental groups challenged the Bush Administration Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) interpretation of § 316(b) of the Clean Water Act (CWA), 33 U.S.C. §1326(b), that allowed exceptions to power plants that diverged from national standards. The claim against the EPA was that the agency unreasonably interpreted the regulations of the CWA when it determined that cost–benefit analysis was a method that could be used to determine the BAT when minimizing the adverse effects of cooling water intakes from power plants. This new interpretation of the statute allows for cost to influence the choice of "best technology available" lowering the standard reduction of "adverse environmental impact."[5]

Statute and regulations edit

Section 316(b) of the Clean Water Act[6] requires that permittees under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) that operate facilities with cooling water intake structures ensure that the location, design, construction, and capacity of their structures reflect the best technology available to minimize detrimental impacts to the environment. The intake structures remove billions of aquatic organisms each year from United States waterways. Most impacts are in early life stages of fish, crustaceans, and other aquatic life.[7]

Prior case edit

The case preceding this Supreme Court case was decided in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. This court heard Riverkeeper, Inc. v. EPA, in 2006 and decided the case in 2007.[5] Then-Circuit Judge Sotomayor wrote the opinion for the court. In this decision the court stated that in order to meet the statute facilities could not use restoration enhancements (restocking fish, restoring habitat, etc.) to meet the National Performance Standard (NPS). Additionally, the court remanded the case to the EPA for clarification of EPA rules regarding NPS determination by CBA and the use of a variance for facilities claiming excessive costs to implement mandated technology. And most importantly to this case, the court decided that a CBA is not consistent with the requirement of using the best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact. The statutory language requires the EPA's selection of BAT be driven by technology. Cost can only be used to determine if remediation can be reasonably borne by the industry and determining the specific technology that meets the standards at the lowest cost. Thus suspending this aspect of Phase II as stated above.[1]

This case edit

The petitioner's power plants had cooling water intake structures that threatened freshwater aquatic life by compression against intake screens (impingement) or by suctioning organisms into the cooling system (entrainment). They challenged the Second Circuit decision that cost benefit analysis cannot be used in the interpretation of the Clean Water Act in determination of the national performance standard and best available technology for existing power plants.[1]

The respondents supported the Second Circuit's finding that the EPA's decision of site-specific cost–benefit variance provision and the use of CBA to determine national performance standard and best available technology for existing facilities is not within the statute and remand the regulations to the agency for clarification.[1]

Adverse environmental impact edit

The process of pulling water into a facility from a natural body of water for use in industrial cooling can have a significant effect on living organisms in that body of water. Estimates for 2004 show that in just one day industry can pull as much as 279 million US gallons (1,060,000 m3) of water into facilities for cooling purposes.[8] The pressure and flow of this large volume of water can impinge large organisms like fish against intake points or entrain small organisms like plankton, eggs and larvae into the cooling system killing or injuring them. A single power plant can impinge a million adult fish in just three weeks. One plant can entrain some 3 - 4 billion smaller fish and shellfish in a year. This can have a destabilizing effect on local ecosystems.[8] Nationwide, "the impingement and entrainment reduction benefits range from $73 million to $83 million per year. These benefits are primarily from improvements to commercial and recreational fishing."[9] There are likely other benefits externalized in this equation such as higher functioning ecosystems, intrinsic value of non-fisheries species to name two. In light of these findings, when congress amended the Clean Water Act in 1972, it directed the EPA to regulate these systems so as to "minimize adverse environmental impact".[8] As of 2014, there were 1065 existing facilities in the US that draw at least 2 million US gallons (7,600 m3) a day. EPA estimated that 521 are manufacturing facilities and 544 are power plants.[7]

EPA rule making edit

Three Phases (rules) have been created over the years by the EPA in response from industry, environmental groups and judicial review to clarify exactly what is needed to meet the statute.[9] Promulgated 1326(b) regulations making the best technology available determination on a case-by-case basis for both Phase I and Phase II facilities.

  • Phase I regulations (created in 2001) govern new cooling water intake structures and mandate closed-cycle cooling systems as BAT.
  • Phase II (2004) regulations apply generally to large existing facilities and outlines alternatives to closed-cycle cooling to meet reduction standards.
  • Phase III (2006) addresses certain existing facilities and new coastal and offshore facilities, not an issue in this case.[9]

The National Performance Standard (NPS), set by the EPA for new facilities is closed-cycle cooling systems, which can reduce impingement and entrainment by up to 98%. For existing facilities NPS in Phase II is "to reduce impingement mortality for all life stages of fish and shellfish by 80 to 95 percent from the calculation baseline; a subset of facilities must also reduce entrainment of such aquatic organisms by 60 to 90 percent from the calculation baseline."[1]

In Phase II the EPA declined to specifically mandate closed-cycle cooling systems as BAT for existing facilities due to the compliant cost, which could be nine times the amount of other methods of reduction approaching the same standard. A cost–benefit analysis is incorporated to determine the standard. Existing facilities have alternatives to meet these reduction standards including existing technologies, additional fish protection technologies, and restoration measures. Phase II rules outline these alternatives and also permit site-specific variances from the NPS and if the permitting agency imposes restrictions that render results "as close to practical to the applicable performance standards", using "Best Professional Judgement".[9]

Phase II update: In 2007 "EPA suspended the Cooling Water Intake Structure Regulations for existing large power plants as an unreasonable interpretation of the statute. This suspension was in response to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Riverkeeper, Inc., v. EPA. (2007)" (see below for details).[9] In 2011 the Supreme Court ruling stated that Phase II was a reasonable interpretation of the statute reversing the lower court ruling allowing the use of Phase II.[1]

Main issue - Best Available Technology - BAT edit

The main issue for the court was to decide if the Clean Water Act statute language is unambiguous or not and whether the EPA interpretations (rules - see below) were reasonable. At the heart of the issue is if the EPA is authorized to consider CBA in determining BAT when meeting the NPS to "minimize adverse environmental impact."

The EPA does not dictate what type of system existing facilities need to use, but determines the standard that must be met. As guidance they use the terminology "Best Available Technology" which is defined here as "Any standard ... applicable to a point source shall require that the location, design, construction, and capacity of cooling water intake structures reflect the best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact."[1] Existing power plants of this type need to use an appropriate system that is the BAT that meets the standard of reduction. The EPA works with each facility to ensure compliance on a site by site basis and can issue variance under specific circumstances.[9] The definition for BAT in the Clean Water Act does not include a CBA as part of the criteria for choosing this technology as it does in definitions of other types of technology for meeting different environmental health standards.[1]

Decision edit

The judgment of the court of appeals is reversed and remanded.

Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the court.

In a five justice majority opinion written by Justice Scalia, the Court overturns the Second Circuit's ruling and found that Congress did not speak directly to whether or not cost–benefit analysis could be used in environmental standards under the "best technology available" verbiage. And found that the EPA's interpretation of the regulations to be reasonable. Four different CWA tests were mentioned in the opinion, however two received greater attention. One called for the use of "best available technology economically achievable" (BATEA) and the other test required the "best available demonstrated control technology" (BADT). The BATEA test was intended to allow progress toward the goal of eliminating the discharge of all pollutants. While the BADT test was applicable to new point sources and was aimed to advance the strategy of "where practicable", a standard allowing no pollutant discharges. The Court differentiated the BAT test from other tests on the basis of distinguishable language and interpreted the ambiguity to allow the agency greater discretion in determining the content of the test.[1] (See Note 2.)

In Whitman v. American Trucking Associations, Inc. the Court ruled that Congress was "unambiguously barred cost considerations" in setting air quality standards under section 109 of the Clean Air Act (CAA). The statute was silent on the issue because it had expressly allowed for the consideration of costs in other provisions of the act. However, concerning the CWA in regards to Entergy, the Court determined that statutory silence was not intended to limit the agency's discretion in consideration of a cost–benefit analysis when determining compliance with national environmental standards.[1]

After determining that the statutes did not specifically address the "best technology available" language contained in the Clean Water Act, the second test was to determine if the agency's interpretation of the regulation was reasonable. This was in reference to the U.S. Supreme Courts decision in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. otherwise known as "Chevron deference". This case granted deference to the administrative agency's interpretation of its own regulations if the congressional intent was unclear. Although the court did not address the quality of the agency's interpretation in Entergy, it did find EPA to be reasonable in its interpretation.[1]

Justice Breyer concurring in part and dissenting in part.

Although Justice Breyer agrees with the Court concerning the use of a cost–benefit analysis in determining environmental standards for water-intake systems, he also admonished the EPA for changing its stance on granting variances. Justice Breyer would have remanded the case to allow the EPA to explain the reasoning behind the change.[1] In siding with the majority in Entergy, Justice Breyer acknowledges that Congress had a reason to limit the weight of cost–benefit analysis for the following reasons. It may delay regulatory process, undervalue the true cost benefit of environmental externalities, and may reduce market incentives to developing advanced treatment technologies. However, on the other hand, forbidding CBA may lead to "irrational results" and since every "real choice" requires a comparison, an absolute prohibition would be difficult to enforce.[4]

Justice Stevens, with whom Justice Souter and Justice Ginsburg join, dissenting.

Justice Stevens believed that Section 316(b) of the CWA prohibited the use of cost-benefit analysis based on the language and stated that Congress' intent was to play a temporal role for existing power plants until a more ambitious standard could be set. And declared that if a cost–benefit analysis were to be done, monetize all aquatic life not just the 1.8 percent believed to have commercial or recreational value. EPA's estimate of aquatic life value was $83 million for less than 2% of aquatic life as opposed to a measured $735 million for all aquatic life.[1]

Held: The EPA permissibly relied on cost–benefit analysis in setting the national performance standards in providing for cost–benefit variances from those standards as part of the Phase II regulations. EPA's perspective is that 1326(b)'s "best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact" standard permits consideration of the technology costs and the relationship between the added cost and the related environmental benefit. EPA needs to demonstrate that it has a reasonable interpretation of the statute, not necessarily the only possible interpretation or even the interpretation deemed best by the courts.[1]

Future implications edit

  • The United States Supreme Court issued an important decision interpreting Federal Water Pollution Control Act section 316(b) to allow the United States Environmental Protection Agency to include cost/benefit considerations in establishing technology-based requirements for cooling water intake structures.[10]
  • Part of EPA's Phase II regulations are upheld so there will be greater regulatory certainty for industry and federal and state agencies. With this judgment here will also be greater regulatory flexibility for industry. However, this regulatory flexibility also may result in significant environmental harm as facilities are not required to implement technology that arguably is the most protective of the nation's waterways.[11]
  • New EPA Rule. As a result of the Supreme Court remand, EPA issued a final rule in 2014 to further clarify requirements for cooling water intake structures at existing power plants and factories. The rule affects about 1065 existing facilities, and requires them to select one of seven technology options.[12][13]
  • Entergy v Riverkeeper designates an important move in the Court's orientation towards increasing the weight of CBA with Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) regulations. Entergy joins a list of recent Supreme Court rulings that seem aimed at rebalancing the perceived excesses of strict EHS legislation of the 1960s, 1970s, and the 1980s[14] Five major environmental decisions from 2008 to 2009, including Entergy, have resulted in adverse environmental decisions. Four of the five preserved executive branch judgments that precluded environmental protections. (See Note 3.)[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper Inc., 556 U.S. 208 (2009).   This article incorporates public domain material from this U.S government document.
  2. ^ "Home". entergy.com.
  3. ^ "Our Story".
  4. ^ a b c d Cannon, Jonathan (2010). "The Sounds of Silence: Cost-Benefit Canons in Entergy Corp. V. Riverkeeper, Inc" (PDF). Harvard Environmental Law Review. 34 (2): 424–460. Retrieved May 3, 2011.
  5. ^ a b Riverkeeper, Inc. v. EPA, 475 F.3d 83 (2d Cir. 2007).
  6. ^ 33 U.S.C. § 1326
  7. ^ a b Fact Sheet: Final Regulations to Establish Requirements for Cooling Water Intake Structures at Existing Facilities (Report). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). May 2014. EPA-821-F-14-001.
  8. ^ a b c Riverkeeper, Inc. v. EPA, 358 F.3d 174 (2d Cir. 2004).
  9. ^ a b c d e f "Cooling Water Intakes Rulemaking History". EPA. January 3, 2017.
  10. ^ "U.S. Supreme Court's decision interpreting Clean Water section 316(b)" (PDF). State Water Resources Control Board. Sacramento, CA: California Environmental Protection Agency. May 6, 2009. Memorandum of Michael A.M. Lauffer, Chief Counsel.
  11. ^ "American Bar Assoc Analysis of Entergy" (PDF). Retrieved May 3, 2011.
  12. ^ EPA (2014-08-15). "National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System—Final Regulations To Establish Requirements for Cooling Water Intake Structures at Existing Facilities and Amend Requirements at Phase I Facilities." Federal Register, 79 FR 48299.
  13. ^ "Cooling Water Intakes — Final 2014 Rule for Existing Electric Generating Plants and Factories". EPA. August 15, 2014.
  14. ^ Cannon, Jonathan (October 2006). "Environmentalism and the Supreme Court: A Cultural Analysis". Ecology Law Quarterly. 33 (363): 432–440.

Notes edit

  • Note 1: Statutes enacted during this period that did not authorize CBA include the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251–1387 (2006); Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 401–7671q (2006); Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1531–1544 (2006); Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601–9675; Safe Drinking Water Act (pre-1996 amendments), Pub. L. No. 93-523, 88 Stat. 1660 (1994); Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 6901–6986; Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 11001–05, 11021–23, 11041–050; and the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, 33 U.S.C. §§ 2701–2762.
  • Note 2: In section 316(b)’s BAT requirement for water intake structures, the CWA establishes a range of pollution reduction standards for various categories of dischargers and pollutants; these standards, in general order of ascending stringency, include best practicable technology (“BPT”), best conventional technology (“BCT”), best available technology economically achievable (“BATEA”), and best available demonstrated technology (“BADT”).156 The statutory factors for BPT and BCT expressly include consideration of the relationship between costs and benefits; the statutory factors for BATEA and BADT do not.
  • Note 3: See Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 129 S. Ct. 365 (2008) (invalidating lower court injunction protecting whales from military sonar tests); Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 129 S. Ct. 1498 (2009) (upholding EPA's use of CBA to select less protective standard for cooling water structures); Coeur Alaska, Inc. v. Se. Alaska Conservation Council, 129 S. Ct. 2458 (2009) (upholding less protective interpretation of CWA requirements for gold mine discharges); Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. United States, 129 S. Ct. 1870 (2009) (limiting scope of liability under CERCLA); Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 129 S. Ct. 1142 (2009) (denying standing to environmental plaintiffs).

External links edit

  • Text of Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper Inc., 556 U.S. 208 (2009) is available from: Cornell  CourtListener  Google Scholar  Justia  Oyez (oral argument audio)   
  • Riverkeeper et. al. v EPA - Second Circuit Court of Appeals decided 2004
  • Riverkeeper v EPA - Second Circuit Court of Appeals decided 2007
  • EPA - Cooling Water Intakes - all regulations and support documents

entergy, corp, riverkeeper, entergy, corp, riverkeeper, 2009, decision, united, states, supreme, court, that, reviewed, environmental, protection, agency, interpretation, clean, water, regulations, with, regard, cooling, water, intakes, power, plants, existing. Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc 556 U S 208 2009 is a decision by the United States Supreme Court that reviewed the Environmental Protection Agency s EPA interpretation of the Clean Water Act regulations with regard to cooling water intakes for power plants Existing facilities are mandated to use the Best Technology Available to minimize the adverse environmental impact 1 The issue was whether the agency may use a cost benefit analysis CBA in choosing the Best Available Technology or BAT to meet the National Performance Standards NPS Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc Supreme Court of the United StatesArgued December 2 2008Decided April 1 2009Full case nameEntergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc et al Docket no 07 588Citations556 U S 208 more 129 S Ct 1498 173 L Ed 2d 369 2009 U S LEXIS 2498Case historyPrior475 F 3d 83 2d Cir 2007 HoldingThe EPA permissibly relied on cost benefit analysis in setting the national performance standards in providing for cost benefit variances from the standards as part of the Phase II regulations Court membershipChief Justice John Roberts Associate Justices John P Stevens Antonin ScaliaAnthony Kennedy David SouterClarence Thomas Ruth Bader GinsburgStephen Breyer Samuel AlitoCase opinionsMajorityScalia joined by Roberts Kennedy Thomas AlitoConcur dissentBreyerDissentStevens joined by Souter GinsburgLaws appliedClean Water Act Reversing a lower court opinion the 5 1 3 ruling upheld the EPA s decision as reasonable to allow CBA to determine the best technology available to maintain national environmental standards 1 Contents 1 Parties 2 Background 3 Statute and regulations 4 Prior case 5 This case 6 Adverse environmental impact 7 EPA rule making 8 Main issue Best Available Technology BAT 9 Decision 10 Future implications 11 See also 12 References 13 Notes 14 External linksParties editPetitioner Entergy Corporation is an energy company engaged primarily in electric power production and retail electric distribution operations Entergy owns and operates both nuclear and fossil fuel power plants generating an aggregated 30 000 megawatts of electrical capacity Indian Point Energy Center is a subsidiary of Entergy Corporation operating a three unit nuclear power plant in Buchanan New York the facility at issue in this case 2 Respondent Riverkeeper is a member supported environmental protection organization dedicated to defending the Hudson River and its tributaries for New York City and Hudson Valley residents Over the past four decades Riverkeeper has been successful as the public s watchdog in bringing hundreds of pollution violations to justice and protecting drinking water for local communities Riverkeeper has an ongoing interest in replacing Indian Point nuclear power plant with renewable energy 3 This case is a consolidation of three cases for review by the Supreme Court Entergy Corporation v Riverkeeper Inc et al PSEG Fossil LLC et al v Riverkeeper Inc et al Utility Water Act Group v Riverkeeper Inc et al 1 Background editAmong the ten major environmental regulatory statutes enacted from the 1960s through the 1980s only the Toxic Substances Control Act TSCA and the Federal Insecticide Fungicide and Rodenticide Act FIFRA granted authority to weigh the cost and benefits in determining policy requirements The remainder of the regulations rely mainly on harm based or technology based methodologies that clearly exclude cost benefit analysis CBA or at a minimum do not provide for it The Clean Water Act statute uses technology based methods to meet its standards 4 See Note 1 Three pre Entergy Supreme Court decisions offer historical guidance into the possible crafting of the CBA canon Each of them address the priority of environmental health and safety concerns with the appropriate level of cost benefit analysis In Tennessee Valley Authority v Hill the Court interpreted section 7 of the Endangered Species Act as discontinuing the construction of the Tellico Dam after the project was more than 80 percent complete and had spent over 50 million in order to save the snail darter an unknown species at the time In American Textile Manufacturers Institute Inc v Donovan the court addressed whether the Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA could adopt cost benefit analysis with regards to cotton dust standards for employees The Court ruled that CBA was not authorized by the statute because feasibility analysis was authorized In Whitman v American Trucking Associations Inc the Court held that section 109 of the Clean Air Act CAA prohibited cost considerations when setting the National Ambient Air Quality Standards NAAQS In a unanimous Court Justice Scalia considered that section 109 requires the public to be protected with an adequate margin of safety and that the CAA had specific reference to cost considerations in related provisions but not with setting the NAAQS 4 Various States and environmental groups challenged the Bush Administration Environmental Protection Agency s EPA interpretation of 316 b of the Clean Water Act CWA 33 U S C 1326 b that allowed exceptions to power plants that diverged from national standards The claim against the EPA was that the agency unreasonably interpreted the regulations of the CWA when it determined that cost benefit analysis was a method that could be used to determine the BAT when minimizing the adverse effects of cooling water intakes from power plants This new interpretation of the statute allows for cost to influence the choice of best technology available lowering the standard reduction of adverse environmental impact 5 Statute and regulations editSection 316 b of the Clean Water Act 6 requires that permittees under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System NPDES that operate facilities with cooling water intake structures ensure that the location design construction and capacity of their structures reflect the best technology available to minimize detrimental impacts to the environment The intake structures remove billions of aquatic organisms each year from United States waterways Most impacts are in early life stages of fish crustaceans and other aquatic life 7 Prior case editThe case preceding this Supreme Court case was decided in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals This court heard Riverkeeper Inc v EPA in 2006 and decided the case in 2007 5 Then Circuit Judge Sotomayor wrote the opinion for the court In this decision the court stated that in order to meet the statute facilities could not use restoration enhancements restocking fish restoring habitat etc to meet the National Performance Standard NPS Additionally the court remanded the case to the EPA for clarification of EPA rules regarding NPS determination by CBA and the use of a variance for facilities claiming excessive costs to implement mandated technology And most importantly to this case the court decided that a CBA is not consistent with the requirement of using the best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact The statutory language requires the EPA s selection of BAT be driven by technology Cost can only be used to determine if remediation can be reasonably borne by the industry and determining the specific technology that meets the standards at the lowest cost Thus suspending this aspect of Phase II as stated above 1 This case editThe petitioner s power plants had cooling water intake structures that threatened freshwater aquatic life by compression against intake screens impingement or by suctioning organisms into the cooling system entrainment They challenged the Second Circuit decision that cost benefit analysis cannot be used in the interpretation of the Clean Water Act in determination of the national performance standard and best available technology for existing power plants 1 The respondents supported the Second Circuit s finding that the EPA s decision of site specific cost benefit variance provision and the use of CBA to determine national performance standard and best available technology for existing facilities is not within the statute and remand the regulations to the agency for clarification 1 Adverse environmental impact editThe process of pulling water into a facility from a natural body of water for use in industrial cooling can have a significant effect on living organisms in that body of water Estimates for 2004 show that in just one day industry can pull as much as 279 million US gallons 1 060 000 m3 of water into facilities for cooling purposes 8 The pressure and flow of this large volume of water can impinge large organisms like fish against intake points or entrain small organisms like plankton eggs and larvae into the cooling system killing or injuring them A single power plant can impinge a million adult fish in just three weeks One plant can entrain some 3 4 billion smaller fish and shellfish in a year This can have a destabilizing effect on local ecosystems 8 Nationwide the impingement and entrainment reduction benefits range from 73 million to 83 million per year These benefits are primarily from improvements to commercial and recreational fishing 9 There are likely other benefits externalized in this equation such as higher functioning ecosystems intrinsic value of non fisheries species to name two In light of these findings when congress amended the Clean Water Act in 1972 it directed the EPA to regulate these systems so as to minimize adverse environmental impact 8 As of 2014 there were 1065 existing facilities in the US that draw at least 2 million US gallons 7 600 m3 a day EPA estimated that 521 are manufacturing facilities and 544 are power plants 7 EPA rule making editThree Phases rules have been created over the years by the EPA in response from industry environmental groups and judicial review to clarify exactly what is needed to meet the statute 9 Promulgated 1326 b regulations making the best technology available determination on a case by case basis for both Phase I and Phase II facilities Phase I regulations created in 2001 govern new cooling water intake structures and mandate closed cycle cooling systems as BAT Phase II 2004 regulations apply generally to large existing facilities and outlines alternatives to closed cycle cooling to meet reduction standards Phase III 2006 addresses certain existing facilities and new coastal and offshore facilities not an issue in this case 9 The National Performance Standard NPS set by the EPA for new facilities is closed cycle cooling systems which can reduce impingement and entrainment by up to 98 For existing facilities NPS in Phase II is to reduce impingement mortality for all life stages of fish and shellfish by 80 to 95 percent from the calculation baseline a subset of facilities must also reduce entrainment of such aquatic organisms by 60 to 90 percent from the calculation baseline 1 In Phase II the EPA declined to specifically mandate closed cycle cooling systems as BAT for existing facilities due to the compliant cost which could be nine times the amount of other methods of reduction approaching the same standard A cost benefit analysis is incorporated to determine the standard Existing facilities have alternatives to meet these reduction standards including existing technologies additional fish protection technologies and restoration measures Phase II rules outline these alternatives and also permit site specific variances from the NPS and if the permitting agency imposes restrictions that render results as close to practical to the applicable performance standards using Best Professional Judgement 9 Phase II update In 2007 EPA suspended the Cooling Water Intake Structure Regulations for existing large power plants as an unreasonable interpretation of the statute This suspension was in response to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Riverkeeper Inc v EPA 2007 see below for details 9 In 2011 the Supreme Court ruling stated that Phase II was a reasonable interpretation of the statute reversing the lower court ruling allowing the use of Phase II 1 Main issue Best Available Technology BAT editThe main issue for the court was to decide if the Clean Water Act statute language is unambiguous or not and whether the EPA interpretations rules see below were reasonable At the heart of the issue is if the EPA is authorized to consider CBA in determining BAT when meeting the NPS to minimize adverse environmental impact The EPA does not dictate what type of system existing facilities need to use but determines the standard that must be met As guidance they use the terminology Best Available Technology which is defined here as Any standard applicable to a point source shall require that the location design construction and capacity of cooling water intake structures reflect the best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact 1 Existing power plants of this type need to use an appropriate system that is the BAT that meets the standard of reduction The EPA works with each facility to ensure compliance on a site by site basis and can issue variance under specific circumstances 9 The definition for BAT in the Clean Water Act does not include a CBA as part of the criteria for choosing this technology as it does in definitions of other types of technology for meeting different environmental health standards 1 Decision editThe judgment of the court of appeals is reversed and remanded Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the court In a five justice majority opinion written by Justice Scalia the Court overturns the Second Circuit s ruling and found that Congress did not speak directly to whether or not cost benefit analysis could be used in environmental standards under the best technology available verbiage And found that the EPA s interpretation of the regulations to be reasonable Four different CWA tests were mentioned in the opinion however two received greater attention One called for the use of best available technology economically achievable BATEA and the other test required the best available demonstrated control technology BADT The BATEA test was intended to allow progress toward the goal of eliminating the discharge of all pollutants While the BADT test was applicable to new point sources and was aimed to advance the strategy of where practicable a standard allowing no pollutant discharges The Court differentiated the BAT test from other tests on the basis of distinguishable language and interpreted the ambiguity to allow the agency greater discretion in determining the content of the test 1 See Note 2 In Whitman v American Trucking Associations Inc the Court ruled that Congress was unambiguously barred cost considerations in setting air quality standards under section 109 of the Clean Air Act CAA The statute was silent on the issue because it had expressly allowed for the consideration of costs in other provisions of the act However concerning the CWA in regards to Entergy the Court determined that statutory silence was not intended to limit the agency s discretion in consideration of a cost benefit analysis when determining compliance with national environmental standards 1 After determining that the statutes did not specifically address the best technology available language contained in the Clean Water Act the second test was to determine if the agency s interpretation of the regulation was reasonable This was in reference to the U S Supreme Courts decision in Chevron U S A Inc v Natural Resources Defense Council Inc otherwise known as Chevron deference This case granted deference to the administrative agency s interpretation of its own regulations if the congressional intent was unclear Although the court did not address the quality of the agency s interpretation in Entergy it did find EPA to be reasonable in its interpretation 1 Justice Breyer concurring in part and dissenting in part Although Justice Breyer agrees with the Court concerning the use of a cost benefit analysis in determining environmental standards for water intake systems he also admonished the EPA for changing its stance on granting variances Justice Breyer would have remanded the case to allow the EPA to explain the reasoning behind the change 1 In siding with the majority in Entergy Justice Breyer acknowledges that Congress had a reason to limit the weight of cost benefit analysis for the following reasons It may delay regulatory process undervalue the true cost benefit of environmental externalities and may reduce market incentives to developing advanced treatment technologies However on the other hand forbidding CBA may lead to irrational results and since every real choice requires a comparison an absolute prohibition would be difficult to enforce 4 Justice Stevens with whom Justice Souter and Justice Ginsburg join dissenting Justice Stevens believed that Section 316 b of the CWA prohibited the use of cost benefit analysis based on the language and stated that Congress intent was to play a temporal role for existing power plants until a more ambitious standard could be set And declared that if a cost benefit analysis were to be done monetize all aquatic life not just the 1 8 percent believed to have commercial or recreational value EPA s estimate of aquatic life value was 83 million for less than 2 of aquatic life as opposed to a measured 735 million for all aquatic life 1 Held The EPA permissibly relied on cost benefit analysis in setting the national performance standards in providing for cost benefit variances from those standards as part of the Phase II regulations EPA s perspective is that 1326 b s best technology available for minimizing adverse environmental impact standard permits consideration of the technology costs and the relationship between the added cost and the related environmental benefit EPA needs to demonstrate that it has a reasonable interpretation of the statute not necessarily the only possible interpretation or even the interpretation deemed best by the courts 1 Future implications editThe United States Supreme Court issued an important decision interpreting Federal Water Pollution Control Act section 316 b to allow the United States Environmental Protection Agency to include cost benefit considerations in establishing technology based requirements for cooling water intake structures 10 Part of EPA s Phase II regulations are upheld so there will be greater regulatory certainty for industry and federal and state agencies With this judgment here will also be greater regulatory flexibility for industry However this regulatory flexibility also may result in significant environmental harm as facilities are not required to implement technology that arguably is the most protective of the nation s waterways 11 New EPA Rule As a result of the Supreme Court remand EPA issued a final rule in 2014 to further clarify requirements for cooling water intake structures at existing power plants and factories The rule affects about 1065 existing facilities and requires them to select one of seven technology options 12 13 Entergy v Riverkeeper designates an important move in the Court s orientation towards increasing the weight of CBA with Environmental Health and Safety EHS regulations Entergy joins a list of recent Supreme Court rulings that seem aimed at rebalancing the perceived excesses of strict EHS legislation of the 1960s 1970s and the 1980s 14 Five major environmental decisions from 2008 to 2009 including Entergy have resulted in adverse environmental decisions Four of the five preserved executive branch judgments that precluded environmental protections See Note 3 4 See also editEntergy Louisiana Inc v Louisiana Public Service Commission United States v EnmonsReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc 556 U S 208 2009 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from this U S government document Home entergy com Our Story a b c d Cannon Jonathan 2010 The Sounds of Silence Cost Benefit Canons in Entergy Corp V Riverkeeper Inc PDF Harvard Environmental Law Review 34 2 424 460 Retrieved May 3 2011 a b Riverkeeper Inc v EPA 475 F 3d 83 2d Cir 2007 33 U S C 1326 a b Fact Sheet Final Regulations to Establish Requirements for Cooling Water Intake Structures at Existing Facilities Report Washington D C U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA May 2014 EPA 821 F 14 001 a b c Riverkeeper Inc v EPA 358 F 3d 174 2d Cir 2004 a b c d e f Cooling Water Intakes Rulemaking History EPA January 3 2017 U S Supreme Court s decision interpreting Clean Water section 316 b PDF State Water Resources Control Board Sacramento CA California Environmental Protection Agency May 6 2009 Memorandum of Michael A M Lauffer Chief Counsel American Bar Assoc Analysis of Entergy PDF Retrieved May 3 2011 EPA 2014 08 15 National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Final Regulations To Establish Requirements for Cooling Water Intake Structures at Existing Facilities and Amend Requirements at Phase I Facilities Federal Register 79 FR 48299 Cooling Water Intakes Final 2014 Rule for Existing Electric Generating Plants and Factories EPA August 15 2014 Cannon Jonathan October 2006 Environmentalism and the Supreme Court A Cultural Analysis Ecology Law Quarterly 33 363 432 440 Notes editNote 1 Statutes enacted during this period that did not authorize CBA include the Clean Water Act 33 U S C 1251 1387 2006 Clean Air Act 42 U S C 401 7671q 2006 Endangered Species Act 16 U S C 1531 1544 2006 Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act 42 U S C 9601 9675 Safe Drinking Water Act pre 1996 amendments Pub L No 93 523 88 Stat 1660 1994 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act 42 U S C 6901 6986 Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act 42 U S C 11001 05 11021 23 11041 050 and the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 33 U S C 2701 2762 Note 2 In section 316 b s BAT requirement for water intake structures the CWA establishes a range of pollution reduction standards for various categories of dischargers and pollutants these standards in general order of ascending stringency include best practicable technology BPT best conventional technology BCT best available technology economically achievable BATEA and best available demonstrated technology BADT 156 The statutory factors for BPT and BCT expressly include consideration of the relationship between costs and benefits the statutory factors for BATEA and BADT do not Note 3 See Winter v Natural Res Def Council 129 S Ct 365 2008 invalidating lower court injunction protecting whales from military sonar tests Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc 129 S Ct 1498 2009 upholding EPA s use of CBA to select less protective standard for cooling water structures Coeur Alaska Inc v Se Alaska Conservation Council 129 S Ct 2458 2009 upholding less protective interpretation of CWA requirements for gold mine discharges Burlington N amp Santa Fe Ry Co v United States 129 S Ct 1870 2009 limiting scope of liability under CERCLA Summers v Earth Island Inst 129 S Ct 1142 2009 denying standing to environmental plaintiffs External links editText of Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc 556 U S 208 2009 is available from Cornell CourtListener Google Scholar Justia Oyez oral argument audio Supreme Court slip opinion archived Riverkeeper et al v EPA Second Circuit Court of Appeals decided 2004 Riverkeeper v EPA Second Circuit Court of Appeals decided 2007 EPA Cooling Water Intakes all regulations and support documents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Entergy Corp v Riverkeeper Inc amp oldid 1175141864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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