Dorf on Law

Mostly law-related musings by Columbia Professor Michael Dorf and some of his lawyer/professor friends

Thursday, December 20, 2007

The New Politics of Delay

In what probably should be chalked into the ‘not too surprising’ column, the Bush administration last night rejected California’s request for permission to regulate cars as sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions under Clean Air Act Section 209. Under 209, states are preempted from regulating cars as sources of pollution with one exception. CA can do so if it gets a waiver from EPA (CA petitioned for the waiver in December 2005). The process is laid out in Section 209(b) of the Clean Air Act. The conventional wisdom was that EPA had little room to deny the waiver in this case. Under the Act, it was free to do so if (A) anything in the CA petition was “arbitrary and capricious” (the California Air Resources Board actually put together pretty solid arguments); (B) CA did not need State standards to meet “compelling and extraordinary conditions” (more on this below); or (C) the CA standards and accompanying enforcement procedures were not “consistent” with the federal regulation of cars as sources of pollution (anything that is “more stringent than” is, at least in principle, normally “consistent with”).

Of course the denial came just a few days after a district court in California held that the waiver request was viable at least in principle because the Clean Air Act reaches greenhouse gases as “pollutants.” And it came only a day after the signing of new federal fuel economy standards. The CA rules and waiver request would subject the car companies to a quicker phasing in of GHG emission controls (2009-16 phase in) as compared to the new federal schedule in the energy bill passed on Tuesday (2012-2020 phase in). In auto industry years, that difference could be very significant.

Either way EPA went here, more litigation over fuel economy was certain. But I’d like to draw attention to the specific legal grounds for denying CA’s petition. If EPA’s press release is any indication of what it will say in its formal denial of the petition, it looks like it is going to bungle this as badly it did the petition at issue in Massachusetts v. EPA (a request that EPA make federal rules on fuel economy under the Act’s Section 202). EPA’s press release was titled “America Receives a National Solution for Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emissions.” In it and in remarks quoted in the press, EPA Administrator Steve Johnson says that federal uniformity is the reason for rejecting CA’s petition. A “patchwork” of state laws on the matter would be bad for the country and, in any event, the federal standards will apply to “all 50 states.” That is a non sequitur, though.

I’ll grant that CA might not be able to prove under Section 209(b)(1)(B) that it is uniquely vulnerable to climate change among the states (although they make a pretty good case). But even CA admits that: it has always maintained that it is acting out of both vulnerability to climate change and a sense of burden sharing: CA contributes disproportionately to US GHG emissions and transportation accounts for over half of its emissions. CA as contributor of GHGs was looking to move now through all available channels. If anything in its approach was “inconsistent” with the federal rules or was less stringent, EPA could easily have identified it and rejected the petition for that reason alone. Some 17 other states had said that they would utilize their authority under 209(c) to require the CA cars if and when EPA granted CA its waiver. So there would be a significant number of states requiring exactly the same thing as CA, but that isn’t a “patchwork.” It’s a real incentive to car makers to meet the more stringent standard and only have to retool once.

Federal preemption here doesn’t provide a “solution” to anything because there is no single solution to this crisis. To deny the petition by raising the Damocles sword of a “patchwork” is to seriously skew the analysis the statute requires. The question is not whether the nation’s economy as a whole will work better with a single (more distant in time) requirement (which American car companies can "fine tune" through wormy tactics and influence in Washington). The question is whether CA’s petition fails on any of the listed statutory factors. Incidentally, CA and its partners have vowed to sue.

Posted by Jamie Colburn

4 Comments:

  • At 10:01 AM, Blogger Michael C. Dorf said…

    Right on all points. The "patchwork" point seems clearly targeted at uninformed public opinion rather than people who actually follow this issue, given that 2 regimes is hardly a "patchwork." And as I noted in my FindLaw column on Monday (available at http://tinyurl.com/2pphpf) if the CA standards take hold, there will be only 1 regime, i.e., California's.

     
  • At 2:12 PM, Blogger heathu said…

    If California ultimately gets its waiver, does anyone know exactly how California proposes to reduce CO2 emissions in cars? Are they going to require that any manufacturer that wants to sell cars in California have a fleet average of 43 mpg, instead of the federal 35? Could a manufacturer meet the California average by simply not selling their thirstiest cars in California? Does California have to follow the federal fleet average model – could it simply ban the sale (and registration in CA) of all cars that do not get at least 43 mpg? Instead of banning the worst CO2 emitters, would CA have the power to fine companies that don’t meet their emissions standards? Thirstier cars would still be sold in CA, but the manufacturer would be fined and presumably pass the added cost on to the consumer of the thirstier car (And wouldn’t such a system be a lot like a gas tax anyway? – people paying more for a thirstier car in their monthly payments instead of at the pump, with the money going to the state treasury.)

     
  • At 2:27 PM, Blogger egarber said…

    I may butcher this, but isn't the whole "patchwork" argument insincere for another reason as well -- namely, because it's sweeping enough to reject ANY CA effort?

    In other words, isn't such an opinion an indictment of the current law itself, since it could conceivably apply to anything CA might do?
    Suppose CA wanted to keep cyanide out of the air -- sorry guys, that would create a "patchwork", no can do.

    Something seems wrong with an argument that mutes a law entirely.

    Not sure if I'm making any sense.

    Are we allowed to not make any sense here? :)

     
  • At 4:34 PM, Blogger Jamison Colburn said…

    In response to heathu, I believe the CA approach is to require fleetwide reductions in emissions of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, along with a few technology-based standards on the use of certain refrigerants in the A/C units (which are extremely potent GHGs). For the fuel, it is obviously going to be a de facto improved fuel efficiency requirement (barring some serious innovation in combustion technology I'm not aware of).

    In response to egarber, I think that's exactly right. As I may have mangled in my post, this can't possibly be EPA's reasoning in the actual petition denial. If it is, they won't just go down in flames in the lawsuit. They'll spontaneously combust. Then again, maybe it is their argument. Juliet Eilprin's piece in the Post today quotes EPA lawyers who are already expecting to the lose the case.

     

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