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2010 American Public Power Association Climate Webinar June 14, 2010 Norman W. Fichthorn Joe Stanko Bill Wehrum Cindy Langworthy Bill Brownell Allison Wood Hunton & Williams LLP 2010 Update on EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Rulemakings American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Norman W. Fichthorn Hunton & Williams LLP CAA Regulation – Background 1999: Groups petition EPA for rulemaking on GHG emissions from new motor vehicles 2003: EPA denies petition; determines it lacks GHG regulatory authority under CAA Litigation on 2003 action: Court of Appeals’ 2005 decision and Supreme Court’s 2007 decision in Massachusetts v. EPA 3 CAA Regulation – Massachusetts v. EPA In 2007, Supreme Court rules that: – EPA has authority to regulate – Carbon dioxide and other GHGs are “air pollutants” under CAA – As articulated in its 2003 decision, EPA’s policy reasons for declining to regulate are inadequate – Regulation not mandatory, but EPA response must be consistent with CAA “endangerment” provision 4 CAA Regulation – EPA’s Response 2008: EPA’s Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) – Automobile GHG rules could trigger economy-wide Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) regulation of GHG emissions April 2009: EPA moves toward regulation by proposing “endangerment” finding for public comment May 2009: White House/California/automaker negotiations result in “National Policy” on auto fuel efficiency and GHG emission limits 5 CAA Regulation – Endangerment Finding Dec. 2009 – EPA issues final endangerment finding as predicate to CAA auto regulation Finds 6 GHGs in the global atmosphere (CO2, methane, nitrous oxide, HFCs, PFCs, SF6) endanger public health and welfare in U.S. Finds GHG emissions from new vehicles in U.S. “contribute” to the endangerment 6 CAA Regulation – Motor Vehicle Rules Sept. 2009 – EPA proposes GHG emission limits for vehicles under CAA, in conjunction with similar DOT fuel efficiency standards April 1, 2010 – Final vehicle GHG rules signed May 7, 2010 – Published in Federal Register Implications for stationary source regulation – PSD Interpretive Memorandum rule (4/2/2010) – “Tailoring” rule (6/3/2010) 7 CAA Regulation - PSD for GHGs April 2, 2010: EPA publishes final rule on reconsideration of the PSD Interpretive Memorandum – Air pollutant is covered by PSD program when the pollutant becomes “subject to regulation” under Clean Air Act – The air pollutant becomes “subject to regulation” only when “subject to either a provision in the CAA or regulation adopted by EPA under the CAA that requires actual control of emissions of that pollutant” 8 PSD for GHGs (cont’d) PSD Interpretive Memorandum Rule (cont’d) – PSD requirements apply to a newly regulated air pollutant when “a regulatory requirement to control emissions of that pollutant ‘takes effect’” – EPA will allow no “grandfathering” of PSD permit applications that are pending at the time GHGs become subject to PSD on January 2, 2011 9 PSD for GHGs (cont’d) PSD Interpretive Memorandum Rule (cont’d) – Title V will apply in a similar fashion – EPA will implement these interpretations immediately in areas subject to federal PSD rules – EPA will allow these interpretations to be implemented without the need for rule changes or further SIP approval in SIP-approved states with compatible regulatory language 10 PSD for GHGs (cont’d) What would it mean to regulate GHGs under the PSD permit program, as EPA has “traditionally” implemented the program? – Statutory 100/250 tons-per-year major source thresholds – Statutory default significance threshold of “zero” – By EPA’s estimates: – PSD applicability would increase from 300 to 41,000 permits/yr – Title V applicability would increase from 14,000 to 6.1 million 11 PSD for GHGs – Tailoring Proposal October 2009: EPA proposes to temporarily “tailor” the applicability of PSD and Title V to GHGs. – Proposed PSD/Title V major source thresholds of 25,000 tpy CO2e – Proposed PSD significance threshold of 10,000 to 25,000 tpy CO2e – Grounded in “absurd results” and “administrative necessity” – Would apply directly in areas subject to federal control and in SIP-approved states based on retroactive SIP approvals 12 PSD/Title V Tailoring Proposal (cont’d) – Strong reaction from Congress, States and permitting authorities – EPA underestimated number of permits required and corresponding administrative burdens – Feb./Mar. 2010: Administrator Jackson indicates tentative EPA decision to raise GHG major source threshold 13 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule – Issued May 13, 2010 and published June 3, 2010 – Codifies PSD Interpretive Memorandum Rule, “subject to regulation,” and PSD applicability dates – PSD applies as of Jan. 2, 2011 – Treats all 6 GHGs as a single pollutant – Focus nearly exclusively on impacts on smaller sources, state and local permitting authorities – Assumes large sources will be subject to PSD for GHGs – Major issue for sources is Best Available Control Technology (“BACT”) 14 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Phase 1: – Jan. 2, 2011 through June 30, 2011 – Only a source that, when newly constructed or modified, will emit at least 75,000 tons/year CO2e and that would trigger PSD or Title V (or is an existing major source) for a non-GHG pollutant would be subject to PSD and Title V for GHGs – Intended to cover largest “anyway” PSD sources, e.g., EGUs 15 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Phase 2: – July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2013 – PSD and Title V apply to new GHG sources – For new construction, source must emit at least 100,000 tons/yr CO2e – For modifications at any existing major facility, GHG emissions must increase by at least 75,000 tons/yr CO2e to trigger PSD for GHGs – For Title V, sources must emit at least 100,000 tons/yr CO2e 16 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Phase 3: – EPA will issue supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking in 2011 -- to conclude no later than July 1, 2012 -- to explore phasing in smaller sources, beginning July 1, 2013 – An “enforceable commitment” – Rulemaking “may discuss whether certain smaller sources can be permanently excluded from permitting” 17 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Phase 3 (cont’d): – EPA will look at streamlining options to reduce permitting burden on smaller sources – E.g., special definition of “potential to emit” (“PTE”) for various sources, presumptive BACT, general permits/permits by rule – No permitting requirements for sources below 50,000 tons/yr CO2e before April 30, 2016 – Including modifications with net increases below 50,000 tons/yr 18 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Other Issues: – By April 30, 2015, EPA is to complete a study on remaining GHG permitting burdens on smaller sources – Another “enforceable commitment” – Based on study, EPA will complete a rule by April 30, 2016 to address smaller sources if necessary but may permanently exclude them – Emissions measured in short tons, not (as in GHG Reporting Rule) metric tons 19 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Other Issues (cont’d): – EPA to issue by end of 2010 supporting guidance to assist permitting authorities, including guidance on BACT requirements – Guidance would first cover source categories that emit GHGs at levels exceeding the regulatory thresholds – No grandfathering, but: – Final permits issued before Jan. 2, 2011 are not reopened even if construction begins after that date, nor does construction continuing after that date require PSD for GHGs. – Sources that are not subject to PSD until Phase 2 do not need GHG permits to continue construction begun before July 1, 2011, but would need a permit if construction begins after that date 20 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Other Issues (cont’d) “Initial screen” based on statutory mass thresholds: – PSD/Title V only apply where PTE in GHGs exceeds both regulatory threshold in CO2e and statutory threshold on mass basis – For modifications, a source must exceed regulatory threshold on a CO2e basis and must also result in a net mass increase of constituent gases combined Current rules on fugitive emissions continue to apply 21 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Asserted Legal Bases: – “Absurd results” – “Administrative necessity” – “One-step-at-a-time” – CAA Section 301(a)(1) – EPA to prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry out functions under the Act 22 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) State Responsibilities – EPA decides to define “subject to regulation” and incorporates new thresholds within the definition – EPA expects many state, local and tribal area programs with identical or similar “open-ended” programs to immediately implement EPA approach without rule or statutory change simply by interpreting “subject to regulation” for PSD/Title V applicability in the same way EPA does in this rule 23 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) State Responsibilities (cont’d) – EPA asks permitting authorities to notify EPA by Aug. 2, 2010 of their intentions with regard to implementing Tailoring Rule for PSD and Title V (e.g., interpretation, rulemaking, legislation) – If state cannot act by Jan. 2, 2011, EPA will then act to “narrow” federal approval of state program before that date – Where states do not have authority to issue permits, EPA may do so directly – States still can use lower thresholds if they prove adequate permitting resources to do so 24 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Title V Issues – Phase 1 75,000 ton threshold doesn’t apply – “Anyway” Title V sources must apply any Title V requirements to GHG emissions – If a permit is pending, it must be supplemented – New sources (beginning July 1, 2011) generally have one year to apply – EPA will consider the issue of applicability of Title V to GHG sources without applicable requirements (“empty permits”) in future steps 25 Final PSD/Title V Tailoring Rule (cont’d) Title V Issues (cont’d) – Fees: – EPA does not amend Title V fee regulations, require formal fee adequacy demonstration at this time, or require change in presumptive minimum fee – Authorities should review resource needs and raise fees if needed – EPA will monitor impacts, conduct fee audits 26 CAA Regulation – Litigation Pending legal challenges to all four rules, as well as administrative petitions for reconsideration filed with EPA Similar alignments with petitioner states, business groups and companies vs. states and environmental organizations supporting EPA Consolidation of cases? Motions to stay rules? Motions to hold litigation in abeyance? 27 CAA Regulation – Litigation (cont’d) Pending challenges to endangerment finding Filed against EPA by 3 states (Texas, Virginia, Alabama), numerous business groups and companies, public interest groups; intervenors opposing EPA include 14 additional states 18 states, several environmental groups filed motions to intervene in support of EPA Consolidated; EPA has moved for abeyance 28 29 CAA Regulation – Litigation (cont’d) Vehicle Rule: cases already filed on vehicle rule from some of the same petitioners – More are likely by July 6, 2010 deadline States, auto manufacturer associations, and environmental groups move to intervene to defend rule – But Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers leaves open possibility of supporting relief for stationary sources 30 CAA Regulation – Litigation (cont’d) PSD Interpretive Rule challenged – Many of the same petitioners, including joint filing by 8 States (TX, AL, SC, SD, NE, ND, VA, MS) – One environmental group (Center for Biological Diversity) also filed a challenge – Intervention motions likely on both sides Petition for administrative reconsideration and stay filed by Utility Air Regulatory Group – Date of Applicability: January 2, 2011 – No “Grandfathering” Provision Tailoring Rule likely to face many similar challenges by August 2, 2010 – Two petitions for review already filed 31 CAA Regulation – What’s Down the Road? New source performance standards – and existing-source standards – for electric generators and other major industries National ambient air quality standards? – Dec. 2009 petition to EPA by CBD and 350.org – Problems with this approach, and EPA’s reaction What – if anything – will Congress do? 32 2010 Legislative Overview: Carper-Alexander 3P Bill American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Joe Stanko Hunton & Williams LLP 2010 The Climate Change Work Group American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Bill Wehrum Hunton & Williams LLP The “Climate Change Work Group” Created by EPA in October 2009 under the auspices of the Clean Air Act Advisory Committee – Permits, New Source Review, and Toxics Subcommittee “The charge to the Climate Change (CC) Work Group is to discuss and identify the major issues and potential barriers to implementing the PSD Program under the CAA for greenhouse gases. The Work Group should focus on the BACT requirement, including information and guidance that would be useful for EPA to provide concerning the technical, economic, and environmental performance characteristics of potential BACT options. In addition, the Work Group should identify and discuss approaches to enable state and local permitting authorities to apply the BACT criteria in a consistent, practical and efficient manner.” 35 The “Climate Change Work Group” (cont’d) Original Plan – A draft interim (3-month) and draft final (6-month) written report is to be delivered and deliberated upon by the CAAAC for submission to the US EPA. – The draft interim report should be completed on or before December 31, 2009, be approximately ten pages (or less) and identify technical, economic, environmental and other information that would be useful to enable sources and permitting authorities to implement BACT for GHGs. – The draft final report is due on or before March 30, 2010, should also be approximately ten pages (or less) and include recommendations for EPA to address the issues and potential barriers associated with the implementation of BACT for GHGs. 36 The “Climate Change Work Group” (cont’d) Actual Outcomes – Broad range of views and disagreement among members of Task Force led to a different phasing of its work: – Phase I: Apply BACT for GHGs in the same manner as conventional pollutants? – Phase II: Craft new approach for BACT for GHGs, even if inconsistent with “traditional” BACT? – Interim Phase I Report, issued January 25, 2010, discusses issues related to BACT assuming current BACT principles apply. – Phase II Report, to be issued by March 31, 2010, would address “Work Group member proposals regarding possible alternative or supplementary approaches to applying” PSD to GHG sources. 37 The “Climate Change Work Group” (cont’d) Who is on the work group? – The usual suspects, including representatives from: – Industry – State and Local Agencies – NGOs Why did EPA form this group? – EPA reportedly already was working on a GHG BACT guidance document before the work group was formed. – The Agency likely hoped to achieve “stakeholder” consensus on key issues to reduce possible controversy on their guidance. 38 Organization of the Phase I Effort The Work Group quickly divided into four issue groups, roughly corresponding to the BACT determination process: – Defining the Source – Technical Feasibility – Cost, Energy, and Environmental Factors – Information and Data Needs The Interim Phase I Report discusses these four issues. There is no consensus on any substantial point. 39 Interim Phase I Report Defining the Source What is the source or unit to which the BACT analysis applies? – Consensus: EPA should continue to require BACT for new emissions units and existing units that undergo a physical or operational change. – Alternative non-consensus views: – Look to non-emitting portions of the process and to separate emissions units not undergoing a physical or operational change. – No expansion of BACT beyond new or changed emissions units 40 Interim Phase I Report Defining the Source (cont’d) At what point do potentially available control options redefine a source? – Consensus: Court and EAB decisions have used terms such as the applicant’s “fundamental business purpose” and a project’s “basic design.” EPA should address their meaning. – Alternative non-consensus views: – BACT cannot redefine or change the fundamental type of project proposed by the applicant. – BACT is limited only by the fundamental business purpose of the facility (e.g., electricity production). “Basic design” reflects only design choices essential to provide the product or service. 41 Interim Phase I Report Technical Feasibility Criteria for determining feasible control technologies – “Technically feasible”: Consensus on 1990 Draft Manual approach; non-consensus on role and value of commercial guarantees. – “Demonstrated in practice”: Consensus on 1990 Draft Manual approach. – Technology transfer: Consensus on 1990 Draft Manual approach. – Innovative technology: General consensus; not much previous use. – CCS: Consensus on broad principles; non-consensus on location issues, degree of use, and similarity – Efficiency: Consensus about potential relevance and difficulties of implementation; non-consensus reflects “defining the source” disagreements – Clean fuels: Consensus that EPA should provide guidance; non-consensus reflects “defining the source” disagreements 42 Interim Phase I Report Technical Feasibility (cont’d) What should be considered in deciding if CCS is technically feasible? – Consensus: The process for capturing CO2 must be evaluated, as well as the ability to transport the CO2 and the availability of a suitable storage site. – Nonconsensus: Location, degree of use, and similarity. How to decide if an energy efficiency threshold is technically feasible for a process? – A factor in evaluating BACT alternatives. – A BACT limitation in and of itself. – Form of the limit? Degradation over time? Site characteristics (e.g., altitude). – Emissions unit vs. other parts of the facility vs. off-site considerations. 43 Interim Phase I Report Criteria for Eliminating Technologies Environmental Impacts – Consensus: – Consider impact of GHG controls on conventional pollutant emissions and NAAQS compliance and optimize emission reductions – Other environmental factors should be considered (water; solid waste; environmental justice; etc.) – Non-consensus – Whether a GHG BACT alternative can be set aside in “step 1” when that alternative would increase criteria pollutant emissions. 44 Interim Phase I Report Criteria for Eliminating Technologies (cont’d) Energy Impacts – Consensus: – “[E]nergy efficiency measures are important. … ‘Where’ the energy efficiency consideration take place (i.e., onsite versus offsite) and ‘how’ (i.e., in the steps of the top-down BACT process of BACT) are important questions.” – Alternative non-consensus views: – Use BACT process to “provide incentives” for energy efficiency – Streamline BACT process because process itself can 45 discourage efficiency projects. Interim Phase I Report Criteria for Eliminating Technologies (cont’d) Economic Impacts – Consensus: – Use CO2e as basis. – $/ton removed will be much lower for GHGs than other pollutants because of larger quantities – Alternative non-consensus views: – $3-$15/ton versus $30-$150/ton (CCS is driver) – Other members want EPA to provide guidance on the range of cost effectiveness values based on the status of various technologies. 46 Interim Phase I Report Needs of States and Stakeholders This work group was led by the states—Mostly consensus on: Timely communication of GHG BACT determinations and ready availability of relevant information. Guidance needed from EPA in key areas. EPA should take steps to expedite the BACT process: – Consensus: Use existing BACT process; develop guidance; inventory of sources. – Non-consensus: Presumptive BACT; whether EPA should be encouraged to issue NSPSs for GHGs to help guide GHG BACT determinations. Netting: guidance needed 47 Extensive training is needed. Interim Phase I Report “Other Issues” Biomass – Consensus: EPA should decide what policy and legal consequences might flow from carbon neutrality – Alternative non-consensus views: – Biomass always carbon-neutral and should be excluded from PSD – Full life-cycle must be assessed on a case-by-case basis to determine carbon neutrality Setting permit conditions based on future availability – No area of consensus: unlawful? 48 Phase II Report On April 9, Gina McCarthy issued a letter responding to the Phase I report: – “actively working with states on technical information and data needs” – “developing sector based GHG control measures white papers” – “gearing up to respond to your questions on BACT policy issues for GHGs” – Move ahead with Phase II … 49 Phase II Report (cont’d) Scope of Phase II – How can the BACT process be used to encourage the development of energy efficient processes and technologies. – How can the development and permitting of innovative emissions reduction measures, including the promotion of inherently efficient and lower emitting processes and practices for GHGs, be encouraged? How can the Innovative Technology waiver be used or changed to better promote technology development and application? Report by July 16 50 2010 NO2 Air Quality Standards & Permitting American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Cindy Langworthy Hunton & Williams LLP NO2 Air Quality Standards & Permitting EPA adopted a new 1-hour National Ambient Air Quality Standard (“NAAQS”) for nitrogen dioxide (“NO2”) – Limits the average 98th percentile daily maximum 1-hour NO2 to 100 parts per billion Has the potential to interfere with permitting new natural gas plants 52 NO2 Air Quality Standards & Permitting (cont’d) As of April 12, 2010, all PSD permit applications must address this NO2 NAAQS – No exemption for applications completed before that date – No exemption based on insignificant impact of permitted project 53 NO2 Air Quality Standards & Permitting (cont’d) Must show by modeling that the permitted project and nearby sources will not cause or contribute to a violation of the 1-hour NAAQS EPA’s preferred model for PSD modeling – AERMOD – is overly conservative – Predicts NAAQS violations that evidence suggests are not real 54 Illustrative Modeling Study Typical natural gas-fired combustion turbine plant – 4 approaches to conversion of NOx to NO2 – – – – – 100% NOx/NO2 conversion at all distances 75% conversion at all distances Ozone-Limiting Method Plume Volume Molar Ratio Method 2 approaches to background NO2 – Uniform or hourly 55 Natural Gas-Fired Plant Layout Peak 1-hr impact 56 Modeling Results for Gas-Fired Power Plant Modeled Concentrations (mg/m3) Max Receptor Source Only Background Source + Background NAAQS (mg/m3) x y Using a single NO2 background value 100% Conversion; Default Method 75% Conversion; Default Method 571.90 428.93 88.62 88.62 660.52 517.55 188.1 188.1 419.24 419.24 -2.44 -2.44 OLM Method using 10% In-Stack Ratio 186.71 88.62 275.33 188.1 419.24 -2.44 OLM Method using 5% In-Stack Ratio 165.44 88.62 254.06 188.1 255.80 361.12 OLM Method using 1% In-Stack Ratio 155.04 88.62 243.66 188.1 205.80 361.12 PVMRM Method using 10% In-Stack Ratio 203.41 88.62 292.03 188.1 419.24 -2.44 PVMRM Method using 5% In-Stack Ratio PVMRM Method using 1% In-Stack Ratio 177.72 157.06 88.62 88.62 266.34 245.68 188.1 188.1 419.24 419.24 -2.44 -2.44 AERMOD NO2 Modeling Method 57 Modeling Results for Gas-Fired Power Plant Modeled Concentrations (mg/m3) Max Receptor Source Only Background Source + Background NAAQS (mg/m3) x y 100% Conversion; Default Method 576.05 35.93 611.98 188.1 419.24 -2.44 75% Conversion; Default Method 436.73 30.85 467.58 188.1 419.24 -2.44 OLM Method using 10% In-Stack Ratio 178.85 49.36 228.21 188.1 419.24 -2.44 OLM Method using 5% In-Stack Ratio 160.27 53.05 213.32 188.1 255.80 361.12 OLM Method using 1% In-Stack Ratio 149.87 53.58 203.45 188.1 255.80 361.12 PVMRM Method using 10% In-Stack Ratio 206.77 37.95 244.72 188.1 419.24 -2.44 PVMRM Method using 5% In-Stack Ratio 168.58 51.03 219.61 188.1 419.24 -2.44 PVMRM Method using 1% In-Stack Ratio 154.41 44.62 199.03 188.1 419.24 -2.44 AERMOD NO2 Modeling Method Using hourly NO2 background data 58 Gas Plant Permitting Considerations Highest impact is attributable to emergency diesel generators – Worst impacts at fence line during the night – Operating generators only at night might reduce modeled impact Lowest impacts with Plume Volume Molar Ratio Hourly NO2 background reduces impacts EPA issuance of Significant Impact Level may help by limiting modeling requirements 59 2010 Proposed CEQ Guidance on Consideration of Climate Change in EIS / EAs American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Bill Brownell Hunton & Williams LLP Proposed CEQ Guidance on Consideration of Climate Change in EIS/EAs Starting point: “It is now well-established that rising GHG emissions are significantly affecting the earth’s climate.” 61 Proposed CEQ Guidance on Consideration of Climate Change in EIS/EAs (cont’d) Guidance: 25,000 tpy of CO2 emissions is “a useful presumptive threshold for discussion and disclosure of GHG emissions.” 62 Proposed CEQ Guidance on Consideration of Climate Change in EIS/EAs (cont’d) Mitigation: “When a proposed action meets an applicable threshold for quantification and reporting … the [action] agency should also consider mitigation measures and reasonable alternatives” to mitigate GHG emissions Comments due May 24, 2010 63 Endangered Species Act and Climate Change Consideration of “climate-dependent” species for listing Consequences of listing: Prohibition of “take” “Consultation” on federal actions 64 Endangered Species Act and Climate Change (cont’d) Climate change and “causation” (polar bear listing): “The best scientific information available has not yet established a causal connection between specific sources and locations of emissions and specific impacts to polar bears or their habitat.” 65 2010 Katrina to Kivalina: Climate Change Nuisance Litigation American Public Power Association Webinar June 14, 2010 Allison Wood Hunton & Williams LLP Climate Change Nuisance Suits Connecticut v. American Electric Power – Filed June 2004 Comer v. Murphy Oil USA Co. – Filed September 2005 – Climate change nuisance allegations added in April 2006 California v. General Motors – Filed September 2006 Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil – Filed February 2008 67 Nuisance? These suits all allege CO2 emissions from a variety of business activities constitute a public and private nuisance. – Public nuisance = an unreasonable interference with a right common to the general public – Private nuisance = a nontrespassory invasion of another’s interest in the private use and enjoyment of land – Typical nuisance: – – – – Hog farms Explosives “Bawdy houses” Water pollution 68 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today June 2004: Connecticut, et al. v. American Electric Power Co., et al., and Open Space Institute, Inc., et al. v. American Electric Power Co., et al. – Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York – – – – against 5 electric utility companies Lead case filed by 8 states (CT, NY, NJ, VT, RI, CA, WI, IA) and New York City. Second companion case filed by 3 land trust and environmental groups. Suits allege CO2 emissions from those 5 utilities’ electric generating facilities constitute a public and private nuisance under federal common law. No monetary damages sought – injunctive relief of a cap on defendants’ CO2 emissions and required reductions for at least a 69 decade The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today September 2004: Defendants file motions to dismiss – Suits circumvent and undermine policies set by Congress and President to address climate change; violation of separation of powers principles. – No federal common law of nuisance – Nuisance law is displaced by federal law. – Congress and President have chosen to establish policy of research and international negotiations – No standing to bring suit February 2005: Briefing complete on motions to dismiss July 2005: Oral argument on motions to dismiss 70 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today August 2005: Hurricane Katrina occurs September 20, 2005: Comer v. Murphy Oil, USA filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi – The Hurricane Katrina case – Asks for class action status – Original complaint contains two classes of defendants: – “Insurance Defendant Class” – “Oil Company Defendant Class” – Not a climate change or a nuisance case at this point 71 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today September 22, 2005: U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York grants motions to dismiss in Connecticut v. AEP on grounds that it raised non-justiciable political questions (political question doctrine) – Connecticut v. AEP, 406 F. Supp. 2d 265 (S.D.N.Y. 2005). – “Cases presenting political questions are consigned to the political branches that are accountable to the People, not to the Judiciary, and the Judiciary is without power to resolve them. This is one of those cases.” – Court rejected plaintiffs’ claim that this was “a simple nuisance claim of the kind courts have adjudicated in the past,” finding that no previous “pollution-as-public-nuisance” case “touched on so many areas of national and international policy.” September 2005: Plaintiffs file appeal in the Second Circuit March 2006: Briefing complete in the Second Circuit 72 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today April 2006: Plaintiffs file Third Amended Complaint in Comer. – Case now becomes a climate change nuisance suit – “Oil Company Defendants” – 8 oil/refinery companies, including American Petroleum Institute – “Coal Company Defendants” – 21 electric utility companies – 10 coal companies – “Chemical Company Defendants” – 3 chemical manufacturing companies and the American Chemistry Council – Diversity jurisdiction not federal question – state law claims 73 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Third Amended Complaint in Comer (continued): – Claims against all defendants in Comer: – Defendants’ CO2 emissions have “substantially increased in frequency and intensity of [sic] storms known as hurricanes; effectively doubling the frequency of category four and five hurricanes over the past thirty years.” – Defendants’ CO2 emissions are alleged to be a proximate and direct cause of an increase in the destructive capacity of Hurricane Katrina. 74 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Third Amended Complaint in Comer (continued): – Causes of action against all defendants: – – – – Public and private nuisance Trespass Negligence Fraudulent misrepresentation and concealment – Plaintiffs also allege unjust enrichment and civil conspiracy/aiding and abetting claims against Oil Company Defendants. – Monetary damages sought. – Loss of property and loss of use and enjoyment of property – Loss of business and/or income – Clean-up expenses (past, present, future) 75 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Third Amended Complaint in Comer (continued): – Damages sought (continued): – – – – – Disruption of the normal course of their lives Loss of loved ones Mental anguish and emotional distress Personal injury Litigation fees and court costs – Also seek punitive damages from defendants “for their conduct which amounts to willful indifference, extreme recklessness, gross negligence and an illegal conspiracy to prevent dissemination of scientific information regarding the specific hazards created by Global Warming.” 76 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today June 2006: Oral argument takes place in the Second Circuit in Connecticut v. AEP – Panel: Judges Sotomayor, Hall, McLaughlin September 2006: Motions To Dismiss filed by defendants in Comer – Barred by the political question doctrine (cite Connecticut v. AEP) – Plaintiffs lack standing – Preemption September 2006: California v. General Motors filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California – Filed September 2006 against six automobile manufacturers (GM, Toyota, Ford, Honda, Daimler Chrysler, Nissan) by California Attorney General – Seeks monetary damages for creating and contributing to the public nuisance of global warming. 77 – Relates to California’s automobile emission standards for GHGs The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today December 15, 2006: Automobile defendants file motions to dismiss in California v. General Motors – – – – Political question doctrine Standing Preemption Other defenses related to automobile industry December 19, 2006: Plaintiffs in Comer v. Murphy Oil file a motion for leave to file a Fourth Amended Complaint (right after they file oppositions to motions to dismiss) and lodge proposed Fourth Amended Complaint with court. – Proposed Fourth Amended Complaint in Comer would add over 100 new defendants to case – Changes basis of jurisdiction to federal question (federal common law) – Adds strict liability claim – Extends civil conspiracy claims to all defendants not just to oil companies 78 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today January 2007: Briefing completed on motions to dismiss in Comer v. Murphy Oil January 2007: Defendants oppose motion to amend complaint in Comer – Defendants argue plaintiffs have not given any explanation of undue delay in adding numerous new parties or for change in jurisdictional basis – Would require briefing to be repeated – Defendants ask court to rule on pending motions to dismiss, which, if granted on threshold jurisdictional issues, would resolve case under either complaint. April 2, 2007: Supreme Court decides Massachusetts v. EPA April 2007: Briefing completed on motions to dismiss in California v. General Motors 79 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today June 2007: Parties in Connecticut v. AEP ordered to file supplemental briefs on effect on case, if any, of Supreme Court’s decision in Massachusetts v. EPA. Briefs filed in early July 2007. August 31, 2007: Oral argument in Comer v. Murphy Oil and dismissal of case – Judge Guirola rules from the bench following the oral argument, granting the motions to dismiss on two grounds: – – – – Case barred by the political question doctrine Plaintiffs lack standing Only a transcript, no published opinion With regard to standing, Judge Guirola stated, “I do not think that under our system of jurisprudence [global warming] is attributable or traceable to these individual defendants but is instead . . . attributable to a larger group that are not before this Court, not only within this nation but outside of our jurisdictional boundaries as well.” (Transcript at 36) 80 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Dismissal of Comer (continued): – With regard to the political question doctrine, Judge Guirola stated that the debate over what to do to address global warming “is a legitimate debate. It is an important debate, but it is a debate which simply has no place in the Court, until such time as Congress enacts legislation which sets appropriate standards by which this Court can measure conduct, whether it be reasonable or unreasonable. . . .” (Transcript at 39) – Plaintiffs “are asking this Court to do . . . what Baker versus Carr told me not to do, and that is to balance economic, environmental, foreign policy, and national security interest[s] and make an initial policy determination of a kind which is clearly nonjudicial. Adjudication of the plaintiffs’ claims in this case would necessitate the formulation of standards dictating, for example, the amount of greenhouse gas emissions that would be excessive and the scientific and policy reasons behind those standards.” (Transcript at 40) 81 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today September 2007: Plaintiffs appeal Comer to the Fifth Circuit. September 17, 2007: Judge Jenkins grants the motions to dismiss in California v. General Motors (no oral argument) – California v. General Motors Corp., No. C06-05755 MJJ, 2007 WL 2726871 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 17, 2007). Case found to be barred on the basis of the political question doctrine. – Cited Connecticut v. AEP decision – Court found that resolution of claim would require it to make initial policy determinations regarding how to address climate change, which is properly province of political branches. – Court also found claims implicated political branches’ powers over interstate commerce and foreign policy. 82 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today October 2007: California v. General Motors appealed to the Ninth Circuit January 2008: Briefing complete in Comer v. Murphy Oil in Fifth Circuit February 2008: Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California by City of Kivalina, Alaska, and the Native Village of Kivalina, a Native American Eskimo tribe – Defendants are 23 energy companies: oil companies, electric utilities, and one coal company 83 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Native Village of Kivalina Complaint (continued): – Defendants’ emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly CO2, are responsible for nuisance of global warming. – Increased temperatures are alleged to have melted winter sea ice adjacent to Village, leaving it more vulnerable to storms and erosion – Villagers seek costs of relocation ($95 to $400 million) – Federal question jurisdiction – federal common law – Four legal theories: – – – – Public nuisance Private nuisance Civil conspiracy (against only 8 of the defendants) Concert of action 84 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today May 2008: Briefing complete in California v. General Motors June 2008: Defendants file motions to dismiss in Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil – Political question doctrine – Standing – No federal common law of nuisance – Displacement of federal common law 85 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today August 6, 2008: Comer argued in Fifth Circuit – Only two judges on panel (Judge Garza and Judge Dennis). Third judge (Judge Minaldi sitting by designation) had death in family and could not be present. – Two weeks later, learned one judge had recused from the case and would need to be reargued. November 3, 2008: Comer reargued in Fifth Circuit – Panel: Judges Davis, Dennis, and Stewart November 2008: Briefing complete on motions to dismiss in Native Village of Kivalina (N.D. Cal.) 86 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today March 10, 2009: California v. General Motors scheduled for oral argument this day in Ninth Circuit; California seeks extension, which is granted. May 8, 2009: California v. General Motors rescheduled for oral argument this day. California seeks six month continuance of case, which is granted. May 19, 2009: Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil scheduled for oral argument in N.D. California. Court decides not to hold argument days before hearing. June 19, 2009: California voluntarily dismisses appeal of California v. General Motors – preserves precedent in N.D. Cal. 87 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today September 21, 2009: Second Circuit finally rules on case – over three years after oral argument – Opinion by Judges Hall and McLaughlin (Justice Sotomayor has joined the Supreme Court weeks before) – Panel reverses the district court: Connecticut v. American Electric Power, 583 F.3d 309 (2d Cir. 2009). – Political question does not bar the case – If plaintiffs were “ask[ing] the court to fashion a comprehensive and far-reaching solution to global climate change . . . [that would] arguably fall within the purview of the political branches.” – This case, however, “does not involve assessing and balancing the kind of broad interests that a legislature or President might consider in formulating a national emissions policy.” 88 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Second Circuit decision in Connecticut v. AEP (continued): – Plaintiffs have standing to bring their claims. – “The future injuries complained of . . . are already in process as a result of the ongoing emissions by Defendants that contribute to increasing temperatures.” – “[A] plaintiff must merely show that a defendant discharges a pollutant that . . . contributes to the kinds of injuries alleged.” – A federal common law of nuisance exists. – Allegations regarding the impacts of “global warming . . . suffice to allege an ‘unreasonable interference’ with ‘public rights’ within the meaning of” the Restatement of Torts. – While “[t]he Supreme Court . . . has not explicitly addressed whether private parties may bring such a [public] nuisance action” under federal common law, that right is implicit in a footnote of an old Supreme Court decision (Milwaukee I). 89 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Second Circuit decision in Connecticut v. AEP (continued): – Plaintiffs’ claims are not displaced at this time. – “Until EPA completes the [CAA] rulemaking process, we cannot speculate” about whether the CAA displaces federal common law. October 15, 2009: Judge Armstrong grants motions to dismiss Native Village of Kivalina – Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil, 663 F. Supp. 2d 863 (N.D. Cal. 2009). – Finds plaintiffs lack standing to bring their claims and that case is barred by the political question doctrine. – Expressly addresses Second Circuit’s decision in Connecticut and rejects it’s reasoning: “This Court is not so sanguine.” 90 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today District Court’s decision in Kivalina (continued): – Political question doctrine: – Plaintiffs ignore that their nuisance claim requires “the factfinder… [to] balance the utility and benefit of the alleged nuisance against the harm caused . . . and otherwise fail to articulate any particular judicially discoverable or manageable standards that would guide a factfinder in rendering a decision that is principled, rational, and based up on reasoned distinctions.” – Standing: – “[T]he pleadings make clear that there is no realistic possibility of tracing any particular alleged effect of global warming to any particular emissions by any specific person, entity, [or] group at any particular point in time.” 91 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today October 16, 2009: Fifth Circuit issues its opinion in Comer v. Murphy Oil partially reversing the district court. – Comer v. Murphy Oil, 585 F.3d 855 (5th Cir. 2009). – Plaintiffs have standing to bring nuisance, trespass, and negligence claims. – “[D]efendants’ main contentions are similar to those recently rejected by the Supreme Court in Massachusetts.” – The “fairly traceable” standard requires only that defendants’ emissions “contribute to, rather than . . . materially cause . . . global warming.” – Plaintiffs lack standing to bring unjust enrichment, civil conspiracy, and fraudulent misrepresentation claims. – “The source of the plaintiffs’ second set of grievances is the alleged failure of the government to properly regulate. . . . Such a generalized grievance is better left to the representative branches.” 92 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today Fifth Circuit’s opinion in Comer v. Murphy Oil (continued): – Plaintiffs’ claims are not barred by the political question doctrine. – “Because [plaintiffs’] … claims do not present any specific question that is exclusively committed by law to the discretion of the legislative or executive branch, we hold that they are justiciable.” – “[I[f a party … is unable to identify a constitutional provision or federal law that arguably commits a material issue … exclusively to a political branch … the motion should be denied without applying the Baker formulations.” – Judge Davis files concurrence – he would have dismissed based on proximate cause. November 2009: Plaintiffs file appeal of Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil in Ninth Circuit. November 5, 2009: Petition for panel rehearing and for rehearing en banc filed in the Second Circuit in Connecticut November 30, 2009: Petitions for rehearing en banc filed in the Fifth Circuit in Comer v. Murphy Oil. 93 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today December 2, 2009: Fifth Circuit directs plaintiffs to file a response to the petition for rehearing en banc in Comer v. Murphy Oil USA. February 26, 2010: Fifth Circuit grants petition for rehearing en banc in Comer v. Murphy Oil, __ F.3d __, 2010 WL 685796 (5th Cir. Feb. 26, 2010). – Nine judges (including three on original panel) to sit for rehearing en banc (seven judges recused). – Panel decision has been vacated. – Oral argument week of May 24, 2010 March 5, 2010: Second Circuit denies petition for rehearing and petition for rehearing en banc. Petitions for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court due in July. March 11, 2010: Plaintiffs file opening briefs in Ninth Circuit in Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil; briefing likely to conclude in September. 94 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today March 31, 2010: Plaintiffs file brief for en banc rehearing in Comer April 30, 2010: Defendants file briefs for en banc rehearing in Comer April 30, 2010: Fifth Circuit issues letter in Comer stating that “new circumstances have arisen” and a judge has had to recuse leaving the court without a quorum and cancelling the oral argument. 95 The Climate Change Tort Suits: 2004 to Today May 6, 2010: Fifth Circuit orders letter briefs to be filed in Comer addressing quorum issue (briefs filed on May 12 and 17) May 28, 2010: Fifth Circuit dismisses appeal finding it has no quorum to hear the case; effect is affirmance of district court dismissal of the case. 96 Final Observations on Climate Change Nuisance Cases Every district court to address these types of cases has dismissed the case based on the political question doctrine – District court judges – who would be the person to actually hear the case – recognize the fact that there are no judicially manageable standards here to guide them and that they would be, in effect, creating public policy on global warming. Two of the four district courts have also dismissed based on standing. Two Courts of Appeals have found that the political question doctrine does not bar the cases and that plaintiffs have standing to bring these cases, but the Fifth Circuit’s decision has been vacated and the appeal dismissed. 97 Final Observations on Climate Change Nuisance Cases Split in the Circuits? Even if these cases are reversed, this is only the motion to dismiss stage. None of the courts, except the Second Circuit, have ruled on the displacement of federal common law issue, and even the Second Circuit acknowledged that displacement was a possibility in the future. Preemption possibility: Members of Congress are discussing preempting these types of suits in any climate legislation, and Utah has already preempted them. 98