In a highly anticipated but not unexpected 6-3
decision, the Supreme Court ruled on June 30, 2022, that the Obama
administration’s Clean Power Plan exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s authority under the Clean Air
Act. The ruling doesn’t take away the EPA’s power to regulate carbon emissions
from power plants, but it makes federal action harder by requiring the agency
to show that Congress has charged it to act – in an area where Congress has consistently failed to act.
The Clean Power Plan, the policy at the heart of the
ruling, never took effect because the court blocked it in 2016, and the EPA now
plans to develop a new policy instead. Nonetheless, the court went out of its
way to strike it down in this case and reject the agency’s interpretation of
what the Clean Air Act permitted.
Having said what the EPA cannot do, the court gave no guidance on
what the agency can do about this urgent problem. Beyond climate policy, the
ruling poses serious questions about how the court will view other regulatory
programs.
Remaking the electricity sector
The Clean Power Plan would have set targets for each state to
reduce carbon dioxide emissions from electric power plants. Utilities
could meet these targets by improving
efficiency at existing coal-fired power plants and by “generation shifting” –
producing more power from natural gas and renewable sources like wind and
solar.
In the EPA’s view, this sectorwide shift to cleaner
sources represented the “best system of emission reduction,” a statutory term
in the 1970 Clean Air Act. Coal companies and Republican-led states contended
that the changes the agency envisioned exceeded its authority.
Chief Justice John Roberts framed the issue as a “major question,”
a doctrine that the court has invoked in only a handful of cases. It holds that agencies may not regulate on questions of
“vast economic or political significance” without clear directions from Congress.
In the most prominent example, in 2000 the court invalidated the
Food and Drug Administration’s attempt to regulate tobacco.
The ruling held that this had never been part of the agency’s mission, no law
gave the FDA clear authority over tobacco, and Congress had not directed the
FDA to take such action.
The major question doctrine builds on a more established but
increasingly disfavored principle of administrative law, Chevron deference,
which requires courts to defer to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of an
ambiguous statute. In my view, however, the Supreme Court is using the major
question doctrine to take on authority to decide what Congress meant, without
regard to the agency’s expert views or policy judgments.
A
rebuke to EPA
In one sense, the majority opinion is fairly narrow. As Roberts
writes: “[T]he only interpretive question before us, and the only one we
answer, is … whether the ‘best system of emission reduction’ identified by EPA
in the Clean Power Plan was within the authority” of section 111 (d) of the
Clean Air Act.
The majority’s answer was no.
Citing its ruling in a 2014 air pollution case,
the court said that the EPA’s interpretation of “best system of emission
reduction” amounted to a “claim to discover in a long-extant statute an unheralded
power” representing a “transformative expansion in its regulatory authority.”
Essentially, the majority found that the EPA had proposed a sweeping national
makeover of the electric power industry.
Roberts characterized section 111 (d) as a “backwater” provision
of the Clean Air Act that had never been used to adopt a rule as broad and with
such “vast economic and political consequences” as the Clean Power Plan.
Although West Virginia and the others who sued argued that the EPA
had no authority to regulate emissions “beyond the fenceline” of individual
plants, the Court did not constrain the agency that tightly. Roberts also noted
that the EPA’s authority was not limited to plant-specific technological
controls. This suggests that the court is leaving the door open for some
regulation beyond the fenceline.
In a lengthy and acerbic dissent, Justice Elena Kagan, joined by
Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor, argued that the text, context,
history and purpose of the Clean Air Act, as well as common sense and the
scientific imperative of dealing with climate change, supported the EPA’s
position. “The Court appoints itself – instead of Congress or the expert agency
– the decisionmaker on climate policy. I cannot think of many things more
frightening,” Kagan concluded.
Putting
regulators on notice
What can the EPA do now? Its options appear limited. The agency
can require existing coal-fired plants to operate more efficiently, but that
would extend the plants’ useful lives, with negative effects on nearby
communities from pollutants that the plants emit.
Theoretically, the EPA could require every coal-fired power plant
to install carbon capture and storage technology. This is the kind of
technological control that the agency has long required for air pollution
sources. But the costs, especially for retrofitting existing plants, are
prohibitive, and utilities would surely challenge the technology as not
“adequately demonstrated,” as required by section 111 (d).
Another option would be to require retrofitting coal plants to
allow co-firing with natural gas –
burning a mix of these fuels, as some plants already do.
But relying on natural gas brings its own problems, including methane leaks from wells and pipelines. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas and a major driver of short-term climate warming.
Market conditions are shifting electricity production away from
coal and toward cleaner, more cost-effective sources like wind and solar. Indeed,
the Clean Power Plan’s original goal of reducing the electric power sector’s
carbon emissions by 32% below 2005 levels by 2030 has already been exceeded.
But this transition is not moving as quickly as climate science suggests is necessary to avoid catastrophic impacts from warming.
Broader
impacts
Beyond climate policy, I expect this ruling to affect how the EPA
and other regulatory agencies interpret laws that have been on the books for
many years. Regulators may shy away from advancing policies that the court
could view as marked departures from past interpretations and actions with big
economic and political consequences.
For example, the Securities and Exchange Commission recently
proposed a new rule to require publicly traded companies to provide more robust disclosure of the financial risks that climate change poses to
their balance sheets. The agency is also moving to more vigorously police greenwashing by
companies claiming to be committed to a net-zero carbon future.
In my view, it is clear that the U.S. has entered a new era of
administrative law, with an activist court asserting its power to curtail what
it perceives as the excesses of regulatory agencies – and not always waiting
for those agencies to complete their work.
Patrick Parenteau,
Professor of Law, Vermont Law School
The
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