California State Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Standards; Advanced Clean Car Program; Reconsideration of a Previous Withdrawal of a Waiver of Preemption; Opportunity for Public Hearing and Public Comment, 22421-22430 [2021-08826]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 80 / Wednesday, April 28, 2021 / Notices
22421
TABLE—REGISTRATION REVIEW INTERIM DECISIONS BEING ISSUED—Continued
Registration review case name and No.
Docket ID No.
Chemical review manager and contact information
Streptomyces lydicus strain WYEC 108; Case Number
6088.
Triallate; Case Number 2695 ...........................................
Triphenyltin hydroxide (TPTH) aka fentin hydroxide;
Case Number 0099.
Triticonazole; Case Number 7036 ....................................
EPA–HQ–OPP–2014–0608
EPA–HQ–OPP–2014–0573
EPA–HQ–OPP–2012–0413
Monica Thapa, thapa.monica@epa.gov, (703) 347–
8688.
Natalie Bray, bray.nathalie@epa.gov, (703) 347–8467.
Tiffany Green, green.tiffany@epa.gov, (703) 347–0314.
EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0602
Ramata Sy, sy.ramata@epa.gov, (703) 347–8941.
The proposed interim registration
review decisions for the chemicals in
the table above were posted to the
docket and the public was invited to
submit any comments or new
information. EPA addressed the
comments or information received
during the 60-day comment period for
the proposed interim decisions in the
discussion for each pesticide listed in
the table. Comments from the 60-day
comment period that were received may
or may not have affected the Agency’s
interim decision. Pursuant to 40 CFR
155.58(c), the registration review case
docket for the chemicals listed in the
Table will remain open until all actions
required in the interim decision have
been completed. This document also
announces the closure of the registration
review case for siduron (Case Number
3130, Docket ID Number EPA–HQ–
OPP–2015–0857) because the last U.S.
registrations for this pesticide have been
canceled.
Background on the registration review
program is provided at: https://
www.epa.gov/pesticide-reevaluation.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq.
Dated: April 23, 2021.
Mary Reaves,
Director, Pesticide Re-Evaluation Division,
Office of Pesticide Programs.
[FR Doc. 2021–08874 Filed 4–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257; FRL–10022–05–
OAR]
California State Motor Vehicle
Pollution Control Standards; Advanced
Clean Car Program; Reconsideration
of a Previous Withdrawal of a Waiver
of Preemption; Opportunity for Public
Hearing and Public Comment
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of Opportunity for Public
Hearing and Comment.
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AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is reconsidering a prior
action that withdrew a waiver of
SUMMARY:
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preemption for California’s zero
emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate and
greenhouse gas (GHG) emission
standards within California’s Advanced
Clean Car (ACC) program for purposes
of rescinding that action. The ACC
program waiver, as it pertains to the
GHG emission standards and ZEV
mandates, will become effective should
EPA rescind the prior action. On
September 27, 2019, EPA and the
National Highway Transportation Safety
Administration (NHTSA) issued an
action titled ‘‘The Safer Affordable FuelEfficient Vehicles Rule Part One: One
National Program’’ (SAFE 1) that
included, among other matters, EPA’s
determination that the Agency had
authority to reconsider the ACC
program waiver and that elements of the
ACC program waiver should be
withdrawn due to NHTSA’s action
under the Energy Policy & Conservation
Act (EPCA) and Clean Air Act (CAA)
preemption provisions. In addition,
SAFE 1 included EPA’s interpretation of
whether States can adopt California’s
GHG emission standards under section
177 of the CAA.
EPA believes that there are significant
issues regarding whether SAFE 1 was a
valid and appropriate exercise of agency
authority, including the amount of time
that had passed since EPA’s 2013
waiver decision, the novel approach and
legal interpretations used in SAFE 1,
and whether EPA took proper account
of the environmental conditions in
California and the environmental
consequences from the waiver
withdrawal in SAFE 1. Further, EPA
will be addressing issues raised in
several petitions for reconsideration of
SAFE 1, including one filed by
California (jointly with a number of
States and Cities) and one jointly filed
by nongovernmental organizations.
Finally, on January 20, 2021, President
Biden issued an Executive Order on
‘‘Protecting Public Health and the
Environment and Restoring Science to
Tackle the Climate Crisis.’’ The
President directed the Federal Agencies
to ‘‘immediately review’’ SAFE 1, and to
consider action ‘‘suspending, revising,
or rescinding’’ that action by April 2021.
Therefore, based upon the issues
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associated with SAFE 1, the petitions
for reconsideration, and the Executive
Order, this Federal Register notice
initiates reconsideration of SAFE 1 and
announces a virtual public hearing as
well as an opportunity to submit new
written comment.
DATES:
Comments: Comments must be
received on or before July 6, 2021.
Public Hearing: EPA will hold a
virtual public hearing on June 2, 2021.
Please refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section for additional
information on the public hearing.
Additional information regarding the
virtual public hearing and this action
can be found at: https://www.epa.gov/
regulations-emissions-vehicles-andengines/public-hearing-informationepas-notice-reconsideration.
ADDRESSES: Comments. You may send
your comments, identified by Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257, by any
of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov (our preferred
method). Follow the online instructions
for submitting comments.
• Email: a-and-r-Docket@epa.gov.
Include Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2021–0257 in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail: U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center,
Air Docket, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20460.
• Hand Delivery or Courier (by
scheduled appointment only): EPA
Docket Center, WJC West Building,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20004. The Docket
Center’s hours of operations are 8:30
a.m.–4:30 p.m., Monday–Friday (except
Federal Holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
action. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. For the
full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
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https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
Out of an abundance of caution for
members of the public and our staff, the
EPA Docket Center and Reading Room
are closed to the public, with limited
exceptions, to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID–19. Our Docket
Center staff will continue to provide
remote customer service via email,
phone, and webform. We encourage the
public to submit comments via https://
www.regulations.gov or email, as there
may be a delay in processing mail and
faxes. Hand deliveries and couriers may
be received by scheduled appointment
only. For further information on EPA
Docket Center services and the current
status, please visit us online at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
EPA continues to monitor information
carefully and continuously from the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), local area health
departments, and our Federal partners
so that we can respond rapidly as
conditions change regarding COVID–19.
Public Hearing. The virtual public
hearing will be held on June 2, 2021.
The hearing will begin at 9:00 a.m.
Eastern Time (ET) and end when all
parties who wish to speak have had an
opportunity to do so. All hearing
attendees (including those who do not
intend to provide testimony and merely
listen) should notify the
SAFE1Hearing@epa.gov email address
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT by May 25, 2021. Once an
email is sent to this address you will
receive an automatic reply with further
information for registration. Be sure to
check your clutter and junk mailboxes
for this reply. Additional information
regarding the hearing appears below
under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions regarding this proposed
action, contact David Dickinson, Office
of Transportation and Air Quality,
Transportation and Climate Division,
Environmental Protection Agency;
telephone number: (202) 343–9256;
email address: dickinson.david@
epa.gov. To register for the virtual
public hearing, contact SAFE1hearing@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Participation in Virtual Public Hearing
II. Background
A. Scope of Preemption and Criteria for a
Waiver Under the Clean Air Act
B. The ACC Program Waiver
C. The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient
(SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part One: One
National Program’’ (SAFE 1)
D. Prior EPA Waiver Decisions for
California Greenhouse Gas Emission
Standards
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E. The Petitions for Reconsideration
III. Request for Comments
I. Participation in Virtual Public
Hearing
Please note that EPA is deviating from
its typical approach because the
President has declared a national
emergency. Because of current CDC
recommendations, as well as state and
local orders for social distancing to limit
the spread of COVID–19, EPA cannot
hold in-person public meetings at this
time.
EPA will begin pre-registering
speakers for the hearing upon
publication of this document in the
Federal Register. To register to speak at
the virtual hearing, please contact the
email address listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. The last
day to pre-register to speak at the
hearing will be May 25, 2021.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes
to provide oral testimony. EPA may ask
clarifying questions during the oral
presentations but will not respond to
the presentations at that time. EPA
recommends submitting the text of your
oral comments as written comments to
the rulemaking docket. Written
statements and supporting information
submitted during the comment period
will be considered with the same weight
as oral comments and supporting
information presented at the public
hearing. Please note that any updates
made to any aspect of the hearing will
be posted online at: https://
www.epa.gov/regulations-emissionsvehicles-and-engines/public-hearinginformation-epas-noticereconsideration.
While EPA expects the hearing to go
forward as set forth above, please
monitor the website or contact the
person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section to
determine if there are any updates. EPA
does not intend to publish a document
in the Federal Register announcing
updates. A copy of the hearing
transcript will be placed into the docket.
If you require the services of a
translator or special accommodations
such as audio description, please preregister for the hearing and describe
your needs by May 25, 2021. EPA may
not be able to arrange accommodations
without advance notice.
II. Background
EPA is reconsidering a prior action
that withdrew the January 9, 2013
waiver of preemption for the state of
California’s (California) Advanced Clean
Car (ACC) program for purposes of
rescinding the withdrawal action. The
ZEV mandates and GHG emission
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standards within the ACC program
waiver will come into effect should EPA
rescind this prior action.1
Specifically, on September 27, 2019,
NHTSA and EPA each finalized agency
actions that addressed greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions standards for new
motor vehicles and zero emissions
vehicle (ZEV) mandates in a single
Federal Register notice titled: ‘‘The
Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient Vehicles
Rule Part One: One National Program’’
(SAFE 1).2 In that notice, NHTSA
codified regulatory text, and
appendices, that provided its view that
state regulation of fuel economy is
preempted under the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act (EPCA). On its part,
EPA withdrew a waiver of preemption
that had been previously granted to
California for the regulation of motor
vehicle emissions through GHG
standards and a ZEV mandate. EPA’s
action also took into consideration
preemption regulations issued by
NHTSA under EPCA in SAFE 1. On
January 20, 2021, President Biden
issued an Executive Order 13990 on
‘‘Protecting Public Health and the
Environment and Restoring Science to
Tackle the Climate Crisis.’’ The
President directed each Federal agency
to ‘‘immediately review’’ SAFE 1, and
consider taking action ‘‘suspending,
revising, or rescinding’’ it by April
2021.3 Accordingly, EPA has conducted
a review of both the legal and factual
predicates for SAFE I. EPA now believes
that there are significant issues with the
SAFE 1 action, including the time
elapsed since EPA’s 2013 waiver
decision (and associated reliance
interests), the novel statutory
interpretations set forth in SAFE 1, and
whether EPA took proper account of the
environmental conditions in California
and the environmental consequences of
the waiver withdrawal in SAFE 1.
Further, subsequent to SAFE 1, EPA
received several petitions for
reconsideration, including one filed by
California seeking clarification of the
scope of the SAFE 1 action, one filed by
California (jointly with a number of
States and Cities), and one jointly filed
by nongovernmental organizations that
1 78 FR 2112 (January 9, 2013). EPA’s waiver
action on January 9, 2013 was for several California
emission standards, including the low emission
vehicle (LEV) III regulations for criteria pollutants.
SAFE 1 withdrew elements of the January 9, 2013
waiver pertaining to certain ZEV mandate and GHG
emission standards. Other elements of the ACC
program waiver remain in effect.
2 The SAFE 1 action is at 84 FR 51310 (September
27, 2019).
3 This action is being issued only by EPA and,
therefore, does not bear upon any future or
potential action NHTSA may take regarding its
decision or pronouncements in SAFE 1.
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raised significant issues related to the
agency’s action in SAFE 1. EPA has
evaluated each petition for
reconsideration and believes there is
merit in reviewing issues that
petitioners have raised such as whether
the withdrawal of the ACC program
waiver was a valid exercise of EPA
authority, and whether the Agency
properly interpreted and applied the
CAA preemption provisions. EPA has
notified these petitioners that the
agency will be addressing issues raised
in their petitions as part of this
proceeding.
In considering whether to rescind the
action that withdrew portions of the
ACC program waiver, EPA is seeking to
determine whether it properly evaluated
and exercised its authority to reconsider
a previous waiver granted to CARB and
whether the withdrawal was a valid and
appropriate exercise of authority and
consistent with judicial precedent.
EPA is providing the following
summary of sections of the Clean Air
Act that are applicable to the Agency’s
review of the California Air Resources
Board’s (CARB’s) new motor vehicle
emissions program, an overview of
CARB’s ACC program waiver and
subsequent EPA action to withdraw
portions of the ACC program waiver
pertaining to CARB’s GHG emission
standards and ZEV mandate in SAFE 1,
an overview of prior EPA waiver actions
applicable to CARB’s GHG emission
standards for motor vehicles, and a brief
description of the petitions for
reconsideration filed with EPA after the
completion of SAFE 1 in order to
provide the context for agency
solicitation of comments, which can be
found in section ‘‘III. Request for
Comments.’’ EPA is not soliciting
comments on the 2013 ACC program
waiver decision, and therefore has not
reopened that decision for comments.
Specifically, EPA is not soliciting
comments on issues addressed in the
ACC program waiver decision beyond
those issues addressed in the final SAFE
1 action. EPA will treat any other
comments it receives as beyond the
scope of this reconsideration
proceeding.
A. Scope of Preemption and Criteria for
a Waiver Under the Clean Air Act
Title II of the Clean Air Act, as
amended, generally preempts states
from setting emission standards for new
motor vehicles. Section 209(a) provides:
No State or any political subdivision
thereof shall adopt or attempt to enforce
any standard relating to the control of
emissions from new motor vehicles or
new motor vehicle engines subject to
this part. No state shall require
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certification, inspection or any other
approval relating to the control of
emissions from any new motor vehicle
or new motor vehicle engine as
condition precedent to the initial retail
sale, titling (if any), or registration of
such motor vehicle, motor vehicle
engine, or equipment.4
California is the only state that is
eligible to seek and receive a waiver of
preemption under the terms of section
209(b)(1). This section provides:
The Administrator, after notice and
opportunity for public hearing, to waive
application of the prohibitions of
section 209(a) for any state that has
adopted standards (other than crankcase
emission standards) for the control of
emissions from new motor vehicles or
new motor vehicle engines prior to
March 30, 1966, if the state determines
that the state standards will be, in the
aggregate, at least as protective of public
health and welfare as applicable Federal
standards. No such waiver shall be
granted if the Administrator finds that—
(A) the determination of the state is
arbitrary and capricious,
(B) the state does not need the state
standards to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions, or
(C) the state standards and
accompanying enforcement procedures
are not consistent with section 202(a) of
the Act.5
Previous decisions granting California
waivers of Federal preemption for motor
vehicle emission standards have stated
that State standards are inconsistent
with section 202(a) if there is
inadequate lead time to permit the
development of the necessary
technology giving appropriate
consideration to the cost of compliance
within that time period or if the Federal
and State test procedures impose
inconsistent certification procedures.6
EPA has consistently interpreted
Section 209(b) to require issuance of a
waiver unless EPA finds that at least
one of the three criteria is met.7 As
4 Section 209(a) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
7543(a).
5 Section 209(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
7543(b)(1).
6 To be consistent, the California certification
procedures need not be identical to the Federal
certification procedures. California procedures
would be inconsistent, however, if manufacturers
would be unable to meet the state and Federal
requirements with the same test vehicle during the
same test. See, e.g., 43 FR 32182 (July 25, 1978).
7 This is different from most waiver proceedings
before the Agency, where EPA typically determines
whether it is appropriate to make certain findings
necessary for granting a waiver, and if the findings
are not made then a waiver is denied. This reversal
of the normal statutory structure embodies and is
consistent with the congressional intent of
providing deference to California to maintain its
own new motor vehicle emissions program. In
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noted above, the three waiver criteria
are properly seen as the criteria for
denial. Prior to SAFE 1, EPA has
consistently declined to consider other
potential bases for denying a waiver
such as Constitutional claims or the
preemptive effect of other Federal
statutes.8 In addition, EPA, given the
text, legislative history and judicial
precedent, has consistently interpreted
section 209(b) as placing the burden on
the opponents of a waiver to
demonstrate that one of the criterion for
a denial has been met.9 Thus, EPA’s
practice has been to defer and not to
intrude in policy decisions made by
California in adopting standards for
protecting the health and welfare of its
citizens.10
In 1977, Congress promulgated
section 177 of the Clean Air Act, which
permitted States to adopt California new
motor vehicle emission standards for
which a waiver of preemption has been
granted if certain criteria are met.11 Also
known as the ‘‘opt-in’’ provision,
section 177 of the Act, 42 U.S.C. 7507,
provides:
Notwithstanding section 7543(a) of
this title, any State which has plan
provisions approved under this part
may adopt and enforce for any model
year standards relating to control of
emissions from new motor vehicles or
new motor vehicle engines and take
such other actions as are referred to in
previous waiver decisions, EPA has recognized that
the intent of Congress in creating a limited review
based on specifically listed criteria was to ensure
that the Federal government did not second-guess
state policy choices. See 40 FR 23102, 23103 (May
28, 1975); 78 FR 2112, 2115 (January 9, 2013); 40
FR 23103–23104; see also LEV I waiver at 58 FR
4166 (January 13, 1993), Decision Document at 64.
Similarly, EPA has stated its practice of leaving the
decision on ‘‘ambiguous and controversial matters
of public policy’’ to California’s judgment. 78 FR
2112, 2115; 40 FR 23103, 23104; 58 FR 4166.
8 ‘‘As EPA has stated on numerous occasions,
section 209(b) of the Clean Air Act limits our
authority to deny California’s requests for waivers
to the three criteria therein, and EPA has refrained
from denying California’s requests for waivers
based on any other criteria. Where the Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has
reviewed EPA decisions declining to deny waiver
requests based on criteria not found in section
209(b), the court has upheld and agreed with EPA’s
determination.’’ 78 FR 2112, 2145 (citing Motor and
Equipment Manufacturers Ass’n v. Nichols (MEMA
II), 142 F.3d 449, 462–63, 466–67 (D.C. Cir. 1998),
Motor and Equipment Manufacturers Ass’n v. EPA
(MEMA I), 627 F.2d 1095, 1111, 1114–20 (D.C. Cir.
1979).
9 MEMA at 1120–1121; MEMA II.
10 EPA is ‘‘to afford California the broadest
possible discretion in selecting the best means to
protect the health of its citizens and the public
welfare.’’ MEMA II, 142 F.3d at 453 (quoting H.R.
Rep. No. 95–294, at 301–02 (1977)); EPA ‘‘ ‘is not
to overturn California’s judgment lightly,’ ’’ Id., at
463 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 95–294, at 302 (1977),
reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 1381).
11 Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. NYS Dep. of Envt’l
Conservation, 17 F.3d 521, 532 (2d Cir. 1994).
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section 7543(a) of this title respecting
such vehicles if—
(1) such standards are identical to the
California standards for which a waiver
has been granted for such model year,
and
(2) California and such State adopt
such standards at least two years before
commencement of such model year (as
determined by regulations of the
Administrator).
Nothing in this section or in
subchapter II of this chapter shall be
construed as authorizing any such State
to prohibit or limit, directly or
indirectly, the manufacture or sale of a
new motor vehicle or motor vehicle
engine that is certified in California as
meeting California standards, or to take
any action of any kind to create, or have
the effect of creating, a motor vehicle or
motor vehicle engine different than a
motor vehicle or engine certified in
California under California standards (a
‘‘third vehicle’’) or otherwise create
such a ‘‘third vehicle’’.
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B. The ACC Program Waiver
On June 27, 2012, CARB notified EPA
of its adoption of the ACC program
regulatory package that contained
amendments to its low-emission vehicle
(LEV) and ZEV mandate and requested
a waiver of preemption under section
209(b) to enforce regulations pertaining
to this program.12 The ACC program
combined the control of smog and sootcausing pollutants and GHG emissions
into a single coordinated package of
requirements for passenger cars, lightduty trucks, and medium-duty
passenger vehicles (and limited
requirements related to heavy-duty
vehicles for certain model years). On
August 31, 2012, EPA issued a notice of
opportunity for public hearing and
written comment on CARB’s request
and solicited comment on all aspects of
a full waiver analysis under the criteria
of section 209(b) of the CAA.13 On
January 9, 2013, EPA granted
California’s request for a waiver of
preemption to enforce the ACC program
regulations.14
Set forth in the ACC program waiver
decision is a summary discussion of
EPA’s decision to depart from its
12 CARB’s June 12, 2012 waiver request
(including its attachments) was included in EPA’s
Air Docket at EPA–HQ–OAR–2012–0562–0002 et
seq. The waiver request and attachments have also
now been placed in EPA’s Air Docket pertaining to
this reconsideration at EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257.
A complete description of the ACC program, as it
existed at the time that CARB applied for the 2013
waiver, can be found in the docket for the January
2013 waiver action, Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2012– 0562.
13 77 FR 53199 (August 31, 2012).
14 78 FR 2112 (January 9, 2013).
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traditional interpretation of section
209(b)(1)(B) (the second waiver prong)
in the 2008 waiver denial for CARB’s
initial GHG standards for certain earlier
model years along with EPA’s return to
the traditional interpretation in the
waiver issued in 2009.15 The traditional
interpretation, which EPA stated is the
better interpretation of section
209(b)(1)(B), calls for evaluating
California’s need for a separate motor
vehicle emission program to meet
compelling and extraordinary
conditions. Because EPA received
comment on this issue during the ACC
program waiver proceeding, as it
pertained to both CARB’s GHG emission
standards and ZEV mandate, the Agency
once again recounted the interpretive
history associated with standards for
both GHG emissions and criteria air
pollutants to explain EPA’s belief that
section 209(b)(1)(B) should be
interpreted the same way for all air
pollutants.16 Applying this approach,
and with deference to California, EPA
found that it could not deny the waiver
under the second waiver prong.17
Without adopting an alternative
interpretation, EPA noted that to the
extent that it was appropriate to
examine the need for CARB’s GHG
standards to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions, EPA had
discussed at length in its 2009 GHG
waiver decision that California does
have compelling and extraordinary
conditions directly related to
regulations of GHGs.18 Similarly, to the
extent that it was appropriate to
examine the need for CARB’s ZEV
mandate, EPA noted that the ZEV
mandate in the ACC program enables
California to meet both its air quality
and climate goals into the future. EPA
recognized CARB’s coordinated
strategies reflected in the ACC program
for addressing both criteria pollutants
and greenhouse gases and the
magnitude of the technology and energy
transformation needed to meet such
goals.19 Therefore, EPA determined that
to the extent the second waiver criterion
15 73 FR 12156 (March 6, 2008); 74 FR 32744 (July
8, 2009).
16 78 FR 2112, 2125–2128.
17 Id. at 2129. ‘‘CARB has repeatedly
demonstrated the need for its motor vehicle
program to address compelling and extraordinary
conditions in California. As discussed above, the
term compelling and extraordinary conditions
‘‘does not refer to the levels of pollution directly.’’
Instead, the term refers primarily to the factors that
tend to produce higher levels of pollution—
geographical and climatic conditions (like thermal
inversions) that, when combined with large
numbers and high concentrations of automobiles,
create serious air pollution problems. California
still faces such conditions.’’
18 Id. at 2129–2130.
19 Id. at 2130–2131.
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should be interpreted to mean a need for
the specific standards at issue, then
CARB’s GHG emission standards and
ZEV mandate satisfy such a finding.20
Also included in the ACC program
waiver is a discussion of the
technological feasibility of the ACC
program GHG emission standards and
the ZEV mandate as evaluated under
section 209(b)(1)(C).21
Further, in response to a comment
that the waiver request for GHG
emission standards should be denied
because GHG standards relate to fuel
economy and are expressly preempted
by the Energy Policy and Conservation
Act (EPCA), EPA explained that section
209(b) of the Act limits the Agency’s
authority to deny California’s requests
for waivers to the three criteria therein
and that the Agency has consistently
refrained from denying California’s
requests for waivers based on any other
criteria. EPA also relied on judicial
precedent as support.22
C. ‘‘The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient
(SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part One: One
National Program’’ (SAFE 1)
In 2018, NHTSA issued a proposal for
the next generation of the
Congressionally-mandated Corporate
Average Fuel Economy (CAFE)
standards that must be achieved by each
manufacturer for its car and light-duty
truck fleet while EPA revisited its lightduty vehicle GHG emissions standards
for certain model years in the
rulemaking titled: ‘‘The Safer Affordable
Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule for
Model Years 2021–2026 Passenger Cars
and Light Trucks.’’ 23 EPA also proposed
to withdraw the waiver for the ACC
program GHG emission standards and
ZEV mandate under both sections
209(b)(1)(B) and (C), based upon the
Agency’s exercise of its inherent
authority to reconsider a previously
granted waiver under the Clean Air Act.
As part of EPA’s asserted authority to
reconsider that ACC program waiver
issued in 2013, EPA noted the changed
circumstances including its
reassessment of section 209(b)(1)(B) as
well as EPA’s new assessment of the
feasibility of CARB’s standards under
section 209(b)(1)(C). In addition, EPA
noted that the proposal presented a
unique situation to consider the
implications of NHTSA’s proposed
20 Id.
at 2129–2131.
at 2131–2143.
22 Id. at 2145 (‘‘Where the Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit has reviewed EPA
decisions declining to deny waiver requests based
on criteria not found in section 209(b), the court has
upheld and agreed with EPA’s determination.’’ See
MEMA II at 462–63, MEMA I at 1114–20).
23 83 FR 42986 (August 24, 2018).
21 Id.
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conclusion of EPCA preemption for
California’s GHG emission standards
and ZEV mandate. EPA proposed to
conclude that state standards preempted
under EPCA cannot be afforded a valid
section 209(b) waiver and thus also
proposed that, if NHTSA finalized its
determination regarding California’s
GHG standards and ZEV mandate, it
would be necessary to withdraw the
waiver separate and apart from section
209(b)(1)(B) and (C).
On September 27, 2019, EPA and
NHTSA published a final action titled:
‘‘The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient
(SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part One: One
National Program’’ (SAFE 1) that
promulgated regulations reflecting
NHTSA’s conclusion that EPCA
preempted California’s GHG standards
and ZEV mandate. In the same action
EPA withdrew the waiver of preemption
for California to enforce the ACC
program GHG and ZEV mandate on two
grounds.24 First, EPA posited that
standards preempted under EPCA could
not be afforded a valid waiver of
preemption under section 209(b). EPA
explained that agency pronouncements
in the ACC program waiver decision on
the historical practice of disregarding
the preemptive effect of EPCA in the
context of evaluating California’s waiver
applications ‘‘was inappropriately
broad, to the extent it suggested that
EPA is categorically forbidden from ever
determining that a waiver is
inappropriate due to consideration of
anything other than the ‘criteria’ or
‘prongs’ at CAA section 209(b)(1)(B)(A)–
(C).’’ 25 EPA further explained that those
pronouncements were made in waiver
proceedings where the agency was
acting solely on its own in contrast to
a joint action with NHTSA such as
SAFE 1. Additionally, EPA expressed
intentions not to consider factors other
than statutory criteria set out in section
209(b)(1)(A)–(C) in future waiver
proceedings, but explained that
addressing the preemptive effect of
EPCA and its implications for EPA’s
waiver for California standards was
called for in SAFE 1 because EPA and
NHTSA were coordinating regulatory
actions in a single notice.26
Second, EPA withdrew the waiver for
GHG standards and ZEV mandate on
two alternative grounds under the
second waiver prong. Specifically, EPA
determined that California does not
need the GHG standards ‘‘to meet
compelling and extraordinary
conditions,’’ under section 209(b)(1)(B)
and even if California does have
compelling and extraordinary
conditions in the context of global
climate change, California does not
‘‘need’’ the GHG standards, under
section 209(b)(1)(B) because they will
not meaningfully address global air
pollution problems of the type
associated with GHG emissions.27
EPA premised the agency’s finding on
a consideration of California’s ‘‘need’’
for its own GHG and ZEV programs,
instead of the ‘‘need’’ for a separate
motor vehicle emission program to meet
compelling and extraordinary
conditions. In doing so, EPA read ‘‘such
State standards’’ in section 209(b)(1)(B)
as ambiguous with respect to the scope
of agency analysis of California waiver
requests and posited that reading this
phrase as requiring EPA to only and
always consider California’s entire
motor vehicle program would limit the
application of this waiver prong in a
way that EPA did not believe Congress
intended. EPA further noted that the
Supreme Court had found that Clean Air
Act provisions may apply differently to
GHGs than they do to traditional
pollutants in UARG v. EPA, 134 S. Ct.
2427 (2014) (partially reversing the GHG
‘‘Tailoring’’ Rule on grounds that the
section 202(a) endangerment finding for
GHG emissions from motor vehicles did
not compel regulation of all sources of
GHG emissions under the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration and Title V
permit programs).
EPA then interpreted section
209(b)(1)(B) as turning on whether there
is a particularized, local nexus between
(1) pollutant emissions from sources, (2)
air pollution, and (3) resulting impact
on health and welfare.28 EPA stated that
these elements match the elements of
the predicate finding EPA must make
before regulating, under section
202(a)(1), and are evident in California’s
criteria-pollutant problems, which
prompted Congress to enact the waiver
provision.29 Under this interpretation,
EPA concluded that no such California
nexus exists for greenhouse gases: (1)
These emissions from California cars are
no more relevant to climate-change
impacts in the state than emissions from
cars elsewhere; (2) the resulting
pollution is globally mixed; and (3)
climate-change impacts in California are
not extraordinary to that state.30 EPA
further determined that ‘‘such State
standards’’ in sections 209(b)(1)(B) and
(C) should be read consistently, which
was a departure from the traditional
approach where this phrase is read as
27 84
24 84
FR 51310 (September 27, 2019).
25 Id. at 51338.
26 Id.
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FR 51310, 51328–51333.
at 51339, 51347.
29 Id. at 51339–5134040, 51348–451349.
30 Id.
28 Id.
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referring back to ‘‘in the aggregate’’ in
section 209(b)(1).31 EPA further
reasoned that the most stringent
regulatory alternative considered in the
2012 final rule and Final Regulatory
Impact Analysis, which would have
required a seven percent average annual
fleetwide increase in fuel economy for
MYs 2017–2025 compared to MY 2016
standards, was forecasted to decrease
global temperatures by only 0.02 °C in
2100.32
Finally, as support for the
determination that California did not
need the ZEV mandate requirements to
meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions, EPA relied on a statement in
the ACC program waiver support
document where CARB noted that there
were no criteria emissions benefit in
terms of vehicle (tank-to-wheel)
emissions because its LEV III criteria
pollutant fleet standard was responsible
for those emission reductions.33
Regarding burden of proof in waiver
proceedings, the agency posited that it
was ‘‘not necessary to resolve this issue
as regardless of whether a
preponderance of the evidence or clear
and compelling evidence standard is
applied, the Agency was concluding
that withdrawal of the waiver was
appropriate.’’ 34
EPA did not finalize the withdrawal
of the waiver under the third waiver
criterion at section 209(b)(1)(C), as
proposed, explaining instead that EPA
and NHTSA were not finalizing the
proposed assessment regarding the
technological feasibility of the Federal
GHG standards for MY 2021 through
2025 in SAFE 1.35
In withdrawing the waiver, EPA
asserted that authority to reconsider and
withdraw the grant of a waiver for the
ACC program was implicit in section
209(b) given that the authority to revoke
a waiver is implied in the authority for
EPA to grant a waiver. The Agency
31 Id.
at 51345.
at 51349.
33 ‘‘There is no criteria emissions benefit from
including the ZEV proposal in terms of vehicle
(tank-to-wheel or TTW) emissions.’’ CARB ACC
program waiver request at 15 (May 2012), EPA–HQ–
OAR– 2012–0562–0004.
34 84 FR 51310, 51344 n.268. At proposal, EPA
also took comment on the burden of proof in waiver
proceedings even though the Agency had initiated
reconsideration of the grant of the ACC program
waiver and such evidentiary aspects for section
209(b) waivers had long been settled. Motor and
Equip. Mfrs Ass’n. v. EPA, 627 F.2d 1095, 1121,
n.19, 1126 (D.C. Cir. 1979) (MEMA I).
35 84 FR 51310, 51350. EPA had proposed to
determine, as an additional basis for the waiver
withdrawal, that new GHG standards and ZEV
mandate for 2021 through 2025 model years are not
consistent with section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act,
including how costs should be properly considered.
EPA’s waiver for CARB’s ACC program, issued in
2013, fully evaluated this criterion.
32 Id.
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claimed further support for authority
based on the legislative history of
section 209(b) and the judicial principle
that agencies possess inherent authority
to reconsider their decisions:
The legislative history from the 1967
CAA amendments where Congress
enacted the provisions now codified in
section 209(a) and (b) provides support
for this view. The Administrator has
‘‘the right . . . to withdraw the waiver
at any time [if] after notice and an
opportunity for public hearing he finds
that the State of California no longer
complies with the conditions of the
waiver.’’ S. Rep. No. 50–403, at 34
(1967).36
EPA also noted that, subject to certain
limitations, administrative agencies
possess inherent authority to reconsider
their decisions in response to changed
circumstances:
It is well settled that EPA has inherent
authority to reconsider, revise, or repeal
past decisions to the extent permitted by
law so long as the Agency provides a
reasoned explanation. This authority
exists in part because EPA’s
interpretations of the statutes it
administers ‘‘are not carved in stone.’’
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467
U.S. 837, 863 (1984). An agency ‘‘must
consider varying interpretations and the
wisdom of its policy on a continuing
basis.’’ Id. at 863–64. This is true when,
as is the case here, review is undertaken
‘‘in response to . . . a change in
administration.’’ National Cable &
Telecommunications Ass’n v. Brand X
internet Services, 545 U.S. 967, 981
(2005). The EPA must also be cognizant
where it is changing a prior position and
articulate a reasoned basis for the
change. FCC v. Fox Television Stations,
Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515 (2009).37
EPA opined that the text, structure,
and context of section 209(b) support
EPA’s interpretation that it has this
authority. EPA further asserted that no
cognizable reliance interests had
accrued sufficient to foreclose EPA’s
ability to exercise this authority.38 EPA
stated:
In tying the third waiver prong to
CAA section 202(a), Congress gave a
clear indication that, in determining
whether to grant a waiver request, EPA
is to engage in a review that involves a
considerable degree of future prediction,
due to the expressly future-oriented
terms and function of CAA section
202(a). In turn, where circumstances
arise that suggest that such predictions
may have been inaccurate, it necessarily
follows that EPA has authority to revisit
36 Id.
at 51332.
at 51333.
38 Id. at 51331–51337.
37 Id.
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those predictions with regard to rules
promulgated under CAA section 202(a),
the requirements of that section, and
their relation to the California standards
at issue in a waiver request, and, on
review, withdraw a previously granted
waiver where those predictions proved
to be inaccurate.39
EPA also disagreed with some
commenters’ assertions that ostensible
reliance interests foreclose withdrawal
of the waiver for MY 2021–2025 GHG
and ZEV standards.40 EPA stated that
‘‘CAA section 177 States do not have
any reliance interests that are
engendered by the withdrawal of the
waiver for the MY 2021–2025 GHG and
ZEV standards.’’ 41
In SAFE 1, EPA provided an
interpretation of section 177 of the CAA,
including the notion that this section
does not authorize other states to adopt
California’s greenhouse gas emission
standards for which EPA had granted a
waiver of preemption under section
209(b). Although section 177 does not
39 Id. at 51332, 51334. As noted above, however,
EPA did not withdraw the ACC waiver based on the
third waiver prong of Section 209(b). 84 FR at
51334. Further, by way of example, EPA stated that
California as well as other parties, such as section
177 states, were on notice that EPA would be
conducting a midterm evaluation (MTE) of the
Federal GHG emission standards and that such
circumstances indicate a lack of sufficient reliance
interests to preclude EPA’s reconsideration of the
ACC waiver issued in 2013. As relevant here, EPA’s
October 15, 2012 rulemaking setting GHG emission
standards for 2017 and later model years included
a commitment to perform the MTE for the Federal
2022 through 2025 model year standards. 77 FR
62624 (October 15, 2012). The MTE called for EPA
to issue a final determination regarding whether the
Federal MY 2022–2025 GHG standards remained
appropriate under section 202(a). On January 12,
2017, EPA completed the MTE and determined that
GHG standards for MY 2022–2025 remained
appropriate under section 202(a). Subsequently,
EPA withdrew the January 2017 final determination
and revised the finding of appropriateness,
concluding instead that GHG standards for MY
2022–2025 were not appropriate and, therefore,
should be revised. 83 FR 16077 (April 13, 2018).
40 According to commenters ‘‘California, and the
section 177 states that have elected to adopt those
standards as their own have incurred reliance
interests ultimately flowing from those standards.
For instance, California has incurred reliance
interests because it is mandated to achieve an
aggressive GHG emissions reduction target for 2030
. . .‘‘[b]ut EPA provides no justification for
applying that change in policy retroactively to
upend a five-year old decision to which substantial
reliance interests have attached.’’ 84 FR 51310,
51331, 51334–51335.
41 Id. at 51336. Regarding states that had adopted
the GHG standards into state implementation plans
(SIPs), under section 177, EPA explained that
because ‘‘Title I does not call for NAAQS
attainment planning as it relates to GHG standards,
those States that may have adopted California’s
GHG standards and ZEV standards for certain MYs
would also not have any reliance interests. 84 FR
51310, 52335. ‘‘EPA did, however, acknowledge the
possibility of SIP implications arising from the
withdrawal of these standards and indicated that
the agency would engage in future actions to
address those implications. Id. at 51338, n. 256.
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require States that adopt California
emission standards to submit such
regulations for EPA review, EPA chose
to nevertheless provide an
interpretation that this provision is
available only to states with approved
nonattainment plans. EPA stated that
nonattainment designations exist only
as to criteria pollutants and greenhouse
gases are not criteria pollutants;
therefore, states could not adopt GHG
standards under section 177.42 Notably,
California in previous waiver requests
has addressed the benefits of GHG
emissions reductions as it relates to
ozone.
D. Prior EPA Waiver Practice
For over fifty years, EPA has
evaluated California’s requests for
waivers of preemption under section
209(b), primarily considering CARB’s
motor vehicle emission program that
addresses criteria pollutants.43 More
recently, the Agency has been tasked
with determining how section
209(b)(1)(B) should be interpreted and
applied in the context of GHG standards
and California’s historical air quality
problems, including the public health
and welfare challenge of climate change.
Although the withdrawal and
revocation of the waiver for CARB’s
ACC program, in SAFE 1, represents a
snapshot of this task, it is important to
examine EPA’s waiver practice in
general, including prior waiver
decisions pertaining to CARB GHG
emission standards, in order to
determine whether EPA properly
reconsidered the ACC program waiver
and properly applied the waiver
criterion in section 209(b)(1)(B) in SAFE
1. A summary of EPA’s historical waiver
practice and decisions regarding CARB’s
regulation of criteria and GHG
emissions, including EPA’s
consideration of the second waiver
prong, is provided below.
EPA has consistently interpreted and
applied the second waiver criterion by
42 Id. at 51350–51351. Since EPA was offering its
views of section 177 in the abstract, its
interpretation of section 177 in SAFE 1 did not have
direct and appreciable legal consequences and was
not a ‘‘final action’’ of the agency.
43 EPA notes that the 1990 amendments to the
Clean Air Act added subsection (e) to section 209.
Subsection (e) addresses the preemption of State or
political subdivision regulation of emissions from
nonroad engines or vehicles. Section 209(e)(2)(A)
sets forth language similar to section 209(b) in terms
of the criteria associated with EPA waiving
preemption, in this instance for California nonroad
vehicle and engine emission standards. Congress
directed EPA to implement subsection (e). See 40
CFR part 1074. EPA review of CARB requests
submitted under section 209(e)(2)(A)(ii) includes
consideration of whether CARB needs its nonroad
vehicle and engine program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions. See 78 FR 58090
(September 20, 2013).
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considering whether California needed a
separate mobile source program as
compared to the individual standards at
issue to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions. As previously
noted, this is known as the ‘‘traditional
approach’’ of interpreting section
209(b)(1)(B).44 At the same time, in the
event and in response to commenters
that have argued that EPA is required to
examine the specific standards at issue
in the waiver request, EPA’s practice
has been to retain the traditional
approach but to nevertheless review the
specific standards to determine whether
California needs such standards. This
has not meant that EPA has adopted an
‘‘alternative approach’’ and required a
demonstration for the need of specific
standards; rather, this additional
Agency review has been afforded to
address commenters’ concerns. For
example, EPA granted an authorization
for CARB’s In-use Off-road Diesel
Standards (Fleet Requirements) that
included an analysis under both
approaches.45
The task of interpreting and applying
section 209(b)(1)(B) to California’s GHG
standards and consideration of the
state’s historical air quality problems
that now include the public health and
welfare challenge of climate change
began in 2005, with CARB’s waiver
request for 2009 and subsequent model
years’ GHG emission standards. On
March 6, 2008, EPA denied the waiver
request based on a new interpretive
finding that section 209(b) was intended
for California to enforce new motor
vehicle emission standards that address
local or regional air pollution problems,
and an Agency belief that California
could not demonstrate a ‘‘need’’ under
section 209(b)(1)(B) for standards
intended to address global climate
change problems. EPA also employed
this new alternative interpretation to
state a belief that the effects of climate
change in California are not compelling
and extraordinary in comparison with
the rest of the country. Therefore,
within this waiver denial, EPA no
longer evaluated whether California had
a need for its motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions (the traditional
interpretation) but rather focused on the
specific GHG emission standard in
44 49
FR 18887, 18890 (May 3, 1984).
FR 58090 (Sept. 20, 2013). The United States
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld EPA’s
grant of a waiver of preemption under either
approach. Dalton Trucking v. EPA, No. 13–74019
(9th Cir. 2021) (finding that EPA was not arbitrary
in granting the waiver of preemption under either
approach). The court opinion noted that ‘‘[t]his
disposition is not appropriate for publication and
is not precedent except as provided by Ninth
Circuit Rule 36–3.’’
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isolation and not in conjunction with
the other motor vehicle emission
standards for criteria pollutants.
In 2009, EPA initiated a
reconsideration of the 2008 waiver
denial based on a belief that significant
issues had been raised since the denial
of the waiver.46 The reconsideration
resulted in granting CARB a waiver for
its GHG emission standards
commencing in the 2009 model year.47
This led to a rejection of the Agency’s
novel alternative interpretation of the
second waiver prong announced in the
previous waiver denial. Instead, EPA
returned to its traditional approach of
evaluating California’s need for a
separate motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions because the
agency viewed it as the better
interpretation. Under the traditional
interpretation of the second waiver
prong, EPA found that the opponents of
the waiver had not met their burden of
proof to demonstrate that California did
not need its motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions. EPA also
determined that, even if the alternative
interpretation were to be applied, the
opponents of the waiver had not
demonstrated that California did not
need its GHG emissions standards to
meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions.48 Since then EPA has
employed the traditional approach for
evaluating California’s need for a
separate motor vehicle emissions
program in waiver requests. Notably,
EPA also relied on the traditional
approach in granting the waiver for the
ACC program.
Within the context of EPA’s
evaluation of the second waiver prong
and California’s GHG emission
standards for on-highway vehicles, EPA
notes the existence of two waivers of
preemption for CARB’s heavy-duty
tractor-trailer (HD) GHG emission
standards.49 Once again, EPA relied
upon its traditional approach of
evaluating California’s need for a
separate motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions and found that
no evidence had been submitted to
demonstrate that California no longer
46 74
FR 7040 (February 12, 2009).
FR 32744 (July 8, 2009).
48 Id. at 32759–32767. See also 76 FR 34693 (June
14, 2011).
49 The first HD GHG emissions standard waiver
related to certain new 2011 and subsequent model
year tractor-trailers. 79 FR 46256 (August 7, 2014).
The second HD GHG emissions standard waiver
related to CARB’s ‘‘Phase I’’ regulation for 2014 and
subsequent model year tractor-trailers. 81 FR 95982
(December 29, 2016).
47 74
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needed its motor vehicle emissions
program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions.50 EPA’s
second waiver for the HD GHG emission
standards made a similar finding that
California’s compelling and
extraordinary conditions continue to
exist under the traditional approach for
the interpretation of the second waiver
criterion.51
F. Petitions for Reconsideration
After it issued SAFE 1, EPA received
multiple petitions for reconsideration
urging the agency to reconsider the
withdrawal of the ACC program’s GHG
standards and ZEV mandate on various
grounds. EPA has granted the following
petitions for reconsideration of SAFE 1
that were pending before the Agency: 52
1. A Petition for Clarification/
Reconsideration submitted by the State
of California (the California Attorney
General and the California Air
Resources Board), on October 9, 2019
(California Petition for Clarification).53
The Petitioner sought both a
50 Relatedly, California explained the need for
these standards based on projected ‘‘reductions in
NOx emissions of 3.1 tons per day in 2014 and one
ton per day in 2020 due to the HD GHG
Regulations. California state[d] that these emissions
reductions will help California in its efforts to attain
applicable air quality standards. California further
projects that the HD GHG Regulations will reduce
GHG emissions in California by approximately 0.7
million metric tons (MMT) of carbon dioxide
equivalent emissions (CO2e) by 2020.’’ 79 FR
46256, 46261.
51 81 FR 95982, 95987. At the time of CARB’s
Board adoption of the HD Phase I GHG regulation,
CARB determined in Resolution 13–50 that
California continues to need its own motor vehicle
program to meet serious ongoing air pollution
problems. CARB asserted that ‘‘[t]he geographical
and climatic conditions and the tremendous growth
in vehicle population and use that moved Congress
to authorize California to establish vehicle
standards in 1967 still exist today. EPA has long
confirmed CARB’s judgment, on behalf of the State
of California, on this matter.’’ (See EPA Air Docket
at regulations.gov at EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0179–
0012). In enacting the California Global Warming
Solutions Act of 2006, the Legislature found and
declared that ‘‘Global warming poses a serious
threat to the economic well-being, public health,
natural resources, and the environment of
California. The potential adverse impacts of global
warming include the exacerbation of air quality
problems, a reduction in the quality and supply of
water to the state from the Sierra snowpack, a rise
in sea levels resulting in the displacement of
thousands of coastal businesses and residences,
damage to the marine ecosystems and the natural
environment, and an increase in the incidences of
infectious diseases, asthma, and other healthrelated problems.’’
52 Separately from this action, EPA has notified
the Parties to each of the Petitions for
Reconsideration and informed them that EPA is
initiating an action under the Administrative
Procedure Act to reconsider SAFE 1. Copies of
EPA’s reply letters can be found in the public
docket at EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257.
53 Copies of the petitions for reconsideration can
be found in the public docket at EPA–HQ–OAR–
2021–0257.
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clarification and reconsideration of the
scope of SAFE 1 as it related to the
withdrawal of portions of the ACC
program waiver. Regarding clarification,
the Petitioner cited somewhat
contradictory statements in SAFE 1 and
indicated that there was confusion
regarding model years that were affected
by the waiver withdrawal.54 The
Petitioner also requested
reconsideration on grounds that the
final action relied on analyses and
justifications not presented at proposal
and thus, was beyond the scope of the
proposal.55
2. A Petition for Reconsideration was
submitted by several States and Cities
on November 26, 2019 (States and
Cities’ Petition).56 This petition
presented several issues, including
whether EPA failed to articulate a valid
rationale to support its authority to
revoke the GHG standards and ZEV
mandate and instead relied on facially
unclear theories not made available at
proposal for public comment.
Petitioners further asserted that EPA
unlawfully changed course in SAFE 1
by considering (and relying on) the
purported preemptive effect of EPCA,
which is outside the confines of section
209(b) and argued that the agency
rationale for withdrawing the waiver
was flawed. They also disagreed with
the Agency’s interpretation of section
209(b)(1)(B) and EPA’s reassessment of
the factual record that existed at the
time of the ACC program waiver, which
led to a new finding under the second
54 The California Petition for Clarification notes
‘‘[i]n the Final Actions, EPA makes statements that
are creating confusion, and, indeed, appear
contradictory, concerning the temporal scope of its
action(s)—specifically, which model years are
covered by the purported withdrawal of California’s
waiver for its GHG and ZEV standards. In some
places, EPA’s statements indicate that it has limited
its action(s) to the model years for which it
proposed to withdraw and for which it now claims
to have authority to withdraw—namely model years
2021 through 2025. In other places, however, EPA’s
statements suggest action(s) with a broader scope—
one that would include earlier model years.’’
55 ‘‘To the extent that EPA’s response to this
petition would result in final action(s) beyond the
scope of what EPA proposed, or would contain
analyses or justifications not included in the
Proposal (such as purported justifications for
broader withdrawal authority), then EPA must
withdraw at least the portion of the Final Actions
that extend beyond the Proposal, issue a revised
proposal and accept and consider public comment
before taking any final action.’’ California Petition
for Clarification at 9.
56 See EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257. This Petition
was joined by the States of California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine,
Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New
Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode
Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, Michigan,
the Commonwealths of Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, and Virginia, the District of
Columbia, and the Cities of Los Angeles, New York,
San Francisco, and San Jose..
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waiver prong and a new result in SAFE
1. They asserted, for example, that
EPA’s new reliance on the
‘‘endangerment provision’’ in Section
202(a) does not support EPA’s section
209(b)(1)(B) interpretation or conclusion
and that the use of the equal sovereignty
principle to inform EPA’s interpretation
of ‘‘compelling and extraordinary
conditions’’ was inappropriate.
Additionally, Petitioners asserted that
EPA should have considered all
supporting documentation instead of
only considering the 2013 waiver record
and that EPA failed to consider new
evidence that further demonstrated
California’s need for GHG emission
standards and ZEV mandates to address
compelling and extraordinary
conditions in California.
3. Petition for Reconsideration by
several non-governmental organizations
on November 25, 2019 (NGOs’
Petition).57 Petitioners asserted that
EPA’s reconsideration of the ACC
program waiver was not a proper
exercise of agency authority and that
EPA relied on improper considerations
in its decision-making. Petitioners cast
the agency’s rationale as ‘‘pretextual.’’
The NGOs’ Petition further noted that
EPA did not properly interpret and
apply the second waiver prong and
markedly ignored new evidence that
further demonstrated California’s need
for its GHG emission standards and ZEV
mandates to address compelling and
extraordinary conditions in California.58
V. Request for Comment
When EPA receives new waiver
requests from CARB, EPA traditionally
publishes a notice of opportunity for
public hearing and comment and then,
after the comment period has closed,
publishes a notice of its decision in the
Federal Register. EPA believes it is
appropriate to use the same procedures
for reconsidering SAFE 1. EPA notes
that, consistent with caselaw and EPA’s
past practice for California waivers, this
proceeding is subject to the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
and is considered an informal
adjudication under the APA. EPA
57 See EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0257. This Petition
was joined by The Center for Biological Diversity,
Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Environment America,
Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental Law &
Policy Center, Natural Resources Defense Council,
Public Citizen, Inc., Sierra Club, and the Union of
Concerned Scientists.
58 Among the comments is a letter from the
CARB, dated June 17, 2019, in support of
Petitioners’ arguments that EPA improperly
considered the reliance interests associated with the
ACC program waiver and that EPA improperly
understood the scope of the need for the ZEV
mandate and GHG standards to address a variety of
transportation conformity obligations as well as
State Implementation Plan planning requirements.
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encourages interested parties to provide
comments on the topics below for
consideration by EPA, in the context of
reconsidering SAFE 1 and reaching a
decision on rescinding that prior agency
action. As noted below, EPA seeks
public comment, in the context of SAFE
1 and now the Agency’s
reconsideration, on whether the Agency
properly exercised its authority in
reconsidering the ACC program waiver
and whether the second waiver prong at
section 209(b)(1)(B) was properly
interpreted and applied. Additionally,
EPA seeks comment on whether EPA
had the authority in the SAFE 1 context
to interpret section 177 of the CAA and
whether the interpretation was
appropriate, as well as whether EPA
properly considered EPCA preemption
and its effect on California’s waiver.
EPA will take all relevant comments
into consideration before taking final
action.
The full waiver analysis, for new
waiver requests, includes consideration
of the following three criteria: Whether
(a) California’s determination that its
motor vehicle emission standards are, in
the aggregate, at least as protective of
public health and welfare as applicable
Federal standards is arbitrary and
capricious, (b) California needs such
standards to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions, and (c)
California’s standards and
accompanying enforcement procedures
are consistent with section 202(a) of the
Clean Air Act.
In contrast, in this instance EPA is not
considering an initial waiver request
(e.g., the 2012 ACC program waiver
request from CARB, which EPA granted
long ago, in 2013). Rather, EPA is now
in the position of reconsidering the
Agency’s prior withdrawal of a waiver
action (SAFE 1) for the purpose of
determining whether the withdrawal
was a valid exercise of the Agency’s
authority and consistent with judicial
precedent and whether the agency’s
action in SAFE 1 should now be
rescinded. Relatedly, certain ZEV
mandate and GHG emission standards
within the ACC program would become
effective should EPA rescind SAFE 1.
EPA’s purpose in soliciting public
comment is to determine whether SAFE
1 was a valid and appropriate exercise
of the Agency’s authority. EPA is only
reconsidering SAFE 1 and not reopening
the ACC program waiver decision for
comments. Therefore, EPA is not
soliciting comments on issues raised
and evaluated by EPA in the 2013 ACC
program waiver decision that were not
raised and evaluated in the final SAFE
1 decision. EPA intends to treat any
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such comments as beyond the scope of
this action.
EPA is seeking to determine whether
it properly evaluated and exercised its
authority in reconsidering a previous
waiver granted to CARB and whether
the withdrawal was a valid exercise of
authority and consistent with judicial
precedent. EPA specifically seeks
comment on the matters raised in the
Petitions for Reconsideration as they
pertain to these evaluations.
EPA is interested in any information
or comments regarding EPA’s inherent
or implied authority to reconsider
previously granted waivers. In
particular, to the extent EPA has such
authority, EPA seeks comments as to
whether there are particular factors or
issues that the Agency is required to
take into consideration, and whether
EPA properly evaluated such factors
when reaching the decision in SAFE 1
to reconsider the ACC program waiver
and withdraw elements of it. For
example, was it permissible for EPA to
withdraw elements of the ACC program
waiver over five years after it was
issued? Were the grounds EPA provided
in SAFE 1 a valid basis for withdrawing
the identified elements of the ACC
program waiver? Did EPA properly
identify and consider any relevant
reliance interests, such as the inclusion
of GHG emission standards and ZEV
mandates in approved SIPs, in its SAFE
1 action? Similarly, are there particular
factors or reliance interests that EPA
should consider in reconsidering the
SAFE 1 action and recognizing the
validity of EPA’s 2013 ACC program
waiver?
EPA’s decision to change course and
withdraw the ACC program waiver, as it
related to CARB’s GHG emission
standards and EPA’s finding that such
standards were only designed to address
climate change and a global air
pollution problem, was based in large
part on a new interpretation of section
209(b)(1)(B)—the second waiver prong
regarding whether California ‘‘needs
such standards to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions.’’ EPA is also
interested in any new or additional
information or comments regarding
whether it appropriately interpreted and
applied section 209(b)(1)(B) in SAFE 1.
For example, was it permissible for EPA
to construe section 209(b)(1)(B) as
calling for a consideration of
California’s need for a separate motor
vehicle program where criteria
pollutants are at issue and a
consideration of California’s specific
standards where GHG standards are at
issue?
Likewise, EPA’s decision to withdraw
the ACC program waiver as it relates to
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California’s ZEV mandate, based on the
same new interpretation and application
of the second waiver prong, rested
heavily on the conclusion that
California only adopted the ZEV
program to achieve GHG emission
reductions. EPA recognizes that this
conclusion, in turn, rested solely on a
specific reading of CARB’s ACC
program waiver request.59 EPA requests
comment on these specific conclusions
and readings as well as within the
context of environmental conditions in
California whether the withdrawal of
the ACC program waiver as it applied to
the ZEV mandate was permissible and
appropriate, under applicable factors
identified above and in relevant
caselaw.
We also seek comment on EPA’s
action in SAFE 1 regarding section 177
of the CAA. Specifically, EPA seeks
comment on whether it was appropriate
for EPA to provide an interpretation of
section 177 within the SAFE 1
proceeding. To the extent it was
appropriate to provide an interpretation,
EPA seeks comment on whether section
177 was properly interpreted and
whether California’s mobile source
emission standards adopted by states
pursuant to Section 177 may have both
criteria emission and GHG emission
benefits and purposes.
As explained above, SAFE 1
represented a unique and
unprecedented circumstance where two
Federal agencies issued a joint notice
and provided separate interpretive
opinions regarding their respective
federal preemption statutes.60 Although
EPA has historically declined to look
beyond the waiver criteria in section
209(b) when deciding the merits of a
waiver request from CARB, in SAFE 1
EPA chose not only to void portions of
a waiver it had previously granted, but
also to evaluate the effect of a
pronouncement of preemption under
EPCA on an existing Clean Air Act
waiver. We seek comment on whether
EPA properly considered and withdrew
portions of the ACC program waiver
pertaining to GHG standards and the
ZEV mandate based on NHTSA’s EPCA
preemption action, including whether
EPA has the authority to withdraw an
existing waiver based on a new action
that is beyond the scope of section 209
59 ‘‘Regarding
the ACC program ZEV mandate
requirements, CARB’s waiver request noted that
there was no criteria emissions benefit in terms of
vehicle (tank-to-wheel—TTW) emissions because
its LEV III criteria pollutant fleet standard was
responsible for those emission reductions.’’ 84 FR
at 51330.
60 The September 27, 2019 joint agency action is
properly considered as two severable actions, a
rulemaking by NHTSA and a final informal
adjudication by EPA.
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22429
of the CAA. Because EPA relied on
NHTSA’s regulation on preemption,
what significance should EPA place on
the repeal of that regulation if NHTSA
does take final action to do so?
Determination of Nationwide Scope or
Effect
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs
judicial review of final actions by EPA.
This section provides, in part, that
petitions for review must be filed in the
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit: (i) When the agency
action consists of ‘‘nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions
taken, by the Administrator,’’ or (ii)
when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, if ‘‘such action is based on
a determination of nationwide scope or
effect and if in taking such action the
Administrator finds and publishes that
such action is based on such a
determination.’’ For locally or regionally
applicable final actions, the CAA
reserves to EPA complete discretion
whether to invoke the exception in (ii).
61
In addition to California, thirteen
other states and the District of Columbia
have adopted California’s greenhouse
gas standards.62 The other states are
New York, Massachusetts, Vermont,
Maine, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Rhode Island, Washington, Oregon, New
Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and
Colorado. These jurisdictions represent
a wide geographic area and fall within
seven different judicial circuits.
If the Administrator takes final action
to revise or rescind SAFE 1, then, in
consideration of the effects of SAFE 1
not only on California, but also on those
states that had already adopted
California’s standards under section
177, to the extent a court finds this
action to be locally or regionally
applicable, the Administrator intends to
exercise the complete discretion
afforded to him under the CAA to make
and publish a finding that this action is
based on a determination of
61 In deciding whether to invoke the exception by
making and publishing a finding that this final
action is based on a determination of nationwide
scope or effect, the Administrator intends to take
into account a number of policy considerations,
including his judgment balancing the benefit of
obtaining the D.C. Circuit’s authoritative centralized
review versus allowing development of the issue in
other contexts and the best use of agency resources.
62 In addition, other states are currently in the
process of adopting California standards.
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‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ within the
meaning of CAA section 307(b)(1).63
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2021–08826 Filed 4–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[OMB 3060–0562; FRS 22896]
Information Collection Being Reviewed
by the Federal Communications
Commission Under Delegated
Authority
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
As part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork burdens, and as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC or
Commission) invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on the
following information collections.
Comments are requested concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
the accuracy of the Commission’s
burden estimate; ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; ways to minimize
the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and ways to
further reduce the information
collection burden on small business
SUMMARY:
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
7 .........................
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor a
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. No person shall be subject to
any penalty for failing to comply with
a collection of information subject to the
PRA that does not display a valid OMB
control number.
DATES: Written PRA comments should
be submitted on or before June 28, 2021.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting comments but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the contact listed below as soon
as possible.
ADDRESSES: Direct all PRA comments to
Cathy Williams, FCC, via email to PRA@
fcc.gov and to Cathy.Williams@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information about the
information collection, contact Cathy
Williams at (202) 418–2918.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 3060–0562.
Title: Section 76.916, Petition for
Recertification.
Form Number: Not applicable.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofit entities; State, local or tribal
government.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 2 respondents; 3 responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 10
hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement; Third party
disclosure requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits. The statutory
authority for this information collection
is contained in Sections 4(i) and 623 of
the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended.
MEDIA .....................................................
Total Annual Burden: 30 hours.
Total Annual Cost: No cost.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: No
impact(s).
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
There is no need for confidentiality with
this collection of information.
Needs and Uses: The information
collection requirements contained in 47
CFR 76.916 provide that a franchising
authority wishing to assume jurisdiction
to regulate basic cable service and
associated rates after its request for
certification has been denied or
revoked, may file a petition for
recertification with the Commission.
The petition must be served on the cable
operator and on any interested party
that participated in the proceeding
denying or revoking the original
certification. Oppositions to petitions
may be filed within 15 days after the
petition is filed. Replies may be filed
within seven days of filing of
oppositions.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–08798 Filed 4–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[23202]
Deletion of Item From April 22, 2021
Open Meeting
April 21, 2021.
The following item has been adopted
by the Commission and deleted from the
list of items scheduled for consideration
at the Thursday, April 22, 2021, Open
Meeting. The item was previously listed
in the Commission’s Notice of
Thursday, April 15, 2021.
Title: Imposing Application Cap in Upcoming NCE FM Filing Window (MB Docket
No. 20–343).
Summary: The Commission will consider a Public Notice to impose a limit of ten
applications filed by any party in the upcoming 2021 filing window for new noncommercial educational FM stations.
*
*
*
*
*
The meeting will be webcast with
open captioning at: www.fcc.gov/live.
Open captioning will be provided as
well as a text only version on the FCC
website. Other reasonable
accommodations for people with
disabilities are available upon request.
In your request, include a description of
the accommodation you will need and
a way we can contact you if we need
more information. Last minute requests
will be accepted but may be impossible
to fill. Send an email to: fcc504@fcc.gov
or call the Consumer & Governmental
Affairs Bureau at 202–418–0530.
Additional information concerning
this meeting may be obtained from the
Office of Media Relations, (202) 418–
0500. Audio/Video coverage of the
meeting will be broadcast live with
open captioning over the internet from
63 In the report on the 1977 Amendments that
revised CAA section 307(b)(1), Congress noted that
the Administrator’s determination that the
‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ exception applies
would be appropriate for any action that has a
scope or effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See
H.R. Rep. No. 95–294 at 323–24, reprinted in 1977
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402–03.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 80 (Wednesday, April 28, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22421-22430]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-08826]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257; FRL-10022-05-OAR]
California State Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Standards;
Advanced Clean Car Program; Reconsideration of a Previous Withdrawal of
a Waiver of Preemption; Opportunity for Public Hearing and Public
Comment
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of Opportunity for Public Hearing and Comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is reconsidering a
prior action that withdrew a waiver of preemption for California's zero
emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate and greenhouse gas (GHG) emission
standards within California's Advanced Clean Car (ACC) program for
purposes of rescinding that action. The ACC program waiver, as it
pertains to the GHG emission standards and ZEV mandates, will become
effective should EPA rescind the prior action. On September 27, 2019,
EPA and the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration
(NHTSA) issued an action titled ``The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient
Vehicles Rule Part One: One National Program'' (SAFE 1) that included,
among other matters, EPA's determination that the Agency had authority
to reconsider the ACC program waiver and that elements of the ACC
program waiver should be withdrawn due to NHTSA's action under the
Energy Policy & Conservation Act (EPCA) and Clean Air Act (CAA)
preemption provisions. In addition, SAFE 1 included EPA's
interpretation of whether States can adopt California's GHG emission
standards under section 177 of the CAA.
EPA believes that there are significant issues regarding whether
SAFE 1 was a valid and appropriate exercise of agency authority,
including the amount of time that had passed since EPA's 2013 waiver
decision, the novel approach and legal interpretations used in SAFE 1,
and whether EPA took proper account of the environmental conditions in
California and the environmental consequences from the waiver
withdrawal in SAFE 1. Further, EPA will be addressing issues raised in
several petitions for reconsideration of SAFE 1, including one filed by
California (jointly with a number of States and Cities) and one jointly
filed by nongovernmental organizations. Finally, on January 20, 2021,
President Biden issued an Executive Order on ``Protecting Public Health
and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate
Crisis.'' The President directed the Federal Agencies to ``immediately
review'' SAFE 1, and to consider action ``suspending, revising, or
rescinding'' that action by April 2021. Therefore, based upon the
issues associated with SAFE 1, the petitions for reconsideration, and
the Executive Order, this Federal Register notice initiates
reconsideration of SAFE 1 and announces a virtual public hearing as
well as an opportunity to submit new written comment.
DATES:
Comments: Comments must be received on or before July 6, 2021.
Public Hearing: EPA will hold a virtual public hearing on June 2,
2021. Please refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
additional information on the public hearing. Additional information
regarding the virtual public hearing and this action can be found at:
https://www.epa.gov/regulations-emissions-vehicles-and-engines/public-hearing-information-epas-notice-reconsideration.
ADDRESSES: Comments. You may send your comments, identified by Docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov
(our preferred method). Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Email: [email protected]. Include Docket ID No. EPA-
HQ-OAR-2021-0257 in the subject line of the message.
Mail: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Docket
Center, Air Docket, Mail Code 28221T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20460.
Hand Delivery or Courier (by scheduled appointment only):
EPA Docket Center, WJC West Building, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004. The Docket Center's hours of
operations are 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday (except Federal
Holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Docket ID
No. for this action. Comments received may be posted without change to
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided. For the full EPA public comment policy, information about CBI
or multimedia submissions, and general guidance on making effective
comments, please visit
[[Page 22422]]
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
Out of an abundance of caution for members of the public and our
staff, the EPA Docket Center and Reading Room are closed to the public,
with limited exceptions, to reduce the risk of transmitting COVID-19.
Our Docket Center staff will continue to provide remote customer
service via email, phone, and webform. We encourage the public to
submit comments via https://www.regulations.gov or email, as there may
be a delay in processing mail and faxes. Hand deliveries and couriers
may be received by scheduled appointment only. For further information
on EPA Docket Center services and the current status, please visit us
online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
EPA continues to monitor information carefully and continuously
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), local area
health departments, and our Federal partners so that we can respond
rapidly as conditions change regarding COVID-19.
Public Hearing. The virtual public hearing will be held on June 2,
2021. The hearing will begin at 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time (ET) and end
when all parties who wish to speak have had an opportunity to do so.
All hearing attendees (including those who do not intend to provide
testimony and merely listen) should notify the [email protected]
email address listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT by May 25,
2021. Once an email is sent to this address you will receive an
automatic reply with further information for registration. Be sure to
check your clutter and junk mailboxes for this reply. Additional
information regarding the hearing appears below under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions regarding this proposed
action, contact David Dickinson, Office of Transportation and Air
Quality, Transportation and Climate Division, Environmental Protection
Agency; telephone number: (202) 343-9256; email address:
[email protected]. To register for the virtual public hearing,
contact [email protected]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Participation in Virtual Public Hearing
II. Background
A. Scope of Preemption and Criteria for a Waiver Under the Clean
Air Act
B. The ACC Program Waiver
C. The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part
One: One National Program'' (SAFE 1)
D. Prior EPA Waiver Decisions for California Greenhouse Gas
Emission Standards
E. The Petitions for Reconsideration
III. Request for Comments
I. Participation in Virtual Public Hearing
Please note that EPA is deviating from its typical approach because
the President has declared a national emergency. Because of current CDC
recommendations, as well as state and local orders for social
distancing to limit the spread of COVID-19, EPA cannot hold in-person
public meetings at this time.
EPA will begin pre-registering speakers for the hearing upon
publication of this document in the Federal Register. To register to
speak at the virtual hearing, please contact the email address listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. The last day to pre-
register to speak at the hearing will be May 25, 2021.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes to provide oral testimony. EPA
may ask clarifying questions during the oral presentations but will not
respond to the presentations at that time. EPA recommends submitting
the text of your oral comments as written comments to the rulemaking
docket. Written statements and supporting information submitted during
the comment period will be considered with the same weight as oral
comments and supporting information presented at the public hearing.
Please note that any updates made to any aspect of the hearing will be
posted online at: https://www.epa.gov/regulations-emissions-vehicles-and-engines/public-hearing-information-epas-notice-reconsideration.
While EPA expects the hearing to go forward as set forth above,
please monitor the website or contact the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to determine if there are any
updates. EPA does not intend to publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing updates. A copy of the hearing transcript will be
placed into the docket.
If you require the services of a translator or special
accommodations such as audio description, please pre-register for the
hearing and describe your needs by May 25, 2021. EPA may not be able to
arrange accommodations without advance notice.
II. Background
EPA is reconsidering a prior action that withdrew the January 9,
2013 waiver of preemption for the state of California's (California)
Advanced Clean Car (ACC) program for purposes of rescinding the
withdrawal action. The ZEV mandates and GHG emission standards within
the ACC program waiver will come into effect should EPA rescind this
prior action.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 78 FR 2112 (January 9, 2013). EPA's waiver action on January
9, 2013 was for several California emission standards, including the
low emission vehicle (LEV) III regulations for criteria pollutants.
SAFE 1 withdrew elements of the January 9, 2013 waiver pertaining to
certain ZEV mandate and GHG emission standards. Other elements of
the ACC program waiver remain in effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, on September 27, 2019, NHTSA and EPA each finalized
agency actions that addressed greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions standards
for new motor vehicles and zero emissions vehicle (ZEV) mandates in a
single Federal Register notice titled: ``The Safer Affordable Fuel-
Efficient Vehicles Rule Part One: One National Program'' (SAFE 1).\2\
In that notice, NHTSA codified regulatory text, and appendices, that
provided its view that state regulation of fuel economy is preempted
under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA). On its part, EPA
withdrew a waiver of preemption that had been previously granted to
California for the regulation of motor vehicle emissions through GHG
standards and a ZEV mandate. EPA's action also took into consideration
preemption regulations issued by NHTSA under EPCA in SAFE 1. On January
20, 2021, President Biden issued an Executive Order 13990 on
``Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to
Tackle the Climate Crisis.'' The President directed each Federal agency
to ``immediately review'' SAFE 1, and consider taking action
``suspending, revising, or rescinding'' it by April 2021.\3\
Accordingly, EPA has conducted a review of both the legal and factual
predicates for SAFE I. EPA now believes that there are significant
issues with the SAFE 1 action, including the time elapsed since EPA's
2013 waiver decision (and associated reliance interests), the novel
statutory interpretations set forth in SAFE 1, and whether EPA took
proper account of the environmental conditions in California and the
environmental consequences of the waiver withdrawal in SAFE 1. Further,
subsequent to SAFE 1, EPA received several petitions for
reconsideration, including one filed by California seeking
clarification of the scope of the SAFE 1 action, one filed by
California (jointly with a number of States and Cities), and one
jointly filed by nongovernmental organizations that
[[Page 22423]]
raised significant issues related to the agency's action in SAFE 1. EPA
has evaluated each petition for reconsideration and believes there is
merit in reviewing issues that petitioners have raised such as whether
the withdrawal of the ACC program waiver was a valid exercise of EPA
authority, and whether the Agency properly interpreted and applied the
CAA preemption provisions. EPA has notified these petitioners that the
agency will be addressing issues raised in their petitions as part of
this proceeding.
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\2\ The SAFE 1 action is at 84 FR 51310 (September 27, 2019).
\3\ This action is being issued only by EPA and, therefore, does
not bear upon any future or potential action NHTSA may take
regarding its decision or pronouncements in SAFE 1.
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In considering whether to rescind the action that withdrew portions
of the ACC program waiver, EPA is seeking to determine whether it
properly evaluated and exercised its authority to reconsider a previous
waiver granted to CARB and whether the withdrawal was a valid and
appropriate exercise of authority and consistent with judicial
precedent.
EPA is providing the following summary of sections of the Clean Air
Act that are applicable to the Agency's review of the California Air
Resources Board's (CARB's) new motor vehicle emissions program, an
overview of CARB's ACC program waiver and subsequent EPA action to
withdraw portions of the ACC program waiver pertaining to CARB's GHG
emission standards and ZEV mandate in SAFE 1, an overview of prior EPA
waiver actions applicable to CARB's GHG emission standards for motor
vehicles, and a brief description of the petitions for reconsideration
filed with EPA after the completion of SAFE 1 in order to provide the
context for agency solicitation of comments, which can be found in
section ``III. Request for Comments.'' EPA is not soliciting comments
on the 2013 ACC program waiver decision, and therefore has not reopened
that decision for comments. Specifically, EPA is not soliciting
comments on issues addressed in the ACC program waiver decision beyond
those issues addressed in the final SAFE 1 action. EPA will treat any
other comments it receives as beyond the scope of this reconsideration
proceeding.
A. Scope of Preemption and Criteria for a Waiver Under the Clean Air
Act
Title II of the Clean Air Act, as amended, generally preempts
states from setting emission standards for new motor vehicles. Section
209(a) provides:
No State or any political subdivision thereof shall adopt or
attempt to enforce any standard relating to the control of emissions
from new motor vehicles or new motor vehicle engines subject to this
part. No state shall require certification, inspection or any other
approval relating to the control of emissions from any new motor
vehicle or new motor vehicle engine as condition precedent to the
initial retail sale, titling (if any), or registration of such motor
vehicle, motor vehicle engine, or equipment.\4\
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\4\ Section 209(a) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7543(a).
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California is the only state that is eligible to seek and receive a
waiver of preemption under the terms of section 209(b)(1). This section
provides:
The Administrator, after notice and opportunity for public hearing,
to waive application of the prohibitions of section 209(a) for any
state that has adopted standards (other than crankcase emission
standards) for the control of emissions from new motor vehicles or new
motor vehicle engines prior to March 30, 1966, if the state determines
that the state standards will be, in the aggregate, at least as
protective of public health and welfare as applicable Federal
standards. No such waiver shall be granted if the Administrator finds
that--
(A) the determination of the state is arbitrary and capricious,
(B) the state does not need the state standards to meet compelling
and extraordinary conditions, or
(C) the state standards and accompanying enforcement procedures are
not consistent with section 202(a) of the Act.\5\
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\5\ Section 209(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
7543(b)(1).
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Previous decisions granting California waivers of Federal
preemption for motor vehicle emission standards have stated that State
standards are inconsistent with section 202(a) if there is inadequate
lead time to permit the development of the necessary technology giving
appropriate consideration to the cost of compliance within that time
period or if the Federal and State test procedures impose inconsistent
certification procedures.\6\
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\6\ To be consistent, the California certification procedures
need not be identical to the Federal certification procedures.
California procedures would be inconsistent, however, if
manufacturers would be unable to meet the state and Federal
requirements with the same test vehicle during the same test. See,
e.g., 43 FR 32182 (July 25, 1978).
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EPA has consistently interpreted Section 209(b) to require issuance
of a waiver unless EPA finds that at least one of the three criteria is
met.\7\ As noted above, the three waiver criteria are properly seen as
the criteria for denial. Prior to SAFE 1, EPA has consistently declined
to consider other potential bases for denying a waiver such as
Constitutional claims or the preemptive effect of other Federal
statutes.\8\ In addition, EPA, given the text, legislative history and
judicial precedent, has consistently interpreted section 209(b) as
placing the burden on the opponents of a waiver to demonstrate that one
of the criterion for a denial has been met.\9\ Thus, EPA's practice has
been to defer and not to intrude in policy decisions made by California
in adopting standards for protecting the health and welfare of its
citizens.\10\
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\7\ This is different from most waiver proceedings before the
Agency, where EPA typically determines whether it is appropriate to
make certain findings necessary for granting a waiver, and if the
findings are not made then a waiver is denied. This reversal of the
normal statutory structure embodies and is consistent with the
congressional intent of providing deference to California to
maintain its own new motor vehicle emissions program. In previous
waiver decisions, EPA has recognized that the intent of Congress in
creating a limited review based on specifically listed criteria was
to ensure that the Federal government did not second-guess state
policy choices. See 40 FR 23102, 23103 (May 28, 1975); 78 FR 2112,
2115 (January 9, 2013); 40 FR 23103-23104; see also LEV I waiver at
58 FR 4166 (January 13, 1993), Decision Document at 64. Similarly,
EPA has stated its practice of leaving the decision on ``ambiguous
and controversial matters of public policy'' to California's
judgment. 78 FR 2112, 2115; 40 FR 23103, 23104; 58 FR 4166.
\8\ ``As EPA has stated on numerous occasions, section 209(b) of
the Clean Air Act limits our authority to deny California's requests
for waivers to the three criteria therein, and EPA has refrained
from denying California's requests for waivers based on any other
criteria. Where the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit has reviewed EPA decisions declining to deny waiver requests
based on criteria not found in section 209(b), the court has upheld
and agreed with EPA's determination.'' 78 FR 2112, 2145 (citing
Motor and Equipment Manufacturers Ass'n v. Nichols (MEMA II), 142
F.3d 449, 462-63, 466-67 (D.C. Cir. 1998), Motor and Equipment
Manufacturers Ass'n v. EPA (MEMA I), 627 F.2d 1095, 1111, 1114-20
(D.C. Cir. 1979).
\9\ MEMA at 1120-1121; MEMA II.
\10\ EPA is ``to afford California the broadest possible
discretion in selecting the best means to protect the health of its
citizens and the public welfare.'' MEMA II, 142 F.3d at 453 (quoting
H.R. Rep. No. 95-294, at 301-02 (1977)); EPA `` `is not to overturn
California's judgment lightly,' '' Id., at 463 (quoting H.R. Rep.
No. 95-294, at 302 (1977), reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 1381).
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In 1977, Congress promulgated section 177 of the Clean Air Act,
which permitted States to adopt California new motor vehicle emission
standards for which a waiver of preemption has been granted if certain
criteria are met.\11\ Also known as the ``opt-in'' provision, section
177 of the Act, 42 U.S.C. 7507, provides:
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\11\ Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. NYS Dep. of Envt'l
Conservation, 17 F.3d 521, 532 (2d Cir. 1994).
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Notwithstanding section 7543(a) of this title, any State which has
plan provisions approved under this part may adopt and enforce for any
model year standards relating to control of emissions from new motor
vehicles or new motor vehicle engines and take such other actions as
are referred to in
[[Page 22424]]
section 7543(a) of this title respecting such vehicles if--
(1) such standards are identical to the California standards for
which a waiver has been granted for such model year, and
(2) California and such State adopt such standards at least two
years before commencement of such model year (as determined by
regulations of the Administrator).
Nothing in this section or in subchapter II of this chapter shall
be construed as authorizing any such State to prohibit or limit,
directly or indirectly, the manufacture or sale of a new motor vehicle
or motor vehicle engine that is certified in California as meeting
California standards, or to take any action of any kind to create, or
have the effect of creating, a motor vehicle or motor vehicle engine
different than a motor vehicle or engine certified in California under
California standards (a ``third vehicle'') or otherwise create such a
``third vehicle''.
B. The ACC Program Waiver
On June 27, 2012, CARB notified EPA of its adoption of the ACC
program regulatory package that contained amendments to its low-
emission vehicle (LEV) and ZEV mandate and requested a waiver of
preemption under section 209(b) to enforce regulations pertaining to
this program.\12\ The ACC program combined the control of smog and
soot-causing pollutants and GHG emissions into a single coordinated
package of requirements for passenger cars, light-duty trucks, and
medium-duty passenger vehicles (and limited requirements related to
heavy-duty vehicles for certain model years). On August 31, 2012, EPA
issued a notice of opportunity for public hearing and written comment
on CARB's request and solicited comment on all aspects of a full waiver
analysis under the criteria of section 209(b) of the CAA.\13\ On
January 9, 2013, EPA granted California's request for a waiver of
preemption to enforce the ACC program regulations.\14\
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\12\ CARB's June 12, 2012 waiver request (including its
attachments) was included in EPA's Air Docket at EPA-HQ-OAR-2012-
0562-0002 et seq. The waiver request and attachments have also now
been placed in EPA's Air Docket pertaining to this reconsideration
at EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257. A complete description of the ACC program,
as it existed at the time that CARB applied for the 2013 waiver, can
be found in the docket for the January 2013 waiver action, Docket
No. EPA-HQ-OAR- 2012- 0562.
\13\ 77 FR 53199 (August 31, 2012).
\14\ 78 FR 2112 (January 9, 2013).
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Set forth in the ACC program waiver decision is a summary
discussion of EPA's decision to depart from its traditional
interpretation of section 209(b)(1)(B) (the second waiver prong) in the
2008 waiver denial for CARB's initial GHG standards for certain earlier
model years along with EPA's return to the traditional interpretation
in the waiver issued in 2009.\15\ The traditional interpretation, which
EPA stated is the better interpretation of section 209(b)(1)(B), calls
for evaluating California's need for a separate motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions. Because EPA
received comment on this issue during the ACC program waiver
proceeding, as it pertained to both CARB's GHG emission standards and
ZEV mandate, the Agency once again recounted the interpretive history
associated with standards for both GHG emissions and criteria air
pollutants to explain EPA's belief that section 209(b)(1)(B) should be
interpreted the same way for all air pollutants.\16\ Applying this
approach, and with deference to California, EPA found that it could not
deny the waiver under the second waiver prong.\17\ Without adopting an
alternative interpretation, EPA noted that to the extent that it was
appropriate to examine the need for CARB's GHG standards to meet
compelling and extraordinary conditions, EPA had discussed at length in
its 2009 GHG waiver decision that California does have compelling and
extraordinary conditions directly related to regulations of GHGs.\18\
Similarly, to the extent that it was appropriate to examine the need
for CARB's ZEV mandate, EPA noted that the ZEV mandate in the ACC
program enables California to meet both its air quality and climate
goals into the future. EPA recognized CARB's coordinated strategies
reflected in the ACC program for addressing both criteria pollutants
and greenhouse gases and the magnitude of the technology and energy
transformation needed to meet such goals.\19\ Therefore, EPA determined
that to the extent the second waiver criterion should be interpreted to
mean a need for the specific standards at issue, then CARB's GHG
emission standards and ZEV mandate satisfy such a finding.\20\
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\15\ 73 FR 12156 (March 6, 2008); 74 FR 32744 (July 8, 2009).
\16\ 78 FR 2112, 2125-2128.
\17\ Id. at 2129. ``CARB has repeatedly demonstrated the need
for its motor vehicle program to address compelling and
extraordinary conditions in California. As discussed above, the term
compelling and extraordinary conditions ``does not refer to the
levels of pollution directly.'' Instead, the term refers primarily
to the factors that tend to produce higher levels of pollution--
geographical and climatic conditions (like thermal inversions) that,
when combined with large numbers and high concentrations of
automobiles, create serious air pollution problems. California still
faces such conditions.''
\18\ Id. at 2129-2130.
\19\ Id. at 2130-2131.
\20\ Id. at 2129-2131.
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Also included in the ACC program waiver is a discussion of the
technological feasibility of the ACC program GHG emission standards and
the ZEV mandate as evaluated under section 209(b)(1)(C).\21\
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\21\ Id. at 2131-2143.
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Further, in response to a comment that the waiver request for GHG
emission standards should be denied because GHG standards relate to
fuel economy and are expressly preempted by the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act (EPCA), EPA explained that section 209(b) of the Act
limits the Agency's authority to deny California's requests for waivers
to the three criteria therein and that the Agency has consistently
refrained from denying California's requests for waivers based on any
other criteria. EPA also relied on judicial precedent as support.\22\
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\22\ Id. at 2145 (``Where the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit has reviewed EPA decisions declining to deny
waiver requests based on criteria not found in section 209(b), the
court has upheld and agreed with EPA's determination.'' See MEMA II
at 462-63, MEMA I at 1114-20).
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C. ``The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part One:
One National Program'' (SAFE 1)
In 2018, NHTSA issued a proposal for the next generation of the
Congressionally-mandated Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE)
standards that must be achieved by each manufacturer for its car and
light-duty truck fleet while EPA revisited its light-duty vehicle GHG
emissions standards for certain model years in the rulemaking titled:
``The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule for Model
Years 2021-2026 Passenger Cars and Light Trucks.'' \23\ EPA also
proposed to withdraw the waiver for the ACC program GHG emission
standards and ZEV mandate under both sections 209(b)(1)(B) and (C),
based upon the Agency's exercise of its inherent authority to
reconsider a previously granted waiver under the Clean Air Act. As part
of EPA's asserted authority to reconsider that ACC program waiver
issued in 2013, EPA noted the changed circumstances including its
reassessment of section 209(b)(1)(B) as well as EPA's new assessment of
the feasibility of CARB's standards under section 209(b)(1)(C). In
addition, EPA noted that the proposal presented a unique situation to
consider the implications of NHTSA's proposed
[[Page 22425]]
conclusion of EPCA preemption for California's GHG emission standards
and ZEV mandate. EPA proposed to conclude that state standards
preempted under EPCA cannot be afforded a valid section 209(b) waiver
and thus also proposed that, if NHTSA finalized its determination
regarding California's GHG standards and ZEV mandate, it would be
necessary to withdraw the waiver separate and apart from section
209(b)(1)(B) and (C).
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\23\ 83 FR 42986 (August 24, 2018).
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On September 27, 2019, EPA and NHTSA published a final action
titled: ``The Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles Rule Part
One: One National Program'' (SAFE 1) that promulgated regulations
reflecting NHTSA's conclusion that EPCA preempted California's GHG
standards and ZEV mandate. In the same action EPA withdrew the waiver
of preemption for California to enforce the ACC program GHG and ZEV
mandate on two grounds.\24\ First, EPA posited that standards preempted
under EPCA could not be afforded a valid waiver of preemption under
section 209(b). EPA explained that agency pronouncements in the ACC
program waiver decision on the historical practice of disregarding the
preemptive effect of EPCA in the context of evaluating California's
waiver applications ``was inappropriately broad, to the extent it
suggested that EPA is categorically forbidden from ever determining
that a waiver is inappropriate due to consideration of anything other
than the `criteria' or `prongs' at CAA section 209(b)(1)(B)(A)-(C).''
\25\ EPA further explained that those pronouncements were made in
waiver proceedings where the agency was acting solely on its own in
contrast to a joint action with NHTSA such as SAFE 1. Additionally, EPA
expressed intentions not to consider factors other than statutory
criteria set out in section 209(b)(1)(A)-(C) in future waiver
proceedings, but explained that addressing the preemptive effect of
EPCA and its implications for EPA's waiver for California standards was
called for in SAFE 1 because EPA and NHTSA were coordinating regulatory
actions in a single notice.\26\
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\24\ 84 FR 51310 (September 27, 2019).
\25\ Id. at 51338.
\26\ Id.
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Second, EPA withdrew the waiver for GHG standards and ZEV mandate
on two alternative grounds under the second waiver prong. Specifically,
EPA determined that California does not need the GHG standards ``to
meet compelling and extraordinary conditions,'' under section
209(b)(1)(B) and even if California does have compelling and
extraordinary conditions in the context of global climate change,
California does not ``need'' the GHG standards, under section
209(b)(1)(B) because they will not meaningfully address global air
pollution problems of the type associated with GHG emissions.\27\
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\27\ 84 FR 51310, 51328-51333.
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EPA premised the agency's finding on a consideration of
California's ``need'' for its own GHG and ZEV programs, instead of the
``need'' for a separate motor vehicle emission program to meet
compelling and extraordinary conditions. In doing so, EPA read ``such
State standards'' in section 209(b)(1)(B) as ambiguous with respect to
the scope of agency analysis of California waiver requests and posited
that reading this phrase as requiring EPA to only and always consider
California's entire motor vehicle program would limit the application
of this waiver prong in a way that EPA did not believe Congress
intended. EPA further noted that the Supreme Court had found that Clean
Air Act provisions may apply differently to GHGs than they do to
traditional pollutants in UARG v. EPA, 134 S. Ct. 2427 (2014)
(partially reversing the GHG ``Tailoring'' Rule on grounds that the
section 202(a) endangerment finding for GHG emissions from motor
vehicles did not compel regulation of all sources of GHG emissions
under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Title V permit
programs).
EPA then interpreted section 209(b)(1)(B) as turning on whether
there is a particularized, local nexus between (1) pollutant emissions
from sources, (2) air pollution, and (3) resulting impact on health and
welfare.\28\ EPA stated that these elements match the elements of the
predicate finding EPA must make before regulating, under section
202(a)(1), and are evident in California's criteria-pollutant problems,
which prompted Congress to enact the waiver provision.\29\ Under this
interpretation, EPA concluded that no such California nexus exists for
greenhouse gases: (1) These emissions from California cars are no more
relevant to climate-change impacts in the state than emissions from
cars elsewhere; (2) the resulting pollution is globally mixed; and (3)
climate-change impacts in California are not extraordinary to that
state.\30\ EPA further determined that ``such State standards'' in
sections 209(b)(1)(B) and (C) should be read consistently, which was a
departure from the traditional approach where this phrase is read as
referring back to ``in the aggregate'' in section 209(b)(1).\31\ EPA
further reasoned that the most stringent regulatory alternative
considered in the 2012 final rule and Final Regulatory Impact Analysis,
which would have required a seven percent average annual fleetwide
increase in fuel economy for MYs 2017-2025 compared to MY 2016
standards, was forecasted to decrease global temperatures by only 0.02
[deg]C in 2100.\32\
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\28\ Id. at 51339, 51347.
\29\ Id. at 51339-5134040, 51348-451349.
\30\ Id.
\31\ Id. at 51345.
\32\ Id. at 51349.
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Finally, as support for the determination that California did not
need the ZEV mandate requirements to meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions, EPA relied on a statement in the ACC program waiver support
document where CARB noted that there were no criteria emissions benefit
in terms of vehicle (tank-to-wheel) emissions because its LEV III
criteria pollutant fleet standard was responsible for those emission
reductions.\33\
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\33\ ``There is no criteria emissions benefit from including the
ZEV proposal in terms of vehicle (tank-to-wheel or TTW) emissions.''
CARB ACC program waiver request at 15 (May 2012), EPA-HQ-OAR- 2012-
0562-0004.
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Regarding burden of proof in waiver proceedings, the agency posited
that it was ``not necessary to resolve this issue as regardless of
whether a preponderance of the evidence or clear and compelling
evidence standard is applied, the Agency was concluding that withdrawal
of the waiver was appropriate.'' \34\
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\34\ 84 FR 51310, 51344 n.268. At proposal, EPA also took
comment on the burden of proof in waiver proceedings even though the
Agency had initiated reconsideration of the grant of the ACC program
waiver and such evidentiary aspects for section 209(b) waivers had
long been settled. Motor and Equip. Mfrs Ass'n. v. EPA, 627 F.2d
1095, 1121, n.19, 1126 (D.C. Cir. 1979) (MEMA I).
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EPA did not finalize the withdrawal of the waiver under the third
waiver criterion at section 209(b)(1)(C), as proposed, explaining
instead that EPA and NHTSA were not finalizing the proposed assessment
regarding the technological feasibility of the Federal GHG standards
for MY 2021 through 2025 in SAFE 1.\35\
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\35\ 84 FR 51310, 51350. EPA had proposed to determine, as an
additional basis for the waiver withdrawal, that new GHG standards
and ZEV mandate for 2021 through 2025 model years are not consistent
with section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act, including how costs should
be properly considered. EPA's waiver for CARB's ACC program, issued
in 2013, fully evaluated this criterion.
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In withdrawing the waiver, EPA asserted that authority to
reconsider and withdraw the grant of a waiver for the ACC program was
implicit in section 209(b) given that the authority to revoke a waiver
is implied in the authority for EPA to grant a waiver. The Agency
[[Page 22426]]
claimed further support for authority based on the legislative history
of section 209(b) and the judicial principle that agencies possess
inherent authority to reconsider their decisions:
The legislative history from the 1967 CAA amendments where Congress
enacted the provisions now codified in section 209(a) and (b) provides
support for this view. The Administrator has ``the right . . . to
withdraw the waiver at any time [if] after notice and an opportunity
for public hearing he finds that the State of California no longer
complies with the conditions of the waiver.'' S. Rep. No. 50-403, at 34
(1967).\36\
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\36\ Id. at 51332.
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EPA also noted that, subject to certain limitations, administrative
agencies possess inherent authority to reconsider their decisions in
response to changed circumstances:
It is well settled that EPA has inherent authority to reconsider,
revise, or repeal past decisions to the extent permitted by law so long
as the Agency provides a reasoned explanation. This authority exists in
part because EPA's interpretations of the statutes it administers ``are
not carved in stone.'' Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
863 (1984). An agency ``must consider varying interpretations and the
wisdom of its policy on a continuing basis.'' Id. at 863-64. This is
true when, as is the case here, review is undertaken ``in response to .
. . a change in administration.'' National Cable & Telecommunications
Ass'n v. Brand X internet Services, 545 U.S. 967, 981 (2005). The EPA
must also be cognizant where it is changing a prior position and
articulate a reasoned basis for the change. FCC v. Fox Television
Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515 (2009).\37\
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\37\ Id. at 51333.
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EPA opined that the text, structure, and context of section 209(b)
support EPA's interpretation that it has this authority. EPA further
asserted that no cognizable reliance interests had accrued sufficient
to foreclose EPA's ability to exercise this authority.\38\ EPA stated:
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\38\ Id. at 51331-51337.
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In tying the third waiver prong to CAA section 202(a), Congress
gave a clear indication that, in determining whether to grant a waiver
request, EPA is to engage in a review that involves a considerable
degree of future prediction, due to the expressly future-oriented terms
and function of CAA section 202(a). In turn, where circumstances arise
that suggest that such predictions may have been inaccurate, it
necessarily follows that EPA has authority to revisit those predictions
with regard to rules promulgated under CAA section 202(a), the
requirements of that section, and their relation to the California
standards at issue in a waiver request, and, on review, withdraw a
previously granted waiver where those predictions proved to be
inaccurate.\39\
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\39\ Id. at 51332, 51334. As noted above, however, EPA did not
withdraw the ACC waiver based on the third waiver prong of Section
209(b). 84 FR at 51334. Further, by way of example, EPA stated that
California as well as other parties, such as section 177 states,
were on notice that EPA would be conducting a midterm evaluation
(MTE) of the Federal GHG emission standards and that such
circumstances indicate a lack of sufficient reliance interests to
preclude EPA's reconsideration of the ACC waiver issued in 2013. As
relevant here, EPA's October 15, 2012 rulemaking setting GHG
emission standards for 2017 and later model years included a
commitment to perform the MTE for the Federal 2022 through 2025
model year standards. 77 FR 62624 (October 15, 2012). The MTE called
for EPA to issue a final determination regarding whether the Federal
MY 2022-2025 GHG standards remained appropriate under section
202(a). On January 12, 2017, EPA completed the MTE and determined
that GHG standards for MY 2022-2025 remained appropriate under
section 202(a). Subsequently, EPA withdrew the January 2017 final
determination and revised the finding of appropriateness, concluding
instead that GHG standards for MY 2022-2025 were not appropriate
and, therefore, should be revised. 83 FR 16077 (April 13, 2018).
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EPA also disagreed with some commenters' assertions that ostensible
reliance interests foreclose withdrawal of the waiver for MY 2021-2025
GHG and ZEV standards.\40\ EPA stated that ``CAA section 177 States do
not have any reliance interests that are engendered by the withdrawal
of the waiver for the MY 2021-2025 GHG and ZEV standards.'' \41\
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\40\ According to commenters ``California, and the section 177
states that have elected to adopt those standards as their own have
incurred reliance interests ultimately flowing from those standards.
For instance, California has incurred reliance interests because it
is mandated to achieve an aggressive GHG emissions reduction target
for 2030 . . .``[b]ut EPA provides no justification for applying
that change in policy retroactively to upend a five-year old
decision to which substantial reliance interests have attached.'' 84
FR 51310, 51331, 51334-51335.
\41\ Id. at 51336. Regarding states that had adopted the GHG
standards into state implementation plans (SIPs), under section 177,
EPA explained that because ``Title I does not call for NAAQS
attainment planning as it relates to GHG standards, those States
that may have adopted California's GHG standards and ZEV standards
for certain MYs would also not have any reliance interests. 84 FR
51310, 52335. ``EPA did, however, acknowledge the possibility of SIP
implications arising from the withdrawal of these standards and
indicated that the agency would engage in future actions to address
those implications. Id. at 51338, n. 256.
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In SAFE 1, EPA provided an interpretation of section 177 of the
CAA, including the notion that this section does not authorize other
states to adopt California's greenhouse gas emission standards for
which EPA had granted a waiver of preemption under section 209(b).
Although section 177 does not require States that adopt California
emission standards to submit such regulations for EPA review, EPA chose
to nevertheless provide an interpretation that this provision is
available only to states with approved nonattainment plans. EPA stated
that nonattainment designations exist only as to criteria pollutants
and greenhouse gases are not criteria pollutants; therefore, states
could not adopt GHG standards under section 177.\42\ Notably,
California in previous waiver requests has addressed the benefits of
GHG emissions reductions as it relates to ozone.
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\42\ Id. at 51350-51351. Since EPA was offering its views of
section 177 in the abstract, its interpretation of section 177 in
SAFE 1 did not have direct and appreciable legal consequences and
was not a ``final action'' of the agency.
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D. Prior EPA Waiver Practice
For over fifty years, EPA has evaluated California's requests for
waivers of preemption under section 209(b), primarily considering
CARB's motor vehicle emission program that addresses criteria
pollutants.\43\ More recently, the Agency has been tasked with
determining how section 209(b)(1)(B) should be interpreted and applied
in the context of GHG standards and California's historical air quality
problems, including the public health and welfare challenge of climate
change. Although the withdrawal and revocation of the waiver for CARB's
ACC program, in SAFE 1, represents a snapshot of this task, it is
important to examine EPA's waiver practice in general, including prior
waiver decisions pertaining to CARB GHG emission standards, in order to
determine whether EPA properly reconsidered the ACC program waiver and
properly applied the waiver criterion in section 209(b)(1)(B) in SAFE
1. A summary of EPA's historical waiver practice and decisions
regarding CARB's regulation of criteria and GHG emissions, including
EPA's consideration of the second waiver prong, is provided below.
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\43\ EPA notes that the 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act
added subsection (e) to section 209. Subsection (e) addresses the
preemption of State or political subdivision regulation of emissions
from nonroad engines or vehicles. Section 209(e)(2)(A) sets forth
language similar to section 209(b) in terms of the criteria
associated with EPA waiving preemption, in this instance for
California nonroad vehicle and engine emission standards. Congress
directed EPA to implement subsection (e). See 40 CFR part 1074. EPA
review of CARB requests submitted under section 209(e)(2)(A)(ii)
includes consideration of whether CARB needs its nonroad vehicle and
engine program to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions. See
78 FR 58090 (September 20, 2013).
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EPA has consistently interpreted and applied the second waiver
criterion by
[[Page 22427]]
considering whether California needed a separate mobile source program
as compared to the individual standards at issue to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions. As previously noted, this is known as the
``traditional approach'' of interpreting section 209(b)(1)(B).\44\ At
the same time, in the event and in response to commenters that have
argued that EPA is required to examine the specific standards at issue
in the waiver request, EPA's practice has been to retain the
traditional approach but to nevertheless review the specific standards
to determine whether California needs such standards. This has not
meant that EPA has adopted an ``alternative approach'' and required a
demonstration for the need of specific standards; rather, this
additional Agency review has been afforded to address commenters'
concerns. For example, EPA granted an authorization for CARB's In-use
Off-road Diesel Standards (Fleet Requirements) that included an
analysis under both approaches.\45\
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\44\ 49 FR 18887, 18890 (May 3, 1984).
\45\ 78 FR 58090 (Sept. 20, 2013). The United States Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld EPA's grant of a waiver of
preemption under either approach. Dalton Trucking v. EPA, No. 13-
74019 (9th Cir. 2021) (finding that EPA was not arbitrary in
granting the waiver of preemption under either approach). The court
opinion noted that ``[t]his disposition is not appropriate for
publication and is not precedent except as provided by Ninth Circuit
Rule 36-3.''
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The task of interpreting and applying section 209(b)(1)(B) to
California's GHG standards and consideration of the state's historical
air quality problems that now include the public health and welfare
challenge of climate change began in 2005, with CARB's waiver request
for 2009 and subsequent model years' GHG emission standards. On March
6, 2008, EPA denied the waiver request based on a new interpretive
finding that section 209(b) was intended for California to enforce new
motor vehicle emission standards that address local or regional air
pollution problems, and an Agency belief that California could not
demonstrate a ``need'' under section 209(b)(1)(B) for standards
intended to address global climate change problems. EPA also employed
this new alternative interpretation to state a belief that the effects
of climate change in California are not compelling and extraordinary in
comparison with the rest of the country. Therefore, within this waiver
denial, EPA no longer evaluated whether California had a need for its
motor vehicle emission program to meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions (the traditional interpretation) but rather focused on the
specific GHG emission standard in isolation and not in conjunction with
the other motor vehicle emission standards for criteria pollutants.
In 2009, EPA initiated a reconsideration of the 2008 waiver denial
based on a belief that significant issues had been raised since the
denial of the waiver.\46\ The reconsideration resulted in granting CARB
a waiver for its GHG emission standards commencing in the 2009 model
year.\47\ This led to a rejection of the Agency's novel alternative
interpretation of the second waiver prong announced in the previous
waiver denial. Instead, EPA returned to its traditional approach of
evaluating California's need for a separate motor vehicle emission
program to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions because the
agency viewed it as the better interpretation. Under the traditional
interpretation of the second waiver prong, EPA found that the opponents
of the waiver had not met their burden of proof to demonstrate that
California did not need its motor vehicle emission program to meet
compelling and extraordinary conditions. EPA also determined that, even
if the alternative interpretation were to be applied, the opponents of
the waiver had not demonstrated that California did not need its GHG
emissions standards to meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions.\48\ Since then EPA has employed the traditional approach
for evaluating California's need for a separate motor vehicle emissions
program in waiver requests. Notably, EPA also relied on the traditional
approach in granting the waiver for the ACC program.
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\46\ 74 FR 7040 (February 12, 2009).
\47\ 74 FR 32744 (July 8, 2009).
\48\ Id. at 32759-32767. See also 76 FR 34693 (June 14, 2011).
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Within the context of EPA's evaluation of the second waiver prong
and California's GHG emission standards for on-highway vehicles, EPA
notes the existence of two waivers of preemption for CARB's heavy-duty
tractor-trailer (HD) GHG emission standards.\49\ Once again, EPA relied
upon its traditional approach of evaluating California's need for a
separate motor vehicle emission program to meet compelling and
extraordinary conditions and found that no evidence had been submitted
to demonstrate that California no longer needed its motor vehicle
emissions program to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions.\50\
EPA's second waiver for the HD GHG emission standards made a similar
finding that California's compelling and extraordinary conditions
continue to exist under the traditional approach for the interpretation
of the second waiver criterion.\51\
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\49\ The first HD GHG emissions standard waiver related to
certain new 2011 and subsequent model year tractor-trailers. 79 FR
46256 (August 7, 2014). The second HD GHG emissions standard waiver
related to CARB's ``Phase I'' regulation for 2014 and subsequent
model year tractor-trailers. 81 FR 95982 (December 29, 2016).
\50\ Relatedly, California explained the need for these
standards based on projected ``reductions in NOx emissions of 3.1
tons per day in 2014 and one ton per day in 2020 due to the HD GHG
Regulations. California state[d] that these emissions reductions
will help California in its efforts to attain applicable air quality
standards. California further projects that the HD GHG Regulations
will reduce GHG emissions in California by approximately 0.7 million
metric tons (MMT) of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions (CO2e) by
2020.'' 79 FR 46256, 46261.
\51\ 81 FR 95982, 95987. At the time of CARB's Board adoption of
the HD Phase I GHG regulation, CARB determined in Resolution 13-50
that California continues to need its own motor vehicle program to
meet serious ongoing air pollution problems. CARB asserted that
``[t]he geographical and climatic conditions and the tremendous
growth in vehicle population and use that moved Congress to
authorize California to establish vehicle standards in 1967 still
exist today. EPA has long confirmed CARB's judgment, on behalf of
the State of California, on this matter.'' (See EPA Air Docket at
regulations.gov at EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0179-0012). In enacting the
California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, the Legislature
found and declared that ``Global warming poses a serious threat to
the economic well-being, public health, natural resources, and the
environment of California. The potential adverse impacts of global
warming include the exacerbation of air quality problems, a
reduction in the quality and supply of water to the state from the
Sierra snowpack, a rise in sea levels resulting in the displacement
of thousands of coastal businesses and residences, damage to the
marine ecosystems and the natural environment, and an increase in
the incidences of infectious diseases, asthma, and other health-
related problems.''
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F. Petitions for Reconsideration
After it issued SAFE 1, EPA received multiple petitions for
reconsideration urging the agency to reconsider the withdrawal of the
ACC program's GHG standards and ZEV mandate on various grounds. EPA has
granted the following petitions for reconsideration of SAFE 1 that were
pending before the Agency: \52\
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\52\ Separately from this action, EPA has notified the Parties
to each of the Petitions for Reconsideration and informed them that
EPA is initiating an action under the Administrative Procedure Act
to reconsider SAFE 1. Copies of EPA's reply letters can be found in
the public docket at EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257.
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1. A Petition for Clarification/Reconsideration submitted by the
State of California (the California Attorney General and the California
Air Resources Board), on October 9, 2019 (California Petition for
Clarification).\53\ The Petitioner sought both a
[[Page 22428]]
clarification and reconsideration of the scope of SAFE 1 as it related
to the withdrawal of portions of the ACC program waiver. Regarding
clarification, the Petitioner cited somewhat contradictory statements
in SAFE 1 and indicated that there was confusion regarding model years
that were affected by the waiver withdrawal.\54\ The Petitioner also
requested reconsideration on grounds that the final action relied on
analyses and justifications not presented at proposal and thus, was
beyond the scope of the proposal.\55\
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\53\ Copies of the petitions for reconsideration can be found in
the public docket at EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257.
\54\ The California Petition for Clarification notes ``[i]n the
Final Actions, EPA makes statements that are creating confusion,
and, indeed, appear contradictory, concerning the temporal scope of
its action(s)--specifically, which model years are covered by the
purported withdrawal of California's waiver for its GHG and ZEV
standards. In some places, EPA's statements indicate that it has
limited its action(s) to the model years for which it proposed to
withdraw and for which it now claims to have authority to withdraw--
namely model years 2021 through 2025. In other places, however,
EPA's statements suggest action(s) with a broader scope--one that
would include earlier model years.''
\55\ ``To the extent that EPA's response to this petition would
result in final action(s) beyond the scope of what EPA proposed, or
would contain analyses or justifications not included in the
Proposal (such as purported justifications for broader withdrawal
authority), then EPA must withdraw at least the portion of the Final
Actions that extend beyond the Proposal, issue a revised proposal
and accept and consider public comment before taking any final
action.'' California Petition for Clarification at 9.
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2. A Petition for Reconsideration was submitted by several States
and Cities on November 26, 2019 (States and Cities' Petition).\56\ This
petition presented several issues, including whether EPA failed to
articulate a valid rationale to support its authority to revoke the GHG
standards and ZEV mandate and instead relied on facially unclear
theories not made available at proposal for public comment.
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\56\ See EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257. This Petition was joined by the
States of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii,
Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New
Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont,
Washington, Wisconsin, Michigan, the Commonwealths of Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, and Virginia, the District of Columbia, and the Cities
of Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and San Jose..
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Petitioners further asserted that EPA unlawfully changed course in
SAFE 1 by considering (and relying on) the purported preemptive effect
of EPCA, which is outside the confines of section 209(b) and argued
that the agency rationale for withdrawing the waiver was flawed. They
also disagreed with the Agency's interpretation of section 209(b)(1)(B)
and EPA's reassessment of the factual record that existed at the time
of the ACC program waiver, which led to a new finding under the second
waiver prong and a new result in SAFE 1. They asserted, for example,
that EPA's new reliance on the ``endangerment provision'' in Section
202(a) does not support EPA's section 209(b)(1)(B) interpretation or
conclusion and that the use of the equal sovereignty principle to
inform EPA's interpretation of ``compelling and extraordinary
conditions'' was inappropriate. Additionally, Petitioners asserted that
EPA should have considered all supporting documentation instead of only
considering the 2013 waiver record and that EPA failed to consider new
evidence that further demonstrated California's need for GHG emission
standards and ZEV mandates to address compelling and extraordinary
conditions in California.
3. Petition for Reconsideration by several non-governmental
organizations on November 25, 2019 (NGOs' Petition).\57\ Petitioners
asserted that EPA's reconsideration of the ACC program waiver was not a
proper exercise of agency authority and that EPA relied on improper
considerations in its decision-making. Petitioners cast the agency's
rationale as ``pretextual.'' The NGOs' Petition further noted that EPA
did not properly interpret and apply the second waiver prong and
markedly ignored new evidence that further demonstrated California's
need for its GHG emission standards and ZEV mandates to address
compelling and extraordinary conditions in California.\58\
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\57\ See EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0257. This Petition was joined by The
Center for Biological Diversity, Chesapeake Bay Foundation,
Environment America, Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental Law &
Policy Center, Natural Resources Defense Council, Public Citizen,
Inc., Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists.
\58\ Among the comments is a letter from the CARB, dated June
17, 2019, in support of Petitioners' arguments that EPA improperly
considered the reliance interests associated with the ACC program
waiver and that EPA improperly understood the scope of the need for
the ZEV mandate and GHG standards to address a variety of
transportation conformity obligations as well as State
Implementation Plan planning requirements.
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V. Request for Comment
When EPA receives new waiver requests from CARB, EPA traditionally
publishes a notice of opportunity for public hearing and comment and
then, after the comment period has closed, publishes a notice of its
decision in the Federal Register. EPA believes it is appropriate to use
the same procedures for reconsidering SAFE 1. EPA notes that,
consistent with caselaw and EPA's past practice for California waivers,
this proceeding is subject to the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
and is considered an informal adjudication under the APA. EPA
encourages interested parties to provide comments on the topics below
for consideration by EPA, in the context of reconsidering SAFE 1 and
reaching a decision on rescinding that prior agency action. As noted
below, EPA seeks public comment, in the context of SAFE 1 and now the
Agency's reconsideration, on whether the Agency properly exercised its
authority in reconsidering the ACC program waiver and whether the
second waiver prong at section 209(b)(1)(B) was properly interpreted
and applied. Additionally, EPA seeks comment on whether EPA had the
authority in the SAFE 1 context to interpret section 177 of the CAA and
whether the interpretation was appropriate, as well as whether EPA
properly considered EPCA preemption and its effect on California's
waiver. EPA will take all relevant comments into consideration before
taking final action.
The full waiver analysis, for new waiver requests, includes
consideration of the following three criteria: Whether (a) California's
determination that its motor vehicle emission standards are, in the
aggregate, at least as protective of public health and welfare as
applicable Federal standards is arbitrary and capricious, (b)
California needs such standards to meet compelling and extraordinary
conditions, and (c) California's standards and accompanying enforcement
procedures are consistent with section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act.
In contrast, in this instance EPA is not considering an initial
waiver request (e.g., the 2012 ACC program waiver request from CARB,
which EPA granted long ago, in 2013). Rather, EPA is now in the
position of reconsidering the Agency's prior withdrawal of a waiver
action (SAFE 1) for the purpose of determining whether the withdrawal
was a valid exercise of the Agency's authority and consistent with
judicial precedent and whether the agency's action in SAFE 1 should now
be rescinded. Relatedly, certain ZEV mandate and GHG emission standards
within the ACC program would become effective should EPA rescind SAFE
1.
EPA's purpose in soliciting public comment is to determine whether
SAFE 1 was a valid and appropriate exercise of the Agency's authority.
EPA is only reconsidering SAFE 1 and not reopening the ACC program
waiver decision for comments. Therefore, EPA is not soliciting comments
on issues raised and evaluated by EPA in the 2013 ACC program waiver
decision that were not raised and evaluated in the final SAFE 1
decision. EPA intends to treat any
[[Page 22429]]
such comments as beyond the scope of this action.
EPA is seeking to determine whether it properly evaluated and
exercised its authority in reconsidering a previous waiver granted to
CARB and whether the withdrawal was a valid exercise of authority and
consistent with judicial precedent. EPA specifically seeks comment on
the matters raised in the Petitions for Reconsideration as they pertain
to these evaluations.
EPA is interested in any information or comments regarding EPA's
inherent or implied authority to reconsider previously granted waivers.
In particular, to the extent EPA has such authority, EPA seeks comments
as to whether there are particular factors or issues that the Agency is
required to take into consideration, and whether EPA properly evaluated
such factors when reaching the decision in SAFE 1 to reconsider the ACC
program waiver and withdraw elements of it. For example, was it
permissible for EPA to withdraw elements of the ACC program waiver over
five years after it was issued? Were the grounds EPA provided in SAFE 1
a valid basis for withdrawing the identified elements of the ACC
program waiver? Did EPA properly identify and consider any relevant
reliance interests, such as the inclusion of GHG emission standards and
ZEV mandates in approved SIPs, in its SAFE 1 action? Similarly, are
there particular factors or reliance interests that EPA should consider
in reconsidering the SAFE 1 action and recognizing the validity of
EPA's 2013 ACC program waiver?
EPA's decision to change course and withdraw the ACC program
waiver, as it related to CARB's GHG emission standards and EPA's
finding that such standards were only designed to address climate
change and a global air pollution problem, was based in large part on a
new interpretation of section 209(b)(1)(B)--the second waiver prong
regarding whether California ``needs such standards to meet compelling
and extraordinary conditions.'' EPA is also interested in any new or
additional information or comments regarding whether it appropriately
interpreted and applied section 209(b)(1)(B) in SAFE 1. For example,
was it permissible for EPA to construe section 209(b)(1)(B) as calling
for a consideration of California's need for a separate motor vehicle
program where criteria pollutants are at issue and a consideration of
California's specific standards where GHG standards are at issue?
Likewise, EPA's decision to withdraw the ACC program waiver as it
relates to California's ZEV mandate, based on the same new
interpretation and application of the second waiver prong, rested
heavily on the conclusion that California only adopted the ZEV program
to achieve GHG emission reductions. EPA recognizes that this
conclusion, in turn, rested solely on a specific reading of CARB's ACC
program waiver request.\59\ EPA requests comment on these specific
conclusions and readings as well as within the context of environmental
conditions in California whether the withdrawal of the ACC program
waiver as it applied to the ZEV mandate was permissible and
appropriate, under applicable factors identified above and in relevant
caselaw.
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\59\ ``Regarding the ACC program ZEV mandate requirements,
CARB's waiver request noted that there was no criteria emissions
benefit in terms of vehicle (tank-to-wheel--TTW) emissions because
its LEV III criteria pollutant fleet standard was responsible for
those emission reductions.'' 84 FR at 51330.
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We also seek comment on EPA's action in SAFE 1 regarding section
177 of the CAA. Specifically, EPA seeks comment on whether it was
appropriate for EPA to provide an interpretation of section 177 within
the SAFE 1 proceeding. To the extent it was appropriate to provide an
interpretation, EPA seeks comment on whether section 177 was properly
interpreted and whether California's mobile source emission standards
adopted by states pursuant to Section 177 may have both criteria
emission and GHG emission benefits and purposes.
As explained above, SAFE 1 represented a unique and unprecedented
circumstance where two Federal agencies issued a joint notice and
provided separate interpretive opinions regarding their respective
federal preemption statutes.\60\ Although EPA has historically declined
to look beyond the waiver criteria in section 209(b) when deciding the
merits of a waiver request from CARB, in SAFE 1 EPA chose not only to
void portions of a waiver it had previously granted, but also to
evaluate the effect of a pronouncement of preemption under EPCA on an
existing Clean Air Act waiver. We seek comment on whether EPA properly
considered and withdrew portions of the ACC program waiver pertaining
to GHG standards and the ZEV mandate based on NHTSA's EPCA preemption
action, including whether EPA has the authority to withdraw an existing
waiver based on a new action that is beyond the scope of section 209 of
the CAA. Because EPA relied on NHTSA's regulation on preemption, what
significance should EPA place on the repeal of that regulation if NHTSA
does take final action to do so?
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\60\ The September 27, 2019 joint agency action is properly
considered as two severable actions, a rulemaking by NHTSA and a
final informal adjudication by EPA.
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Determination of Nationwide Scope or Effect
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA governs judicial review of final
actions by EPA. This section provides, in part, that petitions for
review must be filed in the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit: (i) When the agency action consists of ``nationally
applicable regulations promulgated, or final actions taken, by the
Administrator,'' or (ii) when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, if ``such action is based on a determination of nationwide
scope or effect and if in taking such action the Administrator finds
and publishes that such action is based on such a determination.'' For
locally or regionally applicable final actions, the CAA reserves to EPA
complete discretion whether to invoke the exception in (ii). \61\
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\61\ In deciding whether to invoke the exception by making and
publishing a finding that this final action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope or effect, the Administrator
intends to take into account a number of policy considerations,
including his judgment balancing the benefit of obtaining the D.C.
Circuit's authoritative centralized review versus allowing
development of the issue in other contexts and the best use of
agency resources.
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In addition to California, thirteen other states and the District
of Columbia have adopted California's greenhouse gas standards.\62\ The
other states are New York, Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, Pennsylvania,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, Washington, Oregon, New Jersey, Maryland,
Delaware, and Colorado. These jurisdictions represent a wide geographic
area and fall within seven different judicial circuits.
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\62\ In addition, other states are currently in the process of
adopting California standards.
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If the Administrator takes final action to revise or rescind SAFE
1, then, in consideration of the effects of SAFE 1 not only on
California, but also on those states that had already adopted
California's standards under section 177, to the extent a court finds
this action to be locally or regionally applicable, the Administrator
intends to exercise the complete discretion afforded to him under the
CAA to make and publish a finding that this action is based on a
determination of
[[Page 22430]]
``nationwide scope or effect'' within the meaning of CAA section
307(b)(1).\63\
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\63\ In the report on the 1977 Amendments that revised CAA
section 307(b)(1), Congress noted that the Administrator's
determination that the ``nationwide scope or effect'' exception
applies would be appropriate for any action that has a scope or
effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294 at
323-24, reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402-03.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2021-08826 Filed 4-27-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P