Rescinding the Rule on Increasing Consistency and Transparency in Considering Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking Process, 26406-26419 [2021-10216]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 92 / Friday, May 14, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by July 13, 2021.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Sulfur Dioxide, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: May 7, 2021.
David Gray,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart SS—Texas
2. Section 52.2277 is added to read as
follows
■
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§ 52.2277 Control strategy and
regulations: Sulfur Dioxide.
(a) Determination of Attainment.
Effective June 14, 2021, based upon
EPA’s review of the available
monitoring data, emissions data, and air
quality modeling, EPA has determined
that the Anderson and Freestone
Counties and the Titus County
nonattainment areas have attained the
2010 Primary 1-hour Sulfur Dioxide
National Ambient Air Quality Standard
(2010 SO2 NAAQS). Under the
provisions of EPA’s Clean Data Policy,
this clean data determination suspends
the requirements for these areas to
submit an attainment demonstration,
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[FR Doc. 2021–10140 Filed 5–13–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 83
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2020–0044; FRL 10024–10–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AV18
Rescinding the Rule on Increasing
Consistency and Transparency in
Considering Benefits and Costs in the
Clean Air Act Rulemaking Process
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is rescinding the final
rule entitled ‘‘Increasing Consistency
and Transparency in Considering
Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act
Rulemaking Process.’’ The EPA is
rescinding the rule because the changes
advanced by the rule were inadvisable,
untethered to the CAA, and not
necessary to effectuate the purposes of
the Act.
DATES: This rule is effective June 14,
2021. The EPA will consider comments
on this rule received on or before June
14, 2021.
If a member of the public requests a
public hearing by May 21, 2021, the
EPA will hold a virtual public hearing
on Wednesday, June 9, 2021. Refer to
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below for additional information.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2020–0044, by the following
method:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov/ (our
preferred method). Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2020–0044 for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided. For
SUMMARY:
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Environmental Protection
Agency amends 40 CFR part 52 as
follows:
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associated reasonably available control
measures, a reasonable further progress
plan, contingency measures, and other
planning State Implementation Plan
revisions related to attainment of the
standard for as long as this area
continues to meet the 2010 SO2 NAAQS
or until the area is formally
redesignated.
(b) [Reserved]
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detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Participation’’ heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document. 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Leif
Hockstad, Office of Air Policy and
Program Support, Office of Air and
Radiation, U.S. EPA, Mail Code 6103A,
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20460; (202) 343–9432;
email address: hockstad.leif@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms
APA Administrative Procedure Act
BCA Benefit-Cost Analysis
CAA Clean Air Act
CBI Confidential Business Information
CDC Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CRA Congressional Review Act
CRS Congressional Research Service
E.O. Executive Order
EPA Environmental Protection Agency
FR Federal Register
GAO Government Accountability Office
NAAQS National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
NAS National Academies of Science,
Engineering, and Medicine
NESHAP National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants
NRDC National Resources Defense Council
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
OIRA Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OSHA Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
RTC Response to Comments document
SAB Science Advisory Board
UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
U.S.C. United States Code
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. What action is the Agency taking?
B. Does this action apply to me?
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C. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
II. Background
III. Rationale for Rescission
A. The Benefit-Cost Rule failed to establish
a rational basis for its requirements
based on the Rule’s record
B. The Benefit-Cost Rule Was not necessary
to carry out the CAA because the EPA
already prepares a BCA for CAA rules
that warrant such analysis
C. The codification of specific practices in
the Benefit-Cost Rule limited the EPA’s
ability to rely on the best available
science
D. The Benefit-Cost Rule’s presentational
requirements invited net benefit
calculations in regulatory preambles that
are misleading and inconsistent with
economic best practices
E. The Benefit-Cost Rule did not reconcile
its consideration requirement with the
substantive mandates of the CAA
F. The pre-existing administrative process
provides for ample consistency and
transparency
IV. Rulemaking Procedures, Procedural Rule
Exemption, and Request for Comment
A. Written comments
B. Participating in a virtual public hearing
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
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I. General Information
A. What action is the Agency taking?
In this interim final rule, the EPA is
rescinding the final rule entitled,
‘‘Increasing Consistency and
Transparency in Considering Benefits
and Costs in the Clean Air Act
Rulemaking Process’’ (hereafter
‘‘Benefit-Cost Rule’’).1 For all of the
reasons stated in this preamble, the EPA
has determined that the Benefit-Cost
Rule should be rescinded.
B. Does this action apply to me?
This rule does not regulate the
conduct or determine the rights of any
entity or individual outside the Agency,
as this action pertains only to internal
EPA practices. However, the Agency
recognizes that any entity or individual
interested in the EPA’s regulations
promulgated under the Clean Air Act
(CAA) may be interested in this rule. In
addition, this rule may be of particular
interest to entities and individuals
interested in how the EPA conducts and
considers benefit-cost analyses (BCA).
C. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
The Agency is taking this action
pursuant to CAA section 301(a)(1).2
Section 301(a)(1) provides authority to
the Administrator ‘‘to prescribe such
regulations as are necessary to carry out
his functions’’ under the CAA. As
discussed in Section III of this
preamble, the EPA has determined that
the Benefit-Cost Rule was not
‘‘necessary’’ and lacked a rational basis
under CAA section 301(a), and therefore
the EPA lacked authority to issue it; we
are accordingly rescinding the Rule.
II. Background
On January 20, 2021, President Biden
signed Executive Order 13990,
‘‘Protecting Public Health and the
Environment and Restoring Science To
Tackle the Climate Crisis,’’ 3 which,
among other actions, directed the EPA
to immediately review and consider
suspending, revising, or rescinding the
Benefit-Cost Rule. Accordingly, the EPA
has conducted a comprehensive review
of both the legal and factual predicates
for the Benefit-Cost Rule and, in
particular, the need for the regulations
that the Agency promulgated in the
Benefit-Cost Rule. As a result of this
review, the EPA has determined that the
changes to Agency practice required by
the Benefit-Cost Rule were inadvisable,
not needed, and untethered to the CAA,
and is therefore rescinding the Rule.
The Benefit-Cost Rule was a
procedural rule establishing
requirements related to the development
and consideration of BCA that the EPA
would have been required to undertake
when promulgating certain proposed
and final regulations under the CAA.
The final Benefit-Cost Rule stated, ‘‘[t]he
purpose of this action is to codify
procedural best practices for the
preparation, development, presentation,
and consideration of BCA in regulatory
decision-making under the CAA. This
codification will help ensure that the
EPA implements its statutory
obligations under the CAA, and
describes its work in implementing
2 42
1 85
FR 84130, (December 23, 2020).
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3 86
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U.S.C. 7601(a)(1).
FR 7037 (January 25, 2021).
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those obligations, in a way that is
consistent and transparent.’’ 4 The final
Benefit-Cost Rule was effective upon
publication in the Federal Register
based on the procedural rule exemption
from delayed effective-date
requirements in the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). After publication,
several parties filed petitions for review
of the Benefit-Cost Rule in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, and these consolidated cases
are currently in abeyance.5
The Benefit-Cost Rule included four
independent elements. The first element
required the EPA to prepare a BCA for
all significant proposed and final
regulations under the CAA. The Rule
defined a significant regulation to
include any proposed or final regulation
that was determined to be significant by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under E.O. 12866 or was
otherwise so designated by the EPA
Administrator.
The second element codified specific
practices for developing the BCAs
required by the Rule. Those practices
were drawn largely from, but not
identical to, the EPA’s Guidelines for
Preparing Economic Analyses (hereafter
‘‘Economic Guidelines’’) 6 and OMB’s
Circular A–4.7 Such practices included
providing a statement of need, analysis
of regulatory options, and appropriate
baseline. In addition, the Rule required
the risk assessments used to support
BCAs to follow certain methods for risk
characterization and risk assessment,
including a systematic review approach.
These methods included a specific
process for selecting health benefit
endpoints for quantification, including
the requirement that a clear causal or
likely causal relationship between
pollutant exposure and effect had been
established; a systematic review
process; use of particular models to
quantify the concentration-response
relationships; and a presentation of
results that highlighted uncertainty
associated with the estimated benefits.
The BCA was also required to include
specific methods for assessing
uncertainty and an explanation for the
4 85
FR 84130.
of New York v. EPA, No. 21–1026 (D.C.
Cir.); Cal. Cmtys. Against Toxics v. EPA, No. 21–
1041 (D.C. Cir.); Envt’l Def. Fund v. EPA, No. 21–
1069 (D.C. Cir.). State of New York v. EPA, No. 21–
1026 (D.C. Cir.), Doc. No. 1886762 (Feb. 23, 2021)
(abeyance order).
6 U.S. EPA. 2010. Guidelines for Preparing
Economic Analyses. https://www.epa.gov/
environmental-economics/guidelines-preparingeconomic-analyses.
7 Exec. Office of the President, OMB, Circular A–
4: Regulatory Analysis (Sept. 17, 2003), available at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/
files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf.
5 State
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methods chosen to analyze
uncertainties. To the extent permitted
by law, the Benefit-Cost Rule required
the EPA to ensure that all information
used in the development of the BCA
would be publicly available. Any
departures from the specified practices
required a discussion of the likely effect
on the results of the BCA.
The third element required the
presentation of the BCA results in the
preamble of the rulemakings subject to
the Rule. In addition to a summary of
the overall BCA results, the Benefit-Cost
Rule required preambles to include a
separate reporting of impacts that accrue
to non-U.S. populations, an additional
reporting of the public health and
welfare benefits that pertain to the
specific objective(s) of the CAA
provision(s) under which the rule is
promulgated, and a similar presentation
of any costs that the CAA provision(s)
specifies should be considered.
Finally, the fourth element required
the Agency to consider the BCA in
promulgating the regulation except
where the CAA provision(s) under
which the regulation is promulgated
prohibit it. The Rule required that the
Agency explain in the preamble how the
Agency considered the BCA in its
decision-making. The preamble
indicated the EPA’s intention that
compliance with the Rule’s
requirements would be judicially
reviewable.
The EPA cited CAA section 301(a)(1)
as the sole source of authority for the
Benefit-Cost Rule. That provision states,
‘‘[t]he Administrator is authorized to
prescribe such regulations as are
necessary to carry out his functions
under this chapter.’’ The preamble to
the Rule explained that the Agency had
authority under that CAA provision
because the ‘‘authority in Section
301(a)(1) extends to internal agency
procedures that increase the Agency’s
ability to provide consistency and
transparency to the public in regard to
the rulemaking process under the
CAA.’’ 8 The final Rule cited NRDC v.
EPA, 22 F.3d 1125, 1148 (D.C. Cir. 1994)
for the proposition that ‘‘[CAA section
301] is sufficiently broad to allow the
promulgation of rules that are necessary
and reasonable to effect the purposes of
the Act.’’ 9
III. Rationale for Rescission
After review of the Benefit-Cost Rule
and its record, the EPA has concluded
that the Rule should be rescinded in its
entirety for several reasons. The Agency
stated that it had authority to
8 85
FR 84137.
A. The Benefit-Cost Rule Failed To
Establish a Rational Basis for Its
Requirements Based on the Rule’s
Record.
As an initial matter, the EPA has
determined that the Agency failed to
provide a rational basis to support the
Rule or explain why the Rule was
needed or reasonable. The Rule did not
provide any record evidence that the
guidance and administrative processes
already in place presented problems
that justified the mandate imposed by
the Rule. Indeed, the Rule failed to
point to a single example of a rule
promulgated under the CAA where
problems emerged that would have been
avoided had the mandate imposed by
the rule been in place. Although the
Agency asserted that the Benefit-Cost
Rule’s purported achievement of greater
consistency and transparency in
economic analyses across those CAA
rulemakings affected by the Rule would
‘‘better allow the Agency to fulfill the
purpose described in Section 101(b)(1)
of the CAA ‘to protect and enhance the
quality of the Nation’s air resources so
as to promote the public health and
welfare and the productive capacity of
its population,’ ’’ 11 the mere assertion of
‘‘consistency’’ or ‘‘transparency’’ in the
Rule did not adequately explain what
10 85
9 Id.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
promulgate the Rule under CAA section
301(a) because it asserted that the Rule’s
additional procedures were necessary to
ensure consistency and transparency in
CAA rulemakings.10 However, as
discussed in Section III.A of this
preamble, the Agency failed to articulate
a rational basis for the Rule, and did not
explain how the existing CAA
rulemaking process had created or was
likely to create inconsistent or nontransparent outcomes, i.e., that an actual
or theoretical problem existed. We have
also determined, after reviewing each
element of the Rule, that the additional
procedures required under the Rule
were not needed, useful, or advisable
policy changes. In some cases, as
discussed in this Section of the
preamble, the new procedures could
have hindered the EPA’s compliance
with the CAA and may not have even
furthered the Rule’s stated purposes of
consistency and transparency. Our
rationale for rescinding each of the four
independent elements of the Rule is
severable and provided below in
Sections III.B–E of this preamble.
Finally, in Section III.F we note that the
existing public process provides ample
ability for the public to participate in
the EPA’s CAA rulemakings.
11 85
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the Agency was trying to accomplish.
Furthermore, there was no discussion of
how the requirements of the Rule
improved the Agency’s ability to
accomplish the CAA’s goals to protect
and enhance air quality.12
Some portions of the Rule suggested
that it was intended to combat a
theoretical threat. For example, the
preamble of the final rule stated,
‘‘Without enforceable procedural
regulations for BCA, future regulations
may be promulgated without
consideration of, and public
accountability concerning, their costs
and benefits. Thus, the EPA has
determined that the Final Rule is
necessary to ensure that BCA practices
are implemented in a consistent fashion
prospectively.’’ 13 The hypothetical
threat that future significant CAA
regulations would be promulgated
without appropriate consideration of
costs and benefits and without due
public process is highly implausible.
The Agency’s consideration of all
factors it is required to analyze under
the specific provisions of the CAA is
already subject to public notice and
comment processes (see Section III.F of
this preamble) and enforceable judicial
review. Moreover, as discussed in
Section III.B of this preamble, there has
been an unbroken, bipartisan, decadeslong commitment from Presidential
Administrations to conducting benefitcost analyses for economically
significant regulations issued in the
United States. These analyses are
rigorous, publicly available, subject to
interagency review, and are conducted
according to extensive peer-reviewed
guidelines from OMB and the EPA.14
We therefore rescind the Rule on the
basis that it failed to articulate a rational
basis justifying its promulgation.
B. The Benefit-Cost Rule Was Not
Necessary To Carry Out the CAA
Because the EPA Already Prepares a
BCA for CAA Rules That Warrant Such
Analysis.
In this section, we address the reasons
for rescinding the Rule’s expansion of
BCA to ‘‘significant’’ CAA rulemakings
that are not economically significant
under E.O. 12866. While BCA is a useful
analytic tool for informing regulatory
actions, it is a resource-intensive
undertaking. The Rule expanded the
universe of CAA rulemakings for which
the EPA would be required to conduct
BCAs without justifying why such
12 The Rule referenced CAA sections 101(b)(1)
and 101(c) but failed to explain how its procedures
better served those Congressional aims than the
status quo ante.
13 85 FR 84137.
14 See Section III.C of this preamble.
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expansion was necessary or appropriate.
We conclude that existing directives
under E.O. 12866 and guidance to
conduct BCAs for economically
significant rules, while retaining
flexibility in analyzing costs, benefits,
and other factors for non-economically
significant rules, strike the better
balance between agency resources and
the information provided by additional
economic analysis for such rules.
BCA has been part of executive
branch rulemaking for decades.
Presidents since the 1970s have issued
E.O.s directing agencies to conduct
analyses of the economic consequences
of regulations as part of the rulemaking
development process. E.O. 12866,
which is still in effect, requires that for
all significant regulatory actions, an
agency provide ‘‘an assessment of the
potential costs and benefits of the
regulatory action, including an
explanation of the manner in which the
regulatory action is consistent with a
statutory mandate . . .’’ 15 Some
statutes also impose analytical
requirements for regulatory actions. For
example, the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) includes
requirements that are similar to the
analytical requirements under E.O.
12866. Both E.O. 12866 (and its
predecessors) and its implementing
guidance, Circular A–4, call for
Agencies to focus resources on
quantifying benefits and costs using
BCA for those regulations that are
anticipated to have the largest effects on
the economy. Specifically, E.O. 12866
requires a quantification of benefits and
costs to the extent feasible for any
regulatory action that is ‘‘likely to result
in a rule that may . . . have an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more or adversely affect in a material
way the economy, a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities.’’ 16 Rules
meeting any of these criteria are labelled
as ‘‘economically significant.’’
Similarly, UMRA’s analytical
requirements pertain to all regulatory
actions that include federal mandates
‘‘that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more (adjusted annually
for inflation) in any one year.’’ 17
The EPA estimates the anticipated
impacts of its regulatory actions using
methods and assumptions that are
15 E.O.
12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
(58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993).
16 Id. at section 3(f)(1).
17 2 U.S.C. 1532(a).
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18:21 May 13, 2021
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transparent, consistent with the best
available science, and appropriate for
the scope of the regulatory action. In
performing analysis of regulatory action,
the EPA adheres to the executive order
requirements pertaining to economic
analysis by following the guidance laid
out by Circular A–4 and the Economic
Guidelines. Per those directives and
guidance, the BCAs and other types of
analysis supporting significant CAA
regulations are subject to internal
review and an interagency review
process under E.O. 12866 that involves
application of the principles and
methods defined in Circular A–4. The
scientific information and models used
within BCA and other analyses
supporting regulatory decisions are also
subject to EPA’s peer review guidance 18
and OMB’s guidance to federal agencies
on what information is subject to peer
review, the selection of appropriate peer
reviewers, opportunities for public
participation, and related issues.19
Executive orders and subsequent
guidance distinguish between analytical
requirements for economically
significant rules and other significant
rules, both because of the resource
intensity of regulatory analysis and
because of substantive differences
between types of rules. Developing a
BCA for an economically significant
CAA rule takes considerable Agency
resources often spanning a year or more
and frequently involves the
development of policy-relevant
emissions inventories, photochemical
air quality modeling, engineering
research assessments and analyses,
engineering cost assessments, and
benefits assessments for human health,
climate, visibility, ecological and/or
other categories of benefits. These
complex and time-consuming analytical
undertakings are appropriate for
economically significant rules.
However, these complex analyses may
not always be the best use of Agency
resources for smaller rules determined
to be significant by OMB under E.O.
12866 because they raise novel legal or
policy issues rather than because of the
magnitude of their benefits or costs.
The Benefit-Cost Rule significantly
expanded the set of rulemakings for
which a BCA would have been
conducted. As the Rule required BCA
for all rules designated as significant
under E.O. 12866, this would have
included many actions that are not
economically significant. For example,
18 See EPA’s 2015 Peer Review Handbook, 4th
Edition, available at https://www.epa.gov/osa/peerreview-handbook-4th-edition-2015.
19 See OMB’s Final Information Quality Bulletin
for Peer Review (70 FR 2664, January 14, 2005).
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26409
between January 2017 and January 2021,
the EPA finalized 32 significant
regulations under the CAA, including
only 7 economically significant
regulations.20 This expansion to
conduct BCA for a substantially larger
set of CAA rules would have consumed
significant EPA staff time and other
resources, and the additional time such
unwarranted analyses would have taken
could have resulted in delays in
fulfilling statutory obligations under the
CAA. Removal of this requirement
allows the Agency to better target
analytic resources towards CAA rules
that tend have larger economic
consequences.
Under E.O. 12866, rules that are
designated significant include those that
may: ‘‘[h]ave an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more or
adversely affect in a material way the
economy, a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or tribal governments or
communities’’; ‘‘[c]reate a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfere
with an action taken or planned by
another agency’’; ‘‘[m]aterially alter the
budgetary impact of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof’’; or ‘‘[r]aise novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
set forth in this Executive order.’’ Most
significant CAA regulations that are not
economically significant are determined
to be significant for novel legal or policy
reasons. These rules raise issues that
may be unrelated to the magnitude of
benefits or costs analyzed in BCA. As a
result, key policy decisions in the
context of these rules are often issues
that can be fully addressed through a
more targeted or different kind of
analysis than a BCA. For significant
rules that are not economically
significant, other less resource-intensive
and time-consuming analyses are
prepared to inform and support the
rulemaking. For example, instead of
conducting a BCA, the EPA may instead
examine the emission and cost impacts
on particular regulated entities or
conduct qualitative analyses for less
consequential rules, which may regulate
smaller sectors of economy, affect
sectors that are not well connected with
other parts of the economy, or have
smaller effects to the economy overall.
In addition, often in these situations
data and methods for quantifying and
20 See the memorandum in the docket ‘‘Final
Significant Regulations under the Clean Air Act
2017–2021’’ for the list of the significant and
economically significant regulations.
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monetizing overall net benefits may not
be available. In such cases, less
extensive analyses may provide
sufficient information for the
rulemaking. These analyses may also
include elements of a BCA that
contribute important information to the
policy decision. For example, the
Agency routinely prepares economic
impact assessments for many rules,
including risk and technology reviews
for NESHAPs and new source
performance standards. As noted above,
though, the resources involved in doing
a BCA may not be warranted when the
focus of regulatory analysis is on novel
legal or policy issues or other noneconomic factors that make the action
significant.
The Benefit-Cost Rule did not provide
a justification for its expansion of the
number of CAA rules for which the EPA
must conduct a BCA, and after
reviewing the Rule, we have concluded
that we do not think a BCA is
necessarily warranted for every CAA
rule that is designated as significant
under E.O. 12866. The EPA remains
committed to the principles outlined in
the Economic Guidelines and Circular
A–4 when designing and conducting
analysis of all significant regulations. As
noted, these analyses are the most
extensive—i.e., result in a BCA—for
economically significant rules as those
would most benefit from resourceintensive, complex inquiries into
societal costs and benefits and a
calculation of net benefits. The Rule did
not provide an explanation for why
BCAs are required for other CAA rules
that OMB has designated ‘‘significant’’
for reasons other than the magnitude of
their benefits or costs. Requiring a BCA
even when the primary issues of
importance are not economic
unnecessarily complicates the
rulemaking process, potentially diverts
the Agency’s resources from those
aspects of the rule that warrant
additional consideration (i.e., the
reasons why the rule was designated
significant), and could delay rules
needed for protection of public health
and the environment. In addition,
requiring a BCA for all significant CAA
rules could delay BCAs for
economically significant rules if staff
time and resources are diverted.
C. The Codification of Specific Practices
in the Benefit-Cost Rule Limited the
EPA’s Ability To Rely on the Best
Available Science
The EPA is rescinding the BenefitCost Rule’s codification of specific
practices for the development of BCA in
a regulation because this aspect of the
Rule could have prevented the EPA
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from relying on best available science.
First, because best practices for
conducting a high-quality BCA cannot
be established using a set formula,
codification of specific practices could
prevent situation-specific tailoring of
BCA, which is always necessary.
Second, best practices evolve over time,
and the Benefit-Cost Rule would have
locked the EPA into using outdated
practices until it could have been
amended via rulemaking, which could
have delayed incorporation of new
scientific information and methods.
Third, some of the Rule’s ‘‘best
practice’’ requirements did not derive
from the Economic Guidelines, Circular
A–4, or the EPA’s Science Advisory
Board (SAB) advice. Below we discuss
each rationale for rescission in turn.
1. The Benefit-Cost Rule Demonstrated
the Difficulty in Codifying Specific
Practices Into Implementable and
Reviewable Requirements for BCA
Although the Benefit-Cost Rule stated
that it was based on the requirements of
Circular A–4 and the Economic
Guidelines, codification of such
requirements in regulation is
inconsistent with the instructions in
those same guidance documents to
tailor an analysis to the specific
situation. In the 2003 memo to the
heads of executive agencies and
establishments, Circular A–4 states:
‘‘You will find that you cannot conduct
a good regulatory analysis according to
a formula. Conducting high-quality
analysis requires competent
professional judgment. Different
regulations may call for different
emphases in the analysis, depending on
the nature and complexity of the
regulatory issues and the sensitivity of
the benefit and cost estimates to the key
assumptions.’’ 21 The Economic
Guidelines similarly acknowledge that
there are a wide variety of case-specific
issues that arise in conducting a BCA,
noting that ‘‘[the] most productive and
illuminating approaches for particular
situations will depend on a variety of
case-specific factors and will require
professional judgment.’’ 22 The
Economic Guidelines emphasize that
they are not intended to be a ‘‘rigid
blueprint’’ or a ‘‘cookbook,’’ 23 as doing
so would be unproductive and
ultimately less helpful to analysts due to
the diversity of analyses and situations
requiring professional judgement. For
example, the Benefit-Cost Rule required
quantitative methods to analyze
uncertainties in the assessment of costs,
21 Circular
A–4 at p. 3.
Guidelines at p. 1–2.
22 Economic
23 Id.
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changes in air quality, assessment of
likely changes in health and welfare
endpoints, and the valuation of those
changes, without allowing flexibility to
tailor this requirement to the size or
complexity of the rule being analyzed.
In contrast, Circular A–4 recognizes that
formal quantitative uncertainty analysis
is most important to conduct for the
largest rules: ‘‘For major rules involving
annual economic effects of $1 billion or
more, you should present a formal
quantitative analysis of the relevant
uncertainties about benefits and
costs.’’ 24
In their review of the proposed
Benefit-Cost Rule, the SAB commented
on the tension created by codifying BCA
requirements into regulation. The SAB
‘‘urge[d] EPA to consider carefully
which aspects of BCA should be
included in the final rule versus which
aspects should be in guidance, given the
case-by-case nature of BCA.’’ 25 The
SAB also highlighted examples where a
more flexible approach would be
warranted, including recommending
that ‘‘no ‘one size fits all’ approach to
causality be mandated because a variety
of approaches may need to be taken.’’ 26
However, the EPA did not revise the
requirements in the proposed BenefitCost Rule in response to this advice
from SAB. After further review, the EPA
has reconsidered the record of the
Benefit-Cost Rule, including the public
comments and SAB advice, and agrees
that a ‘‘one size fits all’’ approach is not
an appropriate approach to BCA in
general or mandating specific practices
for benefits assessment causality in
particular.
In addition, the final Benefit-Cost
Rule had no exemption for rules
without costs or with de minimis costs
or benefits, and certain limitations were
only caveated by technical
considerations rather than practicality
or usefulness (e.g., 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(vi)
(‘‘When sufficient data exist’’); 40 CFR
83.3(a)(10)(iii) (‘‘Where data are
sufficient’’)). Circular A–4 provides a
contrary, more flexible and reasoned
approach, stating that ‘‘[a]s with other
elements of regulatory analysis, you will
need to balance thoroughness with the
practical limits on your analytical
24 Circular
A–4 at p. 40.
EPA SAB. 2020. Science Advisory Board
(SAB) Consideration of the Scientific and Technical
Basis of EPA’s Proposed Rule titled ‘‘Increasing
Consistency and Transparency in Considering
Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking
Process.’’ EPA–SAB–20–012. September 30. (‘‘SAB
(2020)’’) at p. i, available at https://
yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/
0A312659C8AC185D852585F80049803C/$File/
EPA-SAB-20-012.pdf.
26 Id. at p. 7.
25 U.S.
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capabilities.’’ 27 Even the CAA provision
(section 317) that requires economic
impact assessments for certain proposed
regulations under the CAA also requires
the EPA to consider practicability,
professional judgement, and the time
and resources involved in determining
the extent of any such assessment.28
This disconnect between the need to
adapt economic analyses to particular
circumstances as articulated in Circular
A–4 and CAA section 317, and the
requirements in the Benefit-Cost Rule
provides an additional rationale for
rescinding the Benefit-Cost Rule.
Existing guidance affords flexibility for
the EPA to conduct the type of analysis
warranted by a particular rulemaking.
Even the parts of the Benefit-Cost
Rule that appeared to be intended to
provide flexibility—such as certain
caveats for benefits assessment like ‘‘to
the extent possible’’—would have
unnecessarily constrained the Agency
compared to the recommendations in
the Economic Guidelines and Circular
A–4. In practice, these caveats
demonstrated one of the problems with
attempting to codify BCA best practices
into regulation, and the advantages of
using guidance to conduct BCAs. Under
the guidance documents, technical
experts exercise their professional
judgment to design and conduct
analyses tailored to the situation at
hand. The Benefit-Cost Rule’s restrictive
caveats like ‘‘to the extent possible’’
eliminated or at the very least cabined
the ability for experts to exercise that
judgment by potentially requiring the
expert to first demonstrate that
compliance with the requirement was
not possible, before being able to select
more appropriate methods and
approaches.
Further, some of the requirements of
the Benefit-Cost Rule were very unclear.
For example, the requirement in 40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(iii)(E) (‘‘To the extent
possible, the studies or analyses should
27 Circular
A–4 at p. 40.
section 317 applies to a subset of
regulations promulgated under the CAA.
Specifically, it applies to new source performance
standards, ozone and stratospheric protection,
prevention of significant deterioration, new motor
vehicles and engines, fuel and fuel additives, and
aircraft emissions regulations. In contrast, the
Benefit-Cost Rule would have applied to all
significant CAA regulations. In addition, the
economic impact assessment required by CAA
section 317 is a less complex and time-consuming
analytical undertaking than a BCA because it does
not require the assessment of benefits. See CAA
section 317(d) (‘‘Extensiveness of assessment. The
assessment required under this section shall be as
extensive as practicable, in the judgment of the
Administrator taking into account the time and
resources available to the Environmental Protection
Agency and other duties and authorities which the
Administrator is required to carry out under this
chapter.’’).
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28 CAA
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be: [. . .] reliably distinguish [sic] the
presence or absence (or degree of
severity) of health outcomes’’) did not
provide clear direction to the analyst
because multiple technical
interpretations of the standard in the
regulation were reasonable. The lack of
clarity in these requirements would
have created confusion within the
Agency and with the public. The
codification of such unclear
requirements in regulation would
undoubtedly have generated
unnecessary and wasteful litigation by
creating opportunities to question
whether the EPA had strictly followed
the letter of the Benefit-Cost Rule, rather
than focusing on whether it had
conducted scientifically sound analyses.
We conclude that reverting to the use
of existing, well-vetted guidance allows
the Agency to design BCAs and analyses
that demand scientific rigor without
forcing the Agency’s economists and
other scientists into choosing between
complying with the Benefit-Cost Rule or
exercising professional scientific and
economic judgment.
2. As Best Practices Evolve Over Time,
the Benefit-Cost Rule Would Have
Locked the EPA Into Using Outdated
Practices Until the Rule Could Have
Been Amended
As acknowledged in the Economic
Guidelines, environmental
policymaking and economic analysis
evolves over time and new literature is
continually published.29 For this
reason, the EPA adopted an approach
described as the ‘‘loose-leaf’’ format 30 in
the Economic Guidelines that provides
flexibility to account for new
information and the growth and
development of economic tools over
time. Circular A–4 also acknowledges
the continual advancement of BCA
methods: ‘‘New methods may become
available in the future. This document
is not intended to discourage or inhibit
their use, but rather to encourage and
stimulate their development.’’ 31
However, the final Benefit-Cost Rule
failed to account for this constantly
evolving environment by enshrining
specific practices in regulation. If the
EPA had retained the Benefit-Cost Rule,
the Agency would have been required to
amend the Rule before being allowed to
incorporate new scientific, including
economic, information or update
methods that had evolved since the
Benefit-Cost Rule was promulgated.
Preventing the EPA from keeping up
with evolving best practices and
29 Economic
Guidelines at p. 1–1.
30 Id.
31 Circular
PO 00000
requiring the EPA to rely on potentially
outdated methods until a revised
rulemaking is completed is inconsistent
with the CAA direction to make
decisions based on the best scientific
data available.32
By freezing and defining what
constituted ‘‘best practices’’ at a single
point in time, the Benefit-Cost Rule
elevated ‘‘consistency’’ over the exercise
of sound judgment based on latest
scientific knowledge and, given that
revision by rulemaking would take a
long time, would have slowed or
discouraged progress in the
development and use of newer and
better methods. This risk was
particularly notable for the highly
prescriptive requirements in the BenefitCost Rule for benefits assessment and
uncertainty analysis (as discussed below
in this Section of the preamble). In
contrast, since guidance is inherently
less prescriptive than regulation, it can
be more flexible in allowing agencies to
keep up with the evolution of best
practices to be used to support CAA
regulations.33 As further evidence of
how best practices change over time, we
note that the Economic Guidelines are
in the process of being updated as part
of a periodic review undertaken by the
EPA.34 In addition, President Biden
32 See, e.g., CAA section 108(a)(2) (directing the
EPA to use ‘‘latest scientific knowledge’’ in setting
the NAAQS); CAA section 211(c)(2)(A) (requiring
the EPA to consider ‘‘all relevant medical and
scientific evidence available’’ in regulating fuels);
CAA section 606(a)(1) (instructing the EPA to
consider accelerated timetable for regulation in part
‘‘based on an assessment of credible current
scientific information’’).
33 As a parallel example under another
environmental statute, the National Academies of
Science, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS) recently
released a peer review report that criticized the
EPA’s systematic review process for evaluating
existing chemical substance risks under the Toxic
Substances Control Act for not meeting state-ofpractice standards. See National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2021. The
Use of Systematic Review in EPA’s Toxic
Substances Control Act Risk Evaluations.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
https://doi.org/10.17226/25952. In response, the
EPA announced that it would no longer use the
prior systematic review approach and would
instead develop a new approach that incorporates
the NAS advice. See EPA. 2021. EPA Commits to
Strengthening Science Used in Chemical Risk
Evaluations. Press Release. Feb 16. https://
www.epa.gov/newsreleases/epa-commitsstrengthening-science-used-chemical-riskevaluations. The Benefit-Cost Rule would have
precluded or slowed this kind of adjustment in
response to future peer reviews and the Agency’s
ability to keep up with evolving best practices for
significant CAA rules.
34 In January 2021, the SAB released their final
peer review report of the EPA’s draft revision, and
the EPA anticipates finalizing the updated
Economic Guidelines shortly. Although the EPA
intended for the requirements in the Benefit-Cost
Rule to align with the updated Economic
Guidelines, the Rule was finalized before the SAB’s
A–4 at p. 42.
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issued a memorandum on January 20,
2021, on Modernizing Regulatory
Review,35 which directs OMB in
consultation with other agencies to
recommend revisions to Circular A–4.
Therefore, the Benefit-Cost Rule,
because it froze the requirement to use
certain practices, may not have been
consistent with the forthcoming updates
to the Economic Guidelines or Circular
A–4.
While the Benefit-Cost Rule purported
to promote consistency, after further
consideration we have concluded that it
instead would have promoted
inconsistency. Best practices for
preparing BCA evolve and improve over
time as scientific learning advances. The
Benefit-Cost Rule sought, by codifying a
discrete set of specific requirements as
‘‘best practices,’’ to lock in those
specific practices and allow judicial
review to enforce them until a future
rulemaking was undertaken to update
them. Because these requirements
applied only to significant CAA rules,
they would not have affected how the
EPA conducts BCA for economically
significant rules issued under other
statutes. For these rules under other
statutes, the EPA would have been able
to conduct BCA by using the latest stateof-the-art methods, without waiting for
updates to the Benefit-Cost Rule. The
EPA has determined, consistent with
the approach in the Economic
Guidelines and Circular A–4, that a
more flexible approach than the BenefitCost Rule is warranted, and thus the
Rule should be rescinded in its entirety.
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3. The Benefit-Cost Rule Codified
Certain Practices That Conflict With
Best Science
Implementation of some of the
specific requirements of the Benefit-Cost
Rule would also undermine the quality
of the EPA’s BCA for CAA regulations.
Some of the requirements for health
benefits assessment promoted particular
types of data in a way that could have
conflicted with the use of best scientific
practices. As discussed in Sections
III.C.1 and 2 of this preamble, the
codification of BCA practices in
regulation as opposed to guidance
presents significant disadvantages; this
problem is only compounded where
there are requirements in the regulation
that are scientifically problematic.
peer review was completed. U.S. EPA SAB. 2021.
Transmittal of the Science Advisory Board Report
titled ‘‘SAB Peer Review of the EPA’s Revised
Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analysis’’.
EPA–SAB–21–002. January 6, available at https://
yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/LookupWeb
ReportsLastMonthBOARD/61C74C0E14BD59568
52586550071E058/$File/EPA-SAB-21-002.pdf.
35 86 FR 7223 (January 26, 2021).
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While the EPA is not asserting that
every requirement in the Benefit-Cost
Rule conflicted with sound scientific or
economic best practices, the
problematic elements were significant
and difficult to address in piecemeal
fashion. These substantive problems
provide further support that the Rule as
a whole should be rescinded.
For example, the requirement in 40
CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(C) to ‘‘employ or
design an analysis that adequately
addresses relevant sources of potential
critical confounding’’ could have led to
inferior selection of health studies or the
potential exclusion of some health
endpoints altogether. Specifically, this
requirement could prioritize the
selection of studies that attempt to
control for confounding,36
inappropriately or to an unwarranted
extent, when scientific evidence
demonstrates that a particular
confounder is not important (e.g., not
well correlated with the health
outcome) or if the model incorporating
a particular confounder yields
implausible or unstable statistical
results. In addition, the SAB advised
that the proposed requirement regarding
consideration of confounders was
‘‘vague and would be difficult to
implement’’ since ‘‘there is ample room
for disagreement over which
confounders are appropriate, or how to
evaluate an actual confounding
effect.’’ 37
As another example, the requirement
in 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(D) to ‘‘consider
how exposure is measured, particularly
those that provide measurements at the
level of the individual and that provide
actual measurements of exposure’’
introduced a bias against some higher
quality methods. Specifically, this
requirement suggested that individuallevel or ‘‘actual’’ measurements are
more highly valued than other
established and accepted methods of
estimating exposure. Though individual
measures of exposure would be
preferred, no population-level study has
yet gathered these data due in part to
the resources that would be required.
36 Confounding occurs when a variable is
associated with both pollutant exposure and the
health outcome, which could mask the true
statistical association between them. For example,
people are exposed to multiple pollutants in the
ambient air that can be associated with the same
health outcome. Epidemiologic studies attempt to
control for confounding using a variety of methods,
and relevant confounders vary across pollutants,
health outcomes, and study designs. For more
information, see Chapter 3 (Exposure to Ambient
Particulate Matter) in: U.S. EPA. 2019. Integrated
Science Assessment for Particulate Matter (Final
Report); Research Triangle Park, NC, available at
https://ofmpub.epa.gov/eims/eimscomm.getfile?p_
download_id=539935.
37 SAB (2020) at p. 11.
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Rather, most epidemiologic studies of
air pollution use measures or models of
concentrations in ambient air as a
surrogate for human exposure. Indeed,
measured concentrations from air
quality monitors may yield less accurate
estimates of exposure among
populations living further from a
monitor compared to modeled exposure.
In addition, codifying a preference for
measured concentrations could
discourage consideration of studies that
combine both measured and modeled
concentrations. For example, studies
that estimate air quality and human
exposure using a combination of
approaches (e.g., remote sensing
techniques and/or models, groundtruthed by monitoring data) are
preferred over those that use a single
method (e.g., measured concentrations),
because the combination of multiple
estimation methods can reduce
statistical bias and generate higherresolution exposure estimates than data
from a single monitor.38
Further, the requirement in 40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(i)(A) that the process of
selecting human health benefit
endpoints would be based upon
scientific evidence that indicates there
is ‘‘a clear causal or likely causal
relationship between pollutant exposure
and effect’’ did not derive from the
Economic Guidelines, Circular A–4, or
SAB advice. In fact, the SAB criticized
the requirement that benefits analyses
for health endpoints should be limited
to those with a ‘‘causal or likely causal’’
relationship. Specifically, the SAB
recommended the Rule allow for
inclusion of effects for which the
relationship may be less certain (e.g.,
‘‘possibly causal’’) if the impact would
be substantial, as a way to more
completely account for uncertainties.39
The Benefit-Cost Rule did not address
the SAB’s recommendation.
The Benefit-Cost Rule in 40 CFR 83.3
also imposed disparate requirements on
the consideration of costs and benefits
that would have led to arbitrary and
distorted BCAs. The Rule set a high bar
for which benefits to include and how
they should be calculated (scientific
evidence indicates there is a clear causal
or likely to be causal relationship
between pollutant exposure and effect
(40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(i)(a)), a preference for
‘‘actual’’ measurements (40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(iii)(D)), potentially
prioritizing confounding controls over
other considerations 40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(iii)(C), etc.). By contrast, the
Rule contained no requirements specific
38 For more information, see Chapter 3 (Exposure
to Ambient Particulate Matter) in U.S. EPA (2019).
39 SAB (2020) at p. ii.
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to how costs were to be calculated (see
generally 40 CFR 83.3). The EPA merely
discussed in the preamble that certain
approaches could generate ‘‘relatively
precise’’ and ‘‘reasonable’’ estimates of
a proposed regulation’s compliance
costs. The Benefit-Cost Rule did not
justify this disparity between setting
highly specific and very stringent
requirements for assessing benefits and
substantially less stringent requirements
for assessing costs. In addition, this
requirement in the Benefit-Cost Rule
only applied to health benefits, which
created an inconsistency with other
categories of benefits (e.g., visibility,
ecological effects) that did not have this
limitation. This could have led to
misleading BCAs in future significant
CAA rules. The Rule’s inconsistencies
with sound economic and scientific
principles warrant the Rule’s rescission.
D. The Benefit-Cost Rule’s
Presentational Requirements Invited Net
Benefit Calculations in Regulatory
Preambles That Are Misleading and
Inconsistent With Economic Best
Practices.
We discuss in this section our reasons
for rescinding the Rule’s requirements
in 40 CFR 83.4(a) and (b) to separately
and selectively present certain subsets
of benefits . The EPA already
disaggregates benefit and cost estimates
in BCAs, so these presentational
requirements do not provide additional
transparency.40 Moreover, the
presentational requirements seemingly
invited partial net benefit calculations
that are contrary to economic best
practice.
Both the Economic Guidelines and
Circular A–4 explain what BCA is and
its purpose in regulatory analysis. BCAs
assess economic efficiency by asking
whether it is theoretically possible for
those who gain from the policy to fully
compensate those who lose and remain
better off. When the answer to this
question is ‘yes,’ then net benefits are
positive, and the policy is a movement
toward economic efficiency. The
Economic Guidelines state that a BCA
‘‘evaluates the favorable effects of policy
actions and the associated opportunity
costs of those actions’’ and ‘‘the
calculation of net benefits helps
ascertain the economic efficiency of a
regulation.’’ 41 Circular A–4 further
clarifies that ‘‘[w]here all benefits and
costs can be quantified and expressed in
monetary units, benefit-cost analysis
provides decision makers with a clear
40 See, e.g., Chapter 11 of the Economic
Guidelines (Presentation of Analysis and Results)
and Circular A–4 at p. 15.
41 Economic Guidelines at p. xi.
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indication of the most efficient
alternative, that is, the alternative that
generates the largest net benefits to
society (ignoring distributional effects).
This is useful information for decision
makers and the public to receive, even
when economic efficiency is not the
only or the overriding public policy
objective.’’ 42
Both guidance documents are clear
that net benefits are calculated by
subtracting total costs from total
benefits, regardless of whether the
benefits and costs arise from intended or
unintended consequences of the
regulation. As Circular A–4 notes, the
‘‘analysis should look beyond the direct
benefits and direct costs of your
rulemaking and consider any important
ancillary benefits and countervailing
risks,’’ where an ancillary benefit is
defined as a ‘‘favorable impact of the
rule that is typically unrelated or
secondary to the statutory purpose of
the rulemaking.’’ 43 This is particularly
important in instances when
unintended effects are important
enough to potentially change the rank
ordering of the regulatory options
considered in the analysis or to
potentially generate a superior
regulatory option with strong ancillary
benefits and fewer countervailing risks.
The Benefit-Cost Rule required the
EPA to present in the preamble a
summary of both the overall BCA results
as well as an additional reporting of
subsets of the total benefits of the rule.
First, the Rule required a presentation of
only the benefits ‘‘that pertain to the
specific objective (or objectives, as the
case may be) of the CAA provision or
provisions under which the significant
regulation is promulgated.’’ 44 Second,
the Rule required that if any benefits
and costs accrue to non-U.S.
populations, they must be reported
separately to the extent possible.45
These presentational requirements are
duplicative of existing information
provided because the EPA already
presents these types of benefits in
disaggregated form in Regulatory Impact
Analyses (RIAs), so there was no lack of
transparency with respect to these
subsets of benefits. The additional
requirement to separately present and
articulate these benefits was
problematic because it could have
42 Circular
A–4 at p. 2.
at p. 26. Ancillary benefits or benefits not
related to the statutory provision under which a
rule is promulgated have sometimes been called
‘‘co-benefits.’’ However, this term is imprecise and
has been applied inconsistently in past practice,
and as such should be avoided (unless the term is
used explicitly in statutes).
44 40 CFR 83.4(b).
45 40 CFR 83.4(a).
43 Id.
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resulted in, and seemingly invited,
misleading net benefit calculations that
excluded impacts that were due to the
regulation. For example, in the final
Affordable Clean Energy Rule, the EPA
provided complete net benefit
calculations consistent with economic
best practices, but also used calculations
of segregated benefits—like those
required under the Benefit-Cost Rule—
to create tables of ‘‘net’’ benefit
calculations (i.e., benefits minus costs)
that accounted for only a subset of the
rule’s benefits.46 In addition, requiring a
separate presentation that excluded
certain categories of benefits that
Circular A–4 and the Economic
Guidelines indicate should be
considered could call into question,
without justification, the significance of
those benefits. Such an exclusion is
inconsistent with the purpose of BCA
and thus would have promoted arbitrary
rather than informed decision-making.
E. The Benefit-Cost Rule Did Not
Reconcile Its Consideration
Requirement With the Substantive
Mandates of the CAA.
In this section, we address the Rule’s
requirement that the Agency ‘‘consider’’
the required BCAs in decision making
and the Rule’s stated intention to make
compliance with the Rule enforceable
by outside parties through judicial
review. As a preliminary matter, we did
not intend these aspects of the Rule to
be read as creating a substantive cause
of action, and we do not think the
record for the Benefit-Cost Rule
supports such a position. Moreover,
after reviewing the record for the
Benefit-Cost Rule, we conclude that the
Rule’s failure to identify the CAA
provisions to which it would apply,
much less its lack of any explanation of
how to reconcile the Rule’s requirement
to ‘‘consider’’ the BCA in the context of
the various CAA provisions, as
discussed in Sections E.1 and E.2 of this
preamble, support rescission of the
Rule. First, for CAA provisions where
the EPA is prohibited from considering
costs, the Rule’s requirement to prepare
a BCA and include it in the judicially
reviewable rulemaking record solely for
the purpose of providing ‘‘additional
information’’ is not necessary to effect
any purpose under the Act. Second, for
CAA provisions that do permit some
consideration of cost or other economic
factors, the Rule did not explain why
BCA is an appropriate way to consider
cost, particularly given the existence of
areas in which Congress required the
EPA to regulate despite anticipating that
46 See 84 FR 32520, 32572 tbl.10–12 (July 8,
2019).
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few, if any, benefits could be monetized.
Because the EPA would essentially have
to give the newly required BCA little to
no weight in such situations, we fail to
see why the added procedure was a
necessary one to carry out the statute.
To the contrary, we conclude that the
traditional, pre-existing manner of
interpreting and implementing the CAA
is the better way to interpret and apply
the CAA.
Addressing the preliminary question
noted above, to the extent that these
aspects of the Benefit-Cost Rule could
be read as requiring more than just an
additional procedural step, such a
reading would be impermissible. The
EPA’s general-rulemaking authority
under CAA section 301(a) is broad, but
the authority ‘‘to issue ancillary
regulations is not open-ended,
particularly when there is statutory
language on point.’’ 47 Given the
complexity of the CAA, including the
numerous provisions addressing the
authority of the Agency to consider
costs, the EPA could not have issued a
substantive rule along the lines of the
Benefit-Cost Rule under our general
rulemaking authority without
substantial, additional analysis and
explanation addressing the specific
requirements of the Act. The EPA
acknowledged as much in the preamble
to the Benefit-Cost Rule in discussing
our view that the Agency’s compliance
with what we characterized as ‘‘these
procedural requirements’’ would be
subject to judicial review but admitting
also that we had not based the Rule on
any interpretation of the substantive
provisions of the CAA.48
Notwithstanding this discussion, to the
extent that some may have viewed the
Benefit-Cost Rule as creating a new
avenue for substantive judicial review of
future CAA actions, which was not
intended, we do not agree that the
Benefit-Cost Rule and its record could
support such a view, and this supports
rescinding the Rule. At most, we believe
that the procedural requirements in the
Benefit-Cost Rule—similar to an
Agency’s failure to provide adequate
notice under the APA or CAA 307(d)—
could only have provided a basis for
remanding a rule to the Agency to cure
process flaws. Rescinding the Rule will
avoid misunderstanding that the Rule
created a substantive cause of action
and will avoid unnecessary litigation
contending that the Rule had
47 See NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055, 1063–64
(D.C. Cir. 2014) (citing American Petroleum Inst. v.
EPA, 52 F.3d 1113, 1119 (D.C. Cir. 1995).
48 85 FR 84138.
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substantive impacts that were not
intended and not supported.
This view is consistent with
provisions in the CAA indicating that
Congress did not intend that additional
analytical requirements such as those at
issue in the Benefit-Cost Rule should
play a substantive role in determining
compliance with statutorily mandated
agency action. In CAA section 317,
Congress created a process by which it
required the EPA to prepare an
economic impact assessment prior to
issuing proposed rulemakings for seven
types of regulations under the Act.49
However, Congress was careful to point
out that the specific statutory mandates
underlying the regulations are
controlling and that failure to comply
with the additional economic impact
assessment requirements is not a basis
upon which review can be obtained for
the applicable rules.50 Congress even
explicitly stated that where a statutory
provision required the Agency to
consider costs, ‘‘the adequacy or
inadequacy of any assessment required
under [CAA section 317] may be taken
into consideration, but shall not be
treated for purposes of judicial review of
any such provision as conclusive with
respect to compliance or noncompliance
with the requirement of such provision
to take cost into account.’’ CAA section
317(g). If Congress did not want its own
statutorily mandated economic impact
assessments to provide a basis to
invalidate CAA rules, then it is unlikely
Congress would have granted the EPA
authority to create a new substantive
cause of action based on failure to
comply with a procedural rule
establishing BCA requirements.
1. The Rule Is Plainly Unnecessary With
Respect to CAA Provisions That
Prohibit the EPA From Considering Cost
The Benefit-Cost Rule’s requirement
to prepare a BCA applied to all
49 The Benefit-Cost Rule did address comments
regarding CAA section 317, but its discussion of
that provision is limited to making the point that
nothing in CAA section 317 precludes the Agency
from requiring any additional analysis, such as its
BCA. See Response to Comments (RTC) at page 53,
available in the docket at EPA–HQ–OAR–2020–
0044–0687.
50 CAA section 317(c) (‘‘Nothing in this section
shall be construed to provide that the analysis of
the factors specified in this subsection affects or
alters the factors which the Administrator is
required to consider in taking any [covered]
action’’); CAA section 317(e) (‘‘Nothing in this
section shall be construed—(1) to alter the basis on
which a standard or regulation is promulgated
under this chapter; (2) to preclude the
Administrator from carrying out his responsibility
under this chapter to protect public health and
welfare; or (3) to authorize or require any judicial
review of any such standard or regulation or any
stay or injunction of the proposal, promulgation, or
effectiveness of such standard or regulation on the
basis of failure to comply with this section.’’).
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significant CAA rulemakings, including
those promulgated under CAA
provisions that prohibit consideration of
cost or other economic factors. The only
waiver from the Rule’s requirements for
these rulemakings was that the BCA
need not be ‘‘considered’’ in such cases
where ‘‘the provision or provisions . . .
prohibit the consideration of the
BCA.’’ 51 In the final rule, the Agency
reasoned that ‘‘while certain statutory
provisions may prohibit reliance on
BCA or other methods of cost
consideration in decision-making, such
provisions do not preclude the Agency
from providing additional information
regarding the impacts of a proposed or
final rule to the public. For example,
while the CAA prohibits the EPA from
considering cost when establishing or
revising requisite NAAQS for certain
criteria pollutants, the EPA nonetheless
provides RIAs to the public for these
rulemakings.’’ 52 The desire to provide
‘‘additional information’’ for those rules
where Congress prohibited the EPA
from considering cost does not on its
face fall within CAA section 301(a)’s
authority to promulgate regulations as
are necessary to carry out the statute.
We therefore find the Rule’s application
to CAA provisions that prohibit the
consideration of cost to be inconsistent
with the Act.
To support the argument for broad
application of the Benefit-Cost Rule, the
EPA asserted equivalency between the
Benefit-Cost Rule’s requirements and
the EPA’s historic preparations of RIAs
for rulemakings under which it was
prohibited from considering costs, such
as setting the NAAQS. We have
concluded, however, that even where
equivalent, the EPA’s past practices do
not provide support for a conclusion
that such practices are necessary to
carry out the Act. In addition, the new
procedures promulgated under the Rule
made two key changes to the existing
process under which the EPA prepared
RIAs for economically significant
rulemakings. The Benefit-Cost Rule
required that the EPA develop a BCA
meeting very specific requirements (as
opposed to one tailored to the rule at
issue, as permissible under existing
guidance, see Section III.C of this
preamble), and perhaps more
importantly, it required the EPA to
include the results of the BCA and how
the information was considered in the
preambles to forthcoming proposed and
final rules promulgated under the CAA.
That is, the BCA mandated by the Rule
was explicitly required to be part of the
Agency’s record for decision-making. In
51 40
52 85
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addition, the Benefit-Cost Rule’s
preamble stated the Agency’s
compliance with the Rule’s
requirements would be subject to
judicial review. See the preamble to the
final rule (‘‘[T]he Final Rule is binding
upon the Agency for significant CAA
regulations, and . . . EPA’s compliance
is subject to judicial review in
challenges to such rulemakings.’’).53
These changes are in stark contrast to
the existing process for interagency
review for rules such as the NAAQS,
where the EPA does not include the RIA
as part of its administrative record for
the rulemaking, nor is compliance with
the E.O. subject to judicial review.54
The Benefit-Cost Rule’s proffered
explanations for why the Rule was
necessary are expressly tied, in part, to
these two changes. The Rule noted that
one motivation for requiring BCAs was
that ‘‘courts have noted the usefulness
of BCA and have utilized the
information provided therein to inform
their analysis when reviewing agencycreated BCAs and/or RIAs as evidence
that an agency ignored alternatives or
acted in an arbitrary or capricious
manner when taking action.’’ 55
Similarly, the EPA articulated that it
viewed enforceability of its new
requirements as critical to its argument
that the Rule was necessary. In the
Response to Comments document, the
Agency stated, ‘‘EPA has not had
procedural enforceable regulations in
place to ensure consistency in its past
BCA practices. To the extent that
commenters assert that EPA’s past
practice has been consistent and
transparent, it is not due to an
53 85
FR 84138.
the earlier E.O.s that required a
regulatory analysis (i.e., E.O. 12291 (46 FR 13193,
February 17, 1981)) contained a requirement that
BCAs prepared per E.O.s be included in the
Agency’s rulemaking record, that directive was
removed from E.O. 12866, which replaced the prior
E.O. Compare E.O. 12291 section 9 (‘‘The
determinations made by agencies under Section 4
of this Order, and any Regulatory Impact Analyses
for any rule, shall be made part of the whole record
of agency action in connection with the rule.’’) with
E.O. 12866 section 11 (containing no such
requirement). Neither E.O. has ever subjected
agency compliance with these E.O.s to judicial
review. See E.O. 12866, section 11 (‘‘Nothing in this
Executive order shall affect any otherwise available
judicial review of agency action. This Executive
Order is intended only to improve the internal
management of the Federal Government and does
not create any right or benefit, substantive or
procedural, enforceable at law or equity by a party
against the United States, its agencies or
instrumentalities, its officers or employees, or any
other person.’’); E.O. 12291, section 9 (‘‘This Order
is intended only to improve the internal
management of the Federal government, and is not
intended to create any right or benefit, substantive
or procedural, enforceable at law by a party against
the United States, its agencies, its officers or any
person.’’).
55 85 FR 84134.
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54 While
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enforceable standardized approach that
would ensure such a result. . . .
Without enforceable procedural
regulations for BCA, future regulations
may be promulgated without
consideration of, and public
accountability concerning, their costs
and benefits. Thus, the EPA has
determined that the Final Rule is
necessary to ensure that BCA practices
are implemented in a consistent fashion
prospectively.’’ 56
But neither of these reasons
articulating the necessity of the Rule can
extend to regulations promulgated
under CAA provisions where the
Agency is prohibited from considering
cost or economic factors. Where
Congress did not intend the EPA to
consider cost, there would be no
purpose for the EPA to incorporate a
BCA into its rulemaking record, and it
would be contrary to the CAA to subject
a Congressionally-required rule to
review based on failure to adhere to an
agency-created mandate to prepare a
BCA where the statute precludes
consideration of cost.
2. For Provisions That Permit
Consideration of Cost or Economic
Factors, the Requirement To Consider
BCA Is Unwarranted Because
Implementation of Those Provisions
Should Begin With Analysis of Statutory
Text and Context
The CAA contains a vast array of
instructions about whether and how the
EPA may consider benefits, costs, or
other economic factors, and discerning
Congress’ intent with respect to those
instructions requires analysis of
statutory context.57 Rather than grapple
with any of the statutory provisions at
issue, the Benefit-Cost Rule assumed
that because Congress provided
authority for the EPA to consider costs
in making some regulatory decisions,
and because courts have concluded that
BCA may be an appropriate way for
agencies to account for costs in some
contexts, it was ‘‘necessary’’ and
reasonable that the EPA should require
consideration of BCA in all significant
CAA rules where it was not precluded
from doing so. However, this faulty
logic does not constitute an adequate
justification, and the EPA has
concluded that the Rule’s approach is
inferior to the existing process of
56 RTC
at Chapter 3.1.1, p. 32.
Supreme Court cases from the last two
decades addressing whether the EPA properly
interpreted the CAA with respect to whether it
could consider cost illustrate the critical role of
context and purpose in statutory interpretation. See
Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns, 531 U.S. 457
(2001); EPA v. EME Homer City Generation, L.P.,
572 U.S. 489 (2014); Michigan v. EPA, 576 U.S. 743
(2015).
57 Three
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interpreting and applying the relevant
CAA provisions.
Under the CAA, Congress granted the
EPA broad powers to act on behalf of
protecting and enhancing the nation’s
air resources. The Act specifically
directs the EPA to, among other things,
set NAAQS, establish emission
standards for both stationary and mobile
sources of air pollution, reduce
emissions of nearly 200 specified
hazardous air pollutants, regulate fuels
and fuel additives, and issue permits
and enforce the Act’s emission limits. In
these various authorities, Congress
established a wide range of direction
with respect to the EPA’s consideration
of benefits, costs, or other economic
factors.58 With respect to costs, the
statutory text in some provisions
explicitly indicates that the EPA should
incorporate a consideration of cost or
economic factors.59 Other authorities
suggest by implication that the EPA
should or may consider costs, using
language directing the EPA to establish
standards that are ‘‘practicable,’’
‘‘reasonably achievable,’’ or
‘‘feasible.’’ 60 And in many if not all of
the CAA authorities, Congress made
clear that the EPA was to give strong, if
not overriding, consideration to the
‘‘benefits’’ of its regulations—i.e.,
beneficial effects on public health,
welfare, risk prevention, the
58 For additional information regarding various
CAA authorities and discussion of cost, see
Congressional Research Service (CRS) report titled
‘‘Cost and Benefit Considerations in Clean Air Act
Regulations.’’ In the report, the CRS identifies
various CAA authorities that either mention or
imply cost considerations and authorities that
neither mention nor imply cost consideration. May
5, 2017, available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/
product/pdf/R/R44840/4.
59 Examples include: The setting of emission
standards for new stationary sources in section 111,
going ‘‘beyond the floor’’ in emission standards for
sources of 187 hazardous air pollutants in section
112(d), setting emission standards for motor
vehicles beyond those standards listed in the act
under sections 202(a) and 202(i), controlling mobile
source air toxics under section 202(l), controlling or
prohibiting the manufacture and sale of fuels and
fuel additives under section 211(c), requiring the
sale of reformulated gasoline in nonattainment
areas under section 211(k), setting emission
standards for nonroad vehicles and engines under
section 213, and setting emission standards for
locomotives, buses, and aircraft, under sections 213,
219, and 231.
60 Examples include: Providing for the use of
‘‘generally available control technologies’’ to
control area sources of hazardous pollutants under
section 112(d)(5), promulgating ‘‘reasonable
regulations and appropriate guidance to provide, to
the greatest extent practicable, for the prevention
and detection of accidental releases,’’ of extremely
hazardous substances and take into consideration
‘‘the concerns of small business,’’ under section
112(r)(7), and imposing emission standards or
emission control technology requirements that
‘‘reflect the best retrofit technology and
maintenance practices reasonably achievable’’ for
retrofit of urban buses under section 219(d).
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environment, safety, and visibility, to
name but a few.
In the Benefit-Cost Rule, the EPA
presumed that its requirements were
permissible because it ‘‘was not aware
of any impediment to this
rulemaking.’’ 61 But the Rule failed to
identify, much less discuss, any
statutory provision governing the rules
to which its requirements would have
applied. The EPA is bound to look to
the statutory language and context of a
particular provision, and in some cases
consider the factual circumstances of
the issue the agency is attempting to
address in determining whether and
how the EPA may consider benefits,
costs, and other factors.62
The Benefit-Cost Rule’s failure to
examine the statutory provisions
governing the regulations it would
impact would have resulted in cases
where the Rule required
‘‘consideration’’ of BCAs where it may
not have been feasible to even produce
a meaningful or useful BCA. Even for
those CAA provisions where cost may
be considered, BCA is not necessarily
useful, and may even be misleading. As
Circular A–4 has noted, ‘‘[w]here all
benefits and costs can be quantified and
expressed as monetary units, benefitcost analysis provides decision makers
with a clear indication of the most
efficient alternative.’’ 63 Circular A–4
goes on to caution, however, that it is
not always possible to quantify benefits
(or costs), and ‘‘[w]hen important
benefits and costs cannot be expressed
in monetary units, BCA is less useful,
and it can even be misleading, because
the calculation of net benefits in such
cases does not provide a full evaluation
of all relevant benefits and costs.’’ 64
This caution is relevant as there are a
number of authorities under the CAA
authorizing or requiring the EPA to
regulate pollutants where, in many
cases, important benefits cannot readily
be monetized. For example, in CAA
section 112(d)(2), the Act prescribes that
the EPA establish emission standards
based on maximum achievable control
technology or ‘‘MACT’’ for new and
existing sources of hazardous air
pollutants. Section 112 authorizes the
EPA to consider costs at some steps in
this process but not at the first step of
establishing the minimum stringency
emission limit, because Congress
recognized the dangerous nature of
hazardous and toxic air pollutants.
61 85
FR 84138.
Am. Textile Mfrs. Inst., Inc. v. Donovan,
452 U.S. 490, 508 (1981); Entergy Corp. v.
Riverkeeper, Inc., 556 U.S. 208, 223 (2009).
63 Circular A–4 at p. 2.
64 Id. at p. 10.
Where the EPA can consider cost in this
context (e.g., requiring more stringent
emission limits), it has not historically
used BCA to establish appropriate
emission standards. We note that as
methods do not yet exist that can
reliably quantify the value of changes in
many HAP-related risks, a BCA would
include only a qualitative assessment of
the benefits of HAP reductions. In other
words, while we know that there are
important health outcomes associated
with exposure to HAP that include
cancer, birth defects, reproductive
effects, and neurodevelopmental
defects, we currently lack the ability to
precisely quantify and fully monetize all
of the benefits of a change in the MACT
standard. In implementing section 112,
the EPA has therefore historically
employed other types of analyses, such
as examining the cost per ton of
emissions removed.65
Perhaps recognizing the varied
landscape presented by the CAA’s
provisions, the Benefit-Cost Rule
ultimately only required that its BCA be
‘‘considered,’’ but prescribed no further
instruction or requirement as to how the
Agency should consider it.66 The
Agency had taken comment on the
possibility of requiring a more
substantive outcome, soliciting input
‘‘on approaches for how the results of
the BCA could be weighed in future
CAA regulatory decisions,’’ including
‘‘whether and under what
circumstances the EPA could or should
determine that a future significant CAA
regulation be promulgated only when
the benefits of the intended action
justify its costs’’ or ‘‘only when
monetized benefits exceed the costs of
the action.’’ 67 Because the final BenefitCost Rule did not strictly direct how the
Agency should weigh BCA in its future
CAA rulemakings, the EPA could have
formally complied with the Rule while
giving the BCA little to no weight in its
decision making. The need to adhere to
the particular statutory language and
context governing the significant CAA
rulemaking at issue, including examples
like the one cited above, would make
that outcome plausible, if not likely. By
appropriately allowing the EPA to
determine how best to consider benefits,
costs, and other factors in the context of
a particular statutory provision, the
Benefit-Cost Rule conceded that it may
serve no purpose in helping the EPA to
effectuate the purposes of the Act. At
the same time, by acknowledging that
the Agency’s choice of analysis depends
62 See
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65 See, e.g., Natl. Ass’n of Clean Water Agencies
v. EPA, 734 F.3d 1115, 1157 (D.C. Cir. 2013).
66 See 40 CFR 83.2(b).
67 85 FR 35623.
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on what each CAA provision requires or
permits,68 the Benefit-Cost Rule refuted
its claim that the Rule provided
‘‘consistency.’’
Given the exacting demands of
discerning Congressional intent in any
given CAA provision, we conclude that
returning to implementation of the CAA
using the traditional process of statutory
interpretation provides advantages over
the Benefit-Cost Rule’s presumption that
consideration of BCA is ‘‘necessary’’
and reasonable to promulgate all
significant CAA regulations regardless
of statutory text and context. Under its
pre-existing process, the Agency first
looks to the text of the relevant statutory
provision to determine whether
Congress intended or permitted the
Agency to consider cost or economic
factors. If yes, the Agency further looks
to the statutory context, legislative
history, and the nature of the program
or environmental problem to be
addressed to determine a reasonable
manner of considering cost. We
conclude that this process of
interpreting and discerning Congress’
intent, subject to public notice and
comment and judicial review, is
superior to the Benefit-Cost Rule’s
presumptive imposition to consider
BCA followed by a subsequent attempt
to reconcile with the statutory text.
F. The Pre-Existing Administrative
Process Provides for Ample Consistency
and Transparency
In the Benefit-Cost Rule the EPA also
failed to establish that its requirements
were needed with respect to process, in
light of the existing procedures under
the APA and, where applicable, CAA
section 307(d). These requirements are
more than adequate to accomplish the
general good government goals of
‘‘consistency’’ and ‘‘transparency,’’ and
the Benefit-Cost Rule failed to provide
any support for its contention that the
pre-existing process was deficient so as
to warrant the Rule’s new procedures.
When promulgating regulations under
the CAA such as those targeted by the
Benefit-Cost Rule, the EPA is already
required by statute to provide ‘‘[g]eneral
notice of proposed rulemaking’’ in ‘‘the
Federal Register,’’ including the legal
authority under which the rule is
proposed and the terms or substance of
the proposed rule.69 Moreover, the EPA
must give interested persons an
opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking through submission of
written data, views, or arguments.70 For
many rules promulgated under the
68 See
40 CFR 83.2(b); 40 CFR 83.4(d).
U.S.C. 553(b); CAA section 307(d)(3).
70 5 U.S.C. 553(c); CAA section 307(d)(5).
69 5
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CAA, including those designated by the
Administrator, CAA section 307(d)
further requires the establishment of a
rulemaking docket,71 and specifies that
the notice of proposed rulemaking must
include a summary of ‘‘the factual data
on which the proposed rule is based,’’ 72
‘‘the methodology used in obtaining the
data and in analyzing the data,’’ 73 and
‘‘the major interpretations and policy
considerations underlying the proposed
rule.’’ 74 CAA section 307(d)(2) also
requires the EPA to ‘‘set forth and
summarize and provide a reference to
any pertinent findings,
recommendations, and comments by the
Scientific Review Committee . . . and
the National Academy of Sciences, and,
if the proposal differs in any important
respect from any of these
recommendations, an explanation of the
reasons for such differences.’’
The EPA must respond to all
significant comments it receives on its
proposed regulations before issuing a
final rule, including contentions from
stakeholders that the EPA has failed to
reasonably consider the costs or benefits
of an action. See Home Box Office, Inc.
v. FCC, 567 F.2d 9, 35–36 (D.C. Cir.
1977) (‘‘[t]he opportunity to comment is
meaningless unless the agency responds
to significant points raised by the
public); Citizens to Preserve Overton
Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 416
(1971) (requiring reviewing court to
assure itself that all relevant factors
have been considered by the agency).
Such comments can encompass
arguments that by failing to conduct a
BCA, the EPA has contravened the CAA
or complaints that its data or analysis is
flawed or arbitrary. Where the EPA
promulgates a final CAA section 307(d)
rule, the EPA is required to provide ‘‘a
response to each of the significant
comments, criticisms, and new data
submitted in written or oral
presentations during the comment
period.’’ 75 The EPA is forbidden from
promulgating a rule based on ‘‘any
information or data which has not been
placed in the docket as of the date of
. . . promulgation.’’ 76
While ‘‘agencies should be free to
fashion their own rules of procedure,’’ 77
and ‘‘are free to grant additional
procedural rights in the exercise of their
discretion,’’ 78 where Congress so
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71 CAA
307(d)(2).
section 307(d)(2)(A).
73 CAA section 307(d)(2)(B).
74 CAA section 307(d)(2)(C).
75 CAA section 307(d)(6)(B).
76 CAA section 307(d)(6)(C).
77 Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 435 U.S.
519, 544 (1978).
78 Id. at 524.
72 CAA
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carefully specified the procedural
requirements for CAA rules (at least
those enumerated in section 307(d)), we
question the wisdom of adding to those
procedures an additional BCA
requirement, particularly where the EPA
did not show that statutory procedures
were deficient.79
The Benefit-Cost Rule did not explain
how the pre-existing ample public
process was inadequate to accomplish
the rule’s stated goals of promoting
consistency and transparency. The
existing process already requires the
EPA to present in a proposed notice
published in the Federal Register its
relevant interpretations of a particular
statutory provision regarding whether
and how it considers costs and benefits.
The existing process already permits
interested parties to promote during the
public comment period a view that
weighing the results of a BCA is a
valuable or appropriate way for the EPA
to consider costs, benefits, or other
factors specified in the provision of the
Act under which a rule is promulgated;
any views asserting that the agency has
not been transparent in providing
factual data, methodologies, legal
interpretations, and policy
considerations; or any views asserting
that the agency has been inconsistent in
its interpretations. The existing process,
under CAA section 307(b), already
subjects any failure on the EPA’s part to
grapple with significant comments to
review by the U.S. Courts of Appeals.80
Therefore, the EPA has determined
that the existing process already
provides sufficient consistency and
transparency.
IV. Rulemaking Procedures, Procedural
Rule Exemption, and Request for
Comment
In this action, the EPA is issuing an
interim final rule to rescind the BenefitCost Rule in its entirety and requesting
comment on that action. We intend to
79 See
NRDC v. Reilly, 976 F.2d 36, 41 (D.C. Cir.
1992) (EPA cannot use its general rulemaking
authority as justification for adding to a statutorily
specified list); NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d at 1064
(‘‘EPA cannot rely on its gap-filling authority to
supplement the Clean Air Act’s provisions when
Congress has not left the agency a gap to fill.’’).
80 Outside parties regularly exercise their right to
challenge the EPA’s actions under the CAA. In a
2011 report, the Government Accountability Office
found that during a 16-year period between 1995
and 2010, about 2,500 environmental cases were
brought against the EPA. Of those challenges, CAA
cases were more than twice as common as cases
brought under any other statute (i.e., comparing the
three most litigated groups of actions: 59% of cases
were brought under the CAA, 20% under the Clean
Water Act, and 6% under Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act). Environmental Litigation: Cases
against EPA and Associated Costs over Time, GAO–
11–650, August 2011, available at https://
www.gao.gov/assets/gao-11-650.pdf.
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26417
follow this interim final rule with a final
rule that responds to comments received
during this public comment period, if
any, and reflects any accompanying
changes to the Agency’s approach. This
interim final rule will stay in place until
it is replaced by the final rule that
responds to any public comments and
makes any warranted changes. This
interim final rule will become effective
30 days after publication.
Like the Benefit-Cost Rule that this
rule rescinds, this interim final rule is
a rule of agency organization,
procedure, or practice. This procedural
rule does not regulate any party outside
of the EPA but instead exclusively
governs the EPA’s internal process for
conducting benefit-cost analysis. This
interim final rule does not regulate the
rights and obligations of any party
outside of the EPA nor does it have any
legal force and effect on them. Any
incidental impacts on voluntary
behavior outside of the EPA do not
render this a substantive rule.
While procedural rules are exempt
from the APA’s notice and public
comment requirements, see 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(A), the EPA has nonetheless
decided to voluntarily seek postpromulgation public comment on this
procedural interim final rule and follow
it with a final rule because the
information and opinions the public
may provide could inform the Agency’s
decision-making.81 By electing to
proceed with an interim final rule rather
than a final rule, the EPA is acting
consistently with Administrative
Conference of the United States
Recommendation 95–4, which
recommends that agencies consider
providing post-promulgation notice and
comment even where an exemption is
justified, be it a substantive rule relying
on the ‘‘good cause’’ exception to notice
and comment, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), or a
procedural rule such as this one.82
A. Written Comments
Submit your comments, identified by
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2020–
0044, at https://www.regulations.gov
(our preferred method), or the other
methods identified in the ADDRESSES
section. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from the
docket. The EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
81 Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Res.
Def. Council, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 524 (1978)
(‘‘Agencies are free to grant additional procedural
rights in the exercise of their discretion.’’).
82 See ACUS Recommendation 95–4, Procedures
for Noncontroversial and Expedited Rulemaking
(1995).
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Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
The EPA is temporarily suspending
its Docket Center and Reading Room for
public visitors to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID–19. Written
comments submitted by mail are
temporarily suspended and no hand
deliveries will be accepted. 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. For further
information and updates on EPA Docket
Center services, please visit us online at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA continues to carefully and
continuously monitor information 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.
B. Participating in a Virtual Public
Hearing
If a member of the public requests
one, the EPA will hold a virtual public
hearing on this interim final rulemaking
on Wednesday, June 9, 2021. Please
note that any hearing would be a
deviation from the EPA’s 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, the EPA cannot hold inperson public meetings at this time.
Upon publication of this document in
the Federal Register, the EPA will
accept requests for a public hearing. If
a hearing is requested, the EPA will also
begin pre-registering speakers and
attendees for the requested hearing. The
EPA will accept registrations on an
individual basis. To register to speak at
the virtual hearing, individuals may use
the online registration form available via
the EPA’s Increasing Consistency and
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Transparency in Considering Costs and
Benefits in the Rulemaking Process web
page for this hearing (https://
www.epa.gov/air-and-radiation/
rescission-2020-benefit-cost-rule) or
contact Leif Hockstad at (202) 343–9432
or hockstad.leif@epa.gov. The last day
to pre-register to speak at the hearing
will be Wednesday, June 2, 2021. On
Monday, June 7, 2021, if a hearing has
been requested, the EPA will post a
general agenda for the hearing that will
list pre-registered speakers in
approximate order at: https://
www.epa.gov/air-and-radiation/
rescission-2020-benefit-cost-rule.
The EPA will make every effort to
follow the schedule as closely as
possible on the day of the hearing, if
held; however, please plan for the
hearing to run either ahead of schedule
or behind schedule. Additionally,
requests to speak will be taken the day
of the hearing at the end of each session
as timing allows. The EPA will make
every effort to accommodate all
speakers.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes
to provide oral testimony. The EPA
recommends submitting the text of your
oral comments as written comments to
the rulemaking docket. The EPA may
ask clarifying questions during the oral
presentations but will not respond to
the presentations at that time. 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.
The EPA is also asking hearing
attendees to pre-register for the hearing,
if held, even those who do not intend
to provide testimony. This will help the
EPA ensure that sufficient phone lines
will be available.
Please note that any updates made to
any aspect of the hearing logistics,
including potential additional sessions,
will be posted online at the EPA’s
Rescission of the Benefit-Cost Rule
website (https://www.epa.gov/air-andradiation/rescission-2020-benefit-costrule). While the EPA expects the
hearing, if held, to go forward as set
forth above, please monitor our website
or contact the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to
determine if there are any updates.
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 Wednesday, June 2, 2021.
The EPA may not be able to arrange
accommodations without advanced
notice.
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V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory
action that was submitted to the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) for
review. Any changes made in response
to OMB recommendations have been
documented in the docket. The EPA
does not anticipate that this rulemaking
will have an economic impact on
regulated entities. This is a rule of
agency procedure and practice.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not contain any
information collection activities and
therefore does not impose an
information collection burden under the
PRA.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
This action is not subject to the RFA.
The RFA applies only to rules subject to
notice and comment rulemaking
requirements under the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553, or
any other statute. This action would not
regulate any entity outside the federal
government and is a rule of agency
procedure and practice.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the states, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. Thus, Executive Order
13175 does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
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14MYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 92 / Friday, May 14, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
[FR Doc. 2021–10216 Filed 5–13–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 300
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
[EPA–HQ–SFUND–1983–0002; EPA–HQ–
SFUND–1989–0008; EPA–HQ–SFUND–
1986–0005; EPA–HQ–SFUND–1990–0010;
FRL–10023–78–OLEM]
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ within the meaning of
Executive Order 13211. It is not likely
to have a significant adverse effect on
the supply, distribution or use of
energy, and it has not otherwise been
designated as a significant energy action
by the Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA).
Deletions From the National Priorities
List
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action is
not subject to Executive Order 12898 (59
FR 7629, February 16, 1994) because it
does not establish an environmental
health or safety standard that results in
disproportionate impacts on minority
and low-income populations.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This rule is exempt from CRA because
it is a rule of agency organization,
procedure, or practice that does not
substantially affect the rights or
obligations of nonagency parties.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 83
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
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7601, the EPA removes and reserves 40
CFR part 83.
PART 83—[REMOVED AND
RESERVED]
For the reasons stated in the preamble,
and under the authority of 42 U.S.C.
■
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16:17 May 13, 2021
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Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) announces the partial
deletion of five sites from the Superfund
National Priorities List (NPL). The NPL,
created under section 105 of the
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (CERCLA) of 1980, as amended, is
an appendix of the National Oil and
Hazardous Substances Pollution
Contingency Plan (NCP). The EPA and
the states, through their designated state
agencies, have determined that all
appropriate response actions under
CERCLA, other than operation and
maintenance, monitoring, and five-year
reviews, where applicable, have been
completed. However, this deletion does
not preclude future actions under
Superfund.
SUMMARY:
The document is effective on
May 14, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Docket: EPA has established
a docket for this action under the Docket
Identification included in Table 1 in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document. All documents in the
docket are listed on the https://
www.regulations.gov website. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, i.e., Confidential
Business Information or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the corresponding Regional Records
DATES:
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Frm 00073
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26419
Centers. Locations, addresses, and
phone numbers of the Regional Records
Centers follow.
Regional Records Centers:
• Region 3 (DE, DC, MD, PA, VA,
WV), U.S. EPA Superfund Records
Center, 1650 Arch Street, Mail code
3SD42, Philadelphia, PA 19103; 215/
814–3024.
• Region 5 (IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI),
U.S. EPA Superfund Division Records
Manager, Mail code SRC–7J, Metcalfe
Federal Building, 7th Floor South, 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL
60604; 312/886–4465.
• Region 7 (IA, KS, MO, NE), U.S.
EPA, 11201 Renner Blvd., Mail code
SUPRSTAR, Lenexa, KS 66219; 913/
551–7956.
• Region 9 (AZ, CA, HI, NV, AS, GU,
MP), U.S. EPA, 75 Hawthorne Street,
Mail code SFD 6–1, San Francisco, CA
94105; 415/972–3160.
The EPA is temporarily suspending
Regional Records Centers for public
visitors to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID–19. Information in
these repositories, including the
deletion docket, may not be updated
with hardcopy or electronic media. For
further information and updates on EPA
Docket Center services, please visit us
online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA continues to carefully and
continuously monitor information 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
• Andrew Hass, U.S. EPA Region 3 (DE,
DC, MD, PA, VA, WV), hass.andrew@
epa.gov, 215/814–2049
• Karen Cibulskis, U.S. EPA Region 5
(IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI),
cibulskis.karen@epa.gov, 312/886–
1843
• David Wennerstrom, U.S. EPA Region
7 (IA, KS, MO, NE),
wennerstrom.david@epa.gov, 913/
551–7996
• Eric Canteenwala, U.S. EPA Region 9
(AZ, CA, HI, NV, AS, GU, MP),
Canteenwala.eric@epa.gov, 415/972–
3932
• Chuck Sands, U.S. EPA Headquarters,
sands.charles@epa.gov, 703/603–8857
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Table 1
includes the portions of the site (media
and areas) to be partially deleted from
the NPL.
E:\FR\FM\14MYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 92 (Friday, May 14, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 26406-26419]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-10216]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 83
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2020-0044; FRL 10024-10-OAR]
RIN 2060-AV18
Rescinding the Rule on Increasing Consistency and Transparency in
Considering Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking Process
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is rescinding the
final rule entitled ``Increasing Consistency and Transparency in
Considering Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking
Process.'' The EPA is rescinding the rule because the changes advanced
by the rule were inadvisable, untethered to the CAA, and not necessary
to effectuate the purposes of the Act.
DATES: This rule is effective June 14, 2021. The EPA will consider
comments on this rule received on or before June 14, 2021.
If a member of the public requests a public hearing by May 21,
2021, the EPA will hold a virtual public hearing on Wednesday, June 9,
2021. Refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below for
additional information.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2020-0044, by the following method:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov/
(our preferred method). Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2020-0044 for this rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided. For detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information on the rulemaking process, see the
``Public Participation'' heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document. 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Leif Hockstad, Office of Air Policy
and Program Support, Office of Air and Radiation, U.S. EPA, Mail Code
6103A, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460; (202) 343-
9432; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Acronyms
APA Administrative Procedure Act
BCA Benefit-Cost Analysis
CAA Clean Air Act
CBI Confidential Business Information
CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CRA Congressional Review Act
CRS Congressional Research Service
E.O. Executive Order
EPA Environmental Protection Agency
FR Federal Register
GAO Government Accountability Office
NAAQS National Ambient Air Quality Standards
NAS National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine
NESHAP National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
NRDC National Resources Defense Council
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
OIRA Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Administration
RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
RTC Response to Comments document
SAB Science Advisory Board
UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
U.S.C. United States Code
Table of Contents
I. General Information
A. What action is the Agency taking?
B. Does this action apply to me?
[[Page 26407]]
C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
II. Background
III. Rationale for Rescission
A. The Benefit-Cost Rule failed to establish a rational basis
for its requirements based on the Rule's record
B. The Benefit-Cost Rule Was not necessary to carry out the CAA
because the EPA already prepares a BCA for CAA rules that warrant
such analysis
C. The codification of specific practices in the Benefit-Cost
Rule limited the EPA's ability to rely on the best available science
D. The Benefit-Cost Rule's presentational requirements invited
net benefit calculations in regulatory preambles that are misleading
and inconsistent with economic best practices
E. The Benefit-Cost Rule did not reconcile its consideration
requirement with the substantive mandates of the CAA
F. The pre-existing administrative process provides for ample
consistency and transparency
IV. Rulemaking Procedures, Procedural Rule Exemption, and Request
for Comment
A. Written comments
B. Participating in a virtual public hearing
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
I. General Information
A. What action is the Agency taking?
In this interim final rule, the EPA is rescinding the final rule
entitled, ``Increasing Consistency and Transparency in Considering
Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking Process'' (hereafter
``Benefit-Cost Rule'').\1\ For all of the reasons stated in this
preamble, the EPA has determined that the Benefit-Cost Rule should be
rescinded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 85 FR 84130, (December 23, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Does this action apply to me?
This rule does not regulate the conduct or determine the rights of
any entity or individual outside the Agency, as this action pertains
only to internal EPA practices. However, the Agency recognizes that any
entity or individual interested in the EPA's regulations promulgated
under the Clean Air Act (CAA) may be interested in this rule. In
addition, this rule may be of particular interest to entities and
individuals interested in how the EPA conducts and considers benefit-
cost analyses (BCA).
C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
The Agency is taking this action pursuant to CAA section
301(a)(1).\2\ Section 301(a)(1) provides authority to the Administrator
``to prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry out his
functions'' under the CAA. As discussed in Section III of this
preamble, the EPA has determined that the Benefit-Cost Rule was not
``necessary'' and lacked a rational basis under CAA section 301(a), and
therefore the EPA lacked authority to issue it; we are accordingly
rescinding the Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 42 U.S.C. 7601(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
On January 20, 2021, President Biden signed Executive Order 13990,
``Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science To
Tackle the Climate Crisis,'' \3\ which, among other actions, directed
the EPA to immediately review and consider suspending, revising, or
rescinding the Benefit-Cost Rule. Accordingly, the EPA has conducted a
comprehensive review of both the legal and factual predicates for the
Benefit-Cost Rule and, in particular, the need for the regulations that
the Agency promulgated in the Benefit-Cost Rule. As a result of this
review, the EPA has determined that the changes to Agency practice
required by the Benefit-Cost Rule were inadvisable, not needed, and
untethered to the CAA, and is therefore rescinding the Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 86 FR 7037 (January 25, 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Benefit-Cost Rule was a procedural rule establishing
requirements related to the development and consideration of BCA that
the EPA would have been required to undertake when promulgating certain
proposed and final regulations under the CAA. The final Benefit-Cost
Rule stated, ``[t]he purpose of this action is to codify procedural
best practices for the preparation, development, presentation, and
consideration of BCA in regulatory decision-making under the CAA. This
codification will help ensure that the EPA implements its statutory
obligations under the CAA, and describes its work in implementing those
obligations, in a way that is consistent and transparent.'' \4\ The
final Benefit-Cost Rule was effective upon publication in the Federal
Register based on the procedural rule exemption from delayed effective-
date requirements in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). After
publication, several parties filed petitions for review of the Benefit-
Cost Rule in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia,
and these consolidated cases are currently in abeyance.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 85 FR 84130.
\5\ State of New York v. EPA, No. 21-1026 (D.C. Cir.); Cal.
Cmtys. Against Toxics v. EPA, No. 21-1041 (D.C. Cir.); Envt'l Def.
Fund v. EPA, No. 21-1069 (D.C. Cir.). State of New York v. EPA, No.
21-1026 (D.C. Cir.), Doc. No. 1886762 (Feb. 23, 2021) (abeyance
order).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Benefit-Cost Rule included four independent elements. The first
element required the EPA to prepare a BCA for all significant proposed
and final regulations under the CAA. The Rule defined a significant
regulation to include any proposed or final regulation that was
determined to be significant by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under E.O. 12866 or was otherwise so designated by the EPA
Administrator.
The second element codified specific practices for developing the
BCAs required by the Rule. Those practices were drawn largely from, but
not identical to, the EPA's Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses
(hereafter ``Economic Guidelines'') \6\ and OMB's Circular A-4.\7\ Such
practices included providing a statement of need, analysis of
regulatory options, and appropriate baseline. In addition, the Rule
required the risk assessments used to support BCAs to follow certain
methods for risk characterization and risk assessment, including a
systematic review approach. These methods included a specific process
for selecting health benefit endpoints for quantification, including
the requirement that a clear causal or likely causal relationship
between pollutant exposure and effect had been established; a
systematic review process; use of particular models to quantify the
concentration-response relationships; and a presentation of results
that highlighted uncertainty associated with the estimated benefits.
The BCA was also required to include specific methods for assessing
uncertainty and an explanation for the
[[Page 26408]]
methods chosen to analyze uncertainties. To the extent permitted by
law, the Benefit-Cost Rule required the EPA to ensure that all
information used in the development of the BCA would be publicly
available. Any departures from the specified practices required a
discussion of the likely effect on the results of the BCA.
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\6\ U.S. EPA. 2010. Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses.
https://www.epa.gov/environmental-economics/guidelines-preparing-economic-analyses.
\7\ Exec. Office of the President, OMB, Circular A-4: Regulatory
Analysis (Sept. 17, 2003), available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf.
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The third element required the presentation of the BCA results in
the preamble of the rulemakings subject to the Rule. In addition to a
summary of the overall BCA results, the Benefit-Cost Rule required
preambles to include a separate reporting of impacts that accrue to
non-U.S. populations, an additional reporting of the public health and
welfare benefits that pertain to the specific objective(s) of the CAA
provision(s) under which the rule is promulgated, and a similar
presentation of any costs that the CAA provision(s) specifies should be
considered.
Finally, the fourth element required the Agency to consider the BCA
in promulgating the regulation except where the CAA provision(s) under
which the regulation is promulgated prohibit it. The Rule required that
the Agency explain in the preamble how the Agency considered the BCA in
its decision-making. The preamble indicated the EPA's intention that
compliance with the Rule's requirements would be judicially reviewable.
The EPA cited CAA section 301(a)(1) as the sole source of authority
for the Benefit-Cost Rule. That provision states, ``[t]he Administrator
is authorized to prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry
out his functions under this chapter.'' The preamble to the Rule
explained that the Agency had authority under that CAA provision
because the ``authority in Section 301(a)(1) extends to internal agency
procedures that increase the Agency's ability to provide consistency
and transparency to the public in regard to the rulemaking process
under the CAA.'' \8\ The final Rule cited NRDC v. EPA, 22 F.3d 1125,
1148 (D.C. Cir. 1994) for the proposition that ``[CAA section 301] is
sufficiently broad to allow the promulgation of rules that are
necessary and reasonable to effect the purposes of the Act.'' \9\
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\8\ 85 FR 84137.
\9\ Id.
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III. Rationale for Rescission
After review of the Benefit-Cost Rule and its record, the EPA has
concluded that the Rule should be rescinded in its entirety for several
reasons. The Agency stated that it had authority to promulgate the Rule
under CAA section 301(a) because it asserted that the Rule's additional
procedures were necessary to ensure consistency and transparency in CAA
rulemakings.\10\ However, as discussed in Section III.A of this
preamble, the Agency failed to articulate a rational basis for the
Rule, and did not explain how the existing CAA rulemaking process had
created or was likely to create inconsistent or non-transparent
outcomes, i.e., that an actual or theoretical problem existed. We have
also determined, after reviewing each element of the Rule, that the
additional procedures required under the Rule were not needed, useful,
or advisable policy changes. In some cases, as discussed in this
Section of the preamble, the new procedures could have hindered the
EPA's compliance with the CAA and may not have even furthered the
Rule's stated purposes of consistency and transparency. Our rationale
for rescinding each of the four independent elements of the Rule is
severable and provided below in Sections III.B-E of this preamble.
Finally, in Section III.F we note that the existing public process
provides ample ability for the public to participate in the EPA's CAA
rulemakings.
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\10\ 85 FR 84137.
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A. The Benefit-Cost Rule Failed To Establish a Rational Basis for Its
Requirements Based on the Rule's Record.
As an initial matter, the EPA has determined that the Agency failed
to provide a rational basis to support the Rule or explain why the Rule
was needed or reasonable. The Rule did not provide any record evidence
that the guidance and administrative processes already in place
presented problems that justified the mandate imposed by the Rule.
Indeed, the Rule failed to point to a single example of a rule
promulgated under the CAA where problems emerged that would have been
avoided had the mandate imposed by the rule been in place. Although the
Agency asserted that the Benefit-Cost Rule's purported achievement of
greater consistency and transparency in economic analyses across those
CAA rulemakings affected by the Rule would ``better allow the Agency to
fulfill the purpose described in Section 101(b)(1) of the CAA `to
protect and enhance the quality of the Nation's air resources so as to
promote the public health and welfare and the productive capacity of
its population,' '' \11\ the mere assertion of ``consistency'' or
``transparency'' in the Rule did not adequately explain what the Agency
was trying to accomplish. Furthermore, there was no discussion of how
the requirements of the Rule improved the Agency's ability to
accomplish the CAA's goals to protect and enhance air quality.\12\
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\11\ 85 FR 84138.
\12\ The Rule referenced CAA sections 101(b)(1) and 101(c) but
failed to explain how its procedures better served those
Congressional aims than the status quo ante.
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Some portions of the Rule suggested that it was intended to combat
a theoretical threat. For example, the preamble of the final rule
stated, ``Without enforceable procedural regulations for BCA, future
regulations may be promulgated without consideration of, and public
accountability concerning, their costs and benefits. Thus, the EPA has
determined that the Final Rule is necessary to ensure that BCA
practices are implemented in a consistent fashion prospectively.'' \13\
The hypothetical threat that future significant CAA regulations would
be promulgated without appropriate consideration of costs and benefits
and without due public process is highly implausible. The Agency's
consideration of all factors it is required to analyze under the
specific provisions of the CAA is already subject to public notice and
comment processes (see Section III.F of this preamble) and enforceable
judicial review. Moreover, as discussed in Section III.B of this
preamble, there has been an unbroken, bipartisan, decades-long
commitment from Presidential Administrations to conducting benefit-cost
analyses for economically significant regulations issued in the United
States. These analyses are rigorous, publicly available, subject to
interagency review, and are conducted according to extensive peer-
reviewed guidelines from OMB and the EPA.\14\
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\13\ 85 FR 84137.
\14\ See Section III.C of this preamble.
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We therefore rescind the Rule on the basis that it failed to
articulate a rational basis justifying its promulgation.
B. The Benefit-Cost Rule Was Not Necessary To Carry Out the CAA Because
the EPA Already Prepares a BCA for CAA Rules That Warrant Such
Analysis.
In this section, we address the reasons for rescinding the Rule's
expansion of BCA to ``significant'' CAA rulemakings that are not
economically significant under E.O. 12866. While BCA is a useful
analytic tool for informing regulatory actions, it is a resource-
intensive undertaking. The Rule expanded the universe of CAA
rulemakings for which the EPA would be required to conduct BCAs without
justifying why such
[[Page 26409]]
expansion was necessary or appropriate. We conclude that existing
directives under E.O. 12866 and guidance to conduct BCAs for
economically significant rules, while retaining flexibility in
analyzing costs, benefits, and other factors for non-economically
significant rules, strike the better balance between agency resources
and the information provided by additional economic analysis for such
rules.
BCA has been part of executive branch rulemaking for decades.
Presidents since the 1970s have issued E.O.s directing agencies to
conduct analyses of the economic consequences of regulations as part of
the rulemaking development process. E.O. 12866, which is still in
effect, requires that for all significant regulatory actions, an agency
provide ``an assessment of the potential costs and benefits of the
regulatory action, including an explanation of the manner in which the
regulatory action is consistent with a statutory mandate . . .'' \15\
Some statutes also impose analytical requirements for regulatory
actions. For example, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
includes requirements that are similar to the analytical requirements
under E.O. 12866. Both E.O. 12866 (and its predecessors) and its
implementing guidance, Circular A-4, call for Agencies to focus
resources on quantifying benefits and costs using BCA for those
regulations that are anticipated to have the largest effects on the
economy. Specifically, E.O. 12866 requires a quantification of benefits
and costs to the extent feasible for any regulatory action that is
``likely to result in a rule that may . . . have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more or adversely affect in a material
way the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or
tribal governments or communities.'' \16\ Rules meeting any of these
criteria are labelled as ``economically significant.'' Similarly,
UMRA's analytical requirements pertain to all regulatory actions that
include federal mandates ``that may result in the expenditure by State,
local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for inflation) in
any one year.'' \17\
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\15\ E.O. 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993).
\16\ Id. at section 3(f)(1).
\17\ 2 U.S.C. 1532(a).
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The EPA estimates the anticipated impacts of its regulatory actions
using methods and assumptions that are transparent, consistent with the
best available science, and appropriate for the scope of the regulatory
action. In performing analysis of regulatory action, the EPA adheres to
the executive order requirements pertaining to economic analysis by
following the guidance laid out by Circular A-4 and the Economic
Guidelines. Per those directives and guidance, the BCAs and other types
of analysis supporting significant CAA regulations are subject to
internal review and an interagency review process under E.O. 12866 that
involves application of the principles and methods defined in Circular
A-4. The scientific information and models used within BCA and other
analyses supporting regulatory decisions are also subject to EPA's peer
review guidance \18\ and OMB's guidance to federal agencies on what
information is subject to peer review, the selection of appropriate
peer reviewers, opportunities for public participation, and related
issues.\19\
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\18\ See EPA's 2015 Peer Review Handbook, 4th Edition, available
at https://www.epa.gov/osa/peer-review-handbook-4th-edition-2015.
\19\ See OMB's Final Information Quality Bulletin for Peer
Review (70 FR 2664, January 14, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Executive orders and subsequent guidance distinguish between
analytical requirements for economically significant rules and other
significant rules, both because of the resource intensity of regulatory
analysis and because of substantive differences between types of rules.
Developing a BCA for an economically significant CAA rule takes
considerable Agency resources often spanning a year or more and
frequently involves the development of policy-relevant emissions
inventories, photochemical air quality modeling, engineering research
assessments and analyses, engineering cost assessments, and benefits
assessments for human health, climate, visibility, ecological and/or
other categories of benefits. These complex and time-consuming
analytical undertakings are appropriate for economically significant
rules. However, these complex analyses may not always be the best use
of Agency resources for smaller rules determined to be significant by
OMB under E.O. 12866 because they raise novel legal or policy issues
rather than because of the magnitude of their benefits or costs.
The Benefit-Cost Rule significantly expanded the set of rulemakings
for which a BCA would have been conducted. As the Rule required BCA for
all rules designated as significant under E.O. 12866, this would have
included many actions that are not economically significant. For
example, between January 2017 and January 2021, the EPA finalized 32
significant regulations under the CAA, including only 7 economically
significant regulations.\20\ This expansion to conduct BCA for a
substantially larger set of CAA rules would have consumed significant
EPA staff time and other resources, and the additional time such
unwarranted analyses would have taken could have resulted in delays in
fulfilling statutory obligations under the CAA. Removal of this
requirement allows the Agency to better target analytic resources
towards CAA rules that tend have larger economic consequences.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See the memorandum in the docket ``Final Significant
Regulations under the Clean Air Act 2017-2021'' for the list of the
significant and economically significant regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under E.O. 12866, rules that are designated significant include
those that may: ``[h]ave an annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities''; ``[c]reate a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another
agency''; ``[m]aterially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof''; or ``[r]aise novel legal or policy issues arising
out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles
set forth in this Executive order.'' Most significant CAA regulations
that are not economically significant are determined to be significant
for novel legal or policy reasons. These rules raise issues that may be
unrelated to the magnitude of benefits or costs analyzed in BCA. As a
result, key policy decisions in the context of these rules are often
issues that can be fully addressed through a more targeted or different
kind of analysis than a BCA. For significant rules that are not
economically significant, other less resource-intensive and time-
consuming analyses are prepared to inform and support the rulemaking.
For example, instead of conducting a BCA, the EPA may instead examine
the emission and cost impacts on particular regulated entities or
conduct qualitative analyses for less consequential rules, which may
regulate smaller sectors of economy, affect sectors that are not well
connected with other parts of the economy, or have smaller effects to
the economy overall. In addition, often in these situations data and
methods for quantifying and
[[Page 26410]]
monetizing overall net benefits may not be available. In such cases,
less extensive analyses may provide sufficient information for the
rulemaking. These analyses may also include elements of a BCA that
contribute important information to the policy decision. For example,
the Agency routinely prepares economic impact assessments for many
rules, including risk and technology reviews for NESHAPs and new source
performance standards. As noted above, though, the resources involved
in doing a BCA may not be warranted when the focus of regulatory
analysis is on novel legal or policy issues or other non-economic
factors that make the action significant.
The Benefit-Cost Rule did not provide a justification for its
expansion of the number of CAA rules for which the EPA must conduct a
BCA, and after reviewing the Rule, we have concluded that we do not
think a BCA is necessarily warranted for every CAA rule that is
designated as significant under E.O. 12866. The EPA remains committed
to the principles outlined in the Economic Guidelines and Circular A-4
when designing and conducting analysis of all significant regulations.
As noted, these analyses are the most extensive--i.e., result in a
BCA--for economically significant rules as those would most benefit
from resource-intensive, complex inquiries into societal costs and
benefits and a calculation of net benefits. The Rule did not provide an
explanation for why BCAs are required for other CAA rules that OMB has
designated ``significant'' for reasons other than the magnitude of
their benefits or costs. Requiring a BCA even when the primary issues
of importance are not economic unnecessarily complicates the rulemaking
process, potentially diverts the Agency's resources from those aspects
of the rule that warrant additional consideration (i.e., the reasons
why the rule was designated significant), and could delay rules needed
for protection of public health and the environment. In addition,
requiring a BCA for all significant CAA rules could delay BCAs for
economically significant rules if staff time and resources are
diverted.
C. The Codification of Specific Practices in the Benefit-Cost Rule
Limited the EPA's Ability To Rely on the Best Available Science
The EPA is rescinding the Benefit-Cost Rule's codification of
specific practices for the development of BCA in a regulation because
this aspect of the Rule could have prevented the EPA from relying on
best available science. First, because best practices for conducting a
high-quality BCA cannot be established using a set formula,
codification of specific practices could prevent situation-specific
tailoring of BCA, which is always necessary. Second, best practices
evolve over time, and the Benefit-Cost Rule would have locked the EPA
into using outdated practices until it could have been amended via
rulemaking, which could have delayed incorporation of new scientific
information and methods. Third, some of the Rule's ``best practice''
requirements did not derive from the Economic Guidelines, Circular A-4,
or the EPA's Science Advisory Board (SAB) advice. Below we discuss each
rationale for rescission in turn.
1. The Benefit-Cost Rule Demonstrated the Difficulty in Codifying
Specific Practices Into Implementable and Reviewable Requirements for
BCA
Although the Benefit-Cost Rule stated that it was based on the
requirements of Circular A-4 and the Economic Guidelines, codification
of such requirements in regulation is inconsistent with the
instructions in those same guidance documents to tailor an analysis to
the specific situation. In the 2003 memo to the heads of executive
agencies and establishments, Circular A-4 states: ``You will find that
you cannot conduct a good regulatory analysis according to a formula.
Conducting high-quality analysis requires competent professional
judgment. Different regulations may call for different emphases in the
analysis, depending on the nature and complexity of the regulatory
issues and the sensitivity of the benefit and cost estimates to the key
assumptions.'' \21\ The Economic Guidelines similarly acknowledge that
there are a wide variety of case-specific issues that arise in
conducting a BCA, noting that ``[the] most productive and illuminating
approaches for particular situations will depend on a variety of case-
specific factors and will require professional judgment.'' \22\ The
Economic Guidelines emphasize that they are not intended to be a
``rigid blueprint'' or a ``cookbook,'' \23\ as doing so would be
unproductive and ultimately less helpful to analysts due to the
diversity of analyses and situations requiring professional judgement.
For example, the Benefit-Cost Rule required quantitative methods to
analyze uncertainties in the assessment of costs, changes in air
quality, assessment of likely changes in health and welfare endpoints,
and the valuation of those changes, without allowing flexibility to
tailor this requirement to the size or complexity of the rule being
analyzed. In contrast, Circular A-4 recognizes that formal quantitative
uncertainty analysis is most important to conduct for the largest
rules: ``For major rules involving annual economic effects of $1
billion or more, you should present a formal quantitative analysis of
the relevant uncertainties about benefits and costs.'' \24\
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\21\ Circular A-4 at p. 3.
\22\ Economic Guidelines at p. 1-2.
\23\ Id.
\24\ Circular A-4 at p. 40.
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In their review of the proposed Benefit-Cost Rule, the SAB
commented on the tension created by codifying BCA requirements into
regulation. The SAB ``urge[d] EPA to consider carefully which aspects
of BCA should be included in the final rule versus which aspects should
be in guidance, given the case-by-case nature of BCA.'' \25\ The SAB
also highlighted examples where a more flexible approach would be
warranted, including recommending that ``no `one size fits all'
approach to causality be mandated because a variety of approaches may
need to be taken.'' \26\ However, the EPA did not revise the
requirements in the proposed Benefit-Cost Rule in response to this
advice from SAB. After further review, the EPA has reconsidered the
record of the Benefit-Cost Rule, including the public comments and SAB
advice, and agrees that a ``one size fits all'' approach is not an
appropriate approach to BCA in general or mandating specific practices
for benefits assessment causality in particular.
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\25\ U.S. EPA SAB. 2020. Science Advisory Board (SAB)
Consideration of the Scientific and Technical Basis of EPA's
Proposed Rule titled ``Increasing Consistency and Transparency in
Considering Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking
Process.'' EPA-SAB-20-012. September 30. (``SAB (2020)'') at p. i,
available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/
0A312659C8AC185D852585F80049803C/$File/EPA-SAB-20-012.pdf.
\26\ Id. at p. 7.
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In addition, the final Benefit-Cost Rule had no exemption for rules
without costs or with de minimis costs or benefits, and certain
limitations were only caveated by technical considerations rather than
practicality or usefulness (e.g., 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(vi) (``When
sufficient data exist''); 40 CFR 83.3(a)(10)(iii) (``Where data are
sufficient'')). Circular A-4 provides a contrary, more flexible and
reasoned approach, stating that ``[a]s with other elements of
regulatory analysis, you will need to balance thoroughness with the
practical limits on your analytical
[[Page 26411]]
capabilities.'' \27\ Even the CAA provision (section 317) that requires
economic impact assessments for certain proposed regulations under the
CAA also requires the EPA to consider practicability, professional
judgement, and the time and resources involved in determining the
extent of any such assessment.\28\ This disconnect between the need to
adapt economic analyses to particular circumstances as articulated in
Circular A-4 and CAA section 317, and the requirements in the Benefit-
Cost Rule provides an additional rationale for rescinding the Benefit-
Cost Rule. Existing guidance affords flexibility for the EPA to conduct
the type of analysis warranted by a particular rulemaking.
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\27\ Circular A-4 at p. 40.
\28\ CAA section 317 applies to a subset of regulations
promulgated under the CAA. Specifically, it applies to new source
performance standards, ozone and stratospheric protection,
prevention of significant deterioration, new motor vehicles and
engines, fuel and fuel additives, and aircraft emissions
regulations. In contrast, the Benefit-Cost Rule would have applied
to all significant CAA regulations. In addition, the economic impact
assessment required by CAA section 317 is a less complex and time-
consuming analytical undertaking than a BCA because it does not
require the assessment of benefits. See CAA section 317(d)
(``Extensiveness of assessment. The assessment required under this
section shall be as extensive as practicable, in the judgment of the
Administrator taking into account the time and resources available
to the Environmental Protection Agency and other duties and
authorities which the Administrator is required to carry out under
this chapter.'').
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Even the parts of the Benefit-Cost Rule that appeared to be
intended to provide flexibility--such as certain caveats for benefits
assessment like ``to the extent possible''--would have unnecessarily
constrained the Agency compared to the recommendations in the Economic
Guidelines and Circular A-4. In practice, these caveats demonstrated
one of the problems with attempting to codify BCA best practices into
regulation, and the advantages of using guidance to conduct BCAs. Under
the guidance documents, technical experts exercise their professional
judgment to design and conduct analyses tailored to the situation at
hand. The Benefit-Cost Rule's restrictive caveats like ``to the extent
possible'' eliminated or at the very least cabined the ability for
experts to exercise that judgment by potentially requiring the expert
to first demonstrate that compliance with the requirement was not
possible, before being able to select more appropriate methods and
approaches.
Further, some of the requirements of the Benefit-Cost Rule were
very unclear. For example, the requirement in 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(E)
(``To the extent possible, the studies or analyses should be: [. . .]
reliably distinguish [sic] the presence or absence (or degree of
severity) of health outcomes'') did not provide clear direction to the
analyst because multiple technical interpretations of the standard in
the regulation were reasonable. The lack of clarity in these
requirements would have created confusion within the Agency and with
the public. The codification of such unclear requirements in regulation
would undoubtedly have generated unnecessary and wasteful litigation by
creating opportunities to question whether the EPA had strictly
followed the letter of the Benefit-Cost Rule, rather than focusing on
whether it had conducted scientifically sound analyses.
We conclude that reverting to the use of existing, well-vetted
guidance allows the Agency to design BCAs and analyses that demand
scientific rigor without forcing the Agency's economists and other
scientists into choosing between complying with the Benefit-Cost Rule
or exercising professional scientific and economic judgment.
2. As Best Practices Evolve Over Time, the Benefit-Cost Rule Would Have
Locked the EPA Into Using Outdated Practices Until the Rule Could Have
Been Amended
As acknowledged in the Economic Guidelines, environmental
policymaking and economic analysis evolves over time and new literature
is continually published.\29\ For this reason, the EPA adopted an
approach described as the ``loose-leaf'' format \30\ in the Economic
Guidelines that provides flexibility to account for new information and
the growth and development of economic tools over time. Circular A-4
also acknowledges the continual advancement of BCA methods: ``New
methods may become available in the future. This document is not
intended to discourage or inhibit their use, but rather to encourage
and stimulate their development.'' \31\ However, the final Benefit-Cost
Rule failed to account for this constantly evolving environment by
enshrining specific practices in regulation. If the EPA had retained
the Benefit-Cost Rule, the Agency would have been required to amend the
Rule before being allowed to incorporate new scientific, including
economic, information or update methods that had evolved since the
Benefit-Cost Rule was promulgated. Preventing the EPA from keeping up
with evolving best practices and requiring the EPA to rely on
potentially outdated methods until a revised rulemaking is completed is
inconsistent with the CAA direction to make decisions based on the best
scientific data available.\32\
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\29\ Economic Guidelines at p. 1-1.
\30\ Id.
\31\ Circular A-4 at p. 42.
\32\ See, e.g., CAA section 108(a)(2) (directing the EPA to use
``latest scientific knowledge'' in setting the NAAQS); CAA section
211(c)(2)(A) (requiring the EPA to consider ``all relevant medical
and scientific evidence available'' in regulating fuels); CAA
section 606(a)(1) (instructing the EPA to consider accelerated
timetable for regulation in part ``based on an assessment of
credible current scientific information'').
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By freezing and defining what constituted ``best practices'' at a
single point in time, the Benefit-Cost Rule elevated ``consistency''
over the exercise of sound judgment based on latest scientific
knowledge and, given that revision by rulemaking would take a long
time, would have slowed or discouraged progress in the development and
use of newer and better methods. This risk was particularly notable for
the highly prescriptive requirements in the Benefit-Cost Rule for
benefits assessment and uncertainty analysis (as discussed below in
this Section of the preamble). In contrast, since guidance is
inherently less prescriptive than regulation, it can be more flexible
in allowing agencies to keep up with the evolution of best practices to
be used to support CAA regulations.\33\ As further evidence of how best
practices change over time, we note that the Economic Guidelines are in
the process of being updated as part of a periodic review undertaken by
the EPA.\34\ In addition, President Biden
[[Page 26412]]
issued a memorandum on January 20, 2021, on Modernizing Regulatory
Review,\35\ which directs OMB in consultation with other agencies to
recommend revisions to Circular A-4. Therefore, the Benefit-Cost Rule,
because it froze the requirement to use certain practices, may not have
been consistent with the forthcoming updates to the Economic Guidelines
or Circular A-4.
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\33\ As a parallel example under another environmental statute,
the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS)
recently released a peer review report that criticized the EPA's
systematic review process for evaluating existing chemical substance
risks under the Toxic Substances Control Act for not meeting state-
of-practice standards. See National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine. 2021. The Use of Systematic Review in
EPA's Toxic Substances Control Act Risk Evaluations. Washington, DC:
The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/25952. In
response, the EPA announced that it would no longer use the prior
systematic review approach and would instead develop a new approach
that incorporates the NAS advice. See EPA. 2021. EPA Commits to
Strengthening Science Used in Chemical Risk Evaluations. Press
Release. Feb 16. https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/epa-commits-strengthening-science-used-chemical-risk-evaluations. The Benefit-
Cost Rule would have precluded or slowed this kind of adjustment in
response to future peer reviews and the Agency's ability to keep up
with evolving best practices for significant CAA rules.
\34\ In January 2021, the SAB released their final peer review
report of the EPA's draft revision, and the EPA anticipates
finalizing the updated Economic Guidelines shortly. Although the EPA
intended for the requirements in the Benefit-Cost Rule to align with
the updated Economic Guidelines, the Rule was finalized before the
SAB's peer review was completed. U.S. EPA SAB. 2021. Transmittal of
the Science Advisory Board Report titled ``SAB Peer Review of the
EPA's Revised Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analysis''. EPA-SAB-
21-002. January 6, available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/
sabproduct.nsf/LookupWebReportsLastMonthBOARD/
61C74C0E14BD5956852586550071E058/$File/EPA-SAB-21-002.pdf.
\35\ 86 FR 7223 (January 26, 2021).
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While the Benefit-Cost Rule purported to promote consistency, after
further consideration we have concluded that it instead would have
promoted inconsistency. Best practices for preparing BCA evolve and
improve over time as scientific learning advances. The Benefit-Cost
Rule sought, by codifying a discrete set of specific requirements as
``best practices,'' to lock in those specific practices and allow
judicial review to enforce them until a future rulemaking was
undertaken to update them. Because these requirements applied only to
significant CAA rules, they would not have affected how the EPA
conducts BCA for economically significant rules issued under other
statutes. For these rules under other statutes, the EPA would have been
able to conduct BCA by using the latest state-of-the-art methods,
without waiting for updates to the Benefit-Cost Rule. The EPA has
determined, consistent with the approach in the Economic Guidelines and
Circular A-4, that a more flexible approach than the Benefit-Cost Rule
is warranted, and thus the Rule should be rescinded in its entirety.
3. The Benefit-Cost Rule Codified Certain Practices That Conflict With
Best Science
Implementation of some of the specific requirements of the Benefit-
Cost Rule would also undermine the quality of the EPA's BCA for CAA
regulations. Some of the requirements for health benefits assessment
promoted particular types of data in a way that could have conflicted
with the use of best scientific practices. As discussed in Sections
III.C.1 and 2 of this preamble, the codification of BCA practices in
regulation as opposed to guidance presents significant disadvantages;
this problem is only compounded where there are requirements in the
regulation that are scientifically problematic. While the EPA is not
asserting that every requirement in the Benefit-Cost Rule conflicted
with sound scientific or economic best practices, the problematic
elements were significant and difficult to address in piecemeal
fashion. These substantive problems provide further support that the
Rule as a whole should be rescinded.
For example, the requirement in 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(C) to
``employ or design an analysis that adequately addresses relevant
sources of potential critical confounding'' could have led to inferior
selection of health studies or the potential exclusion of some health
endpoints altogether. Specifically, this requirement could prioritize
the selection of studies that attempt to control for confounding,\36\
inappropriately or to an unwarranted extent, when scientific evidence
demonstrates that a particular confounder is not important (e.g., not
well correlated with the health outcome) or if the model incorporating
a particular confounder yields implausible or unstable statistical
results. In addition, the SAB advised that the proposed requirement
regarding consideration of confounders was ``vague and would be
difficult to implement'' since ``there is ample room for disagreement
over which confounders are appropriate, or how to evaluate an actual
confounding effect.'' \37\
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\36\ Confounding occurs when a variable is associated with both
pollutant exposure and the health outcome, which could mask the true
statistical association between them. For example, people are
exposed to multiple pollutants in the ambient air that can be
associated with the same health outcome. Epidemiologic studies
attempt to control for confounding using a variety of methods, and
relevant confounders vary across pollutants, health outcomes, and
study designs. For more information, see Chapter 3 (Exposure to
Ambient Particulate Matter) in: U.S. EPA. 2019. Integrated Science
Assessment for Particulate Matter (Final Report); Research Triangle
Park, NC, available at https://ofmpub.epa.gov/eims/eimscomm.getfile?p_download_id=539935.
\37\ SAB (2020) at p. 11.
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As another example, the requirement in 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(D) to
``consider how exposure is measured, particularly those that provide
measurements at the level of the individual and that provide actual
measurements of exposure'' introduced a bias against some higher
quality methods. Specifically, this requirement suggested that
individual-level or ``actual'' measurements are more highly valued than
other established and accepted methods of estimating exposure. Though
individual measures of exposure would be preferred, no population-level
study has yet gathered these data due in part to the resources that
would be required. Rather, most epidemiologic studies of air pollution
use measures or models of concentrations in ambient air as a surrogate
for human exposure. Indeed, measured concentrations from air quality
monitors may yield less accurate estimates of exposure among
populations living further from a monitor compared to modeled exposure.
In addition, codifying a preference for measured concentrations could
discourage consideration of studies that combine both measured and
modeled concentrations. For example, studies that estimate air quality
and human exposure using a combination of approaches (e.g., remote
sensing techniques and/or models, ground-truthed by monitoring data)
are preferred over those that use a single method (e.g., measured
concentrations), because the combination of multiple estimation methods
can reduce statistical bias and generate higher-resolution exposure
estimates than data from a single monitor.\38\
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\38\ For more information, see Chapter 3 (Exposure to Ambient
Particulate Matter) in U.S. EPA (2019).
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Further, the requirement in 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(i)(A) that the
process of selecting human health benefit endpoints would be based upon
scientific evidence that indicates there is ``a clear causal or likely
causal relationship between pollutant exposure and effect'' did not
derive from the Economic Guidelines, Circular A-4, or SAB advice. In
fact, the SAB criticized the requirement that benefits analyses for
health endpoints should be limited to those with a ``causal or likely
causal'' relationship. Specifically, the SAB recommended the Rule allow
for inclusion of effects for which the relationship may be less certain
(e.g., ``possibly causal'') if the impact would be substantial, as a
way to more completely account for uncertainties.\39\ The Benefit-Cost
Rule did not address the SAB's recommendation.
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\39\ SAB (2020) at p. ii.
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The Benefit-Cost Rule in 40 CFR 83.3 also imposed disparate
requirements on the consideration of costs and benefits that would have
led to arbitrary and distorted BCAs. The Rule set a high bar for which
benefits to include and how they should be calculated (scientific
evidence indicates there is a clear causal or likely to be causal
relationship between pollutant exposure and effect (40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(i)(a)), a preference for ``actual'' measurements (40 CFR
83.3(a)(9)(iii)(D)), potentially prioritizing confounding controls over
other considerations 40 CFR 83.3(a)(9)(iii)(C), etc.). By contrast, the
Rule contained no requirements specific
[[Page 26413]]
to how costs were to be calculated (see generally 40 CFR 83.3). The EPA
merely discussed in the preamble that certain approaches could generate
``relatively precise'' and ``reasonable'' estimates of a proposed
regulation's compliance costs. The Benefit-Cost Rule did not justify
this disparity between setting highly specific and very stringent
requirements for assessing benefits and substantially less stringent
requirements for assessing costs. In addition, this requirement in the
Benefit-Cost Rule only applied to health benefits, which created an
inconsistency with other categories of benefits (e.g., visibility,
ecological effects) that did not have this limitation. This could have
led to misleading BCAs in future significant CAA rules. The Rule's
inconsistencies with sound economic and scientific principles warrant
the Rule's rescission.
D. The Benefit-Cost Rule's Presentational Requirements Invited Net
Benefit Calculations in Regulatory Preambles That Are Misleading and
Inconsistent With Economic Best Practices.
We discuss in this section our reasons for rescinding the Rule's
requirements in 40 CFR 83.4(a) and (b) to separately and selectively
present certain subsets of benefits . The EPA already disaggregates
benefit and cost estimates in BCAs, so these presentational
requirements do not provide additional transparency.\40\ Moreover, the
presentational requirements seemingly invited partial net benefit
calculations that are contrary to economic best practice.
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\40\ See, e.g., Chapter 11 of the Economic Guidelines
(Presentation of Analysis and Results) and Circular A-4 at p. 15.
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Both the Economic Guidelines and Circular A-4 explain what BCA is
and its purpose in regulatory analysis. BCAs assess economic efficiency
by asking whether it is theoretically possible for those who gain from
the policy to fully compensate those who lose and remain better off.
When the answer to this question is `yes,' then net benefits are
positive, and the policy is a movement toward economic efficiency. The
Economic Guidelines state that a BCA ``evaluates the favorable effects
of policy actions and the associated opportunity costs of those
actions'' and ``the calculation of net benefits helps ascertain the
economic efficiency of a regulation.'' \41\ Circular A-4 further
clarifies that ``[w]here all benefits and costs can be quantified and
expressed in monetary units, benefit-cost analysis provides decision
makers with a clear indication of the most efficient alternative, that
is, the alternative that generates the largest net benefits to society
(ignoring distributional effects). This is useful information for
decision makers and the public to receive, even when economic
efficiency is not the only or the overriding public policy objective.''
\42\
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\41\ Economic Guidelines at p. xi.
\42\ Circular A-4 at p. 2.
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Both guidance documents are clear that net benefits are calculated
by subtracting total costs from total benefits, regardless of whether
the benefits and costs arise from intended or unintended consequences
of the regulation. As Circular A-4 notes, the ``analysis should look
beyond the direct benefits and direct costs of your rulemaking and
consider any important ancillary benefits and countervailing risks,''
where an ancillary benefit is defined as a ``favorable impact of the
rule that is typically unrelated or secondary to the statutory purpose
of the rulemaking.'' \43\ This is particularly important in instances
when unintended effects are important enough to potentially change the
rank ordering of the regulatory options considered in the analysis or
to potentially generate a superior regulatory option with strong
ancillary benefits and fewer countervailing risks.
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\43\ Id. at p. 26. Ancillary benefits or benefits not related to
the statutory provision under which a rule is promulgated have
sometimes been called ``co-benefits.'' However, this term is
imprecise and has been applied inconsistently in past practice, and
as such should be avoided (unless the term is used explicitly in
statutes).
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The Benefit-Cost Rule required the EPA to present in the preamble a
summary of both the overall BCA results as well as an additional
reporting of subsets of the total benefits of the rule. First, the Rule
required a presentation of only the benefits ``that pertain to the
specific objective (or objectives, as the case may be) of the CAA
provision or provisions under which the significant regulation is
promulgated.'' \44\ Second, the Rule required that if any benefits and
costs accrue to non-U.S. populations, they must be reported separately
to the extent possible.\45\ These presentational requirements are
duplicative of existing information provided because the EPA already
presents these types of benefits in disaggregated form in Regulatory
Impact Analyses (RIAs), so there was no lack of transparency with
respect to these subsets of benefits. The additional requirement to
separately present and articulate these benefits was problematic
because it could have resulted in, and seemingly invited, misleading
net benefit calculations that excluded impacts that were due to the
regulation. For example, in the final Affordable Clean Energy Rule, the
EPA provided complete net benefit calculations consistent with economic
best practices, but also used calculations of segregated benefits--like
those required under the Benefit-Cost Rule--to create tables of ``net''
benefit calculations (i.e., benefits minus costs) that accounted for
only a subset of the rule's benefits.\46\ In addition, requiring a
separate presentation that excluded certain categories of benefits that
Circular A-4 and the Economic Guidelines indicate should be considered
could call into question, without justification, the significance of
those benefits. Such an exclusion is inconsistent with the purpose of
BCA and thus would have promoted arbitrary rather than informed
decision-making.
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\44\ 40 CFR 83.4(b).
\45\ 40 CFR 83.4(a).
\46\ See 84 FR 32520, 32572 tbl.10-12 (July 8, 2019).
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E. The Benefit-Cost Rule Did Not Reconcile Its Consideration
Requirement With the Substantive Mandates of the CAA.
In this section, we address the Rule's requirement that the Agency
``consider'' the required BCAs in decision making and the Rule's stated
intention to make compliance with the Rule enforceable by outside
parties through judicial review. As a preliminary matter, we did not
intend these aspects of the Rule to be read as creating a substantive
cause of action, and we do not think the record for the Benefit-Cost
Rule supports such a position. Moreover, after reviewing the record for
the Benefit-Cost Rule, we conclude that the Rule's failure to identify
the CAA provisions to which it would apply, much less its lack of any
explanation of how to reconcile the Rule's requirement to ``consider''
the BCA in the context of the various CAA provisions, as discussed in
Sections E.1 and E.2 of this preamble, support rescission of the Rule.
First, for CAA provisions where the EPA is prohibited from considering
costs, the Rule's requirement to prepare a BCA and include it in the
judicially reviewable rulemaking record solely for the purpose of
providing ``additional information'' is not necessary to effect any
purpose under the Act. Second, for CAA provisions that do permit some
consideration of cost or other economic factors, the Rule did not
explain why BCA is an appropriate way to consider cost, particularly
given the existence of areas in which Congress required the EPA to
regulate despite anticipating that
[[Page 26414]]
few, if any, benefits could be monetized. Because the EPA would
essentially have to give the newly required BCA little to no weight in
such situations, we fail to see why the added procedure was a necessary
one to carry out the statute. To the contrary, we conclude that the
traditional, pre-existing manner of interpreting and implementing the
CAA is the better way to interpret and apply the CAA.
Addressing the preliminary question noted above, to the extent that
these aspects of the Benefit-Cost Rule could be read as requiring more
than just an additional procedural step, such a reading would be
impermissible. The EPA's general-rulemaking authority under CAA section
301(a) is broad, but the authority ``to issue ancillary regulations is
not open-ended, particularly when there is statutory language on
point.'' \47\ Given the complexity of the CAA, including the numerous
provisions addressing the authority of the Agency to consider costs,
the EPA could not have issued a substantive rule along the lines of the
Benefit-Cost Rule under our general rulemaking authority without
substantial, additional analysis and explanation addressing the
specific requirements of the Act. The EPA acknowledged as much in the
preamble to the Benefit-Cost Rule in discussing our view that the
Agency's compliance with what we characterized as ``these procedural
requirements'' would be subject to judicial review but admitting also
that we had not based the Rule on any interpretation of the substantive
provisions of the CAA.\48\ Notwithstanding this discussion, to the
extent that some may have viewed the Benefit-Cost Rule as creating a
new avenue for substantive judicial review of future CAA actions, which
was not intended, we do not agree that the Benefit-Cost Rule and its
record could support such a view, and this supports rescinding the
Rule. At most, we believe that the procedural requirements in the
Benefit-Cost Rule--similar to an Agency's failure to provide adequate
notice under the APA or CAA 307(d)--could only have provided a basis
for remanding a rule to the Agency to cure process flaws. Rescinding
the Rule will avoid misunderstanding that the Rule created a
substantive cause of action and will avoid unnecessary litigation
contending that the Rule had substantive impacts that were not intended
and not supported.
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\47\ See NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055, 1063-64 (D.C. Cir. 2014)
(citing American Petroleum Inst. v. EPA, 52 F.3d 1113, 1119 (D.C.
Cir. 1995).
\48\ 85 FR 84138.
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This view is consistent with provisions in the CAA indicating that
Congress did not intend that additional analytical requirements such as
those at issue in the Benefit-Cost Rule should play a substantive role
in determining compliance with statutorily mandated agency action. In
CAA section 317, Congress created a process by which it required the
EPA to prepare an economic impact assessment prior to issuing proposed
rulemakings for seven types of regulations under the Act.\49\ However,
Congress was careful to point out that the specific statutory mandates
underlying the regulations are controlling and that failure to comply
with the additional economic impact assessment requirements is not a
basis upon which review can be obtained for the applicable rules.\50\
Congress even explicitly stated that where a statutory provision
required the Agency to consider costs, ``the adequacy or inadequacy of
any assessment required under [CAA section 317] may be taken into
consideration, but shall not be treated for purposes of judicial review
of any such provision as conclusive with respect to compliance or
noncompliance with the requirement of such provision to take cost into
account.'' CAA section 317(g). If Congress did not want its own
statutorily mandated economic impact assessments to provide a basis to
invalidate CAA rules, then it is unlikely Congress would have granted
the EPA authority to create a new substantive cause of action based on
failure to comply with a procedural rule establishing BCA requirements.
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\49\ The Benefit-Cost Rule did address comments regarding CAA
section 317, but its discussion of that provision is limited to
making the point that nothing in CAA section 317 precludes the
Agency from requiring any additional analysis, such as its BCA. See
Response to Comments (RTC) at page 53, available in the docket at
EPA-HQ-OAR-2020-0044-0687.
\50\ CAA section 317(c) (``Nothing in this section shall be
construed to provide that the analysis of the factors specified in
this subsection affects or alters the factors which the
Administrator is required to consider in taking any [covered]
action''); CAA section 317(e) (``Nothing in this section shall be
construed--(1) to alter the basis on which a standard or regulation
is promulgated under this chapter; (2) to preclude the Administrator
from carrying out his responsibility under this chapter to protect
public health and welfare; or (3) to authorize or require any
judicial review of any such standard or regulation or any stay or
injunction of the proposal, promulgation, or effectiveness of such
standard or regulation on the basis of failure to comply with this
section.'').
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1. The Rule Is Plainly Unnecessary With Respect to CAA Provisions That
Prohibit the EPA From Considering Cost
The Benefit-Cost Rule's requirement to prepare a BCA applied to all
significant CAA rulemakings, including those promulgated under CAA
provisions that prohibit consideration of cost or other economic
factors. The only waiver from the Rule's requirements for these
rulemakings was that the BCA need not be ``considered'' in such cases
where ``the provision or provisions . . . prohibit the consideration of
the BCA.'' \51\ In the final rule, the Agency reasoned that ``while
certain statutory provisions may prohibit reliance on BCA or other
methods of cost consideration in decision-making, such provisions do
not preclude the Agency from providing additional information regarding
the impacts of a proposed or final rule to the public. For example,
while the CAA prohibits the EPA from considering cost when establishing
or revising requisite NAAQS for certain criteria pollutants, the EPA
nonetheless provides RIAs to the public for these rulemakings.'' \52\
The desire to provide ``additional information'' for those rules where
Congress prohibited the EPA from considering cost does not on its face
fall within CAA section 301(a)'s authority to promulgate regulations as
are necessary to carry out the statute. We therefore find the Rule's
application to CAA provisions that prohibit the consideration of cost
to be inconsistent with the Act.
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\51\ 40 CFR 83.2(b).
\52\ 85 FR 84134.
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To support the argument for broad application of the Benefit-Cost
Rule, the EPA asserted equivalency between the Benefit-Cost Rule's
requirements and the EPA's historic preparations of RIAs for
rulemakings under which it was prohibited from considering costs, such
as setting the NAAQS. We have concluded, however, that even where
equivalent, the EPA's past practices do not provide support for a
conclusion that such practices are necessary to carry out the Act. In
addition, the new procedures promulgated under the Rule made two key
changes to the existing process under which the EPA prepared RIAs for
economically significant rulemakings. The Benefit-Cost Rule required
that the EPA develop a BCA meeting very specific requirements (as
opposed to one tailored to the rule at issue, as permissible under
existing guidance, see Section III.C of this preamble), and perhaps
more importantly, it required the EPA to include the results of the BCA
and how the information was considered in the preambles to forthcoming
proposed and final rules promulgated under the CAA. That is, the BCA
mandated by the Rule was explicitly required to be part of the Agency's
record for decision-making. In
[[Page 26415]]
addition, the Benefit-Cost Rule's preamble stated the Agency's
compliance with the Rule's requirements would be subject to judicial
review. See the preamble to the final rule (``[T]he Final Rule is
binding upon the Agency for significant CAA regulations, and . . .
EPA's compliance is subject to judicial review in challenges to such
rulemakings.'').\53\ These changes are in stark contrast to the
existing process for interagency review for rules such as the NAAQS,
where the EPA does not include the RIA as part of its administrative
record for the rulemaking, nor is compliance with the E.O. subject to
judicial review.\54\
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\53\ 85 FR 84138.
\54\ While the earlier E.O.s that required a regulatory analysis
(i.e., E.O. 12291 (46 FR 13193, February 17, 1981)) contained a
requirement that BCAs prepared per E.O.s be included in the Agency's
rulemaking record, that directive was removed from E.O. 12866, which
replaced the prior E.O. Compare E.O. 12291 section 9 (``The
determinations made by agencies under Section 4 of this Order, and
any Regulatory Impact Analyses for any rule, shall be made part of
the whole record of agency action in connection with the rule.'')
with E.O. 12866 section 11 (containing no such requirement). Neither
E.O. has ever subjected agency compliance with these E.O.s to
judicial review. See E.O. 12866, section 11 (``Nothing in this
Executive order shall affect any otherwise available judicial review
of agency action. This Executive Order is intended only to improve
the internal management of the Federal Government and does not
create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable
at law or equity by a party against the United States, its agencies
or instrumentalities, its officers or employees, or any other
person.''); E.O. 12291, section 9 (``This Order is intended only to
improve the internal management of the Federal government, and is
not intended to create any right or benefit, substantive or
procedural, enforceable at law by a party against the United States,
its agencies, its officers or any person.'').
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The Benefit-Cost Rule's proffered explanations for why the Rule was
necessary are expressly tied, in part, to these two changes. The Rule
noted that one motivation for requiring BCAs was that ``courts have
noted the usefulness of BCA and have utilized the information provided
therein to inform their analysis when reviewing agency-created BCAs
and/or RIAs as evidence that an agency ignored alternatives or acted in
an arbitrary or capricious manner when taking action.'' \55\ Similarly,
the EPA articulated that it viewed enforceability of its new
requirements as critical to its argument that the Rule was necessary.
In the Response to Comments document, the Agency stated, ``EPA has not
had procedural enforceable regulations in place to ensure consistency
in its past BCA practices. To the extent that commenters assert that
EPA's past practice has been consistent and transparent, it is not due
to an enforceable standardized approach that would ensure such a
result. . . . Without enforceable procedural regulations for BCA,
future regulations may be promulgated without consideration of, and
public accountability concerning, their costs and benefits. Thus, the
EPA has determined that the Final Rule is necessary to ensure that BCA
practices are implemented in a consistent fashion prospectively.'' \56\
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\55\ 85 FR 84134.
\56\ RTC at Chapter 3.1.1, p. 32.
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But neither of these reasons articulating the necessity of the Rule
can extend to regulations promulgated under CAA provisions where the
Agency is prohibited from considering cost or economic factors. Where
Congress did not intend the EPA to consider cost, there would be no
purpose for the EPA to incorporate a BCA into its rulemaking record,
and it would be contrary to the CAA to subject a Congressionally-
required rule to review based on failure to adhere to an agency-created
mandate to prepare a BCA where the statute precludes consideration of
cost.
2. For Provisions That Permit Consideration of Cost or Economic
Factors, the Requirement To Consider BCA Is Unwarranted Because
Implementation of Those Provisions Should Begin With Analysis of
Statutory Text and Context
The CAA contains a vast array of instructions about whether and how
the EPA may consider benefits, costs, or other economic factors, and
discerning Congress' intent with respect to those instructions requires
analysis of statutory context.\57\ Rather than grapple with any of the
statutory provisions at issue, the Benefit-Cost Rule assumed that
because Congress provided authority for the EPA to consider costs in
making some regulatory decisions, and because courts have concluded
that BCA may be an appropriate way for agencies to account for costs in
some contexts, it was ``necessary'' and reasonable that the EPA should
require consideration of BCA in all significant CAA rules where it was
not precluded from doing so. However, this faulty logic does not
constitute an adequate justification, and the EPA has concluded that
the Rule's approach is inferior to the existing process of interpreting
and applying the relevant CAA provisions.
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\57\ Three Supreme Court cases from the last two decades
addressing whether the EPA properly interpreted the CAA with respect
to whether it could consider cost illustrate the critical role of
context and purpose in statutory interpretation. See Whitman v. Am.
Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457 (2001); EPA v. EME Homer City
Generation, L.P., 572 U.S. 489 (2014); Michigan v. EPA, 576 U.S. 743
(2015).
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Under the CAA, Congress granted the EPA broad powers to act on
behalf of protecting and enhancing the nation's air resources. The Act
specifically directs the EPA to, among other things, set NAAQS,
establish emission standards for both stationary and mobile sources of
air pollution, reduce emissions of nearly 200 specified hazardous air
pollutants, regulate fuels and fuel additives, and issue permits and
enforce the Act's emission limits. In these various authorities,
Congress established a wide range of direction with respect to the
EPA's consideration of benefits, costs, or other economic factors.\58\
With respect to costs, the statutory text in some provisions explicitly
indicates that the EPA should incorporate a consideration of cost or
economic factors.\59\ Other authorities suggest by implication that the
EPA should or may consider costs, using language directing the EPA to
establish standards that are ``practicable,'' ``reasonably
achievable,'' or ``feasible.'' \60\ And in many if not all of the CAA
authorities, Congress made clear that the EPA was to give strong, if
not overriding, consideration to the ``benefits'' of its regulations--
i.e., beneficial effects on public health, welfare, risk prevention,
the
[[Page 26416]]
environment, safety, and visibility, to name but a few.
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\58\ For additional information regarding various CAA
authorities and discussion of cost, see Congressional Research
Service (CRS) report titled ``Cost and Benefit Considerations in
Clean Air Act Regulations.'' In the report, the CRS identifies
various CAA authorities that either mention or imply cost
considerations and authorities that neither mention nor imply cost
consideration. May 5, 2017, available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R44840/4.
\59\ Examples include: The setting of emission standards for new
stationary sources in section 111, going ``beyond the floor'' in
emission standards for sources of 187 hazardous air pollutants in
section 112(d), setting emission standards for motor vehicles beyond
those standards listed in the act under sections 202(a) and 202(i),
controlling mobile source air toxics under section 202(l),
controlling or prohibiting the manufacture and sale of fuels and
fuel additives under section 211(c), requiring the sale of
reformulated gasoline in nonattainment areas under section 211(k),
setting emission standards for nonroad vehicles and engines under
section 213, and setting emission standards for locomotives, buses,
and aircraft, under sections 213, 219, and 231.
\60\ Examples include: Providing for the use of ``generally
available control technologies'' to control area sources of
hazardous pollutants under section 112(d)(5), promulgating
``reasonable regulations and appropriate guidance to provide, to the
greatest extent practicable, for the prevention and detection of
accidental releases,'' of extremely hazardous substances and take
into consideration ``the concerns of small business,'' under section
112(r)(7), and imposing emission standards or emission control
technology requirements that ``reflect the best retrofit technology
and maintenance practices reasonably achievable'' for retrofit of
urban buses under section 219(d).
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In the Benefit-Cost Rule, the EPA presumed that its requirements
were permissible because it ``was not aware of any impediment to this
rulemaking.'' \61\ But the Rule failed to identify, much less discuss,
any statutory provision governing the rules to which its requirements
would have applied. The EPA is bound to look to the statutory language
and context of a particular provision, and in some cases consider the
factual circumstances of the issue the agency is attempting to address
in determining whether and how the EPA may consider benefits, costs,
and other factors.\62\
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\61\ 85 FR 84138.
\62\ See Am. Textile Mfrs. Inst., Inc. v. Donovan, 452 U.S. 490,
508 (1981); Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 556 U.S. 208, 223
(2009).
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The Benefit-Cost Rule's failure to examine the statutory provisions
governing the regulations it would impact would have resulted in cases
where the Rule required ``consideration'' of BCAs where it may not have
been feasible to even produce a meaningful or useful BCA. Even for
those CAA provisions where cost may be considered, BCA is not
necessarily useful, and may even be misleading. As Circular A-4 has
noted, ``[w]here all benefits and costs can be quantified and expressed
as monetary units, benefit-cost analysis provides decision makers with
a clear indication of the most efficient alternative.'' \63\ Circular
A-4 goes on to caution, however, that it is not always possible to
quantify benefits (or costs), and ``[w]hen important benefits and costs
cannot be expressed in monetary units, BCA is less useful, and it can
even be misleading, because the calculation of net benefits in such
cases does not provide a full evaluation of all relevant benefits and
costs.'' \64\
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\63\ Circular A-4 at p. 2.
\64\ Id. at p. 10.
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This caution is relevant as there are a number of authorities under
the CAA authorizing or requiring the EPA to regulate pollutants where,
in many cases, important benefits cannot readily be monetized. For
example, in CAA section 112(d)(2), the Act prescribes that the EPA
establish emission standards based on maximum achievable control
technology or ``MACT'' for new and existing sources of hazardous air
pollutants. Section 112 authorizes the EPA to consider costs at some
steps in this process but not at the first step of establishing the
minimum stringency emission limit, because Congress recognized the
dangerous nature of hazardous and toxic air pollutants. Where the EPA
can consider cost in this context (e.g., requiring more stringent
emission limits), it has not historically used BCA to establish
appropriate emission standards. We note that as methods do not yet
exist that can reliably quantify the value of changes in many HAP-
related risks, a BCA would include only a qualitative assessment of the
benefits of HAP reductions. In other words, while we know that there
are important health outcomes associated with exposure to HAP that
include cancer, birth defects, reproductive effects, and
neurodevelopmental defects, we currently lack the ability to precisely
quantify and fully monetize all of the benefits of a change in the MACT
standard. In implementing section 112, the EPA has therefore
historically employed other types of analyses, such as examining the
cost per ton of emissions removed.\65\
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\65\ See, e.g., Natl. Ass'n of Clean Water Agencies v. EPA, 734
F.3d 1115, 1157 (D.C. Cir. 2013).
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Perhaps recognizing the varied landscape presented by the CAA's
provisions, the Benefit-Cost Rule ultimately only required that its BCA
be ``considered,'' but prescribed no further instruction or requirement
as to how the Agency should consider it.\66\ The Agency had taken
comment on the possibility of requiring a more substantive outcome,
soliciting input ``on approaches for how the results of the BCA could
be weighed in future CAA regulatory decisions,'' including ``whether
and under what circumstances the EPA could or should determine that a
future significant CAA regulation be promulgated only when the benefits
of the intended action justify its costs'' or ``only when monetized
benefits exceed the costs of the action.'' \67\ Because the final
Benefit-Cost Rule did not strictly direct how the Agency should weigh
BCA in its future CAA rulemakings, the EPA could have formally complied
with the Rule while giving the BCA little to no weight in its decision
making. The need to adhere to the particular statutory language and
context governing the significant CAA rulemaking at issue, including
examples like the one cited above, would make that outcome plausible,
if not likely. By appropriately allowing the EPA to determine how best
to consider benefits, costs, and other factors in the context of a
particular statutory provision, the Benefit-Cost Rule conceded that it
may serve no purpose in helping the EPA to effectuate the purposes of
the Act. At the same time, by acknowledging that the Agency's choice of
analysis depends on what each CAA provision requires or permits,\68\
the Benefit-Cost Rule refuted its claim that the Rule provided
``consistency.''
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\66\ See 40 CFR 83.2(b).
\67\ 85 FR 35623.
\68\ See 40 CFR 83.2(b); 40 CFR 83.4(d).
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Given the exacting demands of discerning Congressional intent in
any given CAA provision, we conclude that returning to implementation
of the CAA using the traditional process of statutory interpretation
provides advantages over the Benefit-Cost Rule's presumption that
consideration of BCA is ``necessary'' and reasonable to promulgate all
significant CAA regulations regardless of statutory text and context.
Under its pre-existing process, the Agency first looks to the text of
the relevant statutory provision to determine whether Congress intended
or permitted the Agency to consider cost or economic factors. If yes,
the Agency further looks to the statutory context, legislative history,
and the nature of the program or environmental problem to be addressed
to determine a reasonable manner of considering cost. We conclude that
this process of interpreting and discerning Congress' intent, subject
to public notice and comment and judicial review, is superior to the
Benefit-Cost Rule's presumptive imposition to consider BCA followed by
a subsequent attempt to reconcile with the statutory text.
F. The Pre-Existing Administrative Process Provides for Ample
Consistency and Transparency
In the Benefit-Cost Rule the EPA also failed to establish that its
requirements were needed with respect to process, in light of the
existing procedures under the APA and, where applicable, CAA section
307(d). These requirements are more than adequate to accomplish the
general good government goals of ``consistency'' and ``transparency,''
and the Benefit-Cost Rule failed to provide any support for its
contention that the pre-existing process was deficient so as to warrant
the Rule's new procedures.
When promulgating regulations under the CAA such as those targeted
by the Benefit-Cost Rule, the EPA is already required by statute to
provide ``[g]eneral notice of proposed rulemaking'' in ``the Federal
Register,'' including the legal authority under which the rule is
proposed and the terms or substance of the proposed rule.\69\ Moreover,
the EPA must give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rulemaking through submission of written data, views, or
arguments.\70\ For many rules promulgated under the
[[Page 26417]]
CAA, including those designated by the Administrator, CAA section
307(d) further requires the establishment of a rulemaking docket,\71\
and specifies that the notice of proposed rulemaking must include a
summary of ``the factual data on which the proposed rule is based,''
\72\ ``the methodology used in obtaining the data and in analyzing the
data,'' \73\ and ``the major interpretations and policy considerations
underlying the proposed rule.'' \74\ CAA section 307(d)(2) also
requires the EPA to ``set forth and summarize and provide a reference
to any pertinent findings, recommendations, and comments by the
Scientific Review Committee . . . and the National Academy of Sciences,
and, if the proposal differs in any important respect from any of these
recommendations, an explanation of the reasons for such differences.''
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\69\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b); CAA section 307(d)(3).
\70\ 5 U.S.C. 553(c); CAA section 307(d)(5).
\71\ CAA 307(d)(2).
\72\ CAA section 307(d)(2)(A).
\73\ CAA section 307(d)(2)(B).
\74\ CAA section 307(d)(2)(C).
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The EPA must respond to all significant comments it receives on its
proposed regulations before issuing a final rule, including contentions
from stakeholders that the EPA has failed to reasonably consider the
costs or benefits of an action. See Home Box Office, Inc. v. FCC, 567
F.2d 9, 35-36 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (``[t]he opportunity to comment is
meaningless unless the agency responds to significant points raised by
the public); Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S.
402, 416 (1971) (requiring reviewing court to assure itself that all
relevant factors have been considered by the agency). Such comments can
encompass arguments that by failing to conduct a BCA, the EPA has
contravened the CAA or complaints that its data or analysis is flawed
or arbitrary. Where the EPA promulgates a final CAA section 307(d)
rule, the EPA is required to provide ``a response to each of the
significant comments, criticisms, and new data submitted in written or
oral presentations during the comment period.'' \75\ The EPA is
forbidden from promulgating a rule based on ``any information or data
which has not been placed in the docket as of the date of . . .
promulgation.'' \76\
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\75\ CAA section 307(d)(6)(B).
\76\ CAA section 307(d)(6)(C).
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While ``agencies should be free to fashion their own rules of
procedure,'' \77\ and ``are free to grant additional procedural rights
in the exercise of their discretion,'' \78\ where Congress so carefully
specified the procedural requirements for CAA rules (at least those
enumerated in section 307(d)), we question the wisdom of adding to
those procedures an additional BCA requirement, particularly where the
EPA did not show that statutory procedures were deficient.\79\
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\77\ Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Resources
Defense Council, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 544 (1978).
\78\ Id. at 524.
\79\ See NRDC v. Reilly, 976 F.2d 36, 41 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (EPA
cannot use its general rulemaking authority as justification for
adding to a statutorily specified list); NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d at
1064 (``EPA cannot rely on its gap-filling authority to supplement
the Clean Air Act's provisions when Congress has not left the agency
a gap to fill.'').
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The Benefit-Cost Rule did not explain how the pre-existing ample
public process was inadequate to accomplish the rule's stated goals of
promoting consistency and transparency. The existing process already
requires the EPA to present in a proposed notice published in the
Federal Register its relevant interpretations of a particular statutory
provision regarding whether and how it considers costs and benefits.
The existing process already permits interested parties to promote
during the public comment period a view that weighing the results of a
BCA is a valuable or appropriate way for the EPA to consider costs,
benefits, or other factors specified in the provision of the Act under
which a rule is promulgated; any views asserting that the agency has
not been transparent in providing factual data, methodologies, legal
interpretations, and policy considerations; or any views asserting that
the agency has been inconsistent in its interpretations. The existing
process, under CAA section 307(b), already subjects any failure on the
EPA's part to grapple with significant comments to review by the U.S.
Courts of Appeals.\80\
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\80\ Outside parties regularly exercise their right to challenge
the EPA's actions under the CAA. In a 2011 report, the Government
Accountability Office found that during a 16-year period between
1995 and 2010, about 2,500 environmental cases were brought against
the EPA. Of those challenges, CAA cases were more than twice as
common as cases brought under any other statute (i.e., comparing the
three most litigated groups of actions: 59% of cases were brought
under the CAA, 20% under the Clean Water Act, and 6% under Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act). Environmental Litigation: Cases
against EPA and Associated Costs over Time, GAO-11-650, August 2011,
available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-11-650.pdf.
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Therefore, the EPA has determined that the existing process already
provides sufficient consistency and transparency.
IV. Rulemaking Procedures, Procedural Rule Exemption, and Request for
Comment
In this action, the EPA is issuing an interim final rule to rescind
the Benefit-Cost Rule in its entirety and requesting comment on that
action. We intend to follow this interim final rule with a final rule
that responds to comments received during this public comment period,
if any, and reflects any accompanying changes to the Agency's approach.
This interim final rule will stay in place until it is replaced by the
final rule that responds to any public comments and makes any warranted
changes. This interim final rule will become effective 30 days after
publication.
Like the Benefit-Cost Rule that this rule rescinds, this interim
final rule is a rule of agency organization, procedure, or practice.
This procedural rule does not regulate any party outside of the EPA but
instead exclusively governs the EPA's internal process for conducting
benefit-cost analysis. This interim final rule does not regulate the
rights and obligations of any party outside of the EPA nor does it have
any legal force and effect on them. Any incidental impacts on voluntary
behavior outside of the EPA do not render this a substantive rule.
While procedural rules are exempt from the APA's notice and public
comment requirements, see 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A), the EPA has nonetheless
decided to voluntarily seek post-promulgation public comment on this
procedural interim final rule and follow it with a final rule because
the information and opinions the public may provide could inform the
Agency's decision-making.\81\ By electing to proceed with an interim
final rule rather than a final rule, the EPA is acting consistently
with Administrative Conference of the United States Recommendation 95-
4, which recommends that agencies consider providing post-promulgation
notice and comment even where an exemption is justified, be it a
substantive rule relying on the ``good cause'' exception to notice and
comment, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), or a procedural rule such as this one.\82\
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\81\ Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Res. Def.
Council, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 524 (1978) (``Agencies are free to
grant additional procedural rights in the exercise of their
discretion.'').
\82\ See ACUS Recommendation 95-4, Procedures for
Noncontroversial and Expedited Rulemaking (1995).
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A. Written Comments
Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2020-
0044, at https://www.regulations.gov (our preferred method), or the
other methods identified in the ADDRESSES section. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed from the docket. The EPA may
publish any comment received to its public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you consider to be
[[Page 26418]]
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia submissions (audio,
video, etc.) must be accompanied by a written comment. The written
comment is considered the official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general guidance
on making effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
The EPA is temporarily suspending its Docket Center and Reading
Room for public visitors to reduce the risk of transmitting COVID-19.
Written comments submitted by mail are temporarily suspended and no
hand deliveries will be accepted. 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. For further information and updates on EPA Docket
Center services, please visit us online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
The EPA continues to carefully and continuously monitor information
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.
B. Participating in a Virtual Public Hearing
If a member of the public requests one, the EPA will hold a virtual
public hearing on this interim final rulemaking on Wednesday, June 9,
2021. Please note that any hearing would be a deviation from the EPA's
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, the
EPA cannot hold in-person public meetings at this time.
Upon publication of this document in the Federal Register, the EPA
will accept requests for a public hearing. If a hearing is requested,
the EPA will also begin pre-registering speakers and attendees for the
requested hearing. The EPA will accept registrations on an individual
basis. To register to speak at the virtual hearing, individuals may use
the online registration form available via the EPA's Increasing
Consistency and Transparency in Considering Costs and Benefits in the
Rulemaking Process web page for this hearing (https://www.epa.gov/air-and-radiation/rescission-2020-benefit-cost-rule) or contact Leif
Hockstad at (202) 343-9432 or [email protected]. The last day to
pre-register to speak at the hearing will be Wednesday, June 2, 2021.
On Monday, June 7, 2021, if a hearing has been requested, the EPA will
post a general agenda for the hearing that will list pre-registered
speakers in approximate order at: https://www.epa.gov/air-and-radiation/rescission-2020-benefit-cost-rule.
The EPA will make every effort to follow the schedule as closely as
possible on the day of the hearing, if held; however, please plan for
the hearing to run either ahead of schedule or behind schedule.
Additionally, requests to speak will be taken the day of the hearing at
the end of each session as timing allows. The EPA will make every
effort to accommodate all speakers.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes to provide oral testimony. The
EPA recommends submitting the text of your oral comments as written
comments to the rulemaking docket. The EPA may ask clarifying questions
during the oral presentations but will not respond to the presentations
at that time. 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.
The EPA is also asking hearing attendees to pre-register for the
hearing, if held, even those who do not intend to provide testimony.
This will help the EPA ensure that sufficient phone lines will be
available.
Please note that any updates made to any aspect of the hearing
logistics, including potential additional sessions, will be posted
online at the EPA's Rescission of the Benefit-Cost Rule website
(https://www.epa.gov/air-and-radiation/rescission-2020-benefit-cost-rule). While the EPA expects the hearing, if held, to go forward as set
forth above, please monitor our website or contact the person listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to determine if there are
any updates.
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 Wednesday, June 2, 2021. The EPA may
not be able to arrange accommodations without advanced notice.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory action that was submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. Any changes
made in response to OMB recommendations have been documented in the
docket. The EPA does not anticipate that this rulemaking will have an
economic impact on regulated entities. This is a rule of agency
procedure and practice.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not contain any information collection activities
and therefore does not impose an information collection burden under
the PRA.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
This action is not subject to the RFA. The RFA applies only to
rules subject to notice and comment rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553, or any other statute.
This action would not regulate any entity outside the federal
government and is a rule of agency procedure and practice.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the National Government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to
this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
[[Page 26419]]
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an environmental
health risk or safety risk.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' within the
meaning of Executive Order 13211. It is not likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution or use of
energy, and it has not otherwise been designated as a significant
energy action by the Administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA).
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes that this action is not subject to Executive Order
12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994) because it does not establish an
environmental health or safety standard that results in
disproportionate impacts on minority and low-income populations.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This rule is exempt from CRA because it is a rule of agency
organization, procedure, or practice that does not substantially affect
the rights or obligations of nonagency parties.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 83
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
PART 83--[REMOVED AND RESERVED]
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, and under the authority of 42
U.S.C. 7601, the EPA removes and reserves 40 CFR part 83.
[FR Doc. 2021-10216 Filed 5-13-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P