Georgetown Law
Faculty Blog
Fish, Power Plants, and
Cost-Benefit Analysis
By Lisa Heinzerling
January 31,
2007
http://gulcfac.typepad.com/georgetown_university_law/environmental_law/
In a huge
victory for fish and other fans of the Clean Water Act, the Second Circuit last
week ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency may not use cost-benefit
analysis in setting standards for cooling water structures used at existing
power plants around the country.
These structures draw in huge
amounts of water from water bodies adjacent to the power plants they
cool. Fish are killed when they are either trapped at the inlet to these
structures or drawn into the machinery of the structures themselves. The
number of fish killed is almost unbelievable. A single power plant might
kill billions -- yes, billions -- of fish in a single year.
The Clean Water Act instructs EPA
to set standards for these cooling water intake structures. In its first
pass at the issue, EPA decided to require state-of-the-art technology for the
largest and most damaging facilities. By the time the agency's proposal
had passed through the regulatory review process required by the White House,
however, this requirement was gone. In addition, a new "compliance
alternative" had emerged: plants could avoid installing even the less
effective technology required by the amended proposal if they showed that
installing that technology failed a cost-benefit test. In simple terms,
this meant that if the cost of the equipment exceeded the value of the fish
that would be killed if the equipment weren't installed, the plant could avoid
installing the equipment. (And the White House didn't see much value in
these fish.) Thus the White House -- through its regulatory office, the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) -- succeeded in both
weakening the substance of EPA's proposal and in substantially altering the
meaning of the relevant provisions of the Clean Water Act, by interpreting them
to allow standard-setting based on cost-benefit analysis.
The Second
Circuit didn't buy it. The court ruled that the Clean Water Act does not
permit the use of cost-benefit analysis in setting these standards or in allowing
deviations from the standards. Quite reasonably, the court held that the
agency could engage in a form of cost-effectiveness analysis in setting
standards, by identifying the level of protection afforded by state-of-the-art
technology and then allowing use of cheaper but equally effective technologies
in meeting the standards. But the court clearly ruled out OIRA's favorite technique for undoing regulatory advances,
cost-benefit analysis.
The court
declined to decide an issue briefed to them (by amicus OMB Watch, represented
pro bono by me), regarding OIRA's role in the
regulatory process. We had argued that EPA's interpretation of the Clean
Water Act deserved no deference under Chevron because it was, in reality, OIRA's, not EPA's interpretation. The court did not
need to reach this issue because it held that cost-benefit analysis was just
not permitted under the Act.
OIRA's role in this rulemaking
proceeding also led to another interesting, also unresolved, legal
skirmish. In arguing that OIRA had foisted its own interpretation on the
agency actually charged with implementing the statute in question, we relied on
publicly available documents showing exactly how OIRA's
intervention had led to alterations in EPA's proposal. Out of all of the
6,000 records in the agency's docket on this rule and the hundreds of pages of
typical legal mumbojumbo trying to explain the
agency's decision, the documents showing the results of OIRA's
intervention furnished the only really clear explanation of why EPA did what it
did. Yet EPA moved to exclude these documents from the agency record --
despite the fact that they had been made public by the EPA itself and despite
the fact that EPA itself had originally placed them in the docket. EPA
explained that they were "deliberative" documents that shouldn't play
a role in the court's review of EPA's rule. Here again, the court found
no need to rule on this issue because it disposed of the case without looking
at OIRA's role in the process. However, EPA's
position that public documents showing exactly why it chose the rule it did
does not bode well for meaningful judicial review in future cases.
The case is Riverkeeper v EPA.