On December 29, 2011, the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California (“District
Court”) issued three separate rulings on motions for
summary adjudication in the matter of Rocky
Mountain Farmers Union v. Goldstene (Dec.
29, 2011, No. CV-F-09-2234 LJO GSA; No. CV-F-10-163 LJO
DLB) 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 149590). Plaintiffs in the
case, a coalition of associations representing
agricultural interests, refineries, and biofuel
companies, alleged that California’s Low Carbon Fuel
Standard (“LCFS”) regulations promulgated by the
California Air Resource Board (“CARB”) were
unconstitutional. Specifically, Plaintiffs alleged that
the regulations violated the dormant Commerce Clause of
the United States Constitution by improperly
discriminating against out-of-state products in favor of
in-state products, and that these regulations are
preempted by provisions of federal law found in the
Clean Air Act (“CAA”). Defendant CARB asserted in a
separate motion that provisions in the CAA both
prevented Plaintiffs from making any preemption claims
and prevented Plaintiffs from bringing any dormant
Commerce Clause claims. The District Court ultimately
found that the LCFS was discriminatory and violated the
dormant Commerce Clause, and held that while there is an
exception in the CAA that prevents Plaintiffs from
making claims of express preemption, there was no such
restriction on traditional conflict preemption claims or
dormant Commerce Clause claims. These rulings could
have a significant impact on the future of California’s
LCFS regulations and the state’s overall approach to
future regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.
Background
California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 17, §§ 95480-95490) is one of a series of
regulations designed to implement the state’s landmark
greenhouse gas reduction law, Assembly Bill 32 of 2006
(“AB 32”), the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006.
The purpose of the LCFS is to implement a low carbon
fuel standard that will reduce greenhouse gas emissions
“by reducing the full fuel-cycle, carbon intensity of
the transportation fuel used in California.” (Cal. Code
Regs., tit. 17, § 95480.) The LCFS is also designed to
reduce California’s dependence on petroleum and to
stimulate the production and use of alternative,
low-carbon fuels in California. The regulations require
entities to report a significant amount of information
regarding a fuel’s attributes and carbon intensity, and
ultimately sets goals to reduce the average carbon
intensity of each fuel component through 2020.
Analysis
Plaintiff
National Petrochemical & Refiners Association (“NPRA”)
Alleges Dormant Commerce Clause Violations
Plaintiff NPRA’s primary substantive claim is based on
alleged violations of the dormant Commerce Clause. The
dormant Commerce Clause directly limits the power of the
states to discriminate against interstate commerce, and
in the context presented by the LCFS regulations,
“[d]iscrimination simply means differential treatment of
in-state and out-of state economic interests that
benefits the former and burdens the latter.” (United
Haulers Ass’n v. Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth.
(2007) 550 U.S. 330, 333.) NPRA contended that the LCFS
violates the dormant Commerce Clause because it
(1) discriminates in favor of California corn ethanol
and against Midwest corn ethanol; (2) discriminates in
favor of California crude oil and against crude oils
from outside of California; and (3) attempts to regulate
interstate and foreign commerce based on a fuel’s
production and transport that occurs outside of
California. The District Court examined each of these
claims in turn, and held that the LCFS regulations were
discriminatory, and because other non-discriminatory
means were available for achieving CARB’s stated goals,
prevented the regulations from being applied.
First, Plaintiffs argued that because out-of-state
ethanol producers are assigned a higher “carbon
intensity” than in-state producers, the regulation
facially discriminates against out-of-state producers.
The justification provided by CARB for the discrepancy
in assigned carbon intensity was the underlying
difference in greenhouse gas emissions associated with
each producer’s transportation methods as well as
electricity sources (i.e., transport from out-of-state
sources results in higher greenhouse gas emissions, and
California has access to cleaner power sources than some
out-of-state producers). The court agreed with
Plaintiffs on this issue, finding that the differences
in carbon intensity constitute facial discrimination,
and therefore granted NPRA’s motion. Citing a separate
order issued concurrently in the case, the court applied
the constitutional “strict scrutiny” test and concluded
that the LCFS “discriminates against out-of-state corn
derived ethanol on its face and impermissibly regulates
extraterritorially based on the ethanol pathways.”
Second, Plaintiffs argued that the LCFS discriminates
against emerging sources of high carbon intensity crude
oil (“HCICO”) by treating them less favorably than HCICO
from California and foreign countries. A HCICO is a
crude oil with a high carbon intensity value, and
through the LCFS regulations CARB distinguished between
existing HCICOs and emerging HCICOs. NPRA argued that
this classification system in the LCFS treats crude oil
from California more favorably than crude oil from
outside of California because (1) the LCFS treats
emerging crude sources less favorably than HCICO from
California, and (2) under the LCFS all existing crude
sources are assigned the same carbon intensity value
even though HCICO from California has a higher carbon
intensity than other low carbon intensity crude oils
from Alaska and foreign countries. Defendant CARB
argued the LCFS applies evenhandedly to all ethanol
pathways, does not discriminate in the crude oil market,
and does not regulate extraterritorial activity.
However, the District Court sided with NPRA, determining
that even though the values assigned under the LCFS
system for HCICOs appears facially neutral, the design
and practical effect of these LCFS provisions is to
favor California HCICO and discriminate against foreign
HCICOs, thereby protecting California’s type of
processed crude oil by giving that fuel an artificially
favorable and lower carbon intensity value.
Finally, because the District Court found that these
provisions of the LCFS were discriminatory, it also
examined whether CARB had demonstrated that the LCFS
serves a legitimate local purpose and that this purpose
could not be served as well by available
nondiscriminatory means. (See Hunt
v. Washington State Apple Advertising Com. (1977)
432 U.S. 333, 353.) On the first element, the court
found that CARB’s stated purpose, to reduce the risks of
global warming, does serve a local and legitimate
interest and CARB was able to establish that the
regulations are justified by a valid factor unrelated to
economic protectionism, the preservation of the
environment by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
However, the court also found that CARB failed to
establish that the goal of reducing global warming
cannot be adequately served by nondiscriminatory
alternatives or that CARB could not achieve this goal
through other nondiscriminatory means. Thus, the
District Court concluded that although alternative
approaches may be less desirable for a number of
reasons, CARB’s failure to demonstrate that there are no
nondiscriminatory means by which California could combat
global warming through the reduction of greenhouse gas
emissions other than the LCFS could not withstand
dormant Commerce Clause challenges, and granted NPCA’s
motion on this issue.
District
Court Finds Exception to Express Preemption in the CAA
Applies to the LCFS, but Traditional Conflict Preemption
Principles Still Apply
In addition to the substantive dormant Commerce Clause
issues, both Plaintiffs and Defendants raised divergent
interpretations of the CAA in their respective motions.
Specifically, section 211 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C.
§ 7545) sets forth the federal statutory framework for
regulating motor vehicle fuels and fuel additives, and
also authorizes the United States Environmental
Protection Agency (“EPA”) to regulate fuels to control
vehicle emissions and to ensure a national market for
fuels. Plaintiffs alleged that the LCFS conflicts with
and is preempted by the national renewable fuel standard
program (42 U.S.C. § 7545(o), hereafter “section
211(o).”) because the LCFS requires renewable fuel
facilities that are exempted from section 211(o)
requirements to comply with the LCFS. In contrast,
Defendants asserted that the LCFS does not conflict with
Section 211(o) and is instead authorized by section
211(c)(4)(B) which, in effect, serves as an exception to
the preemption provision for California. (“Any state
for which application of [section 209(a)] has at any
time been waived under [section 209(b)] may at any time
prescribe and enforce, for
the purpose of motor vehicle emission control, a control
or prohibition respecting any fuel or
fuel additive.” (42 U.S.C. § 7545(c)(4)(B), emphasis
added.) More specifically, CARB claimed that the LCFS
is an “authorized control of a motor vehicle fuel” as
articulated in section 211(c)(4)(B), and is thus
insulated from preemption challenges.
After examining the history of CARB’s action as it
relates to the CAA, the court found that CARB properly
established that the LCFS was passed for the purpose of
“motor vehicle emission control,” and that the LCFS is a
“control respecting a fuel or fuel additive”, and thus
the regulations fit within the section 211(c)(4)(B)
preemption exception. However, the District Court found
that even though the LCFS is an authorized regulation
pursuant to section 211(c)(4)(B), California’s authority
pursuant to that section is not unfettered, and even
California regulations that are exempt from preemption
under provisions of the CAA must still be analyzed
according to ordinary conflict preemption principles.
According to the court, even when state laws fall within
a savings clause and are therefore not expressly
preempted, those laws are still subject to the ordinary
working of conflict preemption principles. (Citing Chicanos
Por La Causa, Inc. v. Napolitano (2009)
558 F.3d 856, 866.) The court denied without prejudice
this portion of Defendants’ summary judgment motion
because no party had yet addressed the appropriate
standard of review for a conflict preemption challenge.
District
Court Rejects Defendants’ Assertion that the Preemption
Exception Insulates the State Regulations from Commerce
Clause Claims
Finally, CARB contended that Section 211(c)(4)(B) (the
preemption exception) insulates the LCFS regulations
from dormant Commerce Clause claims because Congress
directly authorized California, via this provision, to
regulate a significant aspect of interstate commerce by
allowing the state to adopt fuels regulations that
burden interstate commerce. However, the court
expressly rejected this argument, noting that in order
to authorize a Commerce Clause violation, Congress must
do more than simply authorize a state to regulate in an
area. Rather, Congress must “affirmatively contemplate
otherwise invalid state legislation” and clearly express
its intent to “remove federal Constitutional
constraints.” (Citing South-Central
Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke (1984)
467 U.S. 82, 91; Sporhase
v. Nebraska ex rel. Douglas (1982)
458 U.S. 941, 960.) In this instance, the District
Court found that Defendants failed to establish by clear
and unmistakable evidence that Congress intended to
exempt the LCFS from scrutiny under the Commerce Clause,
and thus Plaintiffs were entitled to bring such a claim.
Conclusions
and Implications
The District Court’s rulings on the validity of the LCFS
may have a significant impact on the implementation of
AB 32 and California’s efforts to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions in the future, as the LCFS was reportedly
designed to account for approximately 10% of the
targeted reductions in overall emissions. It is not
entirely clear how CARB or the state will react to being
unable, at least temporarily, to proceed with
implementing the LCFS as drafted. However, CARB has
since issued “Supplemental Regulatory Advisory 10-04B,”
which states that CARB intends to appeal these rulings,
will seek an order staying the court’s preliminary
injunction, and will continue its stakeholder and
rulemaking processes for the LCFS. It will be
interesting for affected entities to continue to monitor
the success of any appeal as well as participate in the
ongoing interim regulatory processes.
For additional information related to the recent ruling
in Rocky
Mountain Farmers Union v. Goldstene (Dec.
29, 2011, No. CV-F-09-2234 LJO GSA; No. CV-F-10-163 LJO
DLB) 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 149590), please contact Adam
D. Link at alink@somachlaw.com.
Somach
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