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Diné Citizens Against Ruining the Environment v. Bernhardt
Diné Citizens Against Ruining the Environment v. Haaland ↗
1:19-cv-00703D.N.M.18 entries
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
04/01/2024
Decision
Court granted joint motion to dismiss pursuant to settlement.
The federal district court for the District of New Mexico granted a joint motion to dismiss a lawsuit originally filed in 2019 that challenged the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM’s) NEPA review for applications for permit to drill (APDs) in the Mancos Shale/Gallup Sandstone formation of the San Juan Basin. In 2023, the Tenth Circuit found that the NEPA review was deficient, including because the agency failed to take a hard look at direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts on greenhouse gas emissions. In the settlement pursuant to which the plaintiffs’ claims were dismissed, BLM agreed to reconsider the approximately 199 APDs for which the Tenth Circuit found deficiencies and to prepare new or supplemental NEPA documentation. BLM also temporarily paused development authorized by certain APDs challenged in the lawsuit.
08/03/2021
Decision
Plaintiffs' motion for temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction denied and plaintiffs' claims dismissed with prejudice.
The federal district court for the District of New Mexico dismissed a lawsuit challenging BLM’s NEPA review of 370 applications for permits to drill (APDs) in the Mancos Shale/Gallup Sandstone formation of the San Juan Basin. The court noted that this case “originated from a separate, extensively litigated case” (see <a href="https://climatecasechart.com/case/dine-citizens-ruining-environment-v-zinke/">here</a>) challenging more than 300 APDs in which the Tenth Circuit ultimately found that BLM failed to adequately consider cumulative impacts on water resources in five environmental assessments (EAs) but otherwise rejected the plaintiffs’ claims. BLM subsequently completed an “EA Addendum” to supplement the NEPA analysis and concluded for all APDs that the supplemental analysis in conjunction with the earlier analysis “did not demonstrate that the APDs in question would affect the human environment or result in cumulative impacts not already disclosed.” The district court found that BLM had not predetermined its decision to grant the subject APDs and also concluded that BLM’s supplementation was permissible. The district court noted that the EA Addendum reanalyzed several factors, including cumulative effects of greenhouse gas emissions, “though the Tenth Circuit did not explicitly require it to do so.” The plaintiffs contended that the analysis of greenhouse gas emissions was flawed in several ways, and the court rejected each of these contentions. First, the court said the plaintiffs’ argument that BLM merely quantified greenhouse gas emissions without analyzing them was without merit. Second, the court found that BLM’s decision to use a 100-year time horizon instead of a 20-year timeframe to analyze the impacts of greenhouse gas emissions “does not misrepresent or diminish the impact of its environmental conclusions, and is consistent with the law and other similar federal emissions practices.” Third, the court found that the plaintiffs did not establish that BLM failed to consider the APDs’ cumulative impacts on greenhouse gas emissions. The court characterized the plaintiffs’ argument as a request that the court “require an agency to codify Plaintiffs’ beliefs about climate change and its origins in federal oil drilling in the agency’s NEPA documentation.” Fourth, the court found that NEPA did not require that BLM evaluate greenhouse gas emissions in the context of carbon budgets. The court’s analysis of the merits was conducted in the context of a preliminary injunction motion, but the court said further analysis or argumentation would not change its disposition as to the merits and therefore granted the defendants’ request that the plaintiffs’ claims be dismissed with prejudice.
Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment v. Haaland ↗
21-2116United States Tenth Circuit (10th Cir.)8 entries
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
02/01/2023
Decision
District court affirmance of agency action reversed and case remanded for district court to determine the appropriate remedy.
Reversing a district court, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to take a hard look at the direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts on greenhouse gas emissions of applications for permits to drill (APDs) for oil and gas in the Mancos Shale and Gallup Sandstone formations in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico. The court also found that BLM failed to take a hard look at the cumulative impact of hazardous air pollutant emissions but concluded that BLM’s analysis of impacts on water resources and criteria air pollutants was sufficient. With respect to greenhouse gas emissions, the Tenth Circuit found that BLM unreasonably used estimates of annual emissions from construction and operation of wells to represent emissions over the estimated 20-year life span of the wells. The court also found that BLM’s analysis did not explain the agency’s conclusion that greenhouse gas emissions from the wells would have only a de minimis impact on climate change. Because a public comment had requested that BLM use a “carbon budget” method to assess the impacts of the wells’ emissions, the Tenth Circuit ruled that BLM acted arbitrarily and capriciously by neither applying that method nor explaining why it did not apply it. The Tenth Circuit concluded, however, that BLM did not act arbitrarily and capriciously when it used 100-year time horizons (rather than a 20-year horizon) to evaluate the impacts of methane emissions. The Tenth Circuit remanded to the district court to determine whether to vacate the APD approvals or grant other injunctive relief. The Tenth Circuit also enjoined approval of any additional APDs based on the deficient environmental analyses pending the district court’s determination of the appropriate remedy.