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- Center for Biological Diversity v. EPA
Litigation
Center for Biological Diversity v. EPA
About this case
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
06/20/2025
Decision
Environmental petitioners' petition granted in part and rule remanded without vacatur; other petitions denied or dismissed.
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals found that EPA’s analysis of the climate change effects of its 2023 rule setting Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS) Program standards for 2023, 2024, and 2025 was arbitrary and capricious. The court said EPA failed to adequately explain why it relied on “an admittedly outdated study” from 2010 for its assessment of the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with crop-based biofuels instead of using newer data that estimated higher emissions for corn-based ethanol. The court said the “substantial, unexplained discrepancy” in the high-end emissions estimates from the 2010 study and in the newer data was “particularly problematic” because corn-based ethanol “is by volume the largest category of renewable fuel produced in the United States” and “drives the largest aggregate portion of GHG emissions attributable to renewable fuels.” The court said that if EPA improperly relied on the lower emissions estimate, it would lack support for its conclusion that corn-based ethanol provides some GHG reduction compared to gasoline, and its determinations of renewable fuel volumes could have been skewed. The D.C. Circuit also found that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) did not adequately explain its conclusion that the standards would have “no effect” on endangered species or their critical habitat. The court rejected two other critiques of EPA’s climate change analysis: (1) its decision not to use a “model comparison exercise” to evaluate climate effects and (2) its decision not to include the “carbon opportunity cost” of renewable fuel production in its climate change analysis. The court found that EPA’s decision not to use the carbon opportunity cost analysis for which environmental groups advocated was “reasonable and reasonably explained” because that analysis relied on a “flawed assumption” that if land were not used to grow renewable fuel feedstocks it would lie fallow and regenerate native vegetation. The court’s majority also rejected the environmental groups’ contention that EPA’s weighing of statutory factors was arbitrary and capricious because it gave “short shrift” to harms to the environment, environmental justice, and communities. The court also rejected all arguments made by petroleum product refiners, a renewable fuel producer, and a trade association representing certain biodiesel stakeholders. The court concluded that remand without vacatur was the appropriate remedy because EPA and FWS might be able to adequately justify their conclusions regarding climate change and effects on endangered species and critical habitats on remand. A dissenting judge disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that EPA “adequately accounted” for relevant costs and benefits and would have set aside the standards because “EPA has shown no significant possibility that it will be able to rehabilitate the requirements on remand.”
10/05/2023
Motion To Intervene
Motion for leave to intervene on behalf of respondents filed by Clean Fuels Alliance America.
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08/31/2023
Petition
Amended petition for review filed.
Nine petitions for review were filed in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals challenging EPA’s final rule establishing renewable fuel standards for 2023 to 2025 and amending other regulations for the Renewable Fuel Standard program. The D.C. Circuit consolidated the cases. The petitions were filed by Center for Biological Diversity (No. 23-1177); Neste US, Inc., which imports renewable fuel produced at refineries of affiliates (No. 23-1240); a coalition of small refineries, as well as three other refiners (No. 23-1243); REH Company, an oil and gas company (No. 23-1244); Sustainable Advanced Biofuel Refiners Coalition, which asserted that the final rule reopened regulations implementing the biomass-based diesel program from as early as 2010 (No. 23-1246); American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers (No. 23-1247); Coalition for Renewable Natural Gas (No. 23-1248); and National Wildlife Federation (No. 23-1249). The ninth petition (No. 23-1245) was filed by Clean Fuels Alliance America (formerly the National Biodiesel Board), which represents U.S. biodiesel and renewable diesel producers and supporting industries. Clean Fuels voluntarily dismissed its petition and then filed a motion for leave to intervene in support of EPA in response to issues raised by oil and gas company petitioners and environmental groups.
Summary
Challenge to EPA’s final rule establishing renewable fuel standards for 2023 to 2025 and amending other regulations for the Renewable Fuel Standard program.