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Litigation

Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County

About this case

Documents

Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
05/29/2025
Decision
Judgment of D.C. Circuit finding NEPA violations reversed and case remanded.
The U.S. Supreme Court reversed a D.C. Circuit judgment that found that the Surface Transportation Board violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) when it approved an 88-mile railroad line in northeastern Utah that would facilitate transport of crude oil from the rural Uinta Basin to the national rail network. The D.C. Circuit had found, among other violations, that the STB failed to disclose reasonably foreseeable upstream and downstream effects of increased oil drilling and refining, including greenhouse gas emissions. In a five-justice majority opinion authored by Justice Kavanaugh, the Court first found that the D.C. Circuit had not afforded “the substantial judicial deference required in NEPA cases” to the agency’s choices regarding the scope and contents of the environmental impact statement (EIS). The Court stated that some courts, by engaging in “overly intrusive (and unpredictable) review in NEPA cases,” had transformed NEPA “from a modest procedural requirement into a blunt and haphazard tool employed by project opponents” and that a “course correction of sorts is appropriate to bring judicial review under NEPA back in line with the statutory text and common sense.” Second, the Court ruled that the D.C. Circuit incorrectly interpreted NEPA to require the STB “to consider the environmental effects of upstream and downstream projects that are separate in time or place” from the proposed action. The Court distinguished the “indirect effects” of a project at issue such as “run-off into a river that flows many miles from the project and affects fish populations elsewhere, or emissions that travel downwind and predictably pollute other areas” from the environmental effects of a separate project that “breaks the chain of proximate causation between the project at hand and the environmental effects of the separate project.” In addition, the Court stated that—“importantly”—NEPA does not require agencies “to analyze the effects of projects over which they do not exercise regulatory authority.” The Court noted that NEPA does mandate consultation with other agencies but further opined that “there is a vast difference between, for example, an agency’s consulting with the Forest Service to determine the effects of a railroad line that would pass through a national forest and an agency’s asking another agency to assess how 88 miles of additional track in rural Utah would contribute to emissions or climate change along the Gulf Coast.” The Court also emphasized that but-for causation and “mere foreseeability” were not a sufficient basis for courts to order agency analysis of the effects of separate projects. The Court found that the NEPA question in this case was “not close” and that the STB did not need to consider the impacts of future oil drilling in the Uinta Basins or the environmental effects of refineries on the Gulf Coast. Justice Sotomayor, joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson, concurred in the judgment. The concurrence applied a two-step analysis for judicial review of an EIS: first, courts must “consider the grounds on which an agency may rely under its organic statute to modify (by mitigation) or reject a proposed federal action”; second, courts must determine whether the agency acted arbitrarily in determining that an impact was “too causally attenuated from the question at hand” to be considered. In this case, the concurrence found that the first step resolved the question because the STB’s organic statute would not permit the STP to reject the rail line application in order to prevent or mitigate the effects of oil drilling and refining. Justice Gorsuch did not participate in the consideration or decision of the case.
12/04/2024
Letter
Counsel notified that Justice Gorsuch would not participate in the case.
The U.S. Supreme Court notified counsel for parties to a case concerning the scope of National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) reviews that Justice Gorsuch had determined that he would not continue to participate in the case based on the Code of Conduct for Justices. Oral argument was scheduled for December 10, 2024. The Court is considering the question of whether NEPA “requires an agency to study environmental impacts beyond the proximate effects of the action over which the agency has regulatory authority.” The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals found that Surface Transportation Board review of an 80-mile rail line in Utah to be used to transport waxy crude oil violated NEPA, including by failing to disclose reasonably foreseeable upstream and downstream effects of increased oil drilling and refining, including greenhouse gas emissions from combustion.
11/18/2024
Reply
Reply brief filed by federal respondents supporting petitioners.
11/18/2024
Reply
Reply brief filed by petitioners.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law as amicus curiae in support of respondents opposing petitioners.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Constitutional Accountability Center as amicus curiae in support of non-federal respondents.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by 30 members of the U.S. House and Senate as amici curiae in support of respondents.
10/25/2024
Brief
Brief filed by Colorado communities as amici curiae in support of respondents.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by former Council on Environmental Quality officials as amici curiae in support of respondents.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by former senior federal officials as amici curiae supporting respondents.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Colorado, Washington, 13 other states, and the District of Columbia as amici curiae in support of respondents.
10/25/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Howard University School of Law Civil Rights Clinic as amicus curiae in support of respondents.
10/18/2024
Brief
Brief filed by environmental respondents.
10/18/2024
Brief
Brief filed by respondent Eagle County.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation and Western States and Tribal Nations Natural Gas Initiative as amici curiae supporting petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by American Planning Association as amicus curiae in support of no party.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by American Petroleum Institute et al. as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amicus curiae Center for American Liberty in support of reversal for petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by NextDecade LNG, LLC as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amici curiae American Forest Resource Council and Western Energy Alliance in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Senator John Barrasso and five other senators as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by State of Utah as amicus curiae supporting petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amici curiae Americans for Prosperity Foundation and the Competitive Enterprise Institute in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief amicus curiae filed by Property and Environment Research Center in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Center for Environmental Accountability as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by American Exploration & Mining Association et al. as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by law professors as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Interstate Natural Gas Association of America et al. as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by State of Louisiana and 23 other states as amici curiae supporting petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America and nine other business trade associations as amici curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Energy Transfer LP as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by NACCO Natural Resources Corporation as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
09/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Anschutz Exploration Corporation as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
08/30/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by Association of American Railroads as amicus curiae in support of petitioners.
08/28/2024
Brief
Brief filed by petitioners.
08/28/2024
Brief
Brief filed by federal respondents supporting petitioners.
06/23/2024
Decision
Certiorari granted.
The U.S. Supreme Court granted a petition for writ of certiorari seeking review of the D.C. Circuit’s August 2023 opinion finding numerous violations of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in the Surface Transportation Board’s review of a rail line in Utah that would be used to transport waxy crude oil. The petition presented the question of whether NEPA “requires an agency to study environmental impacts beyond the proximate effects of the action over which the agency has regulatory authority.”
05/28/2024
Reply
Reply brief filed for petitioner.
05/20/2024
Opposition
Brief filed by Eagle County and environmental organizations ini opposition.
05/20/2024
Opposition
Brief filed by federal respondents in opposition.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amicus curiae in support of American Forest Resource Council in support of petition for certiorari.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amici curiae Interstate Natural Gas Association of America et al. in support of petitioners.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amicus curiae Utah American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations in support of petitioners.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Amicus brief filed by State of Utah in support of petitioners.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amicus curiae NACCO Natural Resources Corporation in support of petitioners.
04/05/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amici curiae TN Ranching Company et al. in support of petitioners.
04/04/2024
Amicus Motion/Brief
Brief filed by amici curiae Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation and Western States and Tribal Nations Natural Gas Initiative in support of petitioners.
03/04/2024
Petition For Writ Of Certiorari
Petition for writ of certiorari filed.
A railroad company and a coalition of seven Utah counties filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the U.S. Supreme Court seeking review of the D.C. Circuit’s August 2023 opinion finding numerous NEPA violations in the Surface Transportation Board’s review of a rail line in Utah that would be used to transport waxy crude oil. The petition presented the question of whether NEPA “requires an agency to study environmental impacts beyond the proximate effects of the action over which the agency has regulatory authority.” The petitioners identified a circuit court split on this issue, with five circuits reading the Court’s 2004 decision in Department of Transportation v. Public Citizen to mean “that an agency’s environmental review can stop where its regulatory authority stops,” while two circuit require agencies to review “any impact that can be called reasonably foreseeable.”

Summary

Challenge to a Surface Transportation Board decision approving construction and operation of an 85-mile rail line in Utah.