Florescent Lights & Analytical Balance; NESHAP & Affirmative Defenses; and WOTUS Supporting Documents & Public Comments
Florescent Lights & Analytical Balance: With the demise of general incandescent lights, energy savings from florescent lights should be a given, but that was just the beginning. The Department of Energy (DOE) today established new Energy Conservation Program: Energy Conservation Standards for General Service Fluorescent Lamps and Incandescent Reflector Lamps. The Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA) requires that DOE periodically evaluate the efficiency of various electricity consuming functions, in this case general service fluorescent lamps (GSFLs) and incandescent reflector lamps (IRLs). EPCA requires that any new or amended energy conservation standard achieve the maximum improvement in energy efficiency that is technologically feasible and economically justified. The GSFLs will require increased efficiency, but DOE concluded that new IRLs would not be “economically justified.” The final rule’s effective date is March 27, 2015, but compliance is required by January 26, 2018.
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Using DOE’s summary, the benefits would exceed costs, but the analysis
may not be consistent. DOE may have exaggerated the benefits by
introducing the amorphous Administration policy of benefits avoided
through the “social cost of carbon” but does not appear to provide a
corollary level of theoretical costs (perhaps the adverse aesthetic
impact of narrow band light). In this instance, the exaggeration may
not really matter, but the intellectual honesty of levels of analysis
should. As with any use of a policy driven analysis, plumbing parallel
depths of detail can skew the result, and that is the Administration’s
policy. The analytical balance may appear picayune, but sufficient
unjustified imbalance could become arbitrary and capricious in violation
of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
The point of interest here is EPA’s deletion of provisions for an affirmative defense for malfunction in light of a recent court decision in NRDC v. EPA. In that decision, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated a provision of EPA’s “Portland cement” rule that provided an affirmative defense to penalties under the Clean Air Act (CAA) for equipment malfunctions entirely beyond the control of the source; the court found EPA had no such authority to provide an affirmative defense, that deciding whether penalties are “appropriate” was the province of the courts.
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may appropriately expand the court’s rational to provisions not before
the court through a formal notice and comment rulemaking, but it seems
questionable whether the reconsideration vehicle, with its limitations
on public comments requested and issues to which EPA will or will not
respond, is that vehicle. The final rule might be justifiable because
the court held that EPA had not authority for the provision, but EPA
appears to apply the decision across different statutory provisions.
The EPA could clarify and broaden the request for comments, but
inclusion in a narrow reconsideration causes confusion, and may become a
source for more litigation.
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APA has long been interpreted to demand that critical documents
reflecting the analysis to a proposed rule be made available for public
comment. The Synthesis would appear to be just such a document and EPA
may have opened a door to criticism, and potentially vacatur of a WOTUS
final rule, unless a public comment period is permitted.