Clean Power Plan In June 2014, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed The Clean Power Plan (CPP) as an
Obama administration rule. The rules aimed to tackle
climate change by requiring reductions of
carbon dioxide emissions from electricity generation by 32% of recorded 2005 levels by 2030, with the implementation to be set by the states, under the authority granted by the Clean Air Act, § 7411(d). States would have been required to submit implementation plans by 2018 with enforcement to start by 2022. States could require existing plants to implement efficiency improvements, emissions controls, or incorporate
renewable energy generation; under these rules, existing plants adding these elements could then be subject to a
New Source Review by the EPA under § 7411(b), thus assuring older plants then were brought up to standards expected of new power plants. In August 2015, opponents of the CPP, which included 28 states and hundreds of companies, challenged the EPA's authority in its rulemaking of the CPP, filing suit in the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit) after the rules were published in the
Federal Register. Their suit challenged the CPP primarily on three factors. The first related to an oversight during the reconciliation of the Clean Air Act amendment in 1990 which resulted in the House and Senate versions of § 7411(d) to never be reconciled, and both versions were codified into the signed law. The House version had stated that because other parts of the Clean Air Act had covered regulation of carbon dioxide, the EPA could not use § 7411(d) to cover carbon dioxide emissions from existing plants, while the Senate version allowed for § 7411(d) to overlap carbon dioxide emissions coverage. The EPA inferred that they had
judicial deference to interpret the law, following the 2015 Supreme Court decision in
King v. Burwell, and used the Senate's language to develop the CPP, while opponents believed that the House version was the intended language consistent with other parts of the law. In January 2016, the D.C. Circuit agreed to hear the case, though they did not grant a temporary injunction to stay enforcement of the CPP. The D.C. Circuit held an
en banc hearing in September 2016. In April 2017, the D.C. District court granted the abeyance request and granted continued extensions through the year. In October 2017, the EPA formally issued its initial ruling to repeal the CPP, and continued to request the D.C. Circuit to hold the case in abeyance until the rulemaking was finalized. Proponents of the CPP urged the District court to press ahead with ruling from the September 2016, since any delay would allow the EPA to avoid its duty to uphold the Clean Air Act. While the D.C. Circuit did continue to grant additional periods of abeyance through June 2018, the court stated that month that it would no longer grant any further requests to delay the case, requiring the EPA to issue its final rule repealing the CPP and introducing a replacement rule, or to allow the court to continue its review.
Affordable Clean Energy rule With the D.C. Circuit court refusal to grant further abeyance delays, the EPA issued a new proposed set of emissions regulations, the Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule, in August 2018. These repealed the CPP, with the EPA arguing these were developed on a misplaced use of statutory interpretation of § 7411(d). EPA analysis estimated this rule would increase
particulate pollution compared to what was proposed under CPP, potentially leading to 1,500–3,600 more premature deaths per year by 2030 and up to 15,000 more new cases of upper respiratory problems, among other human health impacts. The EPA argued that these initial rules were based on a limited interpretation of § 7411(d), and that other aspects of the Clean Air Act can be used to address other pollutants to reduce these numbers. With the release of the ACE rule and intent to repeal to the CPP, the D.C. Circuit dismissed the case over the CPP as
moot, which subsequently ended the stay on the CPP issued by the Supreme Court. The new rules were seen as a boon to the states and companies that had opposed the CPP, particularly by President
Donald Trump who saw it as a means to support the
coal industry, but several other states and public health groups criticized the new rules, putting profits of the fossil fuel sector over public health. the
American Lung Association and the
American Public Health Association filed suit in the D.C. Circuit court to challenge the rule in July 2019. The plaintiffs were joined by over 170 other groups, including twenty three states, several cities, and other public health groups over time. The suit argued that through the ACE rule, the EPA was failing to meet its duty to reduce emissions and improve public health under the Clean Air Act, as well as preventing states from using other long-standing measures such as
emissions trading as part of their implementation plans. Oral hearings were heard in October 2020. The D.C. Circuit ruled 2–1 on January 19, 2021, by happenstance the day before the
inauguration of Joe Biden as the next U.S. president, in favor of the plaintiffs, vacating the ACE and its repeal of the CPP. The majority opinion ruled that the EPA's ACE rulemaking was made in an
arbitrary and capricious manner intended "to slow the process for reduction of emissions", and that its implementation "hinged on a fundamental misconstruction" of the Clean Air Act's § 7411(d). == Supreme Court ==