Volume 1 of 2
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY,
Petitioner,
v.
No. 06-71891
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC
SAFETY ADMINISTRATION,
Respondent.
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA EX REL. BILL LOCKYER,
ATTORNEY GENERAL; STATE OF
CONNECTICUT; STATE OF MAINE;
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS; STATE OF NEW
JERSEY; STATE OF NEW MEXICO;
STATE OF NEW YORK; STATE OF
OREGON; STATE OF RHODE ISLAND; No. 06-72317
STATE OF VERMONT; DISTRICT OF TRAN No.
COLUMBIA; CITY OF NEW YORK, Reg. 17,566
Petitioners,
v.
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC
SAFETY ADMINISTRATION, an agency
within the UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
Respondents.
14831
14832 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
STATE OF MINNESOTA,
Petitioner,
v. No. 06-72641
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC TRAN No.
SAFETY ADMINISTRATION, an agency Energy Policy Act
within the UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
Respondent.
SIERRA CLUB; PUBLIC CITIZEN, INC.,
Petitioners,
v. No. 06-72694
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
Respondent.
ENVIRONMENTAL DEFENSE,
Petitioner,
v. No. 06-73807
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
Respondent.
NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE No. 06-73826
COUNCIL, INC.,
Petitioner, TRAN No.
v. NHTSA 2006-
24306
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
OPINION
Respondent.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14833
On Petition for Review of an Order of the
Dept. of Transportation, NTSB
Argued and Submitted
May 14, 2007—San Francisco, California
Filed November 15, 2007
Before: Betty B. Fletcher, Eugene E. Siler, Jr.,* and
Michael Daly Hawkins, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge B. Fletcher;
Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Siler
*The Honorable Eugene E. Siler, Jr., Senior United States Circuit Judge
for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14837
COUNSEL
Patrick Gallagher, Sierra Club; Sean H. Donahue (argued),
Environmental Defense; Aaron Colangelo, David Doniger,
Margaret Renner, Natural Resources Defense Council for
Public Interest petitioner-appellants on Energy Policy Conser-
vation Act Issues.
Deborah A. Sivas, Holly D. Gordon, Stanford Law School
Environmental Law Clinic; Kassia R. Siegel, Brendan R.
14838 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
Cummings, Center for Biological Diversity for Public Interest
petitioner-appellants on National Environmental Policy Act
Issues.
Edmund Brown, Jr., Thomas Greene, Theodora Berger, Ken
Alex, Susan S. Fiering (argued), Office of the Attorney Gen-
eral of California; Richard Blumenthal, Kimberly Massicotte,
Jose Suarez, Office of the Attorney General of Connecticut;
G. Steven Rowe, Gerald D. Reid, Office of the Attorney Gen-
eral of Maine; Thomas F. Reilly, William L. Pardee, Matthew
Brock, Office of the Attorney General of Massachusetts; Stu-
art Rabner, Howard Geduldig, Lisa J. Morelli, Office of the
Attorney General of New Jersey; Patricia A. Madrid, Stephen
R. Farris, Office of the Attorney General of New Mexico;
Eliot Spitzer, Caitlin Halligan, Jared Snyder, Office of the
Attorney General of New York; Hardy Myers, Philip
Schradle, Richard M. Whitman, Office of the Attorney Gen-
eral of Oregon; Patrick C. Lynch, Tricia K. Jedele, Office of
the Attorney General of Rhode Island; William H. Sorrell,
Kevin O. Leske, Office of the Attorney General of Vermont;
Eugene A. Adams, Todd S. Kim, Donna M. Murasky, Office
of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia; Michael
A. Cardozo, Susan M. Kath, Scott Pasternack, Tracy Triplett,
Corporation Counsel for the City of New York; Mike Hatch,
Ronald Gitek, Office of the Attorney General of Minnesota
for petitioner-appellants in Consolidated Cases Nos. 06-72317
and 06-72641.
Rosalind A. Knapp, Paul M. Geier, Peter J. Plocki, Anthony
M. Cooke, Lloyd S. Guerci, Katherine C. Gehringer, Timothy
H. Goodman, David W. Case, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, Department of Transportation; Peter
D. Keisler, Matthew J. McKeown, Office of the U.S. Attorney
General; Ronald M. Spritzer, Environment and Natural
Resources Division; Douglas N. Letter, H. Thomas Byron
(argued), U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division for the
respondent-appellees.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14839
OPINION
B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
Eleven states, the District of Columbia, the City of New
York, and four public interest organizations petition for
review of a rule issued by the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) entitled “Average Fuel
Economy Standards for Light Trucks, Model Years 2008-
2011,” 71 Fed. Reg. 17,566 (Apr. 6, 2006) (“Final Rule”)
(codified at 49 C.F.R. pt. 533). Pursuant to the Energy Policy
and Conservation Act of 1975 (EPCA), 49 U.S.C. §§ 32901-
32919 (2007), the Final Rule sets corporate average fuel econ-
omy (CAFE) standards for light trucks, defined by NHTSA to
include many Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs), minivans, and
pickup trucks, for Model Years (MYs) 2008-2011. For MYs
2008-2010, the Final Rule sets new CAFE standards using its
traditional method, fleet-wide average (Unreformed CAFE).
For MY 2011 and beyond, the Final Rule creates a new CAFE
structure that sets varying fuel economy targets depending on
vehicle size and requires manufacturers to meet different fuel
economy levels depending on their vehicle fleet mix
(Reformed CAFE).
Petitioners challenge the Final Rule under the EPCA and
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42
U.S.C. §§ 4321-4347 (2007).1 First, they argue that the Final
Rule is arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to the EPCA
because (a) the agency’s cost-benefit analysis does not set the
1
Petitioners also argued in their opening briefs that the EPCA does not
preempt California’s Clean Air Act motor vehicle greenhouse gas emis-
sions standards. They raised this argument in response to NHTSA’s asser-
tion in the preamble of the Final Rule that the EPCA preempts state laws
and regulations regarding fuel economy standards. See 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,654-70. We do not address this issue since the parties agreed in their
response briefs and at oral argument that the preemption discussion in the
preamble of the Final Rule is not final agency action and thus not cur-
rently reviewable.
14840 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
CAFE standard at the “maximum feasible” level and fails to
give due consideration to the need of the nation to conserve
energy; (b) its calculation of the costs and benefits of alterna-
tive fuel economy standards assigns zero value to the benefit
of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions reduction; (c) its calcula-
tion of costs and benefits of alternative fuel economy stan-
dards fails to evaluate properly the benefit of vehicle weight
reduction; (d) Reformed CAFE standards will depend on
manufacturer fleet mix and not guarantee a minimum average
fuel economy or “backstop”; (e) the transition period during
which manufacturers may choose to comply with either Unre-
formed or Reformed CAFE is contrary to the “maximum fea-
sible” requirement and unnecessary; (f) it perpetuates the
“SUV loophole,” which allows SUVs, minivans, and pickup
trucks to satisfy a lower fuel economy standard than cars; and
(g) it excludes most vehicles rated between 8,500 and 10,000
pounds gross vehicle weight (comprised mostly of large
pickup trucks) from any fuel economy regulation, even
though these vehicles satisfy the statutory criteria for regula-
tion.
Second, Petitioners argue that NHTSA’s Environmental
Assessment is inadequate under NEPA because it fails to take
a “hard look” at the greenhouse gas implications of its rule-
making and fails to analyze a reasonable range of alternatives
or examine the rule’s cumulative impact. Petitioners also
argue that NEPA requires NHTSA to prepare an Environmen-
tal Impact Statement.
NHTSA argues that the Final Rule is not arbitrary and
capricious or contrary to the EPCA, the Environmental
Assessment’s evaluation of the environmental consequences
of its action is adequate, and an Environmental Impact State-
ment is not required.
We have jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. § 32909(a) to review
the Final Rule issued by NHTSA. We hold that the Final Rule
is arbitrary and capricious, contrary to the EPCA in its failure
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14841
to monetize the value of carbon emissions, failure to set a
backstop, failure to close the SUV loophole, and failure to set
fuel economy standards for all vehicles in the 8,500 to 10,000
gross vehicle weight rating (“GVWR”) class. We also hold
that the Environmental Assessment was inadequate and that
Petitioners have raised a substantial question as to whether the
Final Rule may have a significant impact on the environment.
Therefore, we remand to NHTSA to promulgate new stan-
dards as expeditiously as possible and to prepare a full Envi-
ronmental Impact Statement.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. CAFE Regulation Under the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act
In the aftermath of the energy crisis created by the 1973
Mideast oil embargo, Congress enacted the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act of 1975, Pub. L. No. 94-163, 89 Stat. 871,
901-16. See H.R. Rep. No. 94-340 at 1-3 (1975), as reprinted
in 1975 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1762, 1763-65. Congress observed that
“[t]he fundamental reality is that this nation has entered a new
era in which energy resources previously abundant, will
remain in short supply, retarding our economic growth and
necessitating an alteration in our life’s habits and expecta-
tions.” Id. at 1763. The goals of the EPCA are to “decrease
dependence on foreign imports, enhance national security,
achieve the efficient utilization of scarce resources, and guar-
antee the availability of domestic energy supplies at prices
consumers can afford.” S. Rep. No. 94-516 (1975) (Conf.
Rep.), as reprinted in 1975 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1956, 1957. These
goals are more pressing today than they were thirty years ago:
since 1975, American consumption of oil has risen from 16.3
million barrels per day to over 20 million barrels per day, and
the percentage of U.S. oil that is imported has risen from 35.8
to 56 percent. NRDC Cmt. at 11;2 see also 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,644.
2
Natural Resources Defense Council-Comments, NHTSA Docket No.
2005-22223-1705 (Nov. 23, 2005).
14842 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
In furtherance of the goal of energy conservation, Title V
of the EPCA establishes automobile fuel economy standards.
An “average fuel economy standard” (often referred to as a
CAFE standard) is “a performance standard specifying a
minimum level of average fuel economy applicable to a man-
ufacturer in a model year.” 49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(6) (2007).
Only “automobiles” are subject to fuel economy regulation,
and passenger automobiles must meet a statutory standard of
27.5 mpg, 49 U.S.C. § 32902(b),3 whereas non-passenger
automobiles must meet standards set by the Secretary of
Transportation, id. § 32902(a). Congress directs the Secretary
to set fuel economy standards at “the maximum feasible aver-
age fuel economy level that the Secretary decides the manu-
facturers can achieve in that model year.” Id. § 32902(a).4
Under this subsection, the Secretary is authorized to “pre-
scribe separate standards for different classes of automobiles.”
Id. Congress also provides that “[w]hen deciding maximum
feasible average fuel economy under this section, the Secre-
tary of Transportation5 shall consider technological feasibility,
economic practicability, the effect of other motor vehicle
standards of the Government on fuel economy, and the need
of the United States to conserve energy.” Id. § 32902(f).
3
The Secretary of Transportation may prescribe regulations amending
the standard for passenger automobiles “to a level that the Secretary
decides is the maximum feasible average fuel economy level for that
model year.” 49 U.S.C. § 32902(c) (2007).
4
“Non-passenger automobiles. At least 18 months before the begin-
ning of each model year, the Secretary of Transportation shall prescribe
by regulation average fuel economy standards for automobiles (except
passenger automobiles) manufactured by a manufacturer in that model
year. Each standard shall be the maximum feasible average fuel economy
level that the Secretary decides the manufacturers can achieve in that
model year. The Secretary may prescribe separate standards for different
classes of automobiles.” Id. § 32902(a).
5
The Secretary of Transportation delegated authority to promulgate
average fuel economy regulation to NHTSA. See 49 C.F.R. § 1.50(f)
(2007).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14843
Under the EPCA’s definitional scheme, vehicles not manu-
factured primarily for highway use and vehicles rated at
10,000 lbs. gross vehicle weight or more are excluded from
fuel economy regulation altogether because they are not “auto-
mobiles.”6 An “automobile” is defined as:
a 4-wheeled vehicle that is propelled by fuel, or by
alternative fuel, manufactured primarily for use on
public streets, roads, and highways . . . , and rated at
—
(A) not more than 6,000 pounds gross vehicle
weight;7 or
(B) more than 6,000, but less than 10,000, pounds
gross vehicle weight, if the Secretary decides by reg-
ulation that—
(i) an average fuel economy standard under this
chapter for the vehicle is feasible; and
(ii) an average fuel economy standard under this
chapter for the vehicle will result in significant
energy conservation or the vehicle is substantially
used for the same purposes as a vehicle rated at not
more than 6,000 pounds gross vehicle weight.
49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(3). Although NHTSA has the authority
to regulate the fuel economy of vehicles up to 10,000 lbs.
GVWR, see id. § 32901(a)(3)(B), the agency has excluded
vehicles exceeding 8,500 lbs. (other than medium-duty pas-
6
For example, the Hummer H1 is more than 10,000 lbs. GVWR and
thus not subject to CAFE regulation. UCS Cmt. at 33 n.14 (Union of Con-
cerned Scientists-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1978
(Nov. 25, 2005)).
7
A “GVWR” is “the value specified by the manufacturer as the loaded
weight of a single vehicle.” 49 C.F.R. § 523.2 (2007).
14844 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
senger vehicles manufactured during MY 2011 or thereafter)
from its definition of “automobile,” see 49 C.F.R. § 523.3(b).
The CAFE standards NHTSA sets for non-passenger auto-
mobiles or “light trucks,” as referred to by the agency in its
regulations,8 are lower than the standards for passenger auto-
mobiles. Compare 49 C.F.R. § 533.5(a) (2007) with 49 C.F.R.
§ 531.5(a) (2007). A “passenger automobile” is defined as:
an automobile that the Secretary decides by regula-
tion is manufactured primarily for transporting not
more than 10 individuals, but does not include an
automobile capable of off-highway operation that the
Secretary decides by regulation—
(A) has a significant feature (except 4-wheel drive)
designed for off-highway operation; and
(B) is a 4-wheel drive automobile or is rated at
more than 6,000 pounds gross vehicle weight.
49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(16).
The Final Rule sets CAFE standards for “light trucks,”
defined by NHTSA to include many SUVs, vans, and pickup
trucks, for MYs 2008-2011. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,568; 49
C.F.R. § 533.5(a), (g), (h). A “light truck” is:
an automobile other than a passenger automobile
which is either designed for off-highway operation,
as described in paragraph (b) of this section,9 or
8
See, e.g., 49 C.F.R. § 523.5.
9
49 C.F.R. § 523.5(b) provides:
An automobile capable of off-highway operation is an
automobile—
(1)(i) That has 4-wheel drive; or
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14845
designed to perform at least one of the following
functions: (1) Transport more than 10 persons; (2)
Provide temporary living quarters; (3) Transport
property on an open bed; (4) Provide greater cargo-
carrying than passenger-carrying volume; or (5) Per-
mit expanded use of the automobile for cargo-
carrying purposes or other nonpassenger-carrying
purposes through [removable or foldable, stowable
seats to create a flat floor].
49 C.F.R. § 523.5(a) (2007).
For MYs 1996 to 2004, Congress froze the light truck
CAFE standard at 20.7 mpg. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,568.
After the legislative restrictions were lifted, NHTSA set new
light truck CAFE standards in April 2003: 21.0 mpg for MY
2005, 21.6 mpg for MY 2006, and 22.2 mpg for MY 2007.
Light Truck Average Fuel Economy Standards Model Years
2005-2007, 68 Fed. Reg. 16,868, 16,871 (Apr. 7, 2003) (codi-
fied at 49 C.F.R. pt. 533).
In response to a request from Congress, the National Acad-
emy of Sciences (NAS) published in 2002 a report entitled
“Effectiveness and Impact of Corporate Average Fuel Econ-
omy (CAFE) Standards.”10 The NAS committee made several
(ii) Is rated at more than 6,000 pounds gross vehicle weight;
and
(2) That has at least four of the following characteristics
[affecting off-road capability relating to approach angle,
breakover angle, departure angle, running clearance, and front
and rear axle clearances].
10
U.S. DOT/NHTSA-Report, Effectiveness and Impact of Corporate
Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Standards, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-
22223-14 (Aug. 31, 2005) (Committee on the Effectiveness and Impact of
Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Standards, National Research
Council (2002)) (hereinafter “NAS Report”).
14846 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
findings and recommendations. It found that from 1970 to
1982, CAFE standards helped contribute to a 50 percent
increase in fuel economy for new light trucks. Id. at 14. In the
subsequent decades, however, light trucks became more pop-
ular since domestic manufacturers faced less competition in
the light truck category and could generate greater profits. Id.
at 18-19. The “less stringent CAFE standards for trucks . . .
provide[d] incentives for manufacturers to invest in minivans
and SUVs and to promote them to consumers in place of large
cars and station wagons.” Id. at 18. When the CAFE regula-
tions were originally promulgated in the 1970s, “light truck
sales accounted for about 20 percent of the new vehicle mar-
ket,” but now they account for about half. Id. at 88. This shift
has had a “pronounced” effect on overall fuel economy. Id. at
19. As the market share of light trucks has increased, the
overall average fuel economy of the new light duty vehicle
fleet (light trucks and passenger automobiles) has declined
“from a peak of 25.9 MPG in 1987 to 24.0 MPG in 2000.” Id.
Vehicle miles traveled (VMT) by light trucks has also been
growing more rapidly than passenger automobile travel. Id.
The NAS committee found that the CAFE program has
increased fuel economy, but that certain aspects of the pro-
gram “have not functioned as intended,” including “[t]he dis-
tinction between a car for personal use and a truck for work
use/cargo transport,” which “has been stretched well beyond
the original purpose.” Id. at 3. The committee also found that
technologies exist to “significantly reduce fuel consumption,”
for cars and light trucks and that raising CAFE standards
would reduce fuel consumption. Id. at 3-4. Significantly, the
committee found that of the many reasons for improving fuel
economy, “[t]he most important . . . is concern about the
accumulation in the atmosphere of so-called greenhouse
gases, principally carbon dioxide. Continued increases in car-
bon dioxide emissions are likely to further global warming.”
Id. at 2. In addition, the committee found “externalities of
about $0.30/gal of gasoline associated with the combined
impacts of fuel consumption on greenhouse gas emissions and
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14847
on world oil market conditions”11 that “are not necessarily
taken into account when consumers purchase new vehicles.”
Id. at 4.
B. National Environmental Policy Act
NEPA requires a federal agency “to the fullest extent possi-
ble,” to prepare “a detailed statement on . . . the environmen-
tal impact” of “major Federal actions significantly affecting
the quality of the human environment.” 42 U.S.C.
§ 4332(2)(C)(i) (2007); see also 40 C.F.R. § 1500.2 (2007).
The purpose of NEPA is twofold: “ ‘ensure[ ] that the agency
. . . will have available, and will carefully consider, detailed
information concerning significant environmental impacts[,
and] guarantee[ ] that the relevant information will be made
available to the larger [public] audience.’ ” Idaho Sporting
Cong. v. Thomas, 137 F.3d 1146, 1149 (9th Cir. 1998) (quot-
ing Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S.
332, 349 (1989)); see also 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(b) (stating that
environmental information must be provided “before deci-
sions are made and before actions are taken.”). “NEPA
expresses a Congressional determination that procrastination
on environmental concerns is no longer acceptable.” Found.
for N. Am. Wild Sheep v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 681 F.2d 1172,
1181 (9th Cir. 1982). NEPA “is our basic national charter for
protection of the environment.” 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(a).
If there is a substantial question whether an action “may
have a significant effect” on the environment, then the agency
must prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). See,
e.g., Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project v. Blackwood, 161
F.3d 1208, 1212 (9th Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks
omitted). An EIS should contain a discussion of significant
environmental impacts and alternatives to the proposed
11
The committee identified the environmental cost of carbon emissions
as $50/tonne carbon (tC), or $0.12 of this $0.30/gal figure. NAS Report
at 85.
14848 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
action. See 40 C.F.R. §§ 1502.1, 1502.14, 1508.7. As a pre-
liminary step, an agency may prepare an Environmental
Assessment (EA) in order to determine whether a proposed
action may “significantly affect[ ]” the environment and
thereby trigger the requirement to prepare an EIS. See 40
C.F.R. § 1508.9(a)(1) (2007). An EA is “a concise public doc-
ument” that “[b]riefly provide[s] sufficient evidence and anal-
ysis for determining whether to prepare an environmental
impact statement or a finding of no significant impact.”12 Id.
An EA “[s]hall include brief discussions of the need for the
proposal, of alternatives as required by sec. 102(2)(E), of the
environmental impacts of the proposed action and alterna-
tives, and a listing of agencies and persons consulted.” Id.
§ 1508.9(b).
Whether an action may “significantly affect” the environ-
ment requires consideration of “context” and “intensity.” Id.
§ 1508.27; see also Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n v. Bab-
bitt, 241 F.3d 722, 731 (9th Cir. 2001). “Context . . . delimits
the scope of the agency’s action, including the interests affect-
ed.” Nat’l. Parks & Conservation Ass’n, 241 F.3d at 731.
Intensity refers to the “severity of impact,” which includes
both beneficial and adverse impacts, “[t]he degree to which
the proposed action affects public health or safety,” “[t]he
degree to which the effects on the quality of the human envi-
ronment are likely to be highly controversial,” “[t]he degree
to which the possible effects on the human environment are
highly uncertain or involve unique or unknown risks,” and
“[w]hether the action is related to other actions with individu-
ally insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts.” 40
C.F.R. § 1508.27(b)(2), (4), (5), (7).
12
A “finding of no significant impact” is known as a “FONSI.”
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14849
C. NHTSA’s Proposed Rulemaking and Draft
Environmental Assessment
On December 29, 2003, NHTSA published an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that solicited com-
ments on several proposed regulatory changes intended to
increase fuel economy, including a proposal to modernize the
light truck/car distinction and a proposal to increase the
GVWR limit on vehicles subject to CAFE standards. 68 Fed.
Reg. 74,908 (Dec. 29, 2003). NHTSA acknowledged that its
regulations define passenger and non-passenger vehicles “by
the type of use to which they were generally put in the mid-
1970s,” id. at 74,909, and that “[t]he markets for, and designs
of, cars and light trucks have changed substantially,” with
“some light trucks . . . used primarily to transport passengers,”
id. at 74,913. NHTSA noted that in its original NPRM pro-
mulgated in December 1976, it concluded that “Congress
intended that passenger automobiles be defined as those used
primarily for the transport of individuals and that all other
vehicles would fall within the category of non-passenger auto-
mobiles.” Id. at 74,926. NHTSA did not present any specific
proposals for reforming the CAFE program, but it presented
two options for including vehicles under 10,000 lbs. GVWR
in the program: (1) regulating medium-duty passenger vehi-
cles (MDPVs),13 which are vehicles between 8,500 and
13
NHTSA proposed adopting the Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA) definition of MDPVs (used in setting emissions standards):
Medium-duty passenger vehicle (MDPV) means any heavy-
duty vehicle (as defined in this subpart) with a gross vehicle
weight rating (GVWR) of less than 10,000 pounds that is
designed primarily for the transportation of persons. The MDPV
definition does not include any vehicle which:
(1) Is an “incomplete truck” as defined in this subpart; or
(2) Has a seating capacity of more than 12 persons; or
(3) Is designed for more than 9 persons in seating rearward of
the driver’s seat; or
(4) Is equipped with an open cargo area (for example, a pick-
up truck box or bed) of 72.0 inches in interior length or more. A
covered box not readily accessible from the passenger compart-
14850 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
10,000 lbs. GVWR designed primarily for the transportation
of persons, and (2) regulating all vehicles between 8,500 and
10,000 lbs. GVWR. Id. at 74,930.
On August 30, 2005, NHTSA issued proposed CAFE stan-
dards for light trucks MYs 2008-2011 of 22.5 mpg for MY
2008, 23.1 mpg for MY 2009, and 23.5 mpg for MY 2010.14
70 Fed. Reg. 51,414, 51,424 (Aug. 30, 2005). NHTSA deter-
mined that these were the “maximum feasible” standards
using a marginal cost-benefit analysis. See id. For MY 2011
and beyond, NHTSA proposed to adopt a “Reformed CAFE”
system, which would set different CAFE standards for vehi-
cles based on size, measured by the vehicle’s footprint (the
product of multiplying wheelbase by track width). Id. at
51,414, 51,429-41. NHTSA proposed six footprint categories
(a step function), id. at 51,430, and it proposed a transition
period (MY 2008-2010) to Reformed CAFE, during which
manufacturers could choose to comply with either Reformed
or Unreformed CAFE. NHTSA also proposed not to change
the criteria by which vehicles are classified as passenger auto-
mobiles or light trucks, id. at 51,422, and it proposed to regu-
late only MDPVs within the 8,500 to 10,000 lb. vehicle class
as light trucks, id. at 51,455-56.
NHTSA issued a Draft Environmental Assessment in
August 2005. The Draft EA integrated much of the text from
the Final EA that accompanied NHTSA’s light truck rulemak-
ing for MYs 2005-2007 released in April 2003. See Draft
ment will be considered an open cargo area for purposes of this
definition.
40 C.F.R. § 86.1803-01. EPA defines “heavy-duty vehicle” as “any motor
vehicle rated at more than 8,500 pounds GVWR or that has a vehicle curb
weight of more than 6,000 pounds or that has a basic vehicle frontal area
in excess of 45 square feet.” Id.
14
NHTSA requires manufacturers to meet these average fuel economy
standards on a fleet-wide basis.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14851
Environmental Assessment, NHTSA Proposed Corporate
Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Standards 9 (Aug. 2005)
(Draft EA). The Draft EA analyzed three alternatives to the
proposed rule. Alternative A (“No Action”) would extend the
MY 2007 standard of 22.2 mpg through MY 2011. Alterna-
tive B would be Unreformed CAFE in MY 2008-2010 and
Reformed CAFE in MY 2011. Alternative C would be
Reformed CAFE set at equalized cost with Unreformed
CAFE in MY 2008-2010 and Reformed CAFE in MY 2011.
Id.
The Draft EA noted that “CO2 . . . has started to be viewed
as an issue of concern for its global climate change potential.”
Id. at 18. With regard to biological resources, the Draft EA
stated, “emissions of criteria pollutants and greenhouse gases
could result in ozone layer depletion and promote climate
change that could affect species and ecosystems.” Id. at 19.
The projected lifetime fuel savings for MY 2008-2011 light
trucks under Alternatives B and C would “rang[e] from 1.3%
to 1.7% of their fuel compared to the baseline, corresponding
to 4.7-6.0 billion gallons.” Id. at 25. The estimated lifetime
emissions of CO2 ranged from 1,341.4 million metric tons
(mmt) under baseline to 1,306.4 and 1,304.0 mmt under
Alternatives B and C, respectively. Id. at 29. The Draft EA
concluded that the proposed standards would “result in
reduced emissions of CO2, the predominant greenhouse gas
emitted by motor vehicles,” “reductions in contamination of
water resources,” and “minor reductions in impacts to biologi-
cal resources.” Id. at 30-31. In addition, “the cumulative
effects estimated to result from both the 2005-2007 and 2008-
2011 light truck rulemakings over the lifetimes of the vehicles
they would affect are projected to be very small.” Id. at 34.
NHTSA received over 45,000 comments on the NPRM and
Draft EA from states, consumer and environmental organiza-
tions, automobile manufacturers and associations, members of
Congress, and private individuals. See 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,577. Manufacturers argued that reliance on a cost-benefit
14852 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
analysis might not “adequately account for the capabilities of
the industry.” Id. They also generally opposed subjecting
vehicles greater than 8,500 lbs. GVWR to CAFE regulation,
arguing that those vehicles are used in a different manner than
lighter vehicles and that their regulation would not result in
significant fuel savings. Id. at 17,577-78. The states and envi-
ronmental and consumer organizations generally argued that:
• The need of the nation to conserve energy and national
security require more stringent standards, and such stan-
dards are feasible and practicable. E.g., NRDC Cmt. at 4-
5; Environmental Defense Cmt. at 1-7;15 Public Citizen
Cmt. at 1-2.16 For example, the Alliance to Save Energy—
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy
(ACEEE) argued that “[t]he 10 billion gallons of fuel that
NHTSA claims will be saved through the new standards
over the three-decade life of model year 2008-2011 vehi-
cles amount to less than one month’s supply of gasoline
for U.S. light-duty vehicles. These savings are also insuffi-
cient to offset the expected growth in gasoline usage for
even the four-year period covered by the rule.” ACEEE
Cmt. at 1.17
• NHTSA’s use of marginal cost-benefit analysis unlawfully
overemphasizes cost at the expense of technological feasa-
bility and energy conservation and is not “technology-
forcing,” as EPCA intended. E.g., NRDC Cmt. at 14-16;
Environmental Defense Cmt. at 4-5; Public Citizen Cmt.
at 1-2.
• Even if NHTSA’s cost-benefit analysis is permissible, the
15
Environmental Defense-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-
1805 (Nov. 22, 2005).
16
Public Citizen-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-2188
(Dec. 13, 2005).
17
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy-Comments,
NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1711 (Nov. 23, 2005).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14853
“maximum feasible” standard cannot be determined prop-
erly without taking environmental impacts into account,
and the failure to monetize certain benefits such as green-
house gas (GHG) emissions underestimates benefits of
stricter standards. E.g., CBD Cmt. at 1-4;18 NRDC Cmt. at
8 (suggesting specific figures and sources for the value per
ton of CO2 emissions avoided, from $8/ton to $26.50/ton);
Environmental Defense Cmt. at 5-6; Environmental
Defense Cmt. Re: Carbon Costs at 1-3 (citing new studies
from the United Kingdom that value carbon at $96-
174/ton carbon).19
• Reformed CAFE “rewards fuel economy laggards while
penalizing industry leaders,” Sierra Club Cmt. at 4,20 and,
like Unreformed CAFE, promotes the manufacture of
larger, less fuel-efficient vehicles. E.g., App. G to NRDC
18
Center for Biological Diversity-Comments and Attachments A
through E, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1638 (Nov. 22, 2005).
Among other things, the Center for Biological Diversity argued, “An esti-
mate of the true costs of the carbon emissions is one of the most important
inputs into the NHTSA’s algorithm for determining the maximum feasible
average fuel economy level. Estimates of the monetary benefits . . . [are]
readily available. . . . Excluding a monetization of the greenhouse gas
emissions from the NHTSA’s light truck fuel economy rulemaking on the
basis that the future costs of global warming are uncertain is arbitrary and
capricious. . . . The NHTSA cannot dismiss these costs as ‘uncertain’
while simultaneously relying upon the uncertain projections of claimed
economic hardship recited by the automobile industry for an estimate of
the cost of increasing fuel economy.” Id. at 3-4.
19
Environmental Defense-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-
2249 (Mar. 13, 2006); Environmental Defense-Report-The Social Costs of
Carbon Review: Methodological Approaches for Using SCC Estimates in
Policy Assessment, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-2251 (Mar. 13,
2006) (Paul Watkiss, et al., The Social Cost of Carbon (SCC) Review—
Methodological Approaches for Using SCC Estimates in Policy Assess-
ment, Final Report (Nov. 2005)).
20
Sierra Club, U.S. Public Interest Research Group, and National Envi-
ronmental Trust-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1636 (Nov.
22, 2005).
14854 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
Cmt. at 3-4;21 States Cmt. at 5;22 Environmental Defense
Cmt. at 12-13.23
• NHTSA’s analysis of the adverse safety effects of vehicle
weight reduction is flawed and confounds size and weight.
E.g., Sierra Club Cmt. at 8-10; App. C to Environmental
Defense Cmt. at 1-4; Public Citizen Cmt. at 12-19; App.
B to Public Citizen Cmt. at 1-16.
• Since the Reformed CAFE standard for a particular manu-
facturer depends on its fleet mix, NHTSA should include
a “backstop” or guarantee that average fuel economy
levels will not fall below the “maximum feasible” level.
E.g., NRDC Cmt. at 24-25; ACEEE Cmt. at 5; see also
App. E to NRDC Cmt. at 6-12 (analysis of gaming scenar-
ios and upsizing trends); Environmental Defense Cmt. at
13-14 (same); App. G. to Environmental Defense Cmt. at
1-14 (same).
• The transition period (MY 2008-2010) to Reformed CAFE
is unnecessary and undercuts fuel economy savings. E.g.,
NRDC Cmt. at 27-28; ACEEE Cmt. at 2; Environmental
Defense Cmt. at 8-9; UCS Cmt. at 9.
21
Natural Resources Defense Council-Appendices E-I, NHTSA Docket
No. 2005-22223-1710 (Nov. 23, 2005).
22
California Department of Justice-Comments, NHTSA Docket No.
2005-22223-1637 (Nov. 22, 2005) (Comments of the Attorneys General
of the States of California, Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, New
Jersey, Maine, Oregon, Vermont and the Corporation Counsel for the City
of New York).
23
Environmental Defense noted: “From 1988 to 2003, the average
wheelbase of the combined car and truck fleet grew at an average rate of
0.3% per year. Continuing this trend would result in a 0.14 mpg drop for
the MY2011 light truck fuel economy requirement . . . , and if the trend
continued through MY2030, a lost oil savings of 227,000 barrels per day
year—or 30% of the oil savings that would be achieved from the proposed
MY08-11 standards in that year.” Environmental Defense Cmt. at 13.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14855
• All Class 2b trucks between 8,500-10,000 lbs. GVWR
should be regulated because fuel economy standards for
them are feasible, would result in significant energy con-
servation, and they are used for substantially the same pur-
poses as vehicles 6,000 lbs. or less. Environmental
Defense Cmt. at 9-11; App. F to Environmental Defense
Cmt. at 1-2; and Polk Study.24
• Higher fuel economy standards would help domestic auto-
makers remain competitive in the long term and protect
U.S. jobs. App. D to NRDC Cmt. at 22.25 The California
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Com-
mission commented that “[u]pgrading CAFE requirements
could enhance jobs in the United States, especially in the
automobile manufacturing sector. . . . Increasing light-
truck CAFE to 26.9 mpg in 2010 and 31 mpg in 2015
(with corresponding changes for passenger cars) would
increase net jobs up to 346,000.” California Energy Com-
mission Cmt. at 9-10.26
• NHTSA’s draft EA is inadequate and fails to consider the
proposed rule’s impact on climate change. States Cmt. at
1-11; CBD Cmt. at 5-12.
See also 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,578-79 (summarizing comments).
Commenters also submitted to NHTSA numerous scientific
reports and studies regarding the relationship between climate
change and greenhouse gas emissions and the expected
impacts on the environment.27 Emissions from light trucks
24
Environmental Defense-Attachment 5-Pickup Truck Usage Study,
NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1703 (Nov. 23, 2005) (R. L. Polk & Co.,
Pickup Truck Usage Study).
25
Natural Resources Defense Council-Appendix D, NHTSA Docket No.
2005-22223-1709 (Nov. 22, 2005).
26
Joseph F. Desmond-Comments, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-
1557 (Nov. 21, 2005).
27
See generally Attachment A to CBD Cmt. (Global Warming and Its
Impacts); Attachment B to CBD Cmt. (Albritton, D.L., et al., Technical
14856 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
make up about eight percent of annual U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions. Final EA at 22 (citing EPA, EPA-430-R-05-003,
Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks:
1990-2004 (Draft 2006). The transportation sectors account
for about 31 percent of human-generated CO2 emissions in the
U.S. economy. NAS Report at 14. “Overall, U.S. light-duty
vehicles [passenger cars and light trucks] produce about 5
percent of the entire world’s greenhouse gases.” Id. at 20. The
NAS committee concluded, “Since the United States produces
about 25 percent of the world’s greenhouse gases, fuel econ-
omy improvements could have a significant impact on the rate
of CO2 accumulation in the atmosphere.” Id. at 14.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)’s
“Third Assessment Report,” published in 2001, presented the
consensus view of hundreds of scientists on key issues relat-
ing to climate change. The IPCC concluded that “CO2 con-
centrations increasing over [the] 21st century [are] virtually
certain to be mainly due to fossil-fuel emissions,” and that
“[s]tabilization of atmospheric CO2 concentrations at 450,
650, or 1,000 ppm would require global anthropogenic CO2
emissions to drop below year 1990 levels, within a few dec-
Summary, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis. Contribution of
Working Group I to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmen-
tal panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2001)); Attachment F to CBD Cmt.
(Epstein, P.R. and E. Mills (eds.), Climate Change Futures: Health, Eco-
logical and Economic Dimensions (2005)); Attachment G to CBD Cmt.
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Climate Change
2001: Synthesis Report (Summary for Policymakers) (2001)); Attachment
L to CBD Cmt. (Overpeck, J.T., et al., “Arctic System on Trajectory to
New, Seasonally Ice-free State,” EOS (2005)); Attachment M to CBD
Cmt. (Parmesan, C. and H. Galbraith, Pew Center on Global Climate
Change, Observed Impacts of Global Climate Change in the U.S. (Sept.
2004)); Attachment O to CBD Cmt. (Thomas, C.D., et al., “Extinction
Risk from Climate Change,” 427 Nature 145 (Jan. 8, 2004)); Attachment
P to CBD Cmt. (World Health Organization, The World Health Report
2002 (2002)); Attachment Q to CBD Cmt. (Arctic Climate Impact Assess-
ment, Impacts of a Warming Arctic: Highlights (2004)).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14857
ades, about a century, or about 2 centuries, respectively, and
continue to decrease steadily thereafter to a small fraction of
current emissions.”28 Id. The average earth surface tempera-
ture has increased by about 0.6 degree Celsius since the late
19th century, see Technical Summary of IPCC Working
Group I Report at 26; snow and ice cover have decreased
about 10 percent since the late 1960s, id. at 30; and global
average sea level has risen between 10 to 20 cm during the
20th century, id. at 31. The IPCC also developed a range of
emissions scenarios as its basis for predicting the environmen-
tal effect of increased emissions. Id. at 62-63.29
More recent evidence shows that there have already been
severe impacts in the Arctic due to warming, including sea ice
decline. See Attachments J, L, & Q to CBD Cmt. Global
warming has already affected plants, animals, and ecosystems
around the world. See, e.g., Attachment M to CBD Cmt. at
15-16. Some scientists predict that “on the basis of mid-range
climate-warming scenarios for 2050, that 15-37% of species
in our sample of regions and taxa will be ‘committed to
extinction.’ ” Attachment O to CBD Cmt (Thomas, Extinction
Risk from Climate Change, 427 Nature at 145). In addition,
there will be serious consequences for human health, includ-
ing the spread of infectious and respiratory diseases, if world-
28
“The atmospheric concentration of CO2 has increased from 280 ppm
in 1750 to 367 ppm in 1999 . . . . Today’s CO2 concentration has not been
exceeded during the past 420,000 years and likely not during the past 20
million years. The rate of increase over the past century is unprecedented,
at least during the past 20,000 years.” Technical Summary of IPCC Work-
ing Group I Report at 39.
29
The draft of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, “Climate Change
2007,” was published recently (containing reports of the Working Groups
and Technical Summaries) (available at http://www.ipcc.ch). “The sum-
mary . . . said that efforts to rein in the billions of tons of annual releases
of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases would have to begin soon
to limit risks of large changes in the climate and their impact on humans
and nature.” Andrew C. Revkin, Climate Panel Sees Need for New Steps
on Emissions, N. Y. Times, Apr. 27, 2007, at A20.
14858 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
wide emissions continue on current trajectories. See, e.g.,
Attachment F to CBD Cmt. at 32-64. Sea level rise and
increased ocean temperatures are also associated with increas-
ing weather variability and heightened intensity of storms
such as hurricanes. Id. at 21-24. Past projections have under-
estimated sea level rise. See id. at 20. Several studies also
show that climate change may be non-linear, meaning that
there are positive feedback mechanisms that may push global
warming past a dangerous threshold (the “tipping point”). Id.
at 26-27; see also Technical Summary of IPCC Working
Group I Report at 46-53; Attachment F to CBD Cmt. at 26-
27; IPCC Report at 14-16; States Cmt. 9.
D. The Final Rule: CAFE Standards for Light Trucks
MYs 2008-2011
NHTSA issued the Final Rule on April 6, 2006. 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,566. NHTSA set the CAFE standards for MY
2008-2010 (Unreformed CAFE) at the same levels as pro-
posed in the NPRM.30 Unreformed CAFE sets a fleet-wide
average fuel economy standard “with particular regard to the
‘least capable manufacturer with a significant share of the
market.’ ” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,580. NHTSA has reformed the
structure of the CAFE program for light trucks, effective MY
2011 (Reformed CAFE). Under Reformed CAFE, fuel econ-
omy standards are based on a truck’s footprint, with larger
footprint trucks subject to a lower standard and smaller foot-
print trucks subject to higher standards.31 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,566. Instead of six footprint categories (a step function) as
proposed in the NPRM, Reformed CAFE would be based on
30
MY 2008: 22.5 mpg; MY 2009: 23.1 mpg; MY 2010: 23.5 mpg.
31
The NPRM proposed a step function for Reformed CAFE, with six
different footprint categories. The Final Rule establishes target fuel econ-
omy levels for each value of vehicle footprint, referred to as a “continuous
function.” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,587. A continuous function reduces the
incentive to enlarge the footprints of light trucks in order to shift them into
a higher bracket with a lower fuel economy standard. See id. at 17,609.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14859
a continuous function, meaning a separate fuel economy tar-
get for each vehicle of a different footprint. See id. at 17,595-
96. “A particular manufacturer’s compliance obligation for a
model year will be calculated as the harmonic average of the
fuel economy targets for the manufacturer’s vehicles,
weighted by the distribution of manufacturer’s production
volumes among the footprint increments.” Id. at 17,566. A
manufacturer’s CAFE compliance obligation will vary with
its fleet mix. A manufacturer that produces more large foot-
print light trucks will have a lower required CAFE standard
than one that produces more small footprint light trucks.32
During MYs 2008-2010, manufacturers may choose to
comply with Unreformed CAFE or Reformed CAFE. See id.
at 17,593-94.
NHTSA used the manufacturers’ preexisting product plans
as the baseline for its analyses of technical and economic fea-
sibility under both Unreformed and Reformed CAFE. Id. at
17,579. NHTSA made adjustments to the product plans by
applying additional technologies in a “cost-minimizing fash-
ion,”33 id. at 17,582, and stopping at the point where marginal
costs equaled marginal benefits, id. at 17,597. NHTSA con-
sidered the cost of new technologies and the benefits of fuel
savings over the lifetime of the vehicle as the costs and bene-
fits of higher fuel economy standards. Id. at 17,585-87,
17,622-23. NHTSA monetized some externalities such as
emission of criteria pollutants during gasoline refining and
distribution and crash and noise costs associated with driving.
See Final Regulatory Impact Analysis, Corporate Average
Fuel Economy and CAFE Reform for MY 2008-2011 Light
Trucks at VIII-60, VIII-74-80 (March 2006) (FRIA). How-
ever, NHTSA did not monetize the benefit of reducing carbon
32
See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,608-09 (description of Reformed CAFE for-
mula).
33
This means adding technologies “in order of lower to higher costs.”
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,582; see also FRIA at VI-13.
14860 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
dioxide emissions, which it recognized was the “the main
greenhouse gas emitted as a result of refining, distribution,
and use of transportation fuels.” FRIA at VIII-61 to 62.34
NHTSA acknowledged the estimates suggested in the scien-
tific literature, see 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,638; FRIA at VIII-63,
but concluded:
[T]he value of reducing emissions of CO2 and other
greenhouse gases [is] too uncertain to support their
explicit valuation and inclusion among the savings in
environmental externalities from reducing gasoline
production and use. There is extremely wide varia-
tion in published estimates of damage costs from
greenhouse gas emissions, costs for controlling or
avoiding their emissions, and costs of sequestering
emissions that do occur, the three major sources for
developing estimates of economic benefits from
reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,638; see also FRIA at VIII-64 to 65.
In its cost-benefit analysis, NHTSA also excluded weight
reduction for vehicles between 4,000 and 5,000 lbs. curb
weight as a potential measure that manufacturers could use to
increase fuel economy. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,627. NHTSA
accepted the possibility of weight reduction for vehicles over
5,000 lbs. curb weight as a cost-effective technology35 that
34
NHTSA recognized that “[c]arbon dioxide emissions account for more
than 97% of total greenhouse gas emissions from the refining and use of
transportation fuels.” FRIA at VIII-62 n.83.
35
Petitioners presented a study “based on real-world examples suggest[-
ing] that the cost per pound of weight reduced through the use of high
strength steel and advanced engineering techniques has been as low as, or
lower than, 31 cents per pound reduced. This means that for a large light
truck with curb weight of 4000 pounds, the cost of material substitution
per percentage fuel economy improvement would be roughly $20, ranking
it among the most cost-effective fuel economy improvement options avail-
able.” Environmental Defense Cmt. at 4.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14861
would not reduce overall safety. Id. NHTSA relied on a study
by Dr. Charles Kahane36 for this 5,000 lb. figure:
[T]he net safety effect of removing 100 pounds from
a light truck is zero for light trucks with a curb
weight greater than 3,900 lbs. However, given the
significant statistical uncertainty around that figure,
we assumed a confidence bound of approximately
1,000 lbs. and used 5,000 lbs. as the threshold for
considering weight reduction.
Id. (footnotes omitted). By “net safety effect,” NHTSA means
that 3,900 lbs. is the breakeven point: “the point where the
total effect of reducing all vehicles heavier than the breakeven
weight by an equal amount is zero.” Id. at 17,628. In the
FRIA, NHTSA explained that it chose the approximately
1,000 lb. confidence bound based on additional empirical
work found in Kahane’s study:
Kahane estimated a crossover weight37 of 5,085 lbs.
if manufacturers changed both weight and footprint,
and the interval estimated ranged from 4,224 lbs. to
6,121 lbs[.], i.e., an interval +/-1000 lbs[.] around the
point estimate. Although the crossover weight differs
from the point of zero net impact, they would both
tend to have similar sampling errors. We applied this
interval to the 3,900 lbs. point of zero net impact
(which is based on the assumption that footprint is
held constant); therefore, the agency felt it would be
36
U.S. DOT/NHTSA-Report: Vehicle Weight, Fatality Risk and Crash
Compatibility of Model Year 1991-99 Passenger Cars and Light Trucks,
NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-17 (Aug. 31, 2005) (Kahane, C.J., DOT
HS 809 662 (Oct. 2003)) (henceforth “Kahane Study”).
37
“Crossover weight” is “the weight at which a reduction in weight
would produce a zero effect on safety. Each and every light truck weigh-
ing more than the crossover weight would experience a net benefit from
reduced weight. All those below the crossover weight would experience
a net loss in safety.” FRIA at V-15 n.41.
14862 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
prudent to limit weight reductions to those vehicles
above 5,000 lbs. curb weight.
FRIA at V-15 (internal citation omitted).
NHTSA rejected the idea of a “backstop” under Reformed
CAFE. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,592; id. at 17,617. NHTSA stated
that a backstop, or a required fuel economy level applicable
to a manufacturer if its required level under Reformed CAFE
fell below a certain minimum, “would essentially be the same
as an Unreformed CAFE standard.” Id. at 17,592. NHTSA
argued that “EPCA permits the agency to consider consumer
demand and the resulting market shifts in setting fuel econ-
omy standards,” id. at 17,593, and that a backstop “would
essentially limit the ability of manufacturers to respond to
market shifts arising from changes in consumer demand. If
consumer demand shifted towards larger vehicles, a manufac-
turer potentially could be faced with a situation in which it
must choose between limiting its production of the demanded
vehicles, and failing to comply with the CAFE light truck
standard.” Id.
Finally, NHTSA declined to change the regulatory defini-
tion of cars and light trucks to close the SUV loophole and
refused to regulate vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs.
GWVR, other than MDPVs. See id. at 17,574.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-
706 (2007), provides that agency action must be set aside by
the reviewing court if it is “ ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’ ” Com-
petitive Enter. Inst. v. NHTSA (CEI III), 45 F.3d 481, 484
(D.C. Cir. 1995) (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)) (applying the
APA to review a rulemaking under the EPCA). The scope of
review is narrow, but “the agency must examine the relevant
data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14863
including a ‘rational connection between the facts found and
the choice made.’ ” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm
Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983) (citation omitted).
An agency rule would normally be arbitrary and capricious if:
the agency has relied on factors which Congress has
not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider
an important aspect of the problem, offered an expla-
nation for its decision that runs counter to the evi-
dence before the agency, or is so implausible that it
could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the
product of agency expertise.
Id. The reviewing court “ ‘may not supply a reasoned basis
for the agency’s action that the agency itself has not given.’ ”
Id. (quoting SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194, 196
(1947)).
If Congress has spoken directly to the “precise question at
issue,” then we must give effect to Congress’s “unambigu-
ously expressed intent.” Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, 467
U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984). However, “if the statute is silent or
ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for
the court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a permis-
sible construction of the statute.” Id. at 843. We “must reject
administrative constructions which are contrary to clear con-
gressional intent.” Id. at 843 n.9.
NHTSA’s compliance with NEPA is reviewed under an
arbitrary and capricious standard pursuant to the APA. See,
e.g., Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n, 241 F.3d at 730. With
respect to NEPA documents, the agency must take a “hard
look” at the impacts of its action by providing “ ‘a reasonably
thorough discussion of the significant aspects of the probable
environmental consequences.’ ” Thomas, 137 F.3d at 1149
(quoting Or. Nat. Res. Council v. Lowe, 109 F.3d 521, 526
(9th Cir. 1997)). We must determine whether the EA
“ ‘foster[s] both informed decision-making and informed pub-
14864 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
lic participation.’ ” Native Ecosystems Council v. U.S. Forest
Serv., 418 F.3d 953, 960 (9th Cir. 2005) (quoting California
v. Block, 690 F.2d 753, 761 (9th Cir. 1982)).
III. DISCUSSION
A. Energy Policy and Conservation Act Issues
1. NHTSA’s use of marginal cost-benefit analysis to
determine “maximum feasible average fuel
economy level”
[1] With respect to non-passenger automobiles (i.e., light
trucks), the fuel economy standard “shall be the maximum
feasible average fuel economy level that the Secretary decides
the manufacturers can achieve in that model year.” 49 U.S.C.
§ 32902(a). “Maximum feasible” is not defined in the EPCA.
However, the EPCA provides that “[w]hen deciding maxi-
mum feasible average fuel economy under this section, the
Secretary of Transportation shall consider technological feasi-
bility, economic practicability, the effect of other motor vehi-
cle standards of the Government on fuel economy, and the
need of the United States to conserve energy.” Id. § 32902(f).
Petitioners argue that the meaning of “maximum feasible”
is plain, and that NHTSA’s decision to maximize economic
benefits is contrary to the plain language of the EPCA
because “feasible” means “ ‘capable of being done,’ ” not
economically optimal. But even if “feasible” means “ ‘capa-
ble of being done,’ ” technological feasibility, economic prac-
ticability, the effect of other motor vehicle standards, and the
need of the nation to conserve energy must be considered in
determining the “maximum feasible” standard. American Tex-
tile Manufacturers Institue v. Donovan does not support Peti-
tioners’ interpretation of “feasible.” 452 U.S. 490 (1981). In
that case, no other language in the statute modified the phrase
at issue: “to the extent feasible.” Id., 452 U.S. at 508-11.
Here, “maximum feasible” standards are to be determined in
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14865
light of technological feasibility, economic practicability, the
effect of other motor vehicle standards, and the need of the
nation to conserve energy.38
[2] The EPCA clearly requires the agency to consider these
four factors, but it gives NHTSA discretion to decide how to
balance the statutory factors—as long as NHTSA’s balancing
does not undermine the fundamental purpose of the EPCA:
energy conservation. In Center for Auto Safety v. NHTSA, the
D.C. Circuit considered whether NHTSA gave “impermissi-
ble weight to shifts in consumer demand” in setting the MY
1985 and 1986 standards for light trucks. 793 F.2d 1322, 1338
(D.C. Cir. 1986). Petitioners in that case challenged NHTSA’s
rule that revised the standards downward. Id. at 1323-24. The
court held that since Congress had not directly spoken to the
issue of consumer demand, the court must determine whether
the agency’s interpretation represented a “ ‘reasonable accom-
modation of conflicting policies that were committed to the
agency’s care by the statute.’ ” Id. at 1338 (quoting Chevron,
467 U.S. at 845). The court reasoned that:
Congress intended energy conservation to be a long
term effort that would continue through temporary
improvements in energy availability. Thus, it would
clearly be impermissible for NHTSA to rely on con-
sumer demand to such an extent that it ignored the
overarching goal of fuel conservation. At the other
38
Petitioners also cite an earlier NHTSA rulemaking, for light trucks
MYs 1992-1994, to support their interpretation of “feasible.” In that rule-
making, the agency stated that it “has in the past interpreted ‘feasible’ to
refer to whether something is capable of being done.” 55 Fed. Reg. 3608,
3616 (Feb. 2, 1990). But NHTSA further explained, “a standard set at the
maximum feasible average fuel economy level must: (1) Be capable of
being done and (2) be at the highest level that is capable of being done,
taking account of what manufacturers are able to do in light of technologi-
cal feasibility, economic practicability, how other Federal motor vehicle
standards affect average fuel economy, and the need of the nation to con-
serve energy.” Id. (emphasis added).
14866 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
extreme, a standard with harsh economic conse-
quences for the auto industry also would represent an
unreasonable balancing of EPCA’s policies.
Id. at 1340 (footnote omitted). The court concluded that
NHTSA’s consideration of consumer demand was permissible
because Congress did not speak to the precise issue, and “it
specifically delegated the process of setting light truck fuel
economy standards with broad guidelines concerning the fac-
tors that the agency must consider. NHTSA has remained
within the reasonable range permitted by those factors.” Id. at
1341; see also Pub. Citizen v. NHTSA, 848 F.2d 256, 265
(D.C. Cir. 1988) (R. Ginsburg, J.).
In Public Citizen, the petitioners challenged the NHTSA’s
lowering of the fuel economy standard for passenger cars for
MY 1986. 848 F.2d at 259. They argued that NHTSA’s deter-
mination that the statutory 27.5 mpg standard was not eco-
nomically practicable improperly elevated consumer demand
and market forces, subordinated the statute’s technology-
forcing design, and ignored the need of the nation to conserve
energy. Id. at 264. The court held that NHTSA’s “consider-
ation of the likelihood of economic hardship within its assess-
ment of ‘economic practicability[ ]’ must be accorded due
weight.” Id. at 264-65. Based on economic analyses supplied
by other governmental agencies, “NHTSA concluded that the
industry-wide economic effects of the higher CAFE standard
would be severe,” id. at 265, “including sales losses well into
the hundreds of thousands, and job losses well into the tens
of thousands,” id. at 264; see also 49 Fed. Reg. 41,250,
41,252 (Oct. 22, 1984).
Petitioners cite Public Citizen for the proposition that con-
sideration of “economic practicability” allows lowering fuel
economy standards only if a higher standard would cause sub-
stantial economic hardship to a manufacturer with a substan-
tial share of the market. But that is not precisely what Public
Citizen held. Rather, that court concluded that given the
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14867
extensive evidence in the record showing that severe eco-
nomic hardship would result from a higher standard,
NHTSA’s decision to lower the standard under those circum-
stances was not devoid of rational support. Pub. Citizen, 848
F.2d at 265.
The Public Citizen court held that NHTSA’s balancing of
the statutory factors in 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f) was reasonable
given that the possible energy savings from the higher stan-
dard did not outweigh the severe economic costs, id. at 265,
since “the maximum potential increase in annual fuel con-
sumption attributable to th[e] rule would amount to less than
0.1 percent of current consumption,” id. at 268. The court
observed, “NHTSA found the maximum yearly impact of the
lower (26.0 mpg) standard on U.S. gasoline consumption to
be 210 million gallons, 0.3% of annual U.S. gasoline con-
sumption and 0.09% of annual U.S. petroleum consumption.
That savings, NHTSA stated, was not commensurate with
‘potential sales losses to the industry in the hundreds of thou-
sands, job losses in the tens of thousands, or the unreasonable
restriction of consumer choices.’ ” Pub. Citizen, 848 F.2d at
260-61 (citation omitted). In sum, Congress did not “offer[ ]
a more precise balancing formula for the agency to apply to
the four . . . factors,” and “[i]n the absence of a sharper con-
gressional delineation,” the court could not conclude that,
under the circumstances presented there, NHTSA’s decision
was not a reasonable accommodation of conflicting statutory
policies. Id. at 265.
In this rulemaking, NHTSA does not set forth its interpreta-
tion of the four factors in 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f). It simply
states that in determining the “maximum feasible” fuel econ-
omy level, NHTSA “assesses what is technologically feasible
for manufacturers to achieve without leading to adverse eco-
nomic consequences, such as a significant loss of jobs or the
unreasonable elimination of consumer choice.” 70 Fed. Reg.
at 51,425; 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,585 (citing Pub. Citizen, 848
F.2d at 264). NHTSA “balance[s]” the four factors in
14868 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
§ 32902(f), “along with other factors such as safety,” in deter-
mining the CAFE standards. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,588, 17,655.
In earlier rulemakings, NHTSA interpreted “technological
feasibility” to mean “whether particular methods of improv-
ing fuel economy will be available for commercial application
in the model year for which a standard is being established,”
“economic practicability” to mean “whether the implementa-
tion of projected fuel economy improvements is within the
economic capability of the industry,” “effect of other Federal
motor vehicle standards on fuel economy” to mean “an analy-
sis of the unavoidable adverse effects on fuel economy of
compliance with emission, safety, noise, or damageability
standards,” and “the need of the Nation to conserve energy”
to mean “the consumer cost, national balance of payments,
environmental, and foreign policy implications39 of our need
for large quantities of petroleum, especially imported petrole-
um.” 42 Fed. Reg. 63,184, 63,188 (Dec. 15, 1977) (emphasis
added); see also Ctr. for Auto Safety, 793 F.2d at 1325 n.12.
NHTSA “recognize[s] that [it] in the past has expressed its
belief that the statutory consideration of economic practicabil-
ity differs from, but does not preclude consideration of, cost/
benefit analysis.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 51,435. In its final rule
establishing passenger automobile CAFE standards for MYs
1981-1984, NHTSA stated, “not equating cost-benefit consid-
erations with economic practicability is consistent with the
goal of achieving maximum feasible fuel economy by allow-
ing economically and technologically possible standards
which will improve fuel economy but which an analysis, sub-
ject to many practical limitations, might indicate are not cost-
beneficial.” See 42 Fed. Reg. 33,534, 33,536 (1977). The
agency further opined, “A cost-benefit analysis would be use-
ful in considering [economic practicability], but sole reliance
39
See, e.g., App. A to NRDC Cmt. at 4-12 (Natural Resources Defense
Council-Appendix A, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-1706 (Nov. 23,
2005) (issue paper examining how oil dependence affects the American
economy and national security)).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14869
on such an analysis would be contrary to the mandate of the
Act.”40 Id. at 33,537. In this rulemaking, however, NHTSA
states that “the cost/benefit analyses conducted today . . . are
substantially more robust than those conducted in decades
past and provide a more substantial basis for consideration of
economic practicability.” 70 Fed. Reg. at 51,435.
[3] We agree with NHTSA that “EPCA neither requires nor
prohibits the setting of standards at the level at which net ben-
efits are maximized.” Id. at 51,435. The statute is silent on the
precise question of whether a marginal cost-benefit analysis
may be used. See Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843. Public Citizen
and Center for Auto Safety persuade us that NHTSA has dis-
cretion to balance the oft-conflicting factors in 49 U.S.C.
§ 32902(f) when determining “maximum feasible” CAFE
standards under 49 U.S.C. § 32902(a).
To be clear, we reject only Petitioners’ contention that
EPCA prohibits NHTSA’s use of marginal cost-benefit analy-
sis to set CAFE standards. Whatever method it uses, NHTSA
cannot set fuel economy standards that are contrary to Con-
gress’s purpose in enacting the EPCA—energy conservation.
We must still review whether NHTSA’s balancing of the stat-
utory factors is arbitrary and capricious. Additionally, the per-
suasiveness of the analysis in Public Citizen and Center for
Auto Safety is limited by the fact that they were decided two
decades ago, when scientific knowledge of climate change
and its causes were not as advanced as they are today.41 The
40
One of the Petitioners noted that “[w]hile previous standards have uti-
lized cost-benefit analysis as part of the regulatory impact analysis after
the standard was set, the proposed reforms put the cost-benefit analysis
front and center.” App. G to NRDC Cmt. at 3.
41
See Massachusetts v. EPA, 127 S. Ct. 1438, 1447-49, 1455 (2007)
(describing how “the scientific understanding of climate change [has]
progressed” since the 1970s and discussing the evidence showing that
“[t]he harms associated with climate change are serious and well recog-
nized.”); see generally Attachment A to CBD Cmt. (Global Warming and
14870 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
need of the nation to conserve energy is even more pressing
today than it was at the time of EPCA’s enactment. See, e.g.,
NRDC Cmt. at 4, 11 (“When fuel economy legislation was
first enacted, America consumed 16.3 million barrels of oil
per day and 35.8 percent of U.S. oil came from imports. In the
nearly 30 years since then, oil consumption has risen to over
20 million barrels per day and 56 percent of U.S. oil is
imported. If fuel economy standards are not strengthened,
these trends are only expected to get worse, with transporta-
tion oil use driving 80 percent of U.S. oil demand growth
through 2025 and imports rising to 68 percent of U.S. oil
demand. The light duty vehicle fleet currently consumes 8.3
million barrels per day, and in the absence of stronger stan-
dards, that is projected to grow to 12.45 million barrels by
Its Impacts); Attachment B to CBD Cmt. (Albritton, D.L., et al., Technical
Summary, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis. Contribution of
Working Group I to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmen-
tal panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2001)); Attachment F to CBD Cmt.
(Epstein, P.R. and E. Mills (eds.), Climate Change Futures: Health, Eco-
logical and Economic Dimensions (2005)); Attachment G to CBD Cmt.
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Climate Change
2001: Synthesis Report (Summary for Policymakers) (2001)); Attachment
J to CBD Cmt. (National Snow and Ice Data Center, Sea Ice Decline
Intensifies (2005)); Attachment L to CBD Cmt. (Overpeck, J.T., et al.,
“Arctic System on Trajectory to New, Seasonally Ice-free State,” EOS
(2005)); Attachment M to CBD Cmt. (Parmesan, C. and H. Galbraith, Pew
Center on Global Climate Change, Observed Impacts of Global Climate
Change in the U.S. (Sept. 2004)); Attachment O to CBD Cmt. (Thomas,
C.D., et al., “Extinction Risk from Climate Change,” 427 Nature 145 (Jan.
8, 2004)); Attachment P to CBD Cmt. (World Health Organization, The
World Health Report 2002 (2002)); Attachment Q to CBD Cmt. (Arctic
Climate Impact Assessment, Impacts of a Warming Arctic: Highlights
(2004)) Apps. A-B to NRDC Cmt.; Scoping Uncertainty in the Social Cost
of Carbon, Final Project Report, NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-2250
(Mar. 13, 2006) (Thomas E. Downing, et al., Social Cost of Carbon: A
Closer Look at Uncertainty (July 2005)); Environmental Defense-Report-
The Social Cost of Carbon Review: Methodological Approaches for Using
SCC Estimates in Policy Assessment; (Paul Watkiss, et al., The Social
Cost of Carbon (SCC) Review—Methodological Approaches for Using
SCC Estimates in Policy Assessment, Final Report (Nov. 2005)).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14871
2025.”); NAS Report at 13-14, 20. What was a reasonable
balancing of competing statutory priorities twenty years ago
may not be a reasonable balancing of those priorities today.42
2. Failure to monetize benefits of greenhouse gas
emissions reduction
[4] Even if NHTSA may use a cost-benefit analysis to
determine the “maximum feasible” fuel economy standard, it
cannot put a thumb on the scale by undervaluing the benefits
and overvaluing the costs of more stringent standards.
NHTSA fails to include in its analysis the benefit of carbon
emissions reduction in either quantitative or qualitative form.
It did, however, include an analysis of the employment and
sales impacts of more stringent standards on manufacturers.
See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,590-91.
To determine the “maximum feasible” CAFE standards,
NHTSA began with the fuel economy baselines for each of
the seven largest manufacturers—that is, “the fuel economy
levels that manufacturers were planning to achieve in those
42
Public Citizen is also factually distinguishable. The Public Citizen
court based its conclusion that NHTSA’s balancing was reasonable on the
evidence in the record showing that (a) severe economic consequences
would result from a higher standard and (b) the potential fuel savings from
a higher standard would be minor in comparison. Pub. Citizen, 848 F.2d
at 265. Neither of those things are true here. First, NHTSA has provided
no evidence that the auto industry would suffer severe economic conse-
quences as a result of higher CAFE standards for light trucks MYs 2008-
2011. Second, Petitioners calculated that “standards increasing steadily to
an equivalent level of 26 mpg in 2011 would save 940,000 barrels per day
of oil by 2020 and achieve a cumulative reduction of 304 million metric
carbon equivalent tons (mmtC) by that date, more than double the
amounts offered by NHTSA’s current proposal.” Environmental Defense
Cmt. at 2 (emphasis added); see also App. A to NRDC Cmt. at 4 (arguing
that the U.S. uses over 20 million barrels of oil per day and that a higher
CAFE standard that would save 940,000 barrels per day would amount to
4.7% of U.S. consumption per day). This is far higher than the 0.09% fig-
ure in Public Citizen.
14872 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
years.” Id. at 17,581. NHTSA then “add[ed] fuel saving tech-
nologies to each manufacturer’s fleet until the incremental
cost of improving its fuel economy further just equal[ed] the
incremental value of fuel savings and other benefits from
doing so.” Id. at 17,596. The standard is further adjusted
“until industry-wide net benefits are maximized. Maximiza-
tion occurs when the incremental change in industry-wide
compliance costs from adjusting it further would be exactly
offset by the resulting incremental change in benefits.” Id.
NHTSA claims that this “cost-benefit analysis carefully con-
siders and weighs all of the benefits of improved fuel sav-
ings,” and that “there is no compelling evidence that the
unmonetized benefits would alter our assessment of the level
of the standard for MY 2011.” Id. at 17,592.
[5] Under this methodology, the values that NHTSA
assigns to benefits are critical. Yet, NHTSA assigned no value
to the most significant benefit of more stringent CAFE stan-
dards: reduction in carbon emissions. Petitioners strongly
urged NHTSA to include this value in its analysis, and they
cited peer-reviewed scientific literature in support. NRDC
cited figures for the benefit of carbon emissions reduction
ranging from $8 to $26.50 per ton CO2, based on values
assigned by the California Public Utilities Commission, the
Idaho Power Company, and the European Union (EU) carbon
trading program.43 NRDC Cmt. at 8. NRDC also cited a study
published by the National Commission on Energy Policy,
which “found that measures mitigating climate change emis-
sions have estimated benefits of $3-19 per ton of carbon diox-
ide equivalent. The Commission recommends a price of $7
per ton beginning in 2010 and then rising 5 percent each
year.” Id. at 23 (footnote omitted). Environmental Defense
and the Union of Concerned Scientists recommended a mini-
mum value of $50 per ton carbon (or $13.60 per ton CO2),
43
The EU has established carbon emission limits for industrial emitters,
thereby creating a market price for carbon emission allowances. NRDC
Cmt. at 8; see, e.g., http://www.pointcarbon.com.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14873
which reflects a mean marginal damage cost developed in 28
peer-reviewed studies.44 Environmental Defense Cmt. at 6,
A-4;45 UCS Cmt. at 16. Valuing carbon emissions at $50 per
ton carbon translates into approximately $0.15 per gallon of
gasoline saved. UCS Cmt. at 16. The NAS committee, on
which NHTSA relies for other aspects of its analysis, also val-
ued the benefit of carbon emissions reduction at $50 per ton
carbon. NAS Report at 85.
NHTSA acknowledged that “[c]onserving energy, espe-
44
Environmental Defense also submitted an additional comment letter
after the comment period closed noting a recent study from the Social Cost
of Carbon project sponsored by the U.K. Department for Environment,
Food and Rural Affairs. Environmental Defense Cmt. Re: Carbon Costs
at 1-3. The study found that “ ‘[a] lower benchmark of 35 £/tC [about $60
per ton of carbon] is reasonable for a global decision context committed
to reducing the threat of dangerous climate change and includes a modest
level of aversion to extreme risks, relatively low discount rates and equity
weighting.’ ” Id. at 1-2; see Social Cost of Carbon Review. The report
concluded, “ ‘we believe that a value of £55/tC in 2000 [about $95/tC],
but rising more sharply than the current guidance (i.e. at a higher rate than
the current £1/tC per year), would seem to capture the evidence using a
pragmatic approach.’ ” Id. at 2. Environmental Defense concluded:
These results support monetizing the carbon benefits of the light
truck fuel economy rule using values in the range of $96 to $174
per ton of carbon [$26 to $47 per ton of CO2] (at current
exchange rates) . . . . These values translate into shadow values
of 30 to 54 cents per gallon . . . . Calculating the benefits of these
savings at the new values consistent with the SCC study recom-
mendations would yield present value benefits of $54 billion by
2020 . . . and $82 billion by 2030 . . . calculated using a 3% dis-
count rate. On an annual basis, benefits would grow from $1.1
billion in 2011 to $5.9 billion in 2030. [¶] These benefits are sub-
stantial in relation to the costs estimated by NHTSA for its pro-
posal. Yet [they] were entirely omitted from NHTSA’s
calculations . . . .
Id. at 3.
45
Citing R.S.J. Tol, The Marginal Damage Costs of Carbon Dioxide
Emissions: An Estimate of the Uncertainties, 33 Energy Pol’y 2064, 2074
(2005).
14874 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
cially reducing the nation’s dependence on petroleum, bene-
fits the U.S. in several ways. [It] has benefits for economic
growth and the environment, as well as other benefits, such as
reducing pollution and improving security of energy supply.”
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,644. NHTSA also acknowledged the com-
ments it received that recommended values for the benefit of
carbon emissions reduction; however, the agency refused to
place a value on this benefit. See id. at 17,638.46 NHTSA
stated:
The agency continues to view the value of reduc-
ing emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases as
too uncertain to support their explicit valuation and
inclusion among the savings in environmental exter-
nalities from reducing gasoline production and use.
There is extremely wide variation in published esti-
mates of damage costs from greenhouse gas emis-
sions, costs for controlling or avoiding their
emissions, and costs of sequestering emissions that
do occur, the three major sources for developing
estimates of economic benefits from reducing emis-
sions of greenhouse gases. Moreover, . . . com-
menters did not reliably demonstrate that the
unmonetized benefits, which include CO2, and costs,
taken together, would alter the agency’s assessment
of the level of the standard for MY 2011. Thus, the
agency determined the stringency of that standard on
the basis of monetized net benefits.
Id.; see also FRIA, at VIII-64 to 65.47
46
NHTSA erroneously states that Environmental Defense expressed its
recommended value as $50 per ton CO2, rather than $50 per ton carbon.
See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,638. Fifty dollars per ton carbon is equivalent to
$13.60 per ton CO2, which is within the range that NRDC suggested. See
id.
47
In the Final Rule, NHTSA did not exclude the value of carbon reduc-
tion from its analysis on the ground that it now asserts on appeal: “EPCA
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14875
[6] NHTSA’s reasoning is arbitrary and capricious for sev-
eral reasons. First, while the record shows that there is a range
of values, the value of carbon emissions reduction is certainly
not zero. NHTSA conceded as much during oral argument
when, in response to questioning, counsel for NHTSA admit-
ted that the range of values begins at $3 per ton carbon.
NHTSA insisted at argument that it placed no value on carbon
emissions reduction rather than zero value. We fail to see the
difference. The value of carbon emissions reduction is
nowhere accounted for in the agency’s analysis, whether
quantitatively or qualitatively. This position also contradicts
NHTSA’s own explanation in the Final Rule that “the agency
determined the stringency of [the MY 2011] standard on the
basis of monetized net benefits.” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,638
(emphasis added).48 By presenting a scientifically-supported
range of values that does not begin at zero, Petitioners have
shown that it is possible to monetize the benefit of carbon
emissions reduction.
[7] Second, NHTSA gave no reasons why it believed the
range of values presented to it was “extremely wide”; in fact,
several commenters and the NAS committee recommended
the same value: $50 per ton carbon. The NAS committee
selected the value of $50 per ton carbon although it acknowl-
edged the wide range of values in the literature and the poten-
does not compel NHTSA to set CAFE levels with reference to carbon
dioxide emissions specifically, or environmental effects generally.”
NHTSA Br. at 47. We “may only sustain an agency’s action on the
grounds actually considered by the agency.” Nw. Envt’l Defense Ctr. v.
Bonneville Power Admin., 477 F.3d 668, 686 (9th Cir. 2007). In any case,
this argument has no merit because it misses the point. NHTSA’s chosen
methodology for setting CAFE standards is a cost-benefit analysis that
purports to take the relevant costs and benefits into account.
48
Moreover, we note that guidance from the Office of Management and
Budget provides that agencies are to monetize costs and benefits whenever
possible. Office of Mgmt. & Budget, Office of the President, OMB Circu-
lar A-4, at 27 (2003).
14876 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
tial controversy in selecting a particular value. NAS Report at
85. NHTSA argues that the problem was not simply “the ulti-
mate value to be assigned, but the wide variation in published
estimates of the three major underlying costs of carbon diox-
ide emissions—the cost of damages caused by such emis-
sions, the costs of avoiding or controlling such emissions, and
the costs of sequestering resulting emissions.” NHTSA Br. at
49. But NHTSA fails to explain why those three “underlying
costs” are relevant to the question of how carbon emissions
should be valued. We are convinced by Petitioners’ response:
To monetize the benefits of reducing CO2 emissions
from automobiles, NHTSA did not need to calculate
the “costs of sequestering emissions.” Carbon cap-
ture and sequestration, though a feasible means of
reducing emissions from large stationary sources
such as coal-fired power plants, was not within the
range of actions at issue in this automobile fuel
economy rulemaking. Nor were “costs for control-
ling or avoiding [CO2] emissions” a genuine method-
ological barrier here: NHTSA already performed an
elaborate analysis of the costs of mandating
increases in fuel economy. For purposes of this rule-
making, that was the relevant category of control
costs.
EPCA Reply Br. at 10-11.49 In sum, there is no evidence to
support NHTSA’s conclusion that the appropriate course was
not to monetize or quantify the value of carbon emissions
reduction at all.
Citizens for Clean Air v. EPA, 959 F.2d 839 (9th Cir.
49
Since Petitioners filed three sets of opening and reply briefs, the briefs
addressing EPCA issues are referred to as “EPCA Br.” or “EPCA Reply
Br.,” the brief addressing NEPA issues is referred to as “NEPA Br.” or
“NEPA Reply Br.,” and the brief filed by the governmental entities is
referred to as “States’ Br.” or “States’ Reply Br.”
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14877
1992), which NHTSA cites to support its contention that
agencies may decline to adopt a “particular monetary value”
when the “costs and benefits are too uncertain,” NHTSA Br.
at 48, is inapposite. In Citizens for Clean Air, petitioners filed
for administrative review of a state agency’s grant of a permit
for construction of a solid waste incinerator. Citizens for
Clean Air, 959 F.2d at 841. EPA denied the petitions, and this
court held that the decision of the EPA not to consider recy-
cling as a possible “best available control technology” under
the Clean Air Act was not arbitrary or capricious. Id. at 841-
42. The EPA noted in its proposed rule that “it was ‘unable
to reliably quantify the emission reductions attributable to
materials separation when a[ ] [waste incinerator] is equipped
with highly efficient at-the-stack air pollution control
devices.’ ” Id. at 844 (citation omitted). Petitioners submitted
“no hard evidence” that recycling would reduce air pollution
when the waste incinerators are already equipped with “state-
of-the-art pollution control equipment” (e.g., scrubbers). Id. at
847-48. In addition, the Clean Air Act required “that the pro-
posed technology [i.e., recycling] be the best available control
technology, and in the absence of anything specific or quanti-
fiable in support . . . we conclude that EPA’s decision not to
consider recycling in permitting Spokane’s incinerator was
not arbitrary or capricious.” Id. at 848. The petitioners in Citi-
zens for Clean Air had to satisfy such a high statutory thresh-
old (“best available control technology”), and they could not
satisfy that threshold without hard evidence. By contrast, Peti-
tioners here provided substantial evidence of the value of car-
bon emissions reduction, and they do not have to satisfy a
high statutory threshold.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14879
Volume 2 of 2
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14881
[8] Third, NHTSA’s reasoning is arbitrary and capricious
because it has monetized other uncertain benefits, such as the
reduction of criteria pollutants, crash, noise, and congestion
costs, see FRIA at VIII-73 to 80, and “the value of increased
energy security,” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,592. Dr. Michael Wang
of the Center for Transportation Research at Argonne
National Laboratory stated in his peer review of the CAFE
compliance and effect model50 used by NHTSA in its rule-
making that the wide range of dollar values per ton of CO2 “is
not a good reason that CO[2] dollar values are not included
. . . . The same can be said [of] dollar values for criteria pollu-
tants. Yet, monetary values for criteria pollutant emissions are
included in the model.” Wang Cmt. at 6.51
Fourth, NHTSA’s conclusion that commenters did not “re-
liably demonstrate” that monetizing the value of carbon
50
Known as the “Volpe model.”
51
U.S. DOT/NHTSA-Dr. Michael Wang-Individual Report (Com-
ments), NHTSA Docket No. 2005-22223-7 (Aug. 30, 2005).
14882 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
reduction would have affected the stringency of the CAFE
standard “ ‘runs counter to the evidence’ ” before it. NRDC v.
U.S. Forest Serv., 421 F.3d 797, 806 (9th Cir. 2005) (citation
omitted). The Union of Concerned Scientists concluded that
“including [a $50/tC value] in the determination of cost-
efficient fuel economy could increase the 2011 targets by an
average of 0.4-1.1 mpg.” UCS Cmt. at 16. Given that the
CAFE standards set by NHTSA increase only 1.5 mpg from
MY 2008 to 2011,52 an additional 0.4 to 1.1 mpg increase by
MY 2011 is significant. In addition, Environmental Defense
“calculate[d] the benefits of the cumulative reductions at $50/
tC and 3% discount rate at $19.7 billion by 2020 and $28.4
billion by 2030 (current dollars).” Environmental Defense
Cmt. at 6.
We agree with Petitioners that the values they suggest, 10-
22 cents per gallon of gasoline in NHTSA’s estimation, would
not be a small benefit. Under NHTSA’s own calculation that
Reformed CAFE will save 2.8 billion gallons of gasoline for
MY 2011 light trucks, see 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,619, 10-22 cents
a gallon of carbon benefits “would yield hundreds of millions
of dollars in benefits even after discounting—benefits that by
themselves would be substantial in relation to the net benefits
that NHTSA calculated for the rule.” EPCA Reply Br. at 12
(citing 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,623 (showing net benefits of $461
million for MY 2011 under Reformed CAFE)). NHTSA sim-
ply did not “ ‘examine the relevant data and articulate a satis-
factory explanation for its action including a rational
connection between the facts found and the choice made.’ ”
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n, 463 U.S. at 43 (quoting Burling-
ton Truck Lines v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168 (1962)).
Finally, there is no merit to NHTSA’s unfounded assertion
52
Since Reformed CAFE does not have pre-set corporate minimums but
will depend on manufacturers’ fleet mix, the MY 2011 figure is based on
NHTSA’s estimate of the average CAFE level that will be required of
manufacturers for MY 2011. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,568.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14883
that if it had accounted for the benefit of carbon emissions
reduction, it would have had to account for the adverse safety
effects of downweighting, and the two would have balanced
out, resulting in no change to the final CAFE standards. No
evidence supports this assertion. The assertion is also based
on the controversial assumption that higher fuel economy
standards for light trucks causes adverse safety effects from
downweighting.
[9] Thus, NHTSA’s decision not to monetize the benefit of
carbon emissions reduction was arbitrary and capricious, and
we remand to NHTSA for it to include a monetized value for
this benefit in its analysis of the proper CAFE standards.
3. Vehicle safety analysis
Petitioners argue that NHTSA acted arbitrarily and capri-
ciously when it omitted weight reduction for vehicles between
4,000 and 5,000 lbs. curb weight53 as a cost-effective measure
manufacturers could use to increase fuel economy. The NAS
committee found that weight reduction for vehicles greater
than 4,000 lbs. curb weight would result in a safety benefit:
“total fatalities in a hypothetical fleet of relatively modern
passenger vehicles would be reduced by about 0.26 percent if
all pickups and SUVs weighing more than 4,000 lbs. were
replaced with pickups and SUVs weighing 3,500 to 4,000 lbs.”54
53
“Curb weight” generally means the unloaded vehicle weight. See 40
C.F.R. § 86.082-2 (2007).
54
The adverse safety effects of downweighting touted by NHTSA only
applies to smaller vehicles such as passenger cars, not light trucks:
If an increase in fuel economy is effected by a system that
encourages either downweighting or the production and sale of
more small cars, some additional traffic fatalities would be
expected. However, the actual effects would be uncertain, and
any adverse safety impact could be minimized, or even reserved,
if weight and size reductions were limited to heavier vehicles
(particularly those over 4,000 lb). Larger vehicles would then be
14884 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
NAS Report at 72. The NAS committee also noted that such
weight reduction would improve safety in part because it
improves “crash compatibility,” or the variance in vehicle
weights between large and small vehicles. Id. at 5.55
The study by Dr. Charles Kahane, cited by the NAS com-
mittee and NHTSA, did not find a safety benefit resulting
from reducing the weight of light trucks between 4,000 to
5,000 lbs., but it found that “[o]verall, light trucks weighing
3,870 pounds or more are involved in fatal crashes that result
in a total of 14,705 fatalities per year. A 100-pound reduction
would not significantly change those fatalities.” Kahane Study
at 161.56
less damaging (aggressive) in crashes with all other vehicles and
thus pose less risk to other drivers on the road.
NAS Report at 5 (emphasis added); see also id. at 27, 72. The only dispute
here is whether NHTSA should have included weight reduction as a cost-
effective technology for light trucks weighing between 4,000 and 5,000
lbs. curb weight.
55
The NAS committee majority’s findings regarding the adverse safety
effects of downweighting was disputed by two dissenting members of the
committee, who argued that “[t]he relationship between fuel economy and
highway safety is complex, ambiguous, poorly understood, and not mea-
surable by any known means at the present time. . . . The conclusions of
the majority of the committee . . . are overly simplistic and at least par-
tially incorrect.” NAS Report at 117. The dissenters stated, “[t]he bottom
line is that if the weights of passenger cars and light trucks are reduced
proportionally, Kahane’s study predicts that the net effect on highway
fatalities in collisions among all highway users is approximately zero.
Given the history of the debate on this subject, this is a startling result.”
Id. at 120-21.
56
Kahane explains that “the ‘fatality increase per 100-pound reduction’
does not mean the effect of literally removing 100 pounds from a specific
[light truck or van]. It is the average increase in the fatality rates of 1991-
99 models weighing W-100 pounds relative to other 1991-99 models
weighing W pounds, given drivers of the same age/gender and equal val-
ues on the other factors.” Kahane Study at viii.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14885
In the Final Rule, NHTSA applied a “confidence bound” of
approximately 1,000 lbs. to the 3,900 figure, “given the sig-
nificant statistical uncertainty around that figure,” and “used
5,000 lbs. as the threshold for considering weight reduction.”
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,627. The source of the 1,000 lbs. confi-
dence bound is “additional empirical work found in Kahane’s
study” dealing with the crossover weight. FRIA, at V-15.
NHTSA recognized that the crossover weight and the point of
zero net impact (3,900 lbs.) differ, but it concluded that “they
would both tend to have similar sampling errors.” Id.
Petitioners argue that NHTSA’s selection of a 1,000 lbs.
confidence bound is arbitrary and capricious because
Kahane’s 4,000 lbs. figure already accounts for uncertainty,
and the confidence bound is taken from a different part of
Kahane’s study. They also argue that NHTSA arbitrarily
excluded from its uncertainty analysis “the benefits of reduc-
ing crash incompatibility resulting from weight reductions in
the 3,900-5,000 pound class, and whether these might offset
any statistically uncertain safety costs.” EPCA Reply Br. at
15.
[10] Petitioners’ arguments have some merit, and we
believe this is a close question. However, we conclude that
NHTSA’s explanation for using the confidence interval for
the crossover weight—that both the crossover weight and the
point of zero net impact would have similar sampling errors—
does not “rel[y] on factors which Congress has not intended
it to consider, entirely fail[ ] to consider an important aspect
of the problem, . . . [or] run[ ] counter to the evidence before
the agency, [and is not] so implausible that it could not be
ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency
expertise.” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n, 463 U.S. at 43. Peti-
tioners have not sufficiently established the deficiencies in
NHTSA’s reasoning.
14886 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
4. Backstop for Reformed CAFE
Under Reformed CAFE, a manufacturer’s required CAFE
level would depend on its fleet mix. See 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,587-88, 17,595-96.57 Reformed CAFE (setting individual
fuel economy targets for vehicles of every footprint size) plus
a backstop (overall fleet-wide average) would prevent manu-
facturers from upsizing their vehicles or producing too many
large footprint vehicles, if the backstop were set high enough.
Under Unreformed CAFE, manufacturers had to meet only a
fleet-wide average, which means that they could increase the
number of small vehicles (with higher fuel economy) they
produced in order to balance out the larger vehicles (with
lower fuel economy) and achieve the required CAFE stan-
dard. NHTSA argues that Reformed CAFE will alleviate the
problem of downweighting because there will no longer be a
large gap between the CAFE targets for passenger cars and
light trucks. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,620 (“Reformed CAFE,
as adopted today, links the level of the average fuel economy
targets to the size of footprint so that there is an incentive to
reduce weight only to the extent one can do so while also pre-
serving size.”).
Petitioners generally agree that Reformed CAFE, with its
progressive fuel economy targets based on vehicle footprint,
is an improvement over Unreformed CAFE. However, they
argue that Reformed CAFE must include a “backstop” so that
the “minimum level of average fuel economy applicable to a
manufacturer in a model year” would not be determined
57
“The required level of CAFE for a particular manufacturer for a given
model year is calculated using the target-setting function for that model
year in conjunction with that manufacturer’s actual total production and its
production at each footprint value for that model year. The manufacturer’s
required CAFE level is calculated by dividing its total production for the
model year by the sum of the values obtained by dividing the manufactur-
er’s production of each vehicle model included in its fleet by the fuel
economy target for that model.” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,587; see also id. at
17,608-09.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14887
solely by the manufacturer’s fleet mix. See 49 U.S.C.
§ 32901(a)(6). They argue that the statutory language—
“maximum feasible average fuel economy level,” id.
§ 32902(a) (emphasis added), “minimum level of average fuel
economy applicable to a manufacturer in a model year,” id.
§ 32902(a)(6) (emphasis added)—and the statutory structure
contemplate a fixed minimum CAFE standard for light trucks.
NHTSA argues that a backstop would unduly limit con-
sumer choice and perpetuate the problems with Unreformed
CAFE. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,592-93. It argues that the statu-
tory requirement that there be a “minimum” level of average
fuel economy applicable to a manufacturer does not necessar-
ily mean a fixed minimum and is consistent with a minimum
standard applicable to a manufacturer based on that manufac-
turer’s fleet mix.
[11] Neither the EPCA’s language nor structure explicitly
requires NHTSA to adopt a backstop.58 The issue is whether
it was arbitrary or capricious in not adopting a backstop.
Under Reformed CAFE, manufacturers would still be
required to meet a minimum average fuel economy level—
there would simply be no corporate minimum average fuel
economy level. That is, each vehicle of a particular footprint
would be required to meet a minimum average fuel economy
level, but there would be no fleet-wide minimum. See 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,608-09. The corporate or fleet-wide minimum
would depend entirely on the number of vehicles of each foot-
print that the manufacturer decided to produce. See id.
58
The legislative history that Petitioners cite concerning NHTSA’s con-
sideration of fleet mix in establishing CAFE standards does not help them.
That history reveals that Congress considered and rejected a penalty-
waiver provision that would have excused manufacturers from fuel econ-
omy standards if consumer preference caused their non-compliance. This
legislative history argument was rejected by the D.C. Circuit in Center for
Auto Safety, and we agree with the D.C. Circuit’s analysis on that issue.
793 F.2d at 1339-40.
14888 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
[12] Although Congress has not directly spoken on this
issue, it has directed the agency to set the average fuel econ-
omy level for light trucks at the “maximum feasible” level, 49
U.S.C. § 32902(a), considering technological feasibility, eco-
nomic practicability, the need of the nation to conserve
energy, and the effect of other motor vehicle standards of the
government, id. § 32902(f). NHTSA did not consider these
factors in deciding whether to adopt a backstop. See 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,592-93. Instead, the agency explained:
The intent of the CAFE program is not to preclude
future mix shifts and design changes in response to
consumer demand. A backstop would likely have
this influence. . . . Such a system would be in oppo-
sition to congressional intent to establish a regula-
tory system that does not unduly limit consumer
choice.
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,617. NHTSA may consider consumer
demand, but “it would clearly be impermissible for NHTSA
to rely on consumer demand to such an extent that it ignored
the overarching goal of fuel conservation.” Ctr. for Auto
Safety, 793 F.2d at 1340. We believe that NHTSA has com-
mitted this error here. Although EPCA is not intended to “un-
duly limit[ ] consumer choice,” H.R. Rep. No. 94-340, at 87
(1975), as reprinted in 1975 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1762, 1849,
energy conservation is the fundamental purpose of the statute
and an explicit statutory factor that NHTSA “shall” consider,
see 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f). “An agency may not ignore factors
Congress explicitly required be taken into account.” Earth
Island Inst. v. Hogarth, 494 F.3d 757, 765 (9th Cir. 2007)
(citation omitted). NHTSA did not adequately consider the
“need of the nation to conserve energy,” as it was required to
do under 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f), and it has not argued that a
backstop would be technologically infeasible or economically
impracticable. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,592-93, 17,617-18.
[13] We do agree with NHTSA that the continuous func-
tion of Reformed CAFE will likely reduce the incentive to
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14889
upsize because there will no longer be only two categories of
CAFE standards (light trucks and passenger cars). See 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,621. But, Petitioners raise well-founded concerns
(given the historical trend) that a floating fleet-mix-based
standard would continue to permit upsizing—which is not just
a function of consumer demand, but also a function of manu-
facturers’ own design and marketing decisions. We remand to
NHTSA for it to reconsider under the proper standard whether
to adopt a backstop based on the factors in 49 U.S.C.
§ 32902(f).
5. Transition period
The Final Rule permits manufacturers to choose to comply
with Unreformed CAFE or Reformed CAFE in MYs 2008-
2010. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,593-95, 17,639. Beginning in MY
2011, manufacturers must comply with Reformed CAFE.
Petitioners argue that the transition period offered by NHTSA
to manufacturers is impermissible under EPCA since NHTSA
must prescribe a single maximum feasible average fuel econ-
omy level. They argue that NHTSA has “[i]n effect . . .
granted an automatic exemption to manufacturers unwilling to
meet the Reformed CAFE standards between 2008 and 2010,”
and that this is impermissible because the statute grants
exemptions only on an individual basis and if the manufac-
turer meets certain statutory criteria. EPCA Br. at 43-44 (cit-
ing 49 U.S.C. § 32902(d)).
[14] We conclude that the transition period is not prohib-
ited by EPCA, and NHTSA’s decision to allow it is not arbi-
trary or capricious. First, NHTSA has not granted an
“exemption” to manufacturers during the transition period,
because manufacturers are still required to comply with the
CAFE program—they just have a choice as to which standard
with which to comply.
[15] Second, and more importantly, NHTSA has provided
a reasoned explanation for the transition period: it “will mini-
14890 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
mize the potential for unintended compliance burdens that
may be experienced by a manufacturer as the result of shifting
to a new regulatory structure,” it is “critical given that this is
the first comprehensive reform of the light truck CAFE pro-
gram since its inception,” and “the structure of the Reformed
CAFE might require some manufacturers to revise their com-
pliance strategies,” since it “minimizes the ability of manufac-
turers to offset the low fuel economy performance of larger
vehicles by increasing the production of smaller vehicles with
higher fuel economies. Manufacturers that relied on such a
compliance strategy in the past might need to revise their
product plans in order to comply with the Reformed CAFE
standard.” 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,593. NHTSA also noted that
“[m]anufacturers develop product plans for their fleets at least
5 years in advance, plans which incorporate consideration of
CAFE compliance.” Id. at 17,594.
6. Changing the definition of passenger and non-
passenger automobiles in order to close the SUV
loophole
Petitioners challenge NHTSA’s decision not to reform the
SUV loophole. They argue that this decision is arbitrary and
capricious because it runs counter to the evidence showing
that the majority of SUVs, minivans, and pickup trucks func-
tion solely or primarily as passenger vehicles, and because
NHTSA has not provided a reasoned explanation for why the
transition to Reformed CAFE could not be accomplished at
the same time as a revision in the definitions.
The EPCA defines “passenger automobile” as “an automo-
bile that the Secretary decides by regulation is manufactured
primarily for transporting not more than 10 individuals,”
excluding “an automobile capable of off-highway operation
that the Secretary decides . . . has a significant feature except
4-wheel drive) designed for off-highway operation” and is 4-
wheel drive or more than 6,000 lbs. GVWR. 49 U.S.C.
§ 32901(a)(16). “Non-passenger automobiles” are thus
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14891
defined by exclusion. NHTSA defines an automobile other
than a passenger automobile as a “light truck,” a term not
used in the statute. 49 C.F.R. § 523.5 (2007). Under 49 U.S.C.
§ 32901(a)(16), the Secretary has discretion to decide what
constitutes a “passenger automobile” within the confines of
the listed criteria.
NHTSA initially sought input on ways to revise the regula-
tory distinction because the passenger automobile/light truck
distinction had become obsolete: “The application of the regu-
lation to the current vehicle fleet (designed with the regula-
tory distinctions in mind) less clearly differentiates between
passenger cars and light trucks than it did in the 1970s.” 68
Fed. Reg. at 74,927 (ANPRM). However, in the NPRM,
NHTSA decided not to:
chang[e] those classification regulations at this time
in part because [NHTSA] believe[s] an orderly tran-
sition to Reformed CAFE could not be accomplished
if [NHTSA] simultaneously change[s] which vehi-
cles are included in the light truck program and
because, as applied in MY 2011, Reformed CAFE is
likely to reduce the incentive to produce vehicles
classified as light trucks instead of as passenger cars.
70 Fed. Reg. at 51,422. Ultimately, NHTSA did not change
the light truck definition other than by expanding the flat floor
provision to include vehicles with folding seats, if the vehicles
have at least three rows of designated seating. See 49 C.F.R.
§ 523.5(a)(5); 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,650-52.
[16] We conclude that NHTSA’s decision not to otherwise
revise the passenger automobile/light truck definitions is arbi-
trary and capricious. First, NHTSA has not provided a rea-
soned explanation of why an orderly transition to Reformed
CAFE could not be accomplished at the same time that the
passenger automobile/light truck definitions are revised.
14892 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
Second, NHTSA asserts that it reasonably decided to look
to the purpose for which a vehicle is manufactured instead of
consumers’ use of a vehicle because it is a more objective
way of differentiating between passenger and non-passenger
automobiles. But this overlooks the fact that many light trucks
today are manufactured primarily for transporting passengers,
as NHTSA itself has acknowledged: “Many vehicles pro-
duced today, while smaller than many other passenger cars,
qualify as light trucks because they have been designed so
that their seats can be easily removed and their cargo carrying
capacity significantly enhanced.” 68 Fed. Reg. at 74,927
(emphasis added); see also 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,621 n.102
(“NAS Report . . . noted that [the passenger automobile/light
truck fuel economy] gap created an incentive to design vehi-
cles as light trucks instead of cars.”). Today’s design differ-
ences, which capitalize on the lower light truck CAFE
standard, are the very reason that NHTSA sought input on
ways to revise the regulatory distinction “in light of the cur-
rent and emerging motor vehicle fleet.” See 68 Fed. Reg. at
74,927.
In addition, NHTSA’s new focus on the purpose for which
automobiles are manufactured conflicts with its earlier asser-
tion that “Congress intended that passenger automobiles be
defined as those used primarily for the transport of individu-
als.” Id. at 74,926 (emphasis added); see also id. at 74,913
(“The market suggests that while some light trucks may be
used primarily to transport passengers, their ‘peak use or
value’ capability (towing boats, hauling heavy loads, etc.)
may be a critical factor in the purchase decision.” (emphasis
added)).
[17] Third, NHTSA’s decision runs counter to the evidence
showing that SUVs, vans, and pickup trucks are manufactured
primarily for the purpose of transporting passengers and are
generally not used for off-highway operation. The NAS com-
mittee found that:
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14893
The less stringent CAFE standards for trucks did
provide incentives for manufacturers to invest in
minivans and SUVs and to promote them to consum-
ers in place of large cars and station wagons. . . . By
shifting their product development and investment
focus to trucks, they created more desirable trucks
with more carlike features: quiet, luxurious interiors
with leather upholstery, top-of-the-line audio sys-
tems, extra rows of seats, and extra doors.
NAS Report at 18 (emphasis added); see also id. at 23 (noting
the exploding demand for light trucks such as minivans and
“four-door SUVs and pickup trucks with passenger-friendly
features such as extra rows of seats”). Consumers use light
trucks primarily for passenger-carrying purposes in large part
because that is precisely the purpose for which manufacturers
have manufactured and marketed them. See, e.g., App. A to
Public Citizen Cmt. (Kathleen Kerwin, “You Call This the
Family Car? Pickups with Roomy Cabs Become a Status
Accessory,” Business Week, Apr. 26, 1999.). A pickup truck
usage study conducted by R.L. Polk & Co.59 showed that 73%
of light pickup users use their trucks to carry passengers on
a daily or weekly basis, 68% use them for personal trips on
a daily or weekly basis, 58% use them for commuting on a
daily or weekly basis, 59% never use them for towing, and
69% never use them for driving off-road. Polk Study at 11.
Seventy-three percent of medium pickup users use them for
carrying passengers on a daily or weekly basis, 65% use them
for commuting on a daily or weekly basis (61% daily), and
64% never use them for driving off-road. Polk Study at 12.
Even among heavy pickup users, 76% use them for carrying
passengers on a daily or weekly basis, and 52% never use
them for driving off-road. Polk Study at 13.60 The NAS Com-
mittee further found:
59
R.L. Polk & Co. is a major automotive market intelligence company.
60
In addition, pickup owners consider better fuel economy to be the
most important improvement, valuing it nearly as much as all other poten-
tial improvements (e.g., greater horsepower, better off-road capability,
carrying heavier loads) combined. Polk Study at 16.
14894 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
When CAFE regulations were originally formulated,
different standards were set for passenger vehicles
and for work/cargo vehicles . . . . because [work/
cargo vehicles] needed extra power, different gear-
ing, and less aerodynamic body configurations to
carry out their utilitarian, load-carrying functions.
. . . [But this] working definition distinction between
a car for personal use and a truck for work use/cargo
transport[ ] has broken down, initially with
minivans, and more recently with sport utility vehi-
cles and other “cross-over” vehicles that may be
designed for peak use but which are actually used
almost exclusively for personal transport. . . . The
car/truck distinction has been stretched well beyond
its original purpose.
NAS Report at 88 (internal quotation marks and citation omit-
ted). One of the changes the NAS committee recommended
to alleviate this problem was to “tighten” the definition of a
light truck, a step the EPA has already taken for emissions
standards purposes. Id. We agree with Petitioners that
NHTSA’s decision not to do the same was arbitrary and capri-
cious, especially in light of EPCA’s overarching goal of
energy conservation. Thus, we remand to NHTSA to revise its
regulatory definitions of passenger automobile and light truck
or provide a valid reason for not doing so.
7. Exclusion of 8,500-10,000 lb. pickup trucks from
CAFE regulation
Petitioners argue that NHTSA’s decision not to regulate the
fuel economy of vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs.
GVWR (generally referred to as Class 2b trucks),61 other than
61
Trucks are subdivided into a number of classes based on GVWR.
Class 1 trucks are those 6,000 lbs. GVWR or less. Generally, this includes
minivans, small pickup trucks, and small to medium SUVs. Class 2a
trucks are those between 6,001 lbs. and 8,500 lbs. GVWR, which include
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14895
MDPVs, is arbitrary and capricious because fuel economy
standards for these vehicles are feasible and will result in sig-
nificant energy conservation. See 49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(3).
We agree.
All 4-wheeled, fuel- and alternative fuel-propelled vehicles
manufactured for use on roads and highways that are 6,000
lbs. gross vehicle weight or less are automobiles. See 49
U.S.C. § 32901(a)(3)(A). Vehicles more than 6,000 but less
than 10,000 lbs. gross vehicle weight are “automobile[s]” for
the purpose of fuel economy regulation “if the Secretary
decides by regulation that—(i) an average fuel economy stan-
dard under this chapter for the vehicle is feasible; and (ii) an
average fuel economy standard . . . for the vehicle will result
in significant energy conservation or the vehicle is substan-
tially used for the same purposes as a vehicle rated at not
more than 6,000 pounds gross vehicle weight.” Id.
§ 32901(a)(3)(B). Since 1978, NHTSA has defined vehicles
8,500 lbs. GVWR or less as automobiles. See 49 C.F.R.
§ 523.3(b)(2)(iii).
The ANPRM presented two options under which the fuel
economy of vehicles with a GWVR of up to 10,000 lbs. could
be regulated. See 68 Fed. Reg. at 74,930. One option was to
include MDPVs, vehicles with a GVWR of greater than 8,500
but less than 10,000 lbs. that are designed primarily for the
transportation of persons. NHTSA explained that “[t]his defi-
nition would essentially make SUVs between 8,500 and
10,000 lbs. GVWR subject to CAFE, while continuing to
exclude most medium- and heavy-duty pickups and most
medium- and heavy-duty cargo vans that are primarily used
vans, full-size pickups such as the F-150 and Chevrolet Silverado 1500,
and medium to large SUVs. Class 2b trucks are those 8,501 to 10,000 lbs.
GVWR, which include some large vans, heavy duty pickups (e.g., F-250,
Silverado 2500, Ford Excursion, GMC Yukon XL, and Hummer H2), and
large SUVs. See UCS Cmt. at 33 & n.13.
14896 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
for agricultural and commercial purposes.” Id. Another option
was to make all vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs.
GVWR subject to CAFE standards. Id. NHTSA invited com-
ments on these and any other proposals to regulate vehicles
between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs. GVWR. Id. The NPRM dis-
cussed the inclusion of MDPVs, but it did not address the pro-
posal to regulate all vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs.
GVWR. See 70 Fed. Reg. at 51,455-56.
The Final Rule incorporates MDPVs into the definition of
“automobile” such that these vehicles would be regulated as
light trucks beginning in MY 2011. 49 C.F.R. § 523.3(b)(3);
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,648. NHTSA declined to regulate other
vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs. because unlike
MDPVs, they:
are not subject to EPA testing that provides the data
necessary to determine compliance with the CAFE
program. Inclusion of the heavier-rated-non-MDPVs
would increase the test burden for manufacturers.
These vehicles would be subject to a whole new test-
ing regime. Moreover, because these vehicles are not
subject to comparable testing requirements, there is
not sufficient data to estimate a fuel economy base-
line. Without a reliable baseline, the agency is
unable to determine fuel economy targets that would
result in required fuel economy levels that are eco-
nomically practicable and technologically feasible.
71 Fed. Reg. at 17,650.
[18] We conclude that this is not a reasoned explanation for
excluding Class 2b trucks from CAFE regulation. First, Peti-
tioners presented compelling evidence that setting fuel econ-
omy standards for Class 2b trucks is feasible. For example, a
Department of Energy research planning study included esti-
mates:
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14897
based on detailed simulation modeling of both the
city and highway driving cycles working from a
baseline Class 2b truck; baseline estimates were 21.1
mpg city, 15.4 mpg highway, and 13.6 mpg com-
bined. . . . [The study] identified technology options
capable of yielding substantial improvements,
including 50% higher fuel economy with technolo-
gies available over a 7-year horizon and, with use of
hybrid engines in diesel versions of the vehicles, a
near doubling of the fuel economy of a baseline gas-
oline Class 2b pickup would be a feasible “stretch
goal.”
App. F to Environmental Defense Cmt. at 1. An Argonne
National Laboratory study identified numerous technological
improvements that could be applied to Class 2b trucks,
including “aerodynamic improvements,” “lower tire rolling
resistance,” “improved transmissions,” “turbocharging for
diesel engines,” “other engine refinements,” “integrated
starter-generator,” and “hybrid-electric powertrains.” Id.
Another study, published by the American Council for an
Energy-Efficient Economy, found that the potential fuel econ-
omy improvement was “37% . . . over a baseline full-size
pickup.” Id. at 2. Overall, while Class 2b trucks are “designed
with heavier frames and higher capacities, and therefore
larger powertrains and other components, [they] (primarily
heavy-duty pickups) entail substantially the same engineering
as vehicles under 8500 lbs GVWR, and in many cases share
components.” Id. at 1; see also UCS Cmt. at 34.
Second, Petitioners presented substantial evidence that set-
ting CAFE standards for Class 2b trucks would result in sig-
nificant energy conservation and that these vehicles are
substantially used for the same purposes as a vehicle 6,000
lbs. GVWR or less.62 Class 2b trucks constitute the majority
62
Only one factor or the other is required, along with feasibility, for the
Secretary to designate as an “automobile” a 6,000 to 10,000 lbs. GVWR
vehicle. 49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(3)(B)(ii).
14898 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
of vehicles in the 8,500 to 10,000 lb. GVWR class. See
ACEEE Cmt. to ANPRM at 10 (“[P]ickups constitute about
85% of vehicles in the 8,500-10,000 lb. weight range.”).63 One
of the Petitioners argued:
EPA estimates sales of class 2b trucks at 931,000 per
year. Given higher per vehicle oil consumption, we
estimate that 2b trucks consume 13% of overall
demand from trucks under 10,000 pounds GVWR.
...
If class 2b trucks were to improve their fuel econ-
omy by 4% per year . . . over MY 2008-2011, it
would save 47,000 barrels of gasoline and diesel fuel
per day by 2020 and reduce GHG emissions by a
cumulative 16 mmtC over that time frame. Even at
comparable fuel economy improvements to those
NHTSA proposes for the largest class 2a trucks reg-
ulated under the Reformed system—roughly 2% per
year, the country would save 24,000 barrels of gaso-
line and diesel fuel per day by 2020. These amounts
are significant: A 24,000 barrel per day (bpd) saving
would be equivalent to $700 million of annual sav-
ings at a relatively modest shadow price of $1.90/
gallon. This far exceeds the $100 million threshold
for a ‘significant energy action’ under [Executive
Order] 13211.
Environmental Defense Cmt. at 10; see also UCS Cmt. at 34
(estimating that “[i]f these vehicles had been held to the same
fuel economy standard as other light-duty trucks, the total fuel
consumption by trucks under 10,000 lbs GVWR would be
approximately 890 million gallons less in 2005, for a savings
of nearly 60,000 barrels of oil per day. This corresponds to
about 18% of Class 2b fuel use.”).
63
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) Cmt.,
NHTSA Docket No. 2003-16128-1156 (Apr. 27, 2004).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14899
The evidence also shows that Class 2b trucks are “substan-
tially used for the same purposes” as vehicles not more than
6,000 lbs. GVWR. The Polk Study showed that 76% of heavy
pickup truck owners use them for carrying passengers on a
daily or weekly basis, 57% use them for personal trips on a
daily or weekly basis, 49% use them for commuting on a
daily basis, and 52% never use them for driving off-road. Polk
Study at 13; see also Environmental Defense Cmt. at 10 (cit-
ing a 2002 vehicle inventory and use survey conducted by the
U.S. Census Bureau for the argument that “[i]n the interven-
ing decades [since NHTSA revised its definition of ‘automo-
bile’ to include Class 2a trucks but exclude Class 2b trucks],
trucks of all sizes have increasingly shifted from commercial
uses to personal uses.”).64
NHTSA did not address any of this evidence in the Final
Rule, and it does not argue that setting CAFE standards for
Class 2b trucks would not be feasible,65 that it would not
result in significant energy conservation, or that Class 2b
trucks are not substantially used for the same purposes as
smaller trucks. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,649-50; NHTSA Br. at
77-81. Instead, NHTSA makes the bold assertion that “the
agency is not obliged to justify exclusion of such very large
vehicles, as the statute has already excluded them, subject to
64
NHTSA’s original rationale for expanding the definition of “automo-
bile” to include Class 2a trucks but continuing to exclude Class 2b trucks
from CAFE regulation was the prediction that consumers would not use
them for personal use. 43 Fed. Reg. 11995, 11997 (Mar. 23, 1978). The
agency indicated that it would reconsider its decision if this prediction
proved false: “[T]he agency does not expect any circumvention of this
type to be as prevalent as the shift in GVWR’s across the previous 6000
pound dividing line. . . . [V]ehicles rated much above 7000 pounds are
equipped with heavy duty suspensions and other components which make
then unattractive for personal uses. . . . [I]f the agency’s projection in this
regard proves to be incorrect, the light truck category could be further
expanded to avoid circumvention of the fuel economy standards.” Id.
65
NHTSA misdirects much of its attention to the argument that regulat-
ing MDPVs is “more feasible.” NHTSA Br. at 80 (emphasis in original).
14900 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
NHTSA’s discretionary decision to include such vehicles.”
NHTSA Br. at 79 (emphasis in original). This is clearly
wrong. The statute gives NHTSA some discretion in deciding
whether the 49 U.S.C. § 32901(a)(3) factors are met for Class
2b trucks, but if these factors are satisfied, then they are “au-
tomobiles” for which NHTSA must set fuel economy stan-
dards.66
NHTSA asserts that without EPA testing data, it cannot set
CAFE standards for Class 2b trucks. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,650.
But EPA already subjects most Class 2b trucks to the city and
highway fuel economy tests (i.e., city and highway chassis
dynamometer testing) that NHTSA asserts are needed for it to
determine CAFE standards. See 40 C.F.R. § 86.101 (2007)
(applying test procedures to gasoline-fueled trucks above
8,500 lbs. GVWR (“Otto-cycle complete heavy-duty vehi-
cles”)). NHTSA does not dispute this fact.
Moreover, NHTSA has given no explanation of why it
would be infeasible to set standards for Class 2b trucks with-
out EPA’s tests. Instead, NHTSA’s position is merely that
imposing one set of tests “minimize[s]” the “test burden to
manufacturers.” See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,649. This concern has
no relevance to any of the statutory factors under 49 U.S.C.
§ 32901(a)(3)(B).
Finally, NHTSA’s reasoning is arbitrary because it decided
that it is feasible to set CAFE standards for MDPVs even
though they are not currently subject to EPA testing. See id.
66
We also reject NHTSA’s assertion that Petitioners “invert the relevant
question the agency sought to answer” since the agency was only con-
cerned with the feasibility of regulating MDPVs, not other vehicles in the
8,500 to 10,000 lb. weight class. NHTSA Br. at 79. As discussed above,
the agency specifically sought comments on whether it should regulate all
vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000 lbs. GVWR, see 68 Fed. Reg. at
74,930, and Petitioners presented evidence on precisely that question, see,
e.g., Environmental Defense Cmt. at 9-11; UCS Cmt. at 33-35; Public Cit-
izen Cmt. at 18-19; Polk Study.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14901
(“MDPVs are not currently required to undergo chassis dyna-
mometer testing.”). EPA will begin phasing in city chassis
dynamometer testing for MDPVs in MY 2008, but MDPVs
are exempted from highway chassis dynamometer testing. Id.
Yet, having “determined that this additional testing will not be
burdensome for the manufacturers,” NHTSA required high-
way tests as a result of including MDPVs in its “automobile”
definition. Id.
[19] In sum, NHTSA’s decision not to set average fuel
economy standards for all vehicles between 8,500 and 10,000
lbs. GVWR is arbitrary and capricious. That Class 2b trucks
have never been regulated by NHTSA is not a reason for not
regulating them now. We remand to NHTSA to revisit this
issue and promulgate average fuel economy standards for
these vehicles, or to provide a validly reasoned basis for con-
tinuing to exclude them from the regulation.
B. National Environmental Policy Act
1. The EPCA does not limit NHTSA’s NEPA
obligations
NHTSA argues both that it has broad discretion to balance
the factors of 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f) in setting fuel economy
standards and that the EPCA constrains it from considering
more stringent alternatives in the EA. NHTSA can’t have it
both ways. Its hands are not tied, as demonstrated by its dis-
cretionary, substantive decisions to, among other things, value
the benefit of carbon emissions reduction at zero, 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,638, peg its Unreformed CAFE standard to the
least capable manufacturer with a substantial share of the
market, id. at 17,568, apply technologies only until marginal
cost equals marginal benefit,67 id. at 17,589, 17,597, reject
67
As opposed to, for example, setting total costs equal to total benefits,
as suggested by some commenters. See 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,591 (rejecting
the Union of Concerned Scientists’ break-even approach).
14902 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
weight reduction as a cost-effective technology for vehicles
between 4,000 and 5,000 lbs. curb weight, id. at 17,627, and
not adopt a backstop, id. at 17,593.
NHTSA relies on Department of Transportation v. Public
Citizen, 541 U.S. 752 (2004), for its contention that it did not
have to consider the effect of its rule on climate change. Pub-
lic Citizen is inapposite.
In Public Citizen, the Supreme Court held that the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) did not need
to consider the environmental effects of cross-border opera-
tions of motor carriers in its EA, since it had no ability to pre-
vent those operations. 541 U.S. at 770. The Court reasoned,
“where an agency has no ability to prevent a certain effect due
to its limited statutory authority over the relevant actions, the
agency cannot be considered a legally relevant ‘cause’ of the
effect.” Id. The “critical feature” of the case was the fact that
“FMCSA has no ability to countermand the President’s lifting
of the moratorium or otherwise categorically to exclude Mexi-
can motor carriers from operating within the United States.”
Id. at 766. “FMCSA has only limited discretion regarding
motor vehicle carrier registration: It must grant registration to
all domestic or foreign motor carriers that are ‘willing and
able to comply with’ the applicable safety, fitness, and
financial-responsibility requirements. FMCSA has no statu-
tory authority to impose or enforce emissions controls or to
establish environmental requirements unrelated to motor car-
rier safety.” Id. at 758-59 (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
Moreover, neither of the purposes of NEPA—informing the
public and ensuring agency consideration of the environmen-
tal impacts of its actions—would be served. Knowledge of the
environmental impacts would not affect FMCSA decision-
making since FMCSA “simply lacks the power to act on
whatever information might be contained in the EIS.” Id. at
768.
Here, in contrast, NHTSA clearly has statutory authority to
impose or enforce fuel economy standards, 49 U.S.C.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14903
§ 32902(a), (c), and it could have, in exercising its discretion,
set higher standards if an EIS contained evidence that so war-
ranted. See also Sierra Club v. Mainella, 459 F. Supp. 2d 76,
105 (D.D.C. 2006) (“The holding in Public Citizen extends
only to those situations where an agency has ‘no ability’
because of lack of ‘statutory authority’ to address the impact.
[National Park Service], in contrast, is only constrained by its
own regulation from considering impacts on the Preserve
from adjacent surface activities.” (emphasis in original)).
Although NEPA does not demand substantive environmental
outcomes, Public Citizen, 541 U.S. at 756, NHTSA possesses
the power to act on whatever information might be contained
in an EIS. This court has recognized that “NEPA’s legislative
history reflects Congress’s concern that agencies might
attempt to avoid any compliance with NEPA by narrowly
construing other statutory directives to create a conflict with
NEPA. Section 102(2) of NEPA therefore requires govern-
ment agencies to comply ‘to the fullest extent possible.’ ”
Forelaws on Board v. Johnson, 743 F.2d 677, 683 (9th Cir.
1985); id. at 685 (holding that the Bonneville Power Adminis-
tration interpreted its statutory authority too narrowly and
“[g]iven BPA’s statutory duty both to conserve energy use
and to preserve fish and wildlife, and the multitude of alterna-
tive proposals suggested by government agencies and citizen
groups, the failure to prepare an EIS demonstrating that the
agency has considered all significant alternatives violates both
NEPA and the APA.” (citations omitted)).
Moreover, the CAFE standard will affect the level of the
nation’s greenhouse gas emissions and impact global warm-
ing. See Ctr. for Auto Safety, 793 F.2d at 1334-35 (“If setting
a higher standard cannot result in vehicles with increased fuel
efficiency, then the entire regulatory scheme is pointless.”);
NAS Report at 3 (“The CAFE program has clearly contrib-
uted to increased fuel economy of the nation’s light-duty
vehicle fleet during the past 22 years.”). NHTSA does not dis-
pute that light trucks account for a significant percentage of
the U.S. transportation sector, that the U.S. transportation sec-
14904 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
tor accounts for about six percent of the world’s greenhouse
gases, and that “fuel economy improvements could have a
significant impact on the rate of CO2 accumulation in the
atmosphere,” which would affect climate change. NAS
Report at 14; cf. Massachusetts, 127 S. Ct. at 1457 (“EPA
does not dispute the existence of a causal connection between
man-made greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. At
a minimum, therefore, EPA’s refusal to regulate such emis-
sions ‘contributes’ to Massachusetts’ injuries.”).68
[20] In sum, the EPCA does not limit NHTSA’s duty under
NEPA to assess the environmental impacts, including the
impact on climate change, of its rule. EPCA’s goal of energy
conservation and NEPA’s goals of “help[ing] public officials
make decisions that are based on understanding of environ-
68
The Supreme Court’s recent decision in National Association of Home
Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife, 127 S. Ct. 2518 (2007), is not relevant
for several reasons. First, NEPA analysis is entirely distinct from analysis
under the Endangered Species Act. See id. at 2535. Petitioners do not
interpret NEPA as “add[ing] another entirely separate prerequisite to th[e]
list,” id. at 2537, of statutory factors in 49 U.S.C. § 32902(f). NEPA
imposes the obligation on every agency to evaluate the environmental
impacts of its major actions so that there can be informed agency and pub-
lic decisionmaking. See 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1. Second, unlike the EPA,
NHTSA has not taken the position that its actions in setting CAFE stan-
dards involve no judgment or discretion. NHTSA asks this court to defer
to its discretionary choices (based on its expert judgment) on every issue
Petitioners raise under the EPCA. Third, there is no doubt that the fuel
economy standards set by NHTSA will have a direct effect on greenhouse
gas emissions from light trucks—and that NHTSA is thus a “legally rele-
vant cause.” See Massachusetts, 127 S. Ct. at 1457-58 (“[R]educing
domestic automobile emissions is hardly a tentative step. Even leaving
aside the other greenhouse gases, the United States transportation sector
emits an enormous quantity of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere . . .
more than 6% of worldwide carbon dioxide emissions. . . . To put this in
perspective: Considering just emissions from the transportation sector, . . .
the United States would still rank as the third-largest emitter of carbon
dioxide in the world . . . . Judged by any standard, U.S. motor-vehicle
emissions make a meaningful contribution to greenhouse gas concentra-
tions and hence, . . . to global warming.”).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14905
mental consequences, and take actions that protect, restore,
and enhance the environment,” 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(c), and
“insur[ing] that environmental information is available to
public officials and citizens before decisions are made and
before actions are taken,” id. § 1500.1(b), are complementary.
NEPA prohibits uninformed agency action. Robertson v.
Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S. 332, 351 (1989).
“The procedures included in § 102 of NEPA are not ends in
themselves. They are intended to be ‘action forcing.’ The
unequivocal intent of NEPA is to require agencies to consider
and give effect to the environmental goals set forth in the Act,
not just to file detailed impact studies which will fill govern-
mental archives.” Envtl. Def. Fund, Inc. v. Corps of Eng’rs of
the U.S. Army, 470 F.2d 289, 298 (8th Cir. 1972) (citation
omitted).
2. Sufficiency of the Environmental Assessment
We examine the EA with two purposes in mind: to deter-
mine whether it has adequately considered and elaborated the
possible consequences of the proposed agency action when
concluding that it will have no significant impact on the envi-
ronment, and whether its determination that no EIS is required
is a reasonable conclusion.
Even though an EA need not “conform to all the require-
ments of an EIS,” it must be “sufficient to establish the rea-
sonableness of th[e] decision” not to prepare an EIS. Found.
for N. Am. Wild Sheep, 681 F.2d at 1178 n.29 (1982);69 see
69
NHTSA’s reliance on Foundation for North American Wild Sheep is
misplaced because in that case—as here—the agency’s EA “failed to
address certain crucial factors, consideration of which was essential to a
truly informed decision whether or not to prepare an EIS.” 681 F.2d at
1178. The EA failed to consider crucial factors relating to the effect of
reconstruction and use of a road that passed directly through an area occu-
pied by Desert Bighorn Sheep, which are sensitive to encroachment on
their territory. The EA’s insufficiency forced the court to “speculate,”
14906 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
also 40 C.F.R. § 1508.9(a)(1). An EA “[s]hall include brief
discussions of the need for the proposal . . . [and] the environ-
mental impacts of the proposed action and alternatives.” 40
C.F.R. § 1508.9(b). An EA “must in some circumstances
include an analysis of the cumulative impacts of a project. . . .
An EA may be deficient if it fails to include a cumulative
impact analysis . . . .” Native Ecosystems Council v. Dombeck,
304 F.3d 886, 895 (9th Cir. 2002); see also Klamath-Siskiyou
Wildlands Ctr. v. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 387 F.3d 989, 993-
94 (9th Cir. 2004); Kern v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 284
F.3d 1062, 1076-78 (9th Cir. 2002).
a. Cumulative impacts of greenhouse gas emissions
on climate change and the environment
A cumulative impact is defined as “the impact on the envi-
ronment which results from the incremental impact of the
action when added to other past, present, and reasonably fore-
seeable future actions regardless of what agency . . . or person
undertakes such other actions. Cumulative impacts can result
from individually minor but collectively significant actions
taking place over a period of time.” 40 C.F.R. § 1508.7. In
Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, this court held that:
Cumulative impacts of multiple projects can be sig-
nificant in different ways. The most obvious way is
that the greater total magnitude of the environmental
effects . . . may demonstrate by itself that the envi-
ronmental impact will be significant. Sometimes the
total impact from a set of actions may be greater than
the sum of the parts.
even though “the very purpose of NEPA’s requirement that an EIS be pre-
pared for all actions that may significantly affect the environment is to
obviate the need for such speculation by insuring that available data is
gathered and analyzed prior to the implementation of the proposed
action.” Id. at 1179.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14907
387 F.3d at 994.
The EA catalogues the total tonnage of CO2 emissions for
light trucks for MYs 2005-2011. Final EA at 35-39. Table 4-
5 of the Final EA lists the amount of fuel consumption and
emissions of criteria pollutants and CO2 emissions. Id. at 35.
For example, it shows that under Unreformed CAFE, the life-
time CO2 emissions for light trucks MY 2005-2011 would be
4,979 million metric tons (mmt). Id. Under Reformed CAFE,
including MDPVs in MY 2011, CO2 emissions would be
4,966 million metric tons. Id. NHTSA estimated that:
together with the previous action raising MY 2005-
07 light truck CAFE standards, the various alterna-
tives for the current action will reduce lifetime car-
bon dioxide (CO2) emissions from MY 2005-11 light
trucks by 122 to 196 million metric tons, or by 2.4
to 3.8 percent from their level if neither action had
been taken. . . . MY 2008-11 light truck CAFE stan-
dards are projected to result in cumulative reductions
from the previous and current actions ranging from
0.2 to 0.3 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions
over the lifetimes of MY 2005-11 light trucks.
Id. at 36-37 (emphasis added).
[21] We conclude that the EA’s cumulative impacts analy-
sis is inadequate. While the EA quantifies the expected
amount of CO2 emitted from light trucks MYs 2005-2011, it
does not evaluate the “incremental impact” that these emis-
sions will have on climate change or on the environment more
generally in light of other past, present, and reasonably fore-
seeable actions such as other light truck and passenger auto-
mobile CAFE standards.70 The EA does not discuss the actual
70
There are also some inconsistencies. Petitioners point out, for exam-
ple, that the EA does not explain how the lifetime emissions of MY 2011
vehicles (697 mmt) could be less than MY 2010 (700 mmt) for the base-
line alternative, see Final EA at 29, given that fuel economy is held cons-
tant and vehicle miles traveled (VMT) are expected to increase each year,
id. at 8, 34.
14908 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
environmental effects resulting from those emissions or place
those emissions in context of other CAFE rulemakings. This
is a similar deficiency as that found in the Bureau of Land
Management’s EA in Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center,
where this court held that the BLM’s cumulative impacts
analysis was inadequate because “[a] calculation of the total
number of acres to be harvested in the watershed is a neces-
sary component of a cumulative effects analysis, but it is not
a sufficient description of the actual environmental effects
that can be expected from logging those acres” and “stating
the total miles of roads to be constructed is similar to merely
stating the sum of the acres to be harvested—it is not a
description of the actual environmental effects.” 387 F.3d at
995.
NHTSA does not dispute that the CAFE standard will have
an effect on global warming due to an increase in greenhouse
gas emissions. The new rule will not actually result in a
decrease in carbon emissions, but potentially only a decrease
in the rate of growth of carbon emissions. NHTSA concedes
that “the new CAFE standards will not entirely offset the pro-
jected effect of increases in the number of light trucks.”
NHTSA Br. at 92. However, NHTSA contends that Congress
is “the cause of that shortfall,” not the agency, since it “is
Congress’s decision in EPCA to require that CAFE standards
be technologically feasible and economically practicable.” Id.
NHTSA concludes from this that it has no obligation to assess
the cumulative impact of its rule on climate change.
This argument is without merit for the reasons already dis-
cussed. NHTSA has the power to change the CAFE standards
based on information contained in an EIS. We agree with
Petitioners that “[b]y allowing particular fuel economy levels,
which NHTSA argues translate directly into particular tailpipe
emissions, NHTSA’s regulations are the proximate cause of
those emissions just as EPA Clean Air Act rules permitting
particular smokestack emissions are the proximate cause of
those air pollutants and are unquestionably subject to NEPA’s
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14909
cumulative impacts requirements.” NEPA Gray Br. at 22; cf.
Massachusetts, 127 S. Ct. at 1455-58. Thus, the fact that “cli-
mate change is largely a global phenomenon that includes
actions that are outside of [the agency’s] control . . . does not
release the agency from the duty of assessing the effects of its
actions on global warming within the context of other actions
that also affect global warming.” States’ Gray Br. at 15
(emphasis added). The cumulative impacts regulation specifi-
cally provides that the agency must assess the “impact of the
action when added to other past, present, and reasonably fore-
seeable future actions regardless of what agency (Federal or
non-Federal) or person undertakes such other actions.” 40
C.F.R. § 1508.7; see also Res. Ltd., Inc. v. Robertson, 35 F.3d
1300, 1306 (9th Cir. 1994) (“The Forest Service says that
cumulative impacts from non-Federal actions need not be ana-
lyzed because the Federal government cannot control them.
That interpretation is inconsistent with 40 C.F.R. § 1508.7,
which specifically requires such analysis.”).
[22] The impact of greenhouse gas emissions on climate
change is precisely the kind of cumulative impacts analysis
that NEPA requires agencies to conduct. Any given rule set-
ting a CAFE standard might have an “individually minor”
effect on the environment, but these rules are “collectively
significant actions taking place over a period of time.” 40
C.F.R. § 1508.7; see also Native Ecosystems Council, 304
F.3d at 897 (holding that the Forest Service’s road density
standard amendments must be subject to cumulative impacts
analysis because otherwise, “the Forest Service will be free to
amend road density standards throughout the forest piece-
meal, without ever having to evaluate the amendments’ cumu-
lative environmental impacts.”); City of Los Angeles v.
NHTSA, 912 F.2d 478, 501 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (Wald, C.J., dis-
senting) (“[W]e cannot afford to ignore even modest contribu-
tions to global warming. If global warming is the result of the
cumulative contributions of myriad sources, any one modest
in itself, is there not a danger of losing the forest by closing
our eyes to the felling of the individual trees?”), overruled on
14910 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
other grounds by Fla. Audubon Soc. v. Bentsen, 94 F.3d 658
(D.C. Cir. 1996). Thus, NHTSA must provide the necessary
contextual information about the cumulative and incremental
environmental impacts of the Final Rule in light of other
CAFE rulemakings and other past, present, and reasonably
foreseeable future actions, regardless of what agency or per-
son undertakes such other actions.
b. Reasonable alternatives
[23] NHTSA must “[r]igorously explore and objectively
evaluate all reasonable alternatives.” 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14(a).
The alternatives section is the “heart” of an EIS. Id.
§ 1502.14; Ilio’ulaokalani Coalition v. Rumsfeld, 464 F.3d
1083, 1095 (9th Cir. 2006); NRDC v. U.S. Forest Serv., 421
F.3d 797, 813 (9th Cir. 2005). Although “an agency’s obliga-
tion to consider alternatives under an EA is a lesser one than
under an EIS,” Native Ecosystems Council v. U.S. Forest
Serv., 428 F.3d 1233, 1246, 1245 (9th Cir. 2005), “NEPA
requires that alternatives . . . be given full and meaningful
consideration,” whether the agency prepares an EA or an EIS,
id. at 1245 (alteration in original; internal quotation marks
omitted). The agency must “provide sufficient evidence and
analysis for determining whether to prepare an environmental
impact statement or a finding of no significant impact.” 40
C.F.R. § 1508.9.
In the EA, NHTSA considered a very narrow range of
alternatives. All the alternatives evaluated were derived from
NHTSA’s cost-benefit analysis. 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,672 n.265
(“The evaluated alternatives represent standards set under the
traditional Unreformed CAFE process and under the marginal
cost-benefit analysis previously described.”). The alternatives
presented in the EA are as follows:
• Alternative A (“Baseline”): MY 2007 standard of 22.2
mpg for MYs 2008-2011.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14911
• Alternative B: Unreformed CAFE for MYs 2008-201071
and Reformed CAFE for MY 2011 with fuel economy tar-
gets set using continuous function. MPDVs included in
MY 2011 only.
• Alternative C: Reformed CAFE for MYs 2008-2011 with
fuel economy targets set using continuous function.
Impacts are shown including MDPVs for MY 2011 only
and excluding MDPVs altogether.
• Alternative D: Reformed CAFE as described in NPRM,
with fuel economy targets set using step function (six foot-
print categories). Entirely excludes MDPVs.
• Alternative E: Reformed CAFE described in NPRM, with
revised fuel economy targets for each of its six footprint
categories. Impacts are shown including MDPVs for MY
2011 only and excluding MDPVs altogether.
Final EA at vii, 8-15. The alternative NHTSA ultimately
chose is a mix between Alternatives B and C: NHTSA
adopted Reformed CAFE beginning in MY 2011 and Unre-
formed CAFE for MYs 2008-2010, but it allowed a transition
period to Reformed CAFE in MY 2011, so manufacturers
may choose to continue to follow Unreformed CAFE in MYs
2008-2010. The adopted alternative includes MDPVs for MY
2011 only.
These alternatives are hardly different from the option that
NHTSA ultimately adopted. The EA states that “Alternatives
C and E are projected to result in the largest reductions in fuel
consumption, energy use, and environmental effects among
these alternatives,” id. at vii, but Alternative C is close to
what NHTSA adopted (the only difference being no transition
period), and Alternative E barely results in less CO2 emissions
71
22.5 mpg for MY 2008, 23.1 mpg for MY 2009, and 23.5 mpg for
MY 2010.
14912 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
than Alternative C. See id. at x (change from baseline for
Alternative C and Alternative E with MDPVs in MY 2011 are
the same (-73 mmt), and change in baseline without MDPVs
is -70 mmt for Alternative C and -71 mmt for Alternative E).
The entire range of alternatives considered in the EA ranged
from “22.2 to 22.7 mpg for MY 2008, 22.2 to 23.3 mpg for
MY 2009, and 22.2 to 23.6 mpg for MY 2010.” Id. at 16. The
estimated lifetime fuel and energy use by MY 2008-2011
light trucks under the alternatives ranged from a 1.8 to 2.6
percent decrease from “baseline,” id. at 27-28, and the esti-
mated lifetime emissions of CO2 ranged from 2,767 to 2,840
mmt, id. at 29, which is extremely small compared to the
overall volume of emissions.72
NHTSA acknowledged that “the range of impacts from the
considered alternatives is very narrow and minimal.” 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,672. However, the agency justified its choice of
range and refusal to consider other alternatives on the ground
that “standards more stringent than those represented by the
alternatives would not satisfy the statutory requirement to
establish standards . . . that are both technologically feasible
and economically practicable . . . . NEPA’s requirements must
be applied in light of the constraints placed on the agency by
EPCA.” Final EA at viii. Once again, NHTSA falls back on
its contention that it had no discretion to consider setting
higher CAFE standards. As before, we conclude that this
argument is flawed.
NHTSA also erroneously contends that Petitioners have not
identified any specific alternative the agency should have con-
sidered. To the contrary, Environmental Defense submitted a
detailed appendix to its comment titled, “Revised Benefit-
Cost Analysis for Calculating Optimal CAFE Targets.” See
72
See U.S. E.P.A., Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and
Sinks: 1990-2004, at 2-1 (Apr. 15, 2006) (stating that “[i]n 2004, total
U.S. greenhouse gas emissions were 7,074.4 tetragrams of carbon dioxide
equivalents (Tg CO2 Eq.).”).
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14913
Environmental Defense Cmt. App. A.73 In this document,
Environmental Defense performed a marginal cost-benefit
analysis, using a variety of different assumptions and inputs.
Table A-1 set forth 28 different possible CAFE standards for
MY 2011 (including NHTSA’s figure). On the basis of its cal-
culations, it recommended a final rule that would increase
CAFE standards at a rate of 4% per year and achieve a stan-
dard of 26 mpg by MY 2011. Environmental Defense Cmt.,
Letter from Kevin Mills, Director, Clean Car Program, Envi-
ronmental Defense, to Jacqueline Glassman, Acting Adminis-
trator, NHTSA (Nov. 22, 2005).
We also disagree with NHTSA that Petitioners’ suggested
alternatives would not be reasonably related to the project’s
purpose. The purpose of the Final Rule is to set CAFE stan-
dards for light trucks for MYs 2008-2011. 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,566. NHTSA itself describes the scope of the EA as “ana-
lyz[ing] the environmental impacts associated with various
alternatives to the existing CAFE program.” Final EA at 4.
Since EPCA’s overarching goal is energy conservation, con-
sideration of more stringent fuel economy standards that
would conserve more energy is clearly reasonably related to
the purpose of the CAFE standards. Energy conservation and
environmental protection are not coextensive, but they often
overlap. The Supreme Court has recently recognized as much.
See Massachusetts, 127 S. Ct. at 1462 (“[T]hat DOT sets
mileage standards in no way licenses EPA to shirk its envi-
ronmental responsibilities. EPA has been charged with pro-
tecting the public’s ‘health’ and ‘welfare,’ 42 U.S.C.
§ 7521(a)(1), a statutory obligation wholly independent of
DOT’s mandate to promote energy efficiency. The two obli-
gations may overlap, but there is no reason to think the two
agencies cannot both administer their obligations and yet
avoid inconsistency.” (citation omitted)).
73
This document is a revision of Environmental Defense’s June 2005
analysis of optimal light truck fuel economy improvement rates titled,
“Cost-Effective Targets for a 2008+ Light Truck CAFE Rule.” See Envi-
ronmental Defense Cmt. App. A at A-1.
14914 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
3. NHTSA must prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement
[24] An agency must prepare an EIS “if ‘substantial ques-
tions are raised as to whether a project . . . may cause signifi-
cant degradation of some human environmental factor.’ ”
Idaho Sporting Cong. v. Thomas, 137 F.3d 1146, 1149 (9th
Cir. 1998). Petitioners “need not show that significant effects
will in fact occur,” but only that there are “substantial ques-
tions whether a project may have a significant effect.” Id. at
1150 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Blue Moun-
tains Biodiversity Project v. Blackwood, 161 F.3d 1205, 1212
(9th Cir. 1998); Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n v. Babbit,
241 F.3d 722, 730 (9th Cir. 2001). “If an agency decides not
to prepare an EIS, it must supply a ‘convincing statement of
reasons’ to explain why a project’s impacts are insignificant.
‘The statement of reasons is crucial to determining whether
the agency took a ‘hard look’ at the potential environmental
impact of a project.’ ” Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project,
161 F.3d at 1212 (quoting Save the Yaak Comm. v. Block, 840
F.2d 714, 717 (9th Cir. 1988)); see also Nat’l Parks & Con-
servation Ass’n, 241 F.3d at 730.
“Whether there may be a significant effect on the environ-
ment requires consideration of two broad factors: ‘context and
intensity.’ ” Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n, 241 F.3d at
731 (quoting 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27). A number of factors
should be considered in evaluating intensity, including, “[t]he
degree to which the proposed action affects public health or
safety,” “[t]he degree to which the effects on the quality of the
human environment are likely to be highly controversial,”
“[t]he degree to which the possible effects on the human envi-
ronment are highly uncertain or involve unique or unknown
risks,” “[t]he degree to which the action may establish a pre-
cedent for future actions with significant effects or represents
a decision in principle about a future consideration,”
“[w]hether the action is related to other actions with individu-
ally insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts,” and
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14915
“[t]he degree to which the action may adversely affect an
endangered or threatened species or its habitat.” 40 C.F.R.
§ 1508.27(b)(2), (4), (5), (6), (7), (9). An action may be “sig-
nificant” if one of these factors is met. Ocean Advocates v.
U.S. Army Corps of Eng’rs, 361 F.3d 1108, 1125 (9th Cir.
2004); see also Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n, 241 F.3d
at 731 (either degree of uncertainty or controversy “may be
sufficient to require preparation of an EIS in appropriate cir-
cumstances.”).
[25] NHTSA’s finding of no significant impact (FONSI)
stated that the agency determined that its Final Rule “will not
have a significant effect on the human environment. This
finding of no significant impact is based on the attached Final
Environmental Assessment (EA). . . .” Finding of No Signifi-
cant Environmental Impact for Model Year 2008-2011 Light
Truck Fuel Economy Standards, NHTSA Docket No. 2006-
24309-3 (Mar. 28, 2006). In the Final EA, NHTSA explained
that compared to the “baseline” alternative of extending the
MY 2007 light truck CAFE standard through MYs 2008-
2011, its evaluated alternatives would have a minor beneficial
impact on various environmental resources. Final EA at 26-
33, 39-42. NHTSA concluded that “the final rule would pro-
duce, compared to U.S. emissions of CO2, a small decrease in
emissions of CO2, the primary component of greenhouse gas
emissions, under the selected alternative. Accordingly, the
agency determined that the action we are adopting today will
not have a significant impact on the environment.” 71 Fed.
Reg. at 17,673 (citing Final EA at 32).
Petitioners argue that the evidence raises a substantial ques-
tion as to whether the Final Rule may have a significant
impact on the environment and that NHTSA failed to provide
a convincing statement of reasons for why a small decrease
(rather than a larger decrease) in the growth of CO2 emissions
would not have a significant impact on the environment. Peti-
tioners note that NHTSA has never evaluated the impacts of
carbon emissions from light trucks or other vehicles, much
14916 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
less the effect of any reduction or increase in those emissions
on climate change. Petitioners presented evidence that contin-
ued increase in greenhouse gas emissions may change the cli-
mate in a sudden and non-linear way. Without some analysis,
it would be “impossible for NHTSA to know . . . whether a
change in GHG emissions of 0.2% or 1% or 5% or 10% . . .
will be a significant step toward averting the ‘tipping point’ ”
and irreversible adverse climate change. States’ Gray Br. at 6.
NHTSA argues that its “conclusion that a 0.2 percent
decrease in carbon dioxide emissions will not have a signifi-
cant impact upon the environment is self-evidently reasonable
and consistent” with City of Los Angeles v. NHTSA, 912 F.2d
478 (D.C. Cir. 1990), and Public Citizen v. NHTSA, 848 F.2d
256 (D.C. Cir. 1988). NHTSA Br. at 111. NHTSA also argues
that the impact of the rule on global warming is too specula-
tive to warrant NEPA analysis.
We conclude that NHTSA’s FONSI is arbitrary and capri-
cious and the agency must prepare an EIS because the evi-
dence raises a substantial question as to whether the Final
Rule may have a significant impact on the environment. See
Idaho Sporting Congress, 137 F.3d at 1149 (holding that an
EIS must be prepared “if substantial questions are raised as to
whether a project . . . may cause significant degradation of
some human environmental factor” (alteration in original;
internal quotation marks omitted)). Moreover, NHTSA has
failed to provide a convincing statement of reasons for its
finding of insignificance. See, e.g., Blue Mountains Biodiver-
sity Project, 161 F.3d at 1212; Nat’l Parks & Conservation
Ass’n, 241 F.3d at 730.
Petitioners have raised a “substantial question” as to
whether the CAFE standards for light trucks MYs 2008-2011
“may cause significant degradation of some human environ-
mental factor,” particularly in light of the compelling scien-
tific evidence concerning “positive feedback mechanisms” in
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14917
the atmosphere.74 Among the evidence Petitioners presented
to the agency was the following:
• The IPCC Third Assessment Report, which dis-
cusses the history of anthropogenic interference
with the climate system, the projected increase in
climate variability and extreme weather events,
and the projected effects on various ecological
systems. See IPCC Third Assessment Report at
2-33. The IPCC found:
Changes in climate could increase the risk of
abrupt and non-linear changes in many eco-
systems, which would affect their function, bio-
diversity, and productivity. The greater the
magnitude and rate of the change, the greater the
risk of adverse impacts. For example:
Changes in disturbance regimes and shifts in
the location of suitable climatically defined habi-
tats may lead to abrupt breakdown of terrestrial
and marine ecosystems with significant changes
in composition and function and increased risk of
extinctions.
Sustained increases in water temperatures of as
little as 1°C, alone or in combination with any of
several stresses . . . can lead to corals ejecting
their algae (coral bleaching) and the eventual
death of some corals. . . .
Inertia is a widespread inherent characteristic of
the interacting climate, ecological, and socio-
economic systems. Thus some impacts of anthro-
74
Petitioners did not waive this “tipping” argument, as NHTSA argues.
Evidence concerning “tipping” was presented to the agency during the
comment period and is in the administrative record.
14918 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
pogenic climate change may be slow to become
apparent, and some could be irreversible if cli-
mate change is not limited in both rate and mag-
nitude before associated thresholds, whose
positions may be poorly known, are crossed.
IPCC Third Assessment Report at 16 (emphasis
added); see also id. at 15 (Table SPM-2 shows
“[e]xamples of climate variability and extreme
climate events and examples of their impacts.”).
• The IPCC Working Group I Technical Summary
provided: “The possibility for rapid and irrevers-
ible changes in the climate system exists, but
there is a large degree of uncertainty about the
mechanisms involved and hence also about the
likelihood or time-scales of such transitions. The
climate system involves many processes and
feedbacks that interact in complex non-linear
ways. This interaction can give rise to thresholds
in the climate system that can be crossed if the
system is perturbed sufficiently.” Technical Sum-
mary of IPCC Working Group I Report at 53
(emphasis added); see also id. at 46-53 (discus-
sion of positive feedback mechanism).
• “The American Meterological Society, the Amer-
ican Geophysical Union, and the American Asso-
ciation for Advancement of Science, among
many, many other scientific organizations have
all concluded that the evidence of human induced
warming is compelling. . . . In an April 2004 arti-
cle, leading NASA and Department of Energy
scientists stated that emissions of carbon dioxide
and other heat-trapping gases have warmed the
oceans and led to an energy imbalance that is
causing and will continue to cause, significant
warming, increasing the urgency of reducing CO2
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14919
emissions.” States’ Cmt. at 9 (citing essay that
reviewed 928 peer-reviewed scientific papers).
• The Climate Change Futures Report published by
the Center for Health and the Global Environ-
ment at Harvard Medical School, which analyzed
in detail climate change scenarios that “will
affect the health of humans as well as the eco-
systems and species on which we depend.” Cli-
mate Change Futures Report at 5; see generally
id. at 32-90 (case studies involving infectious and
respiratory diseases, extreme weather events, and
natural and managed systems).
Finally, Petitioners have satisfied several of the “intensity”
factors listed in 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27(b) for determining “sig-
nificant effect.” For example, the Final Rule clearly may have
an “individually insignificant but cumulatively significant”
impact with respect to global warming. Evidence that Peti-
tioners submitted in the record also shows that global warm-
ing will have an effect on public health and safety. Climate
Change Futures Report at 6-90. Petitioners do not claim (nor
do they have to show) that NHTSA’s Final Rule would be the
sole cause of global warming, and that is NHTSA’s only
response on this point.
Petitioners have also satisfied the “controversy” factor. See
40 C.F.R. § 1508.27(b)(4); see Blue Mountains Biodiversity
Project, 161 F.3d at 1212 (“ ‘controversial’ is ‘a substantial
dispute [about] the size, nature, or effect of the major Federal
action rather than the existence of opposition to a use.’ ”
(alteration in original)). NHTSA received over 45,000 indi-
vidual submissions on its proposal. See 71 Fed. Reg. at
17,577; see also Nat’l Parks & Conservation Ass’n, 241 F.3d
at 736 (four-hundred and fifty comments, 85% of which
opposed the agency’s preferred alternative was “more than
sufficient to meet the ‘outpouring of public protest’ discussed
in [prior case law]. More important, to the extent the com-
14920 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
ments urged that the EA’s analysis was incomplete, . . . they
cast substantial doubt on the adequacy of the Parks Service’s
methodology and data.” (footnote and citation omitted)). We
reject NHTSA’s argument that “petitioners’ controversy does
not concern the ‘size, nature, or effect’ of the new CAFE stan-
dards, but rather the desire of some commenters for different
regulations that they have not described in any detail.”
NHTSA Br. at 117. The entire dispute between Petitioners
and NHTSA centers on the stringency of the MY 2008-2011
light truck CAFE standards—their “size” or “effect.”75
In light of the evidence in the record, it is hardly “self-
evident” that a 0.2 percent decrease in carbon emissions (as
opposed to a greater decrease) is not significant. NHTSA’s
conclusion that a small reduction (0.2% compared to baseline)
in the growth of carbon emissions would not have a signifi-
cant impact on the environment was unaccompanied by any
analysis or supporting data, either in the Final Rule or the EA.
See, e.g., 71 Fed. Reg. at 17,673; Final EA at 32.
[26] Nowhere does the EA provide a “statement of rea-
sons” for a finding of no significant impact, much less a “con-
vincing statement of reasons.” For example, the EA discusses
the amount of CO2 emissions expected from the Rule, but
does not discuss the potential impact of such emissions on cli-
mate change. In the “Affected Environment” section of the
EA, NHTSA states that “[i]ncreasing concentrations of green-
house gases are likely to accelerate the rate of climate
change.” Final EA at 22. The agency notes that “[t]he trans-
portation sector is a significant source of greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions, accounting for approximately 28 percent of
all greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.” Id. From
this, NHTSA jumps to the conclusion that “[c]oupled with the
75
Wetlands Action Network v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 222 F.3d
1105, 1122 (9th Cir. 2000), cited by NHTSA, is not on point, because peti-
tioners there wanted the Corps to build a saltwater marsh instead of a
freshwater marsh.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14921
effects resulting from the 2003 light truck rule, the effects
resulting from the agency’s current action are expected to
lessen the GHG impacts discussed above.” Id.
Table 3-2 of the EA, which shows the potential health
effects of criteria air pollutants, is similarly devoid of mean-
ingful analysis or a statement of reasons why the effects
would be insignificant. The potential health effect for CO2 is
described: “Increase in greenhouse gases can lead to climate
change. Hot temperatures can lead to cardiovascular prob-
lems, heat exhaustion, and some respiratory problems. There
may be an increased risk of infectious diseases due to
increased temperatures. Heat can also increase the concentra-
tion of ground-level ozone.” Id. at 20.
[27] Nor is there any analysis or statement of reasons in the
section of the EA that discusses environmental impacts. The
EA states that reduction in fuel production and consumption
would reduce “contamination of water resources,” acid rain,
risk of oil spills and contamination, and “lead to minor reduc-
tions in impacts to biological resources . . . includ[ing] habitat
encroachment and destruction, air and water pollution, green-
house gases, and oil contamination from petroleum refining
and distribution.” Id. at 32-33; see also id. at 39 (Table 4-7
compares the impacts under the baseline CAFE standard of
22.2 mpg and the analyzed alternatives. It cursorily summa-
rizes the impacts as “slower rate of growth in fuel consump-
tion for light trucks,” “reduction of GHG emissions,” and
“minor benefit [to water and biological resources] from reduc-
tions in energy consumption, GHG emissions and extremely
small changes in criteria pollutant emissions.”); id. at 32-33
(citing no supporting data for its conclusions regarding
impacts on water and biological resources).
[28] NHTSA’s EA “shunted aside [significant questions]
with merely conclusory statements,” failed to “directly
address[ ]” “substantial questions,” and most importantly,
“provide[d] no foundation” for the important inference
14922 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
NHTSA draws between a decrease in the rate of carbon emis-
sions growth and its finding of no significant impact. Found.
for N. Am. Wild Sheep, 681 F.2d at 1179. NHTSA makes
“vague and conclusory statements” unaccompanied by “sup-
porting data,” and the EA “do[es] not constitute a ‘hard look’
at the environmental consequences of the action as required
by NEPA.” Great Basin Mine Watch v. Hankins, 456 F.3d
955, 973 (9th Cir. 2006). Thus, the FONSI is arbitrary and
capricious. See Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, 387 F.3d
at 994 (“[T]he problem with the entire table is that it does not
provide any objective quantification of the impacts. Instead,
the reader is informed only that a particular environmental
factor will be ‘unchanged,’ ‘improved,’ or ‘degraded’ and
whether that change will be ‘minor’ or ‘major.’ The reader is
not told what data the conclusion was based on, or why objec-
tive data cannot be provided.”).
The only reason NHTSA provided for why the environ-
mental impact of the Final Rule would be insignificant is that
it results in a decreased rate of growth of GHG emissions
compared to the light truck CAFE standard for MY 2007. But
simply because the Final Rule may be an improvement over
the MY 2007 CAFE standard does not necessarily mean that
it will not have a “significant effect” on the environment.
NHTSA has not explained why its rule will not have a signifi-
cant effect.76
76
We are not persuaded by NHTSA’s argument that City of Los Angeles
v. NHTSA supports its position. In that case, state and local governmental
entities and environmental groups brought separate challenges to
NHTSA’s decision not to prepare an EIS covering its CAFE standards for
MYs 1987-1988 and 1989. 912 F.2d at 482. Pursuant to 15 U.S.C.
§ 2002(a)(1), (4), NHTSA lowered the passenger car standard from the
statutory 27.5 mpg to 26.0 mpg for MYs 1987-88 and 26.5 mpg for MY
1989. Id. With respect to MYs 1987-88, the court held that city and state
petitioners had standing to sue under NEPA on air pollution grounds, but
it rejected their challenge on the merits. The court held that NRDC had
standing to challenge the MY 1989 on global warming grounds, but it did
not disturb NHTSA’s conclusion that an EIS was not required. Chief
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14923
In light of the emergent consensus on global warming,
Chief Judge Wald’s reasoning in her dissent in City of Los
Angeles is not only prescient but persuasive:
While NHTSA did the calculations necessary to
determine how much extra carbon dioxide would be
emitted, it failed completely to discuss in any detail
the global warming phenomenon itself, or to explain
the benchmark for its determination of insignificance
in relation to that environmental danger. Had the
emissions been slightly over one percent, would that
have been significant? Without some articulated
criteria for significance in terms of contribution to
global warming that is grounded in the record and
available scientific evidence, NHTSA’s bald conclu-
sion that the mere magnitude of the percentage
increase is enough to alleviate its burden of conduct-
ing a more thorough investigation cannot carry the
day.
Judge Wald dissented on the court’s merits ruling and would have held
that NHTSA acted arbitrarily in concluding that the 1989 CAFE standard
would not have a significant impact on global warming and would have
remanded to NHTSA. Id.
Then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined in Judge D. Ginsburg’s opin-
ion on NRDC’s NEPA challenge, and she provided two reasons for her
concurrence: “(1) NRDC’s apparent acceptance of NHTSA’s finding that
the 1.0 mpg CAFE rollback at issue would yield a ‘maximum theoretical
increase of less than one percent in greenhouse gases,’ . . . and (2)
NRDC’s failure even to allege that such an increase ‘would produce any
marginal effect on the probability, the severity, or the imminence’ of the
global warming disaster petitioners project.” Id. at 504 (citation omitted).
These reasons do not apply here. Petitioners have provided substantial evi-
dence that even a small increase in greenhouse gases could cause abrupt
and severe climate changes. Cf. Massachusetts, 127 S. Ct. at 1458 (“[T]he
rise in sea levels associated with global warming has already harmed and
will continue to harm Massachusetts. The risk of catastrophic harm,
though remote, is nevertheless real. That risk would be reduced to some
extent if petitioners received the relief they seek.”).
14924 CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA
912 F.2d at 500.
[29] Petitioners have raised a substantial question of
whether the Final Rule may significantly affect the environ-
ment. NHTSA acknowledges that carbon emissions contribute
to global warming, and it does not dispute the scientific evi-
dence that Petitioners presented concerning the significant
effect of incremental increases in greenhouses gases. NHTSA
has not provided a “statement of reasons why potential effects
are insignificant,” much less a “convincing statement of rea-
sons.” See Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project, 161 F.3d at
1211 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted). It
asserts simply that the insignificance of the effects is “self-
evident[ ].” In order that the public and the agency be fully
advised, we remand and order the agency to prepare a full
EIS.
IV. CONCLUSION
NHTSA’s failure to monetize the value of carbon emissions
in its determination of the MY 2008-2011 light truck CAFE
standards, failure to set a backstop, failure to revise the pas-
senger automobile/light truck classifications, and failure to set
fuel economy standards for all vehicles in the 8,500 to 10,000
lb. GVWR class, was arbitrary and capricious and contrary to
the EPCA. We therefore remand to NHTSA to promulgate
new standards consistent with this opinion as expeditiously as
possible and for the earliest model year practicable.
We also hold that the EA was inadequate and Petitioners
have raised a substantial question as to whether the Final
Action may have a significant impact on the environment.
Thus, we remand to NHTSA for the preparation of a full EIS.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY v. NHTSA 14925
SILER, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in
part:
I concur in the conclusions by the majority on all points,
with the exception of its conclusion in Section III.A.4. I
would not find that the NHTSA acted arbitrarily or capri-
ciously in failing to adopt a backstop for a minimum level of
average fuel economy. The majority admits that the EPCA
does not require NHTSA to adopt a backstop. We must real-
ize that the arbitrary or capricious standard is one that grants
an agency a significant amount of deference. Its failure to
adopt this backstop was not an act which ignored factors that
Congress required to be taken into account. Under those cir-
cumstances, when the EPCA did not require the adoption of
a backstop, I would not find that NHTSA acted arbitrarily or
capriciously by failing to do so.