An appeals court ruled that California does have the legal authority to enact more stringent emissions regulations than the federal government — but it’s just one of several cases challenging the state’s Advanced Clean Fleets and Advanced Clean Trucks rules.
On April 9, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit rejected challenges to California’s authority under the Clean Air Act to set its own pollution standards for new cars and trucks.
The lawsuit, Ohio v. EPA, came from the attorneys general of Ohio and other states, and from oil, gas, and ethanol interests.
The unanimous decision by a three-judge panel found that both state petitioners and fuel petitioners lacked standing to raise some of their claims because they had not demonstrated how a favorable decision by the court would remedy their alleged injuries.
The petitioners claimed that the EPA was not authorized to grant California the waiver under the Clean Air Act. The fuel petitioners argue that the EPA exceeded its statutory authority under the Clean Air Act. State Petitioners contended that the EPA’s waiver reinstatement decision was contrary to law because the relevant California regulations are preempted by a separate federal statute, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975.
“Both groups of petitioners fall far short of meeting their burden of demonstrating a ‘substantial probability that their alleged injuries would be redressed by a favorable decision by this court,” the judges said in their decision.
While 17 states were involved in challenging the California regulations, 23 states and cities argued the other side, as did did environmental and health groups and a coalition of automakers and energy companies.
Ohio v. EPA is one of three cases about clean transportation that were argued before the D.C. Circuit court in two days last September. Two other cases – Texas v. EPA and NRDC v. NHTSA – were argued before a different three-judge panel, and those cases are still pending.
New Challenge to Advanced Clean Fleets Rule from New Competitor to U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Meanwhile, a new lawsuit was filed April 1 in the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of California by the American Free Enterprise Chamber of Commerce and the Associated Equipment Distributors, challenging California’s Advanced Clean Fleets rules. The lawsuit seeks declaratory and injunctive relief.
Formed in 2022, the American Free Enterprise Chamber of Commerce (AmFree) is a 501(c)(6) membership organization that represents entrepreneurs and businesses.
Associated Equipment Distributors (AED) is an international trade association representing companies that sell, rent, service, and manufacture equipment used in construction, agriculture, mining, forestry, power generation, and industrial applications.
Citing the “profound socioeconomic consequences” trucks have for the country, the suit says, “to gin up demand for electric trucks, CARB will simply eliminate choice for disfavored fleets: buy electric, or else.”
“California’s plan to destroy choice will ripple across the U.S. economy and wreak havoc on interstate commerce, all without Congress ever lifting a finger and, indeed, in defiance of federal law,” they claim.
The suit contends that the California Air Resource’s Boards action fall outside of the EPA’s narrow exception in the Clean Air Act allowing California to receive a waiver of EPA’s federal pre-emption of emissions standards. According to the Clean Air Act, the filing says “no such waiver shall be granted” if EPA finds that:
- California’s rules are “arbitrary and capricious:”
- The state doesn’t need the standards “to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions;” or
- California’s standards and enforcement procedures are not consistent with a part of the Clean Air Act that requires enough lead time “to permit the development and application of the requisite technology, giving appropriate consideration to the cost of compliance within such period.”
The suit contends that the terrible air pollution and smog problems California faced when the Clean Air Act was written, resulting in the exemption for the state to set its own emissions rules, are no longer the problem, and that the switch to focusing on climate change is not what the Clean Air Act authors had in mind.
“Trucks are now so clean that, according to CARB, 260 trucks are cleaner than a single train carrying the same cargo,” the suit notes.
AmFree is an organization that aims to be an alternative to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Bill Barr, who was attorney general in President Donald Trump’s administration, is the chairman of an advisory board for an AmFree project called the Center for Legal Action.
The Center for Legal Action is “dedicated to checking the insatiable expansion of the administrative state and returning power to the people and their elected representatives,” according to a news release announcing its formation.
The Advanced Clean Fleets rule is also under fire from the California Trucking Association, which filed suit in October, and the Western States Trucking Association’s two suits against the ACF and CARB’s Advanced Clean Trucks rule as well.