Teck Cominco Alaska, Inc., operator of the Red Dog Mine in a remote area of northwest Alaska, sought a PSD permit from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC) to install additional diesel-fired electric generators to support expanded operations. The project triggered the Clean Air Act's PSD program for attainment areas, requiring a permit that incorporates Best Available Control Technology (BACT) limits for nitrogen oxides (NOx), among other pollutants. ADEC conducted a BACT analysis—using, in substance, the widely used "top-down" approach—identifying selective catalytic reduction (SCR) as a highly effective NOx control option, and also considering less effective combustion-based controls such as low-NOx tuning and water/fuel injection. Following industry submissions and internal back-and-forth, ADEC ultimately issued a PSD permit selecting less stringent, combustion-based controls (low-NOx measures and water injection) as BACT for the new diesel units and rejected SCR. ADEC's reasons for rejecting SCR varied over time and included concerns about cost-effectiveness, technological feasibility in harsh climatic conditions, operational reliability, potential environmental side effects (e.g., ammonia slip), and the mine operator's preferences. The EPA, reviewing the state's permit, concluded that ADEC's rejection of SCR lacked an adequate, consistent, and record-supported rationale, and that the State had not demonstrated that its chosen controls represented the maximum degree of reduction achievable as required by the Act's BACT definition. Acting under Clean Air Act §§ 113(a)(5) and 167, EPA issued orders preventing construction. Alaska and Teck Cominco sought judicial review. The Ninth Circuit upheld EPA's authority and action, and the Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does the Clean Air Act authorize the EPA to block construction authorized by a state-issued PSD permit by second-guessing the state's BACT determination when the agency finds that the determination is not supported by a reasoned analysis consistent with the Act?
Under the Clean Air Act's PSD program, a state permitting authority must determine and impose BACT—"an emission limitation based on the maximum degree of reduction" achievable on a case-by-case basis, taking into account energy, environmental, and economic impacts and other costs. 42 U.S.C. § 7479(3). Although states have primary responsibility to make BACT determinations, EPA retains oversight and enforcement authority, including the power under 42 U.S.C. §§ 113(a)(5) and 167 to prevent construction of a major emitting facility that does not conform to PSD requirements. EPA may intervene when a state's BACT determination is not in accordance with the Act—i.e., when it is inadequately reasoned, insufficiently supported by the record, or otherwise unreasonable—subject to arbitrary-and-capricious review under the APA. EPA is not authorized to substitute its policy preferences for a state's reasoned choice among adequately supported BACT options, but it may disapprove a state's BACT determination that fails to reflect the statute's requirement of the maximum achievable reduction consistent with the specified factors.
Yes. The Clean Air Act authorizes EPA to prevent construction authorized by a state PSD permit where the state's BACT determination is not in accordance with the Act. EPA permissibly concluded that ADEC's rejection of SCR and selection of less effective controls as BACT was inadequately reasoned and unsupported by the record, and EPA's orders were not arbitrary or capricious. The judgment upholding EPA's action was affirmed.
Statutory structure and cooperative federalism. The Court emphasized that the PSD program blends state implementation with federal oversight. While states make case-specific BACT determinations, EPA must ensure compliance with statutory requirements. Sections 113(a)(5) and 167 authorize EPA to act when a state is "not acting in compliance" with requirements relating to the construction of new or modified sources and to take measures "necessary to prevent" construction that does not conform to PSD requirements. Reading those provisions to reach only total state failure to require BACT would render the federal backstop largely toothless. Instead, they allow intervention when a state's BACT determination is not made in accordance with the statutory definition and criteria. Chevron deference. The Clean Air Act does not expressly specify the precise scope of EPA's supervisory authority over state BACT determinations. Finding ambiguity, the Court deferred under Chevron to EPA's reasonable interpretation that §§ 113(a)(5) and 167 permit the Agency to ensure that state BACT determinations are substantively compliant with the statute, not merely procedurally adequate. This interpretation fits the Act's design to prevent backsliding in clean air regions and to ensure "the maximum degree of reduction" achievable consistent with enumerated factors. Application to the record. Turning to EPA's orders under APA review, the Court held EPA's determination was not arbitrary or capricious. ADEC variously justified rejecting SCR with shifting rationales—cost, feasibility in cold conditions, operational reliability, and environmental side effects—but the record did not demonstrate that SCR was technically infeasible for the proposed diesel units, that its costs outweighed its substantial emission reductions under an accepted cost-effectiveness framework, or that collateral impacts rendered it unreasonable. The Agency could reasonably find the State's analysis not "reasoned" in the sense required by the BACT definition and guidance, particularly given evidence of SCR's widespread application on comparable sources and ADEC's own recognition of SCR's superior control efficiency. Limits preserved. The Court underscored that EPA may not dictate a particular technology where a state provides a reasoned, record-supported basis for a different choice that still qualifies as BACT under the statute. But where, as here, the State's determination effectively diluted BACT without adequate support, EPA could lawfully invoke its stop-construction authority. Concerns about federalism did not alter the statutory command; the Clean Air Act contemplates federal oversight as a necessary check within cooperative federalism.
The decision clarifies the balance between state discretion and federal oversight in the PSD program. For students, it is a prime example of Chevron deference applied to EPA's interpretation of its supervisory powers, the use of arbitrary-and-capricious review to assess agency action, and the operation of cooperative federalism in environmental law. Substantively, it heightens the rigor expected of state BACT analyses: states must build a coherent, evidence-based record showing why their chosen control represents the maximum achievable reduction considering statutory factors. The case also signals that EPA's backstop authority extends beyond policing total failures—it can correct unreasonable or inadequately supported BACT determinations.
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation v. EPA delineates the boundary between state discretion and federal oversight in the Clean Air Act's PSD program. By recognizing EPA's authority to halt construction when a state's BACT determination lacks a reasoned, record-based foundation, the Court ensured that the statutory mandate—"maximum degree of reduction" achievable considering specified factors—has real force in practice.