Maui County operates the Lahaina Wastewater Reclamation Facility on the island of Maui. For decades, the facility treated municipal sewage and disposed of millions of gallons of treated effluent each day by injecting it into four underground wells. Scientific studies, including an Environmental Protection Agency tracer dye study, demonstrated that a substantial portion of the injected effluent traveled through groundwater and emerged in the Pacific Ocean near Kahekili Beach, contributing to algal growth and adverse impacts on a nearshore coral reef ecosystem. Environmental organizations, including Hawaii Wildlife Fund, filed a citizen suit under the Clean Water Act (CWA), alleging that the County added pollutants to navigable waters from a point source without an NPDES permit. The district court granted summary judgment to the plaintiffs, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed, holding that the CWA applied because the pollutants were "fairly traceable" from the facility's injection wells to the ocean. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide whether the CWA requires a permit when pollutants originate from a point source but reach navigable waters via groundwater.
Does the Clean Water Act require an NPDES permit when pollutants originate from a point source but are conveyed to navigable waters by groundwater or another nonpoint pathway, rather than by a direct discharge?
Under the Clean Water Act, an NPDES permit is required for the addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point source. This requirement applies not only to discharges that directly enter navigable waters from a point source, but also when the discharge is the functional equivalent of a direct discharge. Relevant, nonexclusive factors in determining functional equivalence include: (1) transit time; (2) distance traveled; (3) the nature of the material through which the pollutant travels; (4) the extent to which the pollutant is diluted or chemically changed as it travels; (5) the amount of the pollutant entering the navigable waters relative to the amount that leaves the point source; (6) the manner by or area in which the pollutant enters the navigable waters; and (7) the degree to which the pollutant maintains its specific identity. In most cases, time and distance will be the most important factors.
Yes. The Clean Water Act requires a permit when there is the functional equivalent of a direct discharge from a point source into navigable waters. The Court vacated the Ninth Circuit's judgment and remanded for application of the functional-equivalence standard.
Textually, the Court focused on the statutory phrase "any addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point source," reasoning that "from" establishes a causal connection between a point source and the addition to navigable waters. Reading the statute to cover only discharges that are literally direct would create a loophole: a discharger could simply end a pipe a few feet short of navigable waters, allowing pollutants to reach the same waters via groundwater or another conduit. Such an interpretation would undermine the Act's structure and purpose to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters." At the same time, the Court rejected the Ninth Circuit's "fairly traceable" test as overly broad. That standard could sweep in remote and attenuated releases where pollutants travel long distances or over long periods through complex subsurface processes, effectively transforming the CWA into a general regulation of groundwater—a domain Congress left primarily to the States. To balance these concerns, the Court adopted a functional-equivalence test, accompanied by a nonexclusive list of factors that emphasize practical causation, with transit time and distance typically being paramount. This standard captures discharges that are, in substance, the same as direct discharges while excluding remote, transformed, or de minimis connections. The Court also declined to adopt the Environmental Protection Agency's 2019 interpretive statement categorically excluding all releases to groundwater from NPDES coverage, concluding that the agency's view was not controlling and did not comport with the statute's text and purposes. The majority opinion, authored by Justice Breyer and joined by the Chief Justice and Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Kagan, and Kavanaugh, emphasized administrability, inviting agencies and lower courts to apply the listed factors and develop guidance through case-by-case adjudication. Separate dissents would have adopted narrower readings based on stricter textual limits or federalism concerns.
Maui is a cornerstone Clean Water Act case that clarifies the boundary between point-source regulation under the federal NPDES program and state-regulated nonpoint sources such as groundwater. It provides a workable, fact-intensive framework for courts, agencies, and regulated entities to evaluate indirect discharges without expanding the Act to all groundwater or narrowing it to only literal, immediate outfalls. For law students, the case exemplifies modern statutory interpretation—blending textual analysis with purpose and consequences—while also illustrating the limits of administrative deference and the Court's role in crafting administrable legal standards in complex regulatory regimes.
County of Maui v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund provides a durable, middle-ground standard for determining when the Clean Water Act's NPDES program captures indirect discharges from point sources. By focusing on functional equivalence and offering a set of practical factors, the Court closed an obvious evasion while preserving state primacy over generalized groundwater regulation.