The Clean Air Act (CAA) requires EPA to set National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for criteria pollutants and assigns primary responsibility to the states to implement those standards through State Implementation Plans (SIPs). A core element, the Good Neighbor Provision, mandates that SIPs contain sufficient measures to prohibit in-state emissions that "contribute significantly" to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of NAAQS in other states. After the D.C. Circuit in North Carolina v. EPA (2008) remanded an earlier interstate program (the Clean Air Interstate Rule, CAIR), EPA promulgated the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) in 2011 to address interstate transport of SO2 and NOx that create fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and ozone problems in downwind states. Using a two-step framework, EPA (1) identified upwind states that contributed at or above a screening threshold to downwind nonattainment or maintenance receptors, and (2) quantified each state's "significant contribution" based on cost-effective reductions, assigning state emission budgets and implementing a power-sector cap-and-trade program through FIPs where SIPs were missing or inadequate. A coalition of states and industry petitioners challenged CSAPR in the D.C. Circuit, which vacated the rule, holding that EPA must apportion emission reductions strictly by each state's proportional contribution and give states a first opportunity—after EPA quantifies obligations—to implement those reductions in SIPs. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
1) Does the Clean Air Act's Good Neighbor Provision permit EPA to allocate upwind states' emission reduction obligations based on cost-effectiveness rather than strictly proportional contributions to downwind nonattainment or maintenance problems? 2) Did EPA act lawfully in issuing FIPs after finding that state SIPs failed to satisfy Good Neighbor obligations without first quantifying each state's specific reduction requirement and affording states a further opportunity to submit revised SIPs?
Under the Clean Air Act, each state's SIP must include adequate provisions prohibiting emissions that significantly contribute to nonattainment or interfere with maintenance of NAAQS in any other state (42 U.S.C. § 7410(a)(2)(D)(i)(I)). States must submit SIPs within three years of a new or revised NAAQS (42 U.S.C. § 7410(a)(1)); if a state fails to submit a compliant SIP or EPA disapproves it, EPA must promulgate a Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) (42 U.S.C. § 7410(c)(1)). Applying Chevron deference (Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC, 467 U.S. 837 (1984)), where statutory text is ambiguous and the agency's interpretation is reasonable, the agency's construction controls. The terms "contribute significantly" and "interfere with maintenance" are ambiguous enough to permit EPA to fashion a workable, cost-sensitive allocation method so long as it does not require over-control (i.e., reductions beyond what is necessary to remedy downwind problems).
The Supreme Court reversed the D.C. Circuit and upheld CSAPR. It held that the Good Neighbor Provision does not require strictly proportional, source-apportionment-based allocations and that EPA's cost-effective, region-wide approach is a permissible construction under Chevron. The Court also held that the CAA does not require EPA to quantify state obligations before states submit SIPs; EPA was authorized to issue FIPs after determining that states had failed to submit adequate SIPs by the statutory deadline.
The Court, in an opinion by Justice Ginsburg, first determined that the Good Neighbor Provision's command to prevent emissions that "contribute significantly" to downwind nonattainment or interfere with maintenance is ambiguous as to how to allocate responsibility among multiple upwind states. Given this ambiguity and the technical complexity of interstate transport, the Court applied Chevron and found EPA's cost-effectiveness approach reasonable. A purely proportional attribution model is neither mandated by the text nor practically well-suited to the multi-causal, interactive nature of interstate pollution, where many upwind states contribute to downwind exceedances and where cost-effective controls vary. EPA's method minimized total costs needed to achieve downwind attainment while preventing any single state from being saddled with disproportionately expensive controls relative to others. The Court rejected the D.C. Circuit's rule that EPA must provide states a post-quantification opportunity to revise SIPs before imposing FIPs. The statute imposes firm deadlines: states must submit SIPs meeting all applicable requirements within three years of a NAAQS revision. If a state fails to do so or its SIP is disapproved, EPA must issue a FIP. Nothing in § 7410 conditions EPA's FIP authority on first quantifying each state's transport obligations. States bear primary responsibility and have tools to evaluate their likely obligations, including modeling and EPA guidance. The Court further emphasized that while EPA may consider cost, it may not require reductions that exceed what is necessary to resolve downwind nonattainment or maintenance problems—guarding against "over-control." As-applied objections concerning potential over-control were left for further proceedings on remand. Accordingly, the Court reversed the D.C. Circuit, upholding CSAPR's general framework and EPA's FIP authority.
EPA v. EME Homer City is pivotal for understanding cooperative federalism under the CAA and the scope of Chevron deference in technically complex regulatory schemes. It confirms that EPA may use cost-effective, market-based methods to apportion interstate emission reductions under the Good Neighbor Provision, rejects a rigid proportionality requirement, and clarifies that EPA can promulgate FIPs once SIPs fail by the statutory deadline without a further round of state planning. For law students, the case illustrates how statutory ambiguity, administrative expertise, and feasibility considerations drive judicial deference, and it provides a template for analyzing nationwide, multi-source environmental programs addressing transboundary harms.
EPA v. EME Homer City Generation validated EPA's central strategy for addressing cross-state pollution: use region-wide modeling and cost-effective controls to allocate responsibility among multiple upwind states that collectively cause downwind NAAQS problems. The Supreme Court's application of Chevron to uphold this approach acknowledged both the statutory ambiguity and the practical need for expert-driven solutions to a complex, interstate externality.