Communities etc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management District

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 2020
DocketB294732M
StatusPublished

This text of Communities etc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management District (Communities etc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Communities etc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management District, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 4/30/20 (unmodified opn. attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

COMMUNITIES FOR A B294732 BETTER ENVIRONMENT, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. BS169841)

v. ORDER MODIFYING OPINION AND SOUTH COAST AIR QUALITY DENYING PETITION MANAGEMENT DISTRICT, FOR REHEARING

Defendant and Respondent; [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT] TESORO REFINING AND MARKETING COMPANY, LLC,

Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

THE COURT: IT IS ORDERED that the opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on April 7, 2020, be modified as follows: 1. On page 2, the second sentence of the first paragraph of the opinion is deleted and replaced as follows: “The report found the main environmental impact of the project would be to reduce air pollution from the refinery.” 2. On page 8, the first two full sentences (“This change would align the permit with standard industry and agency practice. [¶] In other words, the third component of the project change would be to replace the old figure with a new figure of 302.4 in the Heater’s federal air pollution permit.”) are deleted. 3. On page 12, the fourth sentence of the second paragraph (“Indeed, the 2010 case even involved the same Wilmington oil refinery [back when ConocoPhillips rather than Tesoro owned it].”) is deleted. 4. On page 12, in the first sentence of the fourth paragraph, replace “the Wilmington refinery” with “a refinery.” 5. On page 22, the first sentence of the last paragraph is deleted and replaced as follows: “So this project would reduce air pollution from the refinery, according to the environmental impact report.” 6. On page 24, the second sentence of the first full paragraph is deleted and replaced as follows: “The agency selected the 98th percentile baseline to follow the practice of the federal EPA, which uses the 98th percentile standard to regulate air pollution at the national level.”

2 7. On page 24, the first sentence of the second full paragraph is deleted and replaced as follows: “Communities agrees federal regulators indeed do use the 98th percentile standard.” 8. On page 32, the first full sentence is deleted and replaced as follows: “The federal use of the same 98th percentile standard is substantial evidence validating the agency’s approach.”

Plaintiff and Appellant’s petition for rehearing is denied. [There is no change in the judgment.]

____________________________________________________________ BIGELOW, P. J. STRATTON, J. WILEY, J.

3 Filed 4/7/20 (unmodified version) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COMMUNITIES FOR A B294732 BETTER ENVIRONMENT, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. BS169841)

v.

SOUTH COAST AIR QUALITY MANAGEMENT DISTRICT,

Defendant and Respondent;

TESORO REFINING AND MARKETING COMPANY, LLC,

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Richard L. Fruin, Jr., Judge. Affirmed. Shana Lazerow, Jennifer Ganata; Law Office of Jonathan Weissglass and Jonathan Weissglass for Plaintiff and Appellant. Woodruff, Spradlin & Smart, Bradley R. Hogin, Lucas V. Grunbaum; Bayron Gilchrist, Barbara Baird and Veera Tyagi for Defendant and Respondent. Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, Daniel M. Kolkey, Peter S. Modlin, Cynthia Mullen and William F. Cole for Real Party in Interest and Respondent. ____________________ A group called Communities for a Better Environment attacks an environmental impact report about an oil refinery project. The report found the main environmental impact of the project would be to reduce air pollution. The agency and the trial court certified the report. Communities criticizes this environmental impact report in four respects. First, it used the wrong “baseline.” Second, the agency did not obtain information about the pre-project composition of crude oil the refinery processes, but instead merely found the post-project input would remain within the refinery’s “operating envelope.” Third, the report did not explain how the agency calculated its so-called “6,000 barrel” figure. Fourth, the report did not disclose either the existing volume of crude oil the refinery processes as a whole or the refinery’s unused capacity. We resolve these issues as follows. First, the agency properly used its discretion to adopt a logical and conventional federal baseline. Second, the law did not require the report to detail immaterial information about input crude oil composition.

2 Third, Communities forfeited its right to complain about the 6,000-barrel figure because it was essential for Communities to raise this issue before the agency but Communities never did. Fourth, the law did not require the agency to list either the refinery’s pre-project volume or its unused capacity because these data were immaterial. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court, which rejected Communities’ attacks on this environmental impact report. The governing statute is the California Environmental Quality Act, which begins at section 21000 of the Public Resources Code. Environmental professionals often call the Act CEQA, but this acronym is not universally known, so we call it the Act. All unspecified citations are to that Code. I We begin with the essential facts, starting with crude oil. A Crude oil is a smelly, yellow-to-black liquid from underground and from around the world. Its precise chemical composition varies by its place of origin and is important to oil refiners, who design and build chemical plants to process crude oils of various kinds. A fundamental of the refinery business is the variousness of crude. Crude’s chemical composition can vary by sulfur content. Sweet crude has less sulfur than sour crude, and so sweet crude is easier to refine than sour, and for that reason is more valuable. Crude also is light or heavy, depending on the length of its hydrocarbon chains. Light crude has shorter hydrocarbons and takes less energy to refine than does heavy crude.

3 The shortest hydrocarbon molecules have only a few atoms of hydrogen and carbon. Examples are methane, ethane, propane, and butane, which normally are gases. Longer hydrocarbon molecules like those in gasoline and diesel are liquids. Very long hydrocarbon molecules like those constituting asphalt and tar are solids. (See Rodeo Citizens Assn. v. County of Contra Costa (2018) 22 Cal.App.5th 214, 217 (Rodeo).) A refinery is an industrial plant that distills oil. The process separates the various hydrocarbons by their boiling or vaporization temperatures. These temperatures are related to each hydrocarbon’s molecular weight. Think of distilling a mixture of water and alcohol: the alcohol boils off more easily than the water and thus is concentrated in the vapor. At a refinery, you put crude in one end, the crude goes through pipes and processing units, and at the other end out flows gasoline, jet fuel, diesel, and such. The two refinery operations in this case have more than two dozen different processing units: the Crude Unit, Delayed Coker Unit, the Fluid Catalytic Cracking Unit, and so forth. Refineries are designed to process only particular ranges of crude. A refinery built to specialize in light sweet, for example, may not be able to handle heavy sour. That range is the refinery’s operating envelope. The processing units in a refinery are in a fixed chain: a mandatory order. Pipes connect these units. Their diameters limit the rate of total refinery throughput. Think of your car: gas tank, then engine, then muffler. Your car is a sequential system of tubes and pipes connecting these components. If you try to rearrange the components’ order, your car will suffer. And if you install a larger gas tank, that enlargement at one point in the

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Communities etc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/communities-etc-v-south-coast-air-quality-management-district-calctapp-2020.