Cook Inlet Keeper v. State

46 P.3d 957, 32 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20699, 55 ERC (BNA) 1088, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 53, 2002 WL 844036
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 2002
DocketS-9730
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 P.3d 957 (Cook Inlet Keeper v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook Inlet Keeper v. State, 46 P.3d 957, 32 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20699, 55 ERC (BNA) 1088, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 53, 2002 WL 844036 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

46 P.3d 957 (2002)

COOK INLET KEEPER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Alaska, Office of Management and Budget, Division of Governmental Coordination, Appellee,
Forest Oil Corporation, Intervenor-Appellee.

No. S-9730.

Supreme Court of Alaska.

May 3, 2002.

*958 Michael J. Frank and Rebecca L. Bernard, Trustees for Alaska, Anchorage, for Appellant.

Lisa A. Weissler and Kirsten Swanson, Assistant Attorneys General, and Bruce M. Botelho, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee State of Alaska.

Kyle W. Parker and David J. Mayberry, Patton Boggs, LLP, Anchorage, for Intervenor-Appellee Forest Oil Corporation.

Before: FABE, Chief Justice, MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Alaska law requires all projects affecting coastal areas to be reviewed for consistency *959 with the Alaska Coastal Management Program. The state issued a final consistency determination approving the installation and operation of a new offshore exploratory drilling platform in the Cook Inlet over the Redoubt Shoals. In finding the project consistent with the Coastal Program, the state excluded from its consistency review the platform's proposed discharges of various wastes — discharges that were already authorized under a general federal permit covering exploratory drilling discharges throughout the upper Cook Inlet area. Because the state had a statutory duty to conduct a project-specific consistency review encompassing all activities for which the Osprey project needed a permit, including a general permit that already existed, we reverse and remand for a new consistency determination.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Alaska Coastal Management Act[1] requires the state to establish and enforce the Alaska Coastal Management Program (Coastal Program), which protects Alaska's coastal areas by ensuring that commercial and industrial development is consistent with Alaska's environmental and cultural interests.[2] Under the Act, state agencies can authorize activities involved in a project having significant impacts in Alaska's coastal areas only if the state determines that the project is consistent with the applicable Coastal Program standards.[3] The Alaska Governor's Office of Management and Budget is responsible for determining whether projects requiring approval from two or more state resource agencies are consistent with the Coastal Program;[4] within that office, the responsibility is assigned to the Division of Governmental Coordination.[5] The Alaska Coastal Policy Council promulgates the Coastal Program's regulations and hears petitions for review of consistency determinations.[6]

In May 1998 Forcenergy Inc. — now Forest Oil Corporation — filed with the state a project questionnaire, permit applications, and supporting information seeking to install an exploration platform over the Redoubt Shoals in Cook Inlet to conduct exploratory drilling for oil and gas; the platform would later be converted to a production operation if Forest Oil discovered sufficient oil and gas reserves. Forest Oil named the proposed platform "the Osprey," described it as a new project, and stated that the company did not "currently have any State, federal, or local permits related to the activity." Forest Oil noted that the platform would discharge wastewater from industrial or commercial operations, that it would use a disposal system, that the wastewater discharge would exceed 500 gallons per day, and that the company expected to request a mixing zone permit — a permit option when discharges exceed Alaska water quality standards.[7] It also listed as pending a United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) discharge permit.

The state initiated a ninety-day Coastal Program consistency review for the Osprey project by letter dated August 26, 1998. The state's letter initiating the review listed seven permits within the scope of the Osprey project's consistency review process, including an individual federal wastewater discharge permit. The letter also stated that the EPA was in the process of finalizing a general wastewater permit that was expected to cover all discharges into the Cook Inlet by various exploratory drilling operations and that Forest Oil's individual wastewater permit application would be withdrawn in favor *960 of the general permit if the general permit was issued first.

Cook Inlet Keeper, which describes itself as "a member-supported nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting habitat and water quality in the Cook Inlet watershed," submitted comments during the public comment period of the Osprey project's consistency review process. The public comment period ultimately ended on July 30, 1999. By then, the EPA had finalized and issued its general permit authorizing specified wastewater discharges for existing and future exploratory drilling projects throughout state waters within the upper Cook Inlet. The general permit had undergone its own consistency review process, which culminated in the state's issuance of a final consistency determination finding the general permit to be consistent with the Coastal Program.

In its comments on the Osprey project's consistency review, Cook Inlet Keeper acknowledged that the EPA's general wastewater permit covered the Osprey's proposed operations. But Cook Inlet Keeper asserted that state law — specifically, the standards adopted under the Alaska Coastal Management Act — nonetheless provided greater environmental protection. Cook Inlet Keeper urged the state to prohibit the Osprey from discharging toxic wastes created during exploration because discharging the wastes would not "maintain or enhance" habitat and so would violate the Coastal Program's habitat standard.[8] Cook Inlet Keeper further asserted that the Osprey platform would be installed in an area of significant fresh water inputs and so should be held to the habitat standard's specific criterion for estuaries, which broadly requires avoidance of toxic waste discharges.[9] Alternatively, Cook Inlet Keeper argued, the offshore criterion of the habitat standard would prohibit the Osprey from discharging toxic wastes because fisheries would not be maintained or enhanced.[10] Cook Inlet Keeper also expressed concerns about the Osprey's potential interference with whale migration and feeding areas.

On September 2, 1999, about a month after the public comment period closed, the state issued its proposed consistency determination for the Osprey project. The state found the Osprey project to be consistent with the Coastal Program, provided that certain conditions were met. But the state specifically noted that it had excluded the Osprey's wastewater discharge activities from the project's consistency review because the EPA's recently issued exploratory discharge general permit already covered those activities:

Discharge of water-based drill cuttings and muds, wastewater discharges, including gray water, treated sewage and treated effluent from the rig oil/water separator will be regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection agency (EPA) Cook Inlet National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) General Permit. This general permit has been previously reviewed for consistency with the [Coastal Program], so activities associated with the general permit are not part of [the Osprey] consistency review.

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46 P.3d 957, 32 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20699, 55 ERC (BNA) 1088, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 53, 2002 WL 844036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-inlet-keeper-v-state-alaska-2002.