In Re Shintech, Inc.

814 So. 2d 20, 2002 WL 227954
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2002
Docket2000 CA 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 814 So. 2d 20 (In Re Shintech, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Shintech, Inc., 814 So. 2d 20, 2002 WL 227954 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

814 So.2d 20 (2002)

In the Matter of SHINTECH, INC.
Proceedings for Judicial Review Under the Louisiana Environmental Quality Act, La. R.S. 30:2001 et seq.

No. 2000 CA 1984.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 15, 2002.
Writ Denied May 10, 2002.

*21 Joseph J. McKernan, Baton Rouge, for Appellants/Plaintiffs Elizabeth Avants, Les Ann Kirkland, Brenda Bueche, Michell Bond, Barry Ingram, Albertha Hasten.

Robert E. Holden, New Orleans, for Appellee Shintech, Inc.

Steven J. Levine, Baton Rouge, for Appellee/Defendant Dow Chemical Company.

Christopher A. Ratcliff, Baton Rouge, for Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality.

Before: FOIL, PETTIGREW and KLINE,[*] JJ.

*22 FOIL, Judge.

This appeal challenges the trial court's decision to uphold an operating permit granted by the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The facts forming the basis for this appeal are not disputed. Those facts, stated in the trial court's well-articulated reasons for judgment, the basis for the administrative decision and the parties' briefs can be summarized as follows: Since 1974, Shintech, Inc. has operated a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) facility in Freeport, Texas. PVC is a plastic material used to make numerous consumer products such as water pipes, furniture and vinyl siding. The primary raw material used to manufacture PVC is vinyl chloride monomer (VCM). A PVC manufacturer can either manufacture its own VCM, or purchase that product from another chemical company. Shintech's Freeport plant purchases VCM from The Dow Chemical Company (Dow), which operates a VCM manufacturing facility adjacent to the Freeport plant.

Shintech sought to expand its PVC manufacturing operations to Louisiana. It first proposed to build a facility in St. James that would manufacture its own VCM. Although Shintech was granted a permit to operate this facility, it abandoned the proposed project.

Shintech then proposed to build a PVC-only plant in Louisiana, which would require it to purchase VCM. Dow is one of the largest merchant suppliers of VCM in the United States and is the only supplier that had the capacity to provide Shintech with the large amount of VCM required for the proposed PVC facility. Shintech determined that it would locate its PVC plant near Dow's Plaquemine plant. The VCM feedstock needed by Shintech would be shipped to its facility from Dow by means of underground pipelines.

Before constructing the facility, Shintech was required by the Louisiana Air Quality Regulations to obtain a permit from Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) for the emissions of pollutants into the air that would result from the operation of a new facility. On March 12, 1999, Shintech submitted a Part 70 Construction and Operating permit application for the construction and operation of a PVC manufacturing facility near Addis. Shintech proposed to construct the facility on a 275-acre tract of land located on the west side of Louisiana Highway 1 in West Baton Rouge and Iberville Parishes. The site is across the highway from the Dow Plaquemine plant.

In its permit application, Shintech discussed in detail the processes that went into its site selection. Given its business decision to locate the PVC facility in the vicinity of Dow's Plaquemine plant, Shintech established the following site selection criteria: (1) availability of a tract of land measuring 200 acres or more to accommodate the plant and provide a buffer zone; (2) state and local community support; (3) ready access to utilities; (4) ready access to industrial rail and highway transportation infrastructure; (5) ready access to industrial service infrastructure; and (6) availability of an industrial work force. Shintech also held public meetings to identify the issues relevant to siting of the proposed project, which were: (1) proximity to residential areas; (2) potential rail burden impacts to La. Hwy. 1 by the movement of rail cars across the travelled highway; (3) potential rail burden impacts to Louisiana Highway 1148; and (4) industrial encroachment on the west side of La. Hwy. 1.

Shintech considered eight sites in the vicinity of Dow's Plaquemine plant. Five *23 of the sites were eliminated because they did not have sufficient acreage or were not for sale. Two of the sites, while large enough and located on the western side of La. Hwy. 1, had more homes located in a 1.22 mile "worst-case" radius than the selected site. Considering the selection criteria and community input, Shintech chose the 275-acre tract as the best location for the proposed facility.

It is undisputed that the parishes of Iberville and West Baton Rouge are among five Louisiana parishes classified as "serious non-attainment" for ozone. In these parishes, the emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are regulated because VOCs contribute to the formation of ozone. In its environmental assessment statement, Shintech admitted that one of the most significant potential adverse environmental impact from the project related to the emission of VOCs by its proposed facility. However, Shintech stated, the potential adverse impact had been avoided by Dow's voluntary agreement to reduce its VOC emissions to off-set Shintech's emission contributions in the area.

DEQ received written and oral comments during a public hearing on the permit application and throughout the comment period, which was extended by DEQ. Thereafter, on October 15, 1999, DEQ granted Shintech the permit. In lengthy written reasons for decision, with respect to the selection of the site for the facility, DEQ found that there were no alternative sites that would offer more protection to the environment than the proposed site without unduly curtailing non-environmental benefits. Specifically, DEQ found that Shintech's proposed facility would not cause any air quality impacts that would adversely affect human health or the environment in Iberville and West Baton Rouge Parishes. DEQ stressed that there would be no net increase in VOC emissions from the project area due to an acceleration of voluntary VOC emission reductions from Dow. Furthermore, DEQ observed, Shintech's facility did not qualify as a "major stationary source" of VOCs, and therefore, no offsets were even required by the air regulations. DEQ also noted that the project would increase personal income for Louisiana residents and increase tax revenues. The benefits of the project, DEQ concluded, far outweighed the minor environmental impact costs of the facility. In granting the permit, DEQ ultimately found that the proposed project minimized or avoided potential and real adverse environmental impacts to the maximum extent possible and that the social and economic benefits of the proposed facility outweighed any adverse environmental impacts therefrom.

On November 15, 1999, members of various environmental groups and residents of West Baton Rouge and Iberville Parishes (hereinafter referred to as appellants) filed this action against DEQ seeking judicial review of DEQ's permit decision. Dow intervened in the lawsuit.

Appellants advanced three principal arguments in the trial court. First, they complained that Shintech's site study was fundamentally flawed because it was impermissibly limited to a single geographic area around the Dow facility. Because of Shintech's failure to conduct a meaningful site selection study, they argued, DEQ could not fulfill its duty to fully assess the environmental impacts of the proposed facility.

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814 So. 2d 20, 2002 WL 227954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shintech-inc-lactapp-2002.