Nalco Company v. United States Environmental Protection Agency

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 18, 2011
DocketCivil Action No. 2011-0760
StatusPublished

This text of Nalco Company v. United States Environmental Protection Agency (Nalco Company v. United States Environmental Protection Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Nalco Company v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, (D.D.C. 2011).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

) NALCO COMPANY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 11-760 (RMC) ) UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL ) PROTECTION AGENCY, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) )

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

Nalco Company sells OxiPRO,™ a system to aid in killing microbial growth in the

manufacturing process of pulp and paper mills. After lengthy consideration and analysis, the

Environmental Protection Agency concluded that the addition of ammonia or urea products to the

sodium hypochlorite in the system resulted in a new and different pesticide from the chlorine

solution itself. Thus, in December 2010 EPA determined that the ammonia and urea products sold

within the OxiPRO system must be registered as “pesticides” under the Federal Insecticide,

Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (“FIFRA”), 7 U.S.C. § 136-136y. Despite this conclusion, the EPA

enforcement order that arose from this decision only prohibited Nalco from selling its ammonia- and

urea-based products to new customers; it permitted on-going sales to existing customers. In March

2011, Nalco’s competitors sued EPA, demanding that EPA stop Nalco’s sales of ammonia and urea

products altogether.1 Then, on April 18, 2011, EPA changed course and issued a Stop Sale Order,

requiring Nalco to cease all sales of urea-based products and limit sales of its ammonia-based

product. The competitors dropped their suit against EPA. Nalco seeks a preliminary injunction

1 See Ashland Inc. v. EPA, 11-cv-487 (BAH), Compl. [Dkt. #1]. against enforcement of the April Stop Sale Order, asserting that the Order is arbitrary and capricious.

EPA argues that the Court has no jurisdiction to rule on its enforcement choices and,

alternatively, that it has changed its enforcement posture from December 2010 to April 2011 for

legitimate reasons. These arguments would have more force if EPA had not indicated at oral

argument that it changed its position in part to level the commercial market between Nalco and its

competitors. There is no basis in FIFRA for EPA to exercise its enforcement authority to balance

markets; such a purpose constitutes arbitrary and capricious action. Additionally, EPA

distinguished, without explanation, Nalco’s urea-based products and its ammonia-based product.

Because Nalco has met the standards required to obtain a preliminary injunction, the Court will

enjoin enforcement of the April 18, 2011 Stop Sale Order and remand the matter to EPA for

reconsideration.

I. FACTS

Nalco seeks to enjoin the April 18, 2011 Stop Sale Order issued by EPA.2 The Stop

Sale Order arises from a December 16, 2010 Letter Determination by EPA that some of Nalco’s

products must be registered under FIFRA. The Stop Sale Order requires Nalco to cease selling its

urea-based products 60615 and 60630 altogether and prohibits the sale of its ammonia-based product

60620 to all but current 60620 customers.3 Nalco seeks to enjoin enforcement of the April Stop Sale

Order until EPA has completed its review of Nalco’s registration of the products for use under

FIFRA.

2 Defendants include both EPA and its Administrator, Lisa P. Jackson, in her official capacity. Defendants are collectively referred to as “EPA.” 3 Nalco’s 60615 product is 15% urea, its 60630 product is 30% urea, and its 60620 product is 20% ammonia.

-2- Nalco is a process and water treatment solutions provider to customers in the energy,

paper, and water industries.4 The “wet-end” processing in a pulp and paper mill produces slime-

causing microorganisms that corrode and damage paper-making equipment and degrade paper

quality. Amelioration of these problems requires specialized application and monitoring of products

designed to control slime. For the past five years, Nalco has sold an integrated water treatment

system called OxiPRO, which consists of (1) chemical products; (2) online monitoring tools; and

(3) on-site technical service by Nalco personnel.

The first chemical product in the OxiPRO system is a sodium hypochlorite “biocide”

that kills microorganisms; it is registered under FIFRA and approved for this use by EPA. When

added to water, sodium hypochlorite forms hypochlorous acid, an extremely reactive compound.

The OxiPRO system introduces a second type of chemical product to reduce the reactivity of the

acid; Nalco says that these products are proprietary “stabilizers” that are either ammonia- or urea-

based. Neither party disputes that the “ammonia- and urea-based stabilizers used in the OxiPRO

system do not have any biocidal activity themselves (that is, they do not kill microbes), nor are they

registered as pesticides with EPA under FIFRA.” Am. Compl. ¶ 21.

In developing the OxiPRO system, Nalco relied on an informal email exchange, dated

September 8, 2005, in which EPA allegedly “confirmed that ammonia-based chlorine stabilizers do

not require registration under FIFRA when used together with sodium hypochlorite.” Id. ¶ 23. EPA

advised that “[a]mmonia used in that manner is non-pesticidal.” EPA Mem. in Support of Opp’n

to Pl.’s Mot. for Prelim. Inj. (“EPA Mem.”) [Dkt. # 5], Ex. 5 (Emails). Because Nalco’s ammonia-

4 The facts are taken from the Amended Complaint unless otherwise indicated. See Am. Compl. [Dkt. # 22].

-3- and urea-based stabilizers function in nearly identical ways, Nalco did not specifically inquire as to

the status of urea-based stabilizers. Am. Compl. ¶ 23.

However, in 2007, after Nalco’s competitor Buckman Laboratories, Inc., registered

a similar ammonia-based product as a pesticide, Nalco petitioned EPA to reconsider Buckman’s

registration.5 EPA treated this request as a petition to cancel the registration of the Buckman

product. EPA Mem. at 10. In September of 2008, Buckman cross-petitioned, urging EPA to

prohibit further distribution and sale of Nalco’s unregistered ammonia-based product immediately.

In 2009, additional competitors, Ashland Inc. and its subsidiary Hercules Incorporated (collectively

“Ashland”), also filed a petition asking EPA to prohibit Nalco from selling its ammonia- and urea-

based products.6

Thus, starting in 2007, EPA became caught in the middle of an ongoing fight for

market share among Nalco, Buckman, and Ashland. EPA commenced a multi-year process to

resolve whether ammonia- and urea-based products used in conjunction with sodium hypochlorite

were pesticides that required registration under FIFRA. EPA did not interrupt Nalco’s sales of

ammonia- and urea-based products in the meantime. EPA convened multiple meetings to consider

ammonia- and urea-based stabilizers and reviewed reams of submissions by Nalco, Buckman, and

Ashland. In February 2010, EPA held an “Ammonia/Urea Meeting,” “to discuss the competing

petitions filed by the companies challenging the need for registration of ammonia and urea as

5 During the fall of 2007 when Nalco became aware of Buckman’s registration of an ammonia-based product, Nalco also exchanged additional emails with EPA. On September 19, 2007, EPA opined that when ammonia is used with a hypochlorite, the ammonia would in fact constitute a pesticide. EPA Mem. [Dkt. # 5], Ex. 5 (Emails). 6 Ashland distributes a registered ammonia-based product that is manufactured by Ameribrom, Inc. See EPA Mem., Ex. 8 (Dec. 16, 2010 Letter) at 1.

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