'Ohana Pale Ke Ao v. Board of Agriculture, State

188 P.3d 761, 118 Haw. 247, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 261
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 2008
Docket27855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 188 P.3d 761 ('Ohana Pale Ke Ao v. Board of Agriculture, State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
'Ohana Pale Ke Ao v. Board of Agriculture, State, 188 P.3d 761, 118 Haw. 247, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 261 (hawapp 2008).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, Presiding J.

The Board of Agriculture 1 (the Board) of the State of Hawaii (the State) appeals from: (1) the judgment entered by the Circuit Court of the Third Circuit 2 (the circuit court) on March 3, 2006 in favor of ‘Ohana Pale Ke Ao; Kohanaild ‘Ohana; GMO-Free Hawaii; and Sierra Club, Hawaii Chapter (Plaintiffs); and (2) the order granting Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and denying the Board’s motion to dismiss or for summary judgment entered on December 16, 2005.

This appeal presents two issues: (1) whether the Board was required to comply with the Hawaii Environmental Policy Act (HEPA), Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) chapter 343, before approving a permit to import genetically engineered (GE) algae for production in a facility on state lands; and if so, (2) whether two prior environmental impact statements (EISs) prepared for the state lands where production of the GE algae is planned satisfied the Board’s HEPA obligations. 3

We affirm.

*249 BACKGROUND

A.

Since 1995, Mera Pharmaceuticals (Mera), a marine biotechnology firm, has been a tenant at the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawai'i (NELH), 4 a research and technology park 5 on land owned by the State in Keáhole, north of Kailua-Kona, on the island of Hawai'i. The NELH has been the subject of two prior EISs, 6 one in 1976 and the other in 1985. The 1976 EIS primarily addressed the environmental impacts of the NELH support facilities and did not discuss future buildings that might be constructed or future projects that might be conducted at the NELH site. ■ The 1985 EIS included recommendations for potential aquaculture projects at the NELH that included the cultivation of algae.

Pursuant to an application to the State Department of Agriculture (DOA) dated October 29, 2004 and supplemented on April 7, *250 2005, Mera requested a permit to import into Hawai'i test-tube cultures of eight GE strains of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 137c + alga (Crl37 + algae or algae) for large-scale production in outdoor photobioreactors 7 at Mera’s research and production facility at the NELH. Mera’s application noted that the purpose for importing the algae was to “determine the capacity of Chlamydomonas to produce high value metabolites (antibodies) for therapeutic applications.” The application also explained:

The strains that we intent [sic] to import have been transformed to express human monoclonal antibody proteins in their chloroplast (no nuclear transformation). All the strains are derived from the parental strain identified as strain 137c (mating type +) maintained in culture at the Chla-mydomonas Genetics Center at Duke University. For example, one of the strains (identified as Hsv8) has the capacity to express a full-length immunoglobulin-A molecule against a variant of the Herpes simplex virus. .
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a fresh water microalga belonging to the Chlorophy-ceae. It is unicellular and biflagellated (it can swim). Chlamydomonas’ mode of nutrition is autotrophic. Therefore, it requires light and dissolved salts in water. The organism is maintained in culture collections at between 8 and 18° C. Its optimal temperature for growth has not been determined. Although it grows well in liquid culture and brackish environments it can also survive in damp soils. Strains of Chlamydomonas have been isolated even from snowfields. We are not aware of any biogeographical studies specific to this organism. However, natural specimens that have been used to establish cell lines at algal collections have been collected from damp soils, fresh water, brackish water, sea water and snow fields (mountains and in Antarctica). The strains that we intend to use are derived from a fresh water strain.
In principle, Chlamydomonas could be dispersed along with contaminated water or wet soils. We do not believe that this is a concern at our facility in Kailua-Kona as we are surrounded by hot lava fields where open fresh water bodies are non-existent.

Mera’s application was submitted to the DOA pursuant to HRS chapter 150A (1993 & Supp.2007), entitled “Plant and Non-Domestic Animal Quarantine and Microorganism Import,” and Hawaii Administrative Rules (HAR) title 4, subtitle 6, chapter 71A, entitled “Microorganism Import Rules,” the latter of which was adopted by the Board pursuant to HRS § 150A-9 (1993). 8

HRS § 150A-6 (Supp.2007) 9 provides that no person shall import into the State any microorganism that “is detrimental or potentially harmful to agriculture, horticulture, animal or public health, or natural resources, including native biota, or has an adverse effect on the environment as determined by the board[.]” Pursuant to HRS § 150A-6.3 (Supp.2007), 10 the Board is required to main *251 tain both a list of nonrestricted microorganisms allowed into the State without a permit and a list of restricted microorganisms that require a permit for import. The Board’s List of Restricted Microorganisms (Part B), which includes microorganisms classified as “moderate risk” and is incorporated as part of HAR § 4-71A-22, includes all species in the Chlamydomonas genus. Therefore, Mera was required to obtain a permit to import and use the eight strains of the Crl37 + algae in Hawaii.

B.

Under the Board’s Microorganism Import Rules, the Chief of the Plant Quarantine Branch (PQB) for the Department of Agriculture (PQB Chief) is authorized, under certain circumstances, to approve an application for an import permit without submitting the application to the Board. See HAR §§ 4-71A-5(b) (2001) and 4-71A-22(c) (2001). For instance, pursuant to HAR § 4-71A-22(c)(3), 11 the PQB Chief is authorized to approve import permits for the “[c]ultivation of algal ... species in a closed or semi-closed system such as a photobioreaetor.” Howev-er, if the PQB Chief determines that the import of a strain of a restricted microorganism is likely to increase the level of the microorganism’s risk to above a moderate risk, a permit approved by the Board is required. Id.

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188 P.3d 761, 118 Haw. 247, 2008 Haw. App. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohana-pale-ke-ao-v-board-of-agriculture-state-hawapp-2008.