Renewable Fuels Association v. United States Environmental Protection Agency

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedFebruary 4, 2021
DocketCivil Action No. 2018-2031
StatusPublished

This text of Renewable Fuels Association v. United States Environmental Protection Agency (Renewable Fuels Association 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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Renewable Fuels Association v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, (D.D.C. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

RENEWABLE FUELS ASSOCIATION and GROWTH ENERGY,

Plaintiffs, v. Civil Action No. 18-2031 (JEB) UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY and UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Under the Environmental Protection Agency’s Renewable Fuel Standard program (RFS),

covered oil refineries must introduce a certain volume of renewable fuel, such as ethanol, into

the transportation fuel supply each year. From 2015 to 2017, EPA nonetheless granted

exemptions to dozens of refineries, finding them to have met the statutory criterion of

“disproportionate economic hardship.” 42 U.S.C. § 7545(o)(9)(B)(i). Prior to this Freedom of

Information Act suit, however, it had not published any records of its decisions to afford or deny

such relief to any particular refinery. Prompted by Plaintiff trade associations’ FOIA requests

and this litigation, EPA has now produced 72 decision documents from those years, but it has

withheld from many of them two elements of information: (i) the petitioner’s name and (ii) the

location of the facility for which relief was requested. The agency grounds its withholding in

FOIA Exemption 4, claiming that disclosing the redacted information would reveal “commercial

or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential.” 5 U.S.C.

1 § 552(b)(4); see ECF No. 58-3 (Vaughn Index) at 2–3. Plaintiffs disagree and now move for

partial summary judgment to compel disclosure.

With a minor caveat, the Court sides with the Government. Divulging the identity of the

refinery at issue in an RFS determination document would reveal the fact that said refinery

applied for the exemption. And for most (but not all) of the refineries at issue, EPA has

demonstrated that such information meets all three requirements of Exemption 4: it is

commercial or financial, it is obtained from a person, and it is privileged or confidential. As to a

small number of redactions, however, the Court will order that EPA reconsider its decision.

I. Background

A. Legal and Factual Background

Congress first enacted the Renewable Fuel Standard program in the mid-2000s, with the

goal of forcing the market to produce increasing volumes of renewable fuel each year. See

Renewable Fuel Standard Program: Standards for 2018 and Biomass-Based Diesel Volume for

2019, 82 Fed. Reg. 58,486, 58,487 (Dec. 12, 2017). Under the program, oil refineries are

required to produce a certain volume of biofuels as a percentage of the overall volume of fuel

they turn out. See id. at 58,488; Renewable Fuels Ass’n v. EPA (RFA), 948 F.3d 1206, 1222

(10th Cir. 2020), cert. granted sub nom. HollyFrontier Cheyenne v. Renewable Fuels Ass’n, No.

20-472, 2021 WL 77244 (U.S. Jan. 8, 2021). “Small refineries” averaging fewer than 75,000

barrels per day of crude-oil throughput, however, may be exempted from RFS requirements “for

the reason of disproportionate economic hardship.” 42 U.S.C. §§ 7545(o)(1)(K), (9)(B)(i); 40

C.F.R. § 80.1441(e)(2).

For years, EPA did not release any information at all about its decisions to grant or deny

small-refinery exemptions. After coming under pressure to be less secretive, the agency relented

2 and in 2018 began providing a dashboard with aggregate-level data. See ECF No. 51-1 (Pl. SJ

Mot.) at 5; Erin Voegele, Wheeler: EPA to create public ‘dashboard’ on RFS waivers, Biodiesel

Magazine (Aug. 2, 2018), https://bit.ly/39hrz2M. Those data reveal an interesting trend. For the

program’s first two years, 59 refineries were granted exemptions. See ECF No. 51-1, Exh. A

(2011 Small Refinery Exemption Study) at 26. As the industry adjusted to the RFS

requirements, the number declined, totaling just seven in 2015. See EPA, RFS Small Refinery

Exemptions, https://bit.ly/3a7pGVH (last visited Jan. 25, 2021). After a change in presidential

administrations, however, the number of exemptions again increased substantially, from 19

granted in 2016, to 35 in 2017, and 32 in 2018. Id. EPA’s grant rate also skyrocketed, from

around 25% for the years 2013 to 2015 to an apex of 95% in 2017. Id. Even as it disclosed these

high-level numbers, EPA did not identify the specific refineries that received exemptions, nor

did it publish any of its decisions to grant or deny an exemption petition.

B. Procedural History

That changed after two nonprofit trade associations, known as the Renewable Fuels

Association (RFA) and Growth Energy, and one of Growth Energy’s member organizations

submitted FOIA requests to EPA and one to the Department of Energy seeking information

about the specific refineries that had sought exemptions. See ECF No. 1-1, Exhs. B, H, J, M, P,

R, U (Requests). After neither agency timely responded to any request, RFA and Growth Energy

filed this action on August 30, 2018. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint). The parties ultimately agreed

to a production schedule for responsive documents from both agencies. See ECF No. 19 (March

29, 2019, Joint Status Report) at 1–2. DOE completed its production about a month later,

although it referred some redacted documents to EPA for further review. See ECF No. 20 (April

29, 2019, Joint Status Report) at 1. EPA, for its part, agreed to a three-phase production

3 schedule. See March 29, 2019, Joint Status Report at 1–2. Phase I encompasses certain final

decisions by EPA to grant or deny a small-refinery exemption in 2016 and 2017; Phases II and

III contain additional responsive documents, about which the Court will say no more as they are

not the subject of the instant Motion.

In early 2020, as part of its Phase I production, EPA initially produced a total of 55

decision documents revealing its exemption decisions in 2016 and 2017. See ECF No. 58-2

(Declaration of Kevin M. Miller), ¶ 19. After providing the affected refineries the ability to

submit confidentiality claims regarding their petitions, the agency redacted the petitioner name

and/or refinery location from 27 of the decision documents under FOIA Exemption 4. Id., ¶¶ 20,

26. As to the remaining 28 documents for which identifying information was disclosed, EPA

concluded that 25 of the petitioning entities did not qualify for confidential treatment under

FOIA, and the remaining three had not even claimed the information as private. Id., ¶ 20.

Shortly after that production, the Tenth Circuit decided RFA, 948 F.3d 1206, holding that

refineries were not statutorily eligible for a small-refinery exemption in a given year unless they

had received one for each prior year going back to the RFS’s creation. Because only seven

refineries had been granted an exemption in 2015, it follows that many of the exemptions granted

by EPA in 2016 and 2017 were unlawful (although that conclusion has no effect on the propriety

of withholding information from those decisions under FOIA). Plaintiffs — hoping to learn

which refineries received those exemptions — requested that EPA immediately broaden the

scope of Phase I to include decision documents from 2015. See ECF No. 47 (Motion for

Hearing) at 3. EPA objected that the 2015 documents also likely contained confidential business

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