Kain vs. MassDEP SJC Ruling GWSA
Kain vs. MassDEP SJC Ruling GWSA
Kain vs. MassDEP SJC Ruling GWSA
Suffolk.
Present:
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The following submitted briefs for amici curiae:
Stephanie R. Parker for Clean Water Action & others.
Edward J. DeWitt for Association to Preserve Cape Cod.
Arthur P. Kreiger & Jessica A. Wall for William R. Moomaw &
others.
Robert J. Muldoon, Jr., & Thomas Paul Gorman for David A.
Wirth.
CORDY, J.
The
3
statement addressing the petitioners' concerns and concluding
that it had complied with the requirements of the act, including
those set forth in 3 (d).
4
regulatory initiatives cited by the department substantially
complied with the requirements of 3 (d).
The plaintiffs
See
5
assume to be true the allegations in the plaintiffs' complaint
and the exhibits attached thereto.
G. L. c. 231A, 1.
Worcester, 384 Mass. 487, 493 (1981), S.C., 390 Mass. 358
(1983).
G. L. c. 21N, 3 (d).4
6
its statutory mandate."
Statutory framework.
The act
7
established a comprehensive framework to address the effects of
climate change in the Commonwealth by reducing emissions to
levels that scientific evidence had suggested were needed to
avoid the most damaging impacts of climate change.
Executive
In accordance
G. L. c. 21N, 3 (b).
The same year that the act became law, the Legislature also
enacted companion legislation concerning "Green Communities,"
St. 2008, c. 169; "Oceans," St. 2008, c. 114; "Clean Energy
Biofuels," St. 2008, c. 206; and "Green Jobs," St. 2008, c. 307.
"Each act addresses a separate but related piece of the clean
energy economy."
with a broad array of tools, including "targeted and technologyspecific policies[,] . . . economy-wide and market-based
mechanisms," and renewable energy portfolio standards and energy
efficiency improvements, to advance a clean energy economy while
8
reducing emissions and addressing the unique threats that
climate change poses to the Commonwealth.
See Massachusetts
Clean Energy and Climate Plan for 2020, supra, Executive Summary
at 7.
The act is one of the primary mechanisms for achieving
reductions in emissions, and is the sole piece of legislation
authorizing the establishment of legally binding limits on those
emissions in the Commonwealth.6
Secretary's Determination at 1.
to meet the reduction limit for 2050, the statute also includes
timelines for achieving specified benchmarks in greenhouse gas
reductions in 2020, 2030, and 2040.
G. L. c. 21N, 3 (b).
9
entities primarily responsible for implementing the act.7
generally G. L. c. 21N.
See
See
Next, the
10
usual" baseline.8
15.
required to adopt a limit for 2020 that was between ten and
twenty-five per cent below the 1990 emissions level, as well as
a plan for achieving said reduction.
(1), 4 (a); St. 2008, c. 298, 15.
As
secretary
2050. G.
be set at
These
Id.
11
It is undisputed by the parties that the department met
each of the statutory deadlines, except for the deadline for
promulgating the 3 (d) regulations.
The department
See
Id.
Id.
See Secretary's
12
to reduce emissions.
The
Secretary's
Id.
See Eastern
13
need not be attributable solely to regulations passed pursuant
to 3 (d), but rather recognize that a variety of policies and
programs, including actions taken under other statutory
programs, such as the Green Communities Act, G. L. c. 7, 9A,
may produce measurable reductions.
Secretary's Determination at
5.
2.
Statutory language.
The department
14
the sulfur hexafluoride regulations and its amendments to the
RGGI and LEV regulatory schemes.10
We review de novo questions concerning the meaning of an
agency's enabling statute.
Where the
10
15
enabling legislation."
448 Mass. 340, 346 (2007), S.C., 456 Mass. 309 (2010), quoting
Levy v. Board of Registration & Discipline in Med., 378 Mass.
519, 525 (1979).
ultimately the duty of the courts, and for that reason, the
"principle of according weight to an agency's discretion . . .
is one of deference, not abdication, and this court will not
hesitate to overrule agency interpretations of statutes or rules
when those interpretations are arbitrary or unreasonable"
(citations and quotations omitted).
16
a.
The plaintiffs
First, where
17
phrase without giving undue emphasis to any one group of words,
so that, if reasonably possible, all parts shall be construed as
consistent with each other so as to form a harmonious enactment
effectual to accomplish its manifest purpose."
Worcester v.
College Hill Props., LLC, 465 Mass. 134, 139 (2013), quoting
Selectmen of Topsfield v. State Racing Comm'n, 324 Mass. 309,
312313 (1949).
Applying these canons of interpretation, the parties agree
that the emissions reduction levels established by G. L. c. 21N,
3 (b) and 4 (a), are legally binding "[g]reenhouse gas
emission limits" as defined in 1.11
Determination at 1.
See Secretary's
because 3 (d) uses the term "emission limits" rather than the
statutorily defined term "greenhouse gas emissions limit," that
term is inapplicable to 3 (d), and accordingly, regulations
promulgated thereunder need not set binding caps on emissions.
We disagree.
In both of these
11
18
some other type.
It is apparent
G. L. c. 21N,
12
19
"regulation" as "[c]ontrol over something by rule or restriction
. . .").
Given this, we
Although
Webster's
Taking this
13
20
c. 21N, 3 and 4, it is apparent that the Legislature ascribed
the latter meaning to the word "desired."
This interpretation
Thus, by
21
to those sources to achieve the reduction limit for 2020.14
Remaining language.
G. L. c. 21, 3 (d).
22
establish limits that decline on an annual basis.
The
See Leopoldstadt,
We therefore
23
department were to regulate emissions from only one group of
sources or categories of sources.
"formed by
Dictionary 41 (2002).
In this case, however, our interpretation hinges not on the
literal meaning of the word aggregate, but on the word or phrase
to which it applies.
24
Here, the plain language of the statute supports the former
interpretation, as there is nothing in the statutory language to
indicate that the department must regulate every source of
emissions in the Commonwealth.15
Moreover, we
Finally,
15
25
aggregate emission limits for each regulated source or category
of sources must decline on an annual basis.
Thus, we conclude that the plain language of 3 (d)
requires the department to promulgate regulations that address
multiple sources or categories of sources of emissions, impose a
limit on emissions that may be released, limit the aggregate
emissions released from each group of regulated sources or
categories of sources, set emissions limits for each year, and
set limits that decline on an annual basis.
Moreover, by the
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strategies17 does not preclude our finding that 3 (d) requires
source-wide volumetric emissions limits.18
Moreover, such a
27
2020.19
Regulatory programs.
We begin
19
28
a.
Sulfur hexafluoride
G. L.
Id.
Any GIS
manufactured after 2015 must comply with the 2020 rate of 1.0.
310 Code Mass. Regs. 7.72(4).
29
hexafluoride gas capacity of all GIS in the facility.
Mass. Regs. 7.72(6)(b)(8).
310 Code
21
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permissible, and not the collective amount of sulfur
hexafluoride emissions that leak from GIS in the Commonwealth in
a given year.
See G. L. c. 21N, 9
31
that over-all emissions limits decline.22
Indeed, the
See G. L.
c. 21N, 1.
b. RGGI and carbon dioxide budget trading program.
In
The RGGI is a
32
G. L. c. 21N, 1.
See G. L.
See
The number of
Id.
through 2020.
Id.
See Regional
G. L. c. 21A, 22 (b).
Accordingly, the
33
budget," which declines by the requisite 2.5 per cent each year,
through 2020, when the base budget will be 12,617,227 tons of
carbon dioxide.
(2013); See Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative Inc., The RGGI CO2
Cap, available at http://rggi.org/design/overview/cap
[https://perma.cc/T6V5-ATN6].
We conclude that although the RGGI program and amendments
thereto are very important to the over-all regional scheme of
reducing carbon dioxide emissions, they do not qualify as a
regulation under 3 (d).
There
See
34
RGGI.23
35
in one State to purchase allowances from any other State to meet
the compliance requirements.
Under the
Thus, like
24
36
c.
In 1990,
See G. L. c. 111,
See
37
embody the change in "business as usual" required by the
Legislative mandate in the act.26
been amended since the adoption of the act, the amendments were
made for the sole purpose of tracking exact changes to the
California regulations after which it is modeled, see Cal. Code
Regs., tit. 13, sec. 1961.3 (2014), which is required by the
Clean Air Act.
26
It is highly
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unlikely that the Legislature passed the act so that the
department could promulgate regulations otherwise required by
Federal law.
These considerations aside, the LEV amendments fall short
of the requirements of 3 (d) because, like the sulfur
hexafluoride regulations, the LEV program regulates through the
imposition of rates, rather than actual caps on emissions.
The
As a
3 (d).
Conclusion.
The purpose of
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emissions reductions in the Commonwealth, and the Legislature
included 3 (d) in the statute to ensure that legally mandated
reductions are realized by the 2020 deadline.
Accordingly, we
vacate the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the matter
for entry of a judgment declaring that G. L. c. 21N, 3 (d),
requires the department to promulgate regulations that address
multiple sources or categories of sources of greenhouse gas
emissions, impose a limit on emissions that may be released,
limit the aggregate emissions released from each group of
regulated sources or categories of sources, set emission limits
for each year, and set limits that decline on an annual basis.
So ordered.