City of Quincy v. MA Dept. of Envir. Protection ( 2021 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 21-1131
    CITY OF QUINCY, MASSACHUSETTS; TOWN OF HINGHAM, MASSACHUSETTS;
    TOWN OF BRAINTREE, MASSACHUSETTS; DOROTHY ANDERSON; ALICE ARENA;
    MARGARET BELLAFIORE; WENDY CULLIVAN; SUSAN GREENE; ANDREA
    HONORE; MICHAEL LANG; CURTIS NORDGAARD, M.D.; THOMAS PENDERGAST;
    JUDY ROBERTS; BETSY SOWERS; BERNADETTE WILSON; KENNETH J.
    DIFAZIO; JANE HACKETT, Councilor at Large; ED HARRINGTON,
    District Five Councilor; REBECCA HAUGH; GEORGE LORING; ARTHUR
    MATHEWS; PATRICK M. O'CONNOR; FRANK SINGLETON; THOMAS TANNER,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION,
    Respondent,
    ALGONQUIN GAS TRANSMISSION, LLC,
    Intervenor.
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    Before
    Thompson, Lipez, and Kayatta,
    Circuit Judges.
    Michael H. Hayden, with whom Morrison Mahoney LLP, Nicole I.
    Taub and Crystal Huff, Office of the Town Solicitor, Town of
    Braintree, Kerry T. Ryan, and Bogle, DeAscentis & Coughlin, P.C.,
    were on brief, for petitioner.
    Seth Schofield, Senior Appellate Counsel, Office of the
    Attorney General of Massachusetts, with whom Maura Healey,
    Attorney General for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, was on
    brief, for respondent.
    Jeremy C. Marwell, with whom Joshua S. Johnson and Vinson &
    Elkins LLP were on brief, for intervenor.
    December 17, 2021
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.          The City of Quincy, the Towns
    of Braintree and Hingham, and a group of citizens (collectively,
    "the City") challenge the final decision of the Massachusetts
    Department    of   Environmental    Protection    (DEP)   reaffirming      the
    issuance of an air permit to Algonquin Gas Transmission, LLC
    (Algonquin)   for   a   natural    gas   compressor   station    located   in
    Weymouth, Massachusetts.       DEP had previously approved Algonquin's
    plans to power the Weymouth station using a natural-gas-fired
    turbine, which emits some amount of nitrogen oxides (NOx).                 The
    City and other petitioners convinced this court in a prior appeal
    that DEP did not follow its own established procedures when it
    eliminated an electric motor as a possible alternative to the gas-
    fired turbine. See Town of Weymouth v. Mass. Dep't of Env't Prot.,
    
    961 F.3d 34
     (1st Cir.), modified on reh'g, 
    973 F.3d 143
     (1st Cir.
    2020).   We remanded to DEP to assess whether an electric motor was
    in fact what Massachusetts regulations call the "best available
    control technology" (BACT) for the new station.           After holding a
    hearing and considering additional record evidence, DEP again
    concluded that an electric motor was not BACT for the Weymouth
    compressor    station    and   reaffirmed      Algonquin's      air   permit.
    Satisfied that the agency's actions on remand were not arbitrary
    and capricious, we now deny the City's petition for further review
    and affirm DEP's decision after remand.
    - 3 -
    I.
    Our opinion in Town of Weymouth recounts the factual
    background and circumstances leading up to the proceedings on
    remand that form the basis of this petition.             See 961 F.3d at 38–
    41.   We repeat only the essential details, beginning with a brief
    description of the applicable regulatory framework.
    A.
    Pursuant to the Natural Gas Act (NGA), 15 U.S.C. § 717
    et seq., the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) oversees
    the certification of interstate natural gas pipeline projects.             As
    part of FERC's review of proposed pipelines, the agency must ensure
    that each project complies with all relevant federal permitting
    requirements, including those under the federal Clean Air Act
    (CAA), 42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq.               See 15 U.S.C. § 717b(d)(2).
    Congress expressly reserved in the NGA the rights of states to
    issue or deny permits under the CAA for interstate natural gas
    projects.    See id. (providing that the NGA does not "affect[] the
    rights of States under . . . the Clean Air Act"); see also Town of
    Weymouth, 961 F.3d at 39.
    For    its   part,   the        CAA   embraces    a   "cooperative
    federalism"       approach   "such     that       DEP,   in   enforcing    the
    Massachusetts CAA, is in fact acting pursuant to the federal CAA."
    Town of Weymouth, 961 F.3d at 40 n.4; see also id. at 39 n.2.
    Under its authority, DEP has issued comprehensive regulations
    - 4 -
    governing the control of air pollutants, including regulations
    regarding the issuance of air permits for stationary sources of
    air pollution like the Weymouth compressor station at issue in
    this appeal.     See 310 Mass. Code Regs. § 7.02.
    In order to obtain an air permit from DEP, an applicant
    must show that the proposed facility employs the "best available
    control technology" for each regulated air pollutant, including
    NOx.    Id. § 7.02(8)(a)(2); see also Town of Weymouth, 961 F.3d at
    41.     BACT is defined as "an emission limitation based on the
    maximum degree of reduction of any regulated air contaminant
    emitted from or which results from any regulated facility" that
    DEP    "determines       is   achievable     for   such   facility     through
    application of production processes and available methods, systems
    and techniques for control of each such contaminant."                310 Mass.
    Code Regs. § 7.00; see also 42 U.S.C. § 7479(3).            Simply put, BACT
    is the most effective emissions control technology for a pollutant
    that is technologically and economically feasible for the given
    project.
    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has developed
    a five-step, "top-down" process for determining BACT.                See EPA,
    New    Source   Review    Workshop   Manual:   Prevention    of   Significant
    Deterioration and Nonattainment Area Permitting B.5–B.6 (1990),
    https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-
    - 5 -
    07/documents/1990wman.pdf [hereinafter NSR Workshop Manual].    The
    five steps are as follows:
    •   Step 1:    The applicant identifies and lists all available
    control technologies that have "a practical potential for
    application to the emissions unit and the regulated pollutant
    under evaluation." Id. at B.5. However, a control technology
    may be excluded at Step 1 of the BACT analysis if it would
    "redefine the source."    Helping Hand Tools v. EPA, 
    848 F.3d 1185
    , 1194 (9th Cir. 2016); see also Town of Weymouth, 961
    F.3d at 43.1
    •   Step 2:   The applicant eliminates any "technically infeasible
    options" from the list generated at Step 1.      NSR Workshop
    Manual, supra, at B.7.2
    •   Step 3:     The applicant "rank[s]" the "remaining control
    alternatives not eliminated in [S]tep 2" based on their
    1 A control alternative "redefines the source" and is
    properly excluded from the BACT analysis if using the technology
    essentially "requires a complete redesign of the facility."
    Helping Hand Tools, 848 F.3d at 1194. As a "classic" example, "a
    coal-burning power plant need not consider a nuclear fuel option
    as a 'cleaner' fuel because it would require a complete redesign
    of the coal-burning power-plant." Id. (citing Sierra Club v. EPA,
    
    499 F.3d 653
    , 655 (7th Cir. 2007)); see also NSR Workshop Manual,
    supra, at B.13–B.14.
    2 A control option is "technically infeasible" if, "based on
    physical, chemical, and engineering principles, . . . technical
    difficulties would preclude the successful use of the control
    option on the emissions unit under review." Id.
    - 6 -
    effectiveness in reducing controlled pollutant emissions.
    Id. at B.7–B.8.
    •    Step 4:    The applicant evaluates "the energy, environmental,
    and economic impacts" of each control option and eliminates
    any controls that do not meet certain effectiveness criteria.
    Id. at B.8–B.9.
    •    Step 5:    The "most effective control option" that has not
    been eliminated is selected as BACT.              Id. at B.9.
    DEP   has     adopted       EPA's     five-step   approach    for   BACT
    analysis in its guidance, which incorporates the NSR Workshop
    Manual by reference.           See DEP, Best Available Control Technology
    (BACT)     Guidance:      Air         Pollution     Control    Requirements     for
    Construction,         Substantial        Reconstruction       or   Alteration    of
    Facilities        that         Emit      Air       Contaminants       3     (2011),
    https://www.mass.gov/files/documents/2016/08/oo/bactguid.pdf
    [hereinafter DEP BACT Guidance].                An applicant for an air permit
    must     submit   a     BACT    assessment        to   DEP,   which   the   agency
    independently reviews before making a final determination with
    respect to BACT.         See id. at 1; see also 310 Mass. Code Regs.
    § 7.02(8)(a)(2). DEP assesses BACT "on a case-by-case basis taking
    into account energy, environmental, and economic impacts and other
    costs."    310 Mass. Code Regs. § 7.00.
    - 7 -
    B.
    In 2015, Algonquin, a natural gas transmission company,
    proposed to construct and operate the Atlantic Bridge Project, an
    infrastructure project designed to deliver natural gas to the
    northeastern United States.           As part of the project, Algonquin
    sought   to    build   several   natural    gas    compression      facilities,
    including the compressor station in Weymouth.            Compressor stations
    are necessary for the delivery of natural gas through the Atlantic
    Bridge Project pipeline because they increase the system pressure
    inside the pipeline to ensure that gas flow remains at the required
    rates.     See Town of Weymouth, 961 F.3d at 38–39.              A compressor
    station is powered by a "driver," which can include, among other
    things, a gas-fired turbine or an electric motor.
    For the Weymouth compressor station, Algonquin proposed
    to use a "SoLoNOx" Solar Taurus 60 natural-gas-fired combustion
    turbine as the station's driver.            The basic idea is that the
    Weymouth      compressor   station,    which      is   co-located    with   the
    pipeline, burns a small amount of the natural gas in the pipeline
    as fuel in order to generate the pressure necessary to allow the
    rest of the gas to flow through the pipeline to its ultimate
    destinations. See id. at 39. However, because the SoLoNOx turbine
    burns natural gas, it emits NOx, an air pollutant covered by federal
    - 8 -
    and Massachusetts state environmental regulations.3                   An electric
    motor does not emit NOx.
    Initially, Algonquin's air permit application did not
    assess whether an electric motor, rather than the gas-fired SoLoNOx
    turbine, was BACT.            Id. at 42.     But after nearby municipalities
    and citizen groups, including the City, raised the potential of an
    electric motor as an alternative to the SoLoNOx turbine, Algonquin
    revised its application to account for the electric motor option.
    Algonquin's assessment of the electric motor proposed several
    reasons for excluding it from the BACT analysis, including the
    high       costs    of   installing   and    operating    an   electric    motor.
    Crucially, however, Algonquin did not submit a detailed BACT
    analysis evaluating the electric motor option in its revised
    application.          Nonetheless, DEP accepted Algonquin's exclusion of
    the electric motor without conducting its own independent BACT
    analysis.          See id.   DEP subsequently issued an air permit for the
    Weymouth station in January 2019, approving Algonquin's proposal
    to use the SoLoNOx turbine.
    Unhappy       with   the    decision,     the   same    group   of
    municipalities and citizen groups filed an administrative appeal,
    raising, among other things, DEP's failure to consider an electric
    3The SoLoNOx is a proprietary model of dry low NOx turbine,
    which is designed to reduce, although not eliminate, NOx emissions
    by operating as a lower combustion temperature.
    - 9 -
    motor as BACT. See id. at 40. As relevant to that issue, Algonquin
    and DEP argued to the Presiding Officer of the appeal that an
    electric motor could be eliminated at Step 1 of the BACT analysis
    because it would involve a complete redesign of the Weymouth
    station    project.      Id.   at    42–43.      The    Presiding   Officer    was
    unpersuaded by this argument, at least as then presented.                  Id. at
    43.     Instead, the Presiding Officer found that an electric motor
    would not be cost-effective for the Weymouth station because it
    would      require    substantial      infrastructure        investment       and,
    therefore, was excludable at Step 4 of the BACT analysis.                     Id.
    Accordingly, on       the Presiding Officer's recommendation,              DEP's
    Commissioner affirmed the issuance of the Weymouth station air
    permit.     These prior administrative proceedings culminated in a
    petition for review before this court and our decision in Town of
    Weymouth.     In that opinion, we held that DEP's decision to exclude
    an    electric   motor   as    not   BACT     without   performing   the   cost-
    effectiveness calculations required by the agency's established
    procedures was arbitrary and capricious.                  See id. at 47.        We
    therefore remanded to DEP to redo the BACT analysis.4                Id. at 59.
    4In our initial opinion, we also vacated the grant of the
    air permit for the Weymouth compressor station.      See Town of
    Weymouth, 961 F.3d at 58–59. However, after a panel rehearing, we
    revised our opinion to reflect that the remedy granted was remand
    without vacating the air permit. Town of Weymouth v. Mass. Dep't
    of Env't Prot., 
    973 F.3d 143
    , 145 (1st Cir. 2020).
    - 10 -
    On remand, Algonquin submitted a detailed technical
    addendum to its air permit application laying out a more extensive
    BACT analysis.   Algonquin concluded that an electric motor could
    be excluded at either Step 1 (because it would redefine the source)
    or Step 4 (because it was not cost-effective).         DEP's Regional
    Office agreed with Algonquin's analyses and reaffirmed its prior
    BACT determination.   The City and other interested parties again
    requested an adjudicatory hearing before DEP's Office of Appeals
    and Dispute Resolution and submitted its own testimony, including
    a BACT analysis conducted by its expert Dr. Ranajit Sahu.            Dr.
    Sahu concluded that an electric motor was BACT because it would
    not redefine the source at Step 1 and would be cost-effective at
    Step 4.
    On   January 11,   2021,   after   holding   a   hearing   and
    considering additional filings from the parties, the Presiding
    Officer for the matter issued a "Recommended Final Decision After
    Remand," finding that DEP properly determined that an electric
    motor is not BACT and recommending that DEP's Commissioner reaffirm
    the air permit for the Weymouth compressor station.        The Presiding
    Officer found that an electric motor could be excluded either at
    Step 1 of the BACT analysis because it would redefine the source
    or at Step 4 of the BACT analysis because it was not a cost-
    effective control. The Commissioner issued a "Final Decision After
    Remand" on January 19, 2021, adopting the Presiding Officer's
    - 11 -
    recommendations.     The Commissioner noted in his decision that the
    exclusion of an electric motor at Step 1 and Step 4 provided
    "independent bases for affirming the air permit."
    The City now challenges DEP's decision after remand to
    reaffirm the air permit for the Weymouth compressor station.                        As
    it did before, Algonquin intervened as a respondent.                      See Town of
    Weymouth, 961 F.3d at 41.         We have original jurisdiction over this
    petition for review under the NGA.                     Id. at 40–41; 15 U.S.C.
    § 717r(d)(1).
    II.
    As we noted in Town of Weymouth, the NGA does not provide
    a   standard   of   review    for    a    state       agency's    final    permitting
    decisions.      See 961 F.3d at 41.              The City and DEP previously
    maintained     differing      positions         as    to   whether       the   federal
    Administrative      Procedure       Act    or        instead     the    Massachusetts
    Administrative Procedure Act should apply, but as we explained
    before, the standards do not vary materially, at least with respect
    to this case.    See id.     The parties do not now raise any objections
    to this approach.          Thus, as before, we will review formally
    adjudicated     findings     of   fact    for    "substantial          evidence,"   and
    reverse agency decisions if they are "arbitrary and capricious."
    Id.
    - 12 -
    III.
    A.
    We begin our analysis of the merits of the City's
    petition with the City's principal claim:      that DEP's exclusion of
    an electric motor as not BACT was arbitrary and capricious.         There
    is no dispute that an electric motor would be technically feasible
    at Step 2 and would be ranked higher in control effectiveness than
    the SoLoNOx turbine at Step 3.      So, if the City is correct that an
    electric motor survives exclusion in both Step 1 and Step 4, an
    electric motor should be selected as BACT at Step 5.         If, however,
    we conclude that DEP reasonably eliminated an electric motor at
    either Step 1 or Step 4, we will affirm DEP's determination that
    an electric motor is not BACT.      As we will explain in more detail
    below, because we conclude that DEP did not act arbitrarily and
    capriciously when it eliminated an electric motor at Step 4 of the
    BACT analysis, we need not resolve the parties' disagreement as to
    Step 1.
    At   Step   4,   DEP   assesses,   among   other   things,   the
    "economic impacts" of the control alternatives remaining after
    Step 3.   NSR Workshop Manual, supra, at B.26.               The economic
    feasibility of a control option is measured by the technology's
    cost-effectiveness at reducing emissions of regulated pollutants
    -- with effectiveness "measured in terms of tons of pollutant
    emissions removed" and cost "measured in terms of annualized
    - 13 -
    control costs."       Id. at B.36; see also DEP BACT Guidance, supra,
    at    4.   Agency     guidance    explains      that   "[c]ost     effectiveness
    calculations can be conducted on an average[] or incremental
    basis."    NSR Workshop Manual, supra, at B.36.                  Here, DEP and
    Algonquin assessed the average cost-effectiveness of an electric
    motor in its BACT analysis.
    According to the NSR Workshop Manual, average cost-
    effectiveness, which measures the dollar value of each ton of
    pollutant removed, is calculated as:
    control option annualized cost / (baseline
    emissions rate - control option emissions
    rate)
    Id. at B.37 (mathematical notations reformatted).
    The   numerator,      the    annualized    cost   of    the   control
    option, is "the capital cost of the control technology or technique
    amortized over its expected lifetime, plus annual operating and
    maintenance costs."      DEP BACT Guidance, supra, at 4.            To determine
    the    annualized    capital     cost,    total   capital     investments     are
    multiplied by the capital recovery factor, which is calculated as:
    [real interest rate * (1 + real interest
    rate)^(economic life of equipment in years)]
    / [(1 + real interest rate)^(economic life of
    equipment in years) - 1]
    See id., app. B, at b.10 (representing the formula symbolically).
    The     denominator    of     the   average   cost-effectiveness
    formula is the difference between the baseline emission rate --
    - 14 -
    which   "represents    a   realistic       scenario    of     upper     boundary
    uncontrolled   emissions      for   the   source,"    NSR    Workshop    Manual,
    supra, at B.37 -- and the emissions rate of the control option
    being evaluated.      This figure indicates the annual reduction in
    tons of regulated pollutant that is expected to result from
    adopting the control option under consideration.                 See DEP BACT
    Guidance, supra, at 6.          For the Weymouth station, because an
    electric motor does not emit NOx, the control option emissions rate
    is zero.
    Applying     the     average      cost-effectiveness          formula
    described above produces a measure of the cost per ton of pollutant
    (in this case, NOx) controlled per year by using the control
    alternative.       For NOx, DEP has established that technologies
    falling in (or below) the range of $11,000 to $13,000 per ton of
    NOx removed per year will be considered cost feasible.                  See DEP
    BACT Guidance, supra, at 5.         Control technologies with an average
    cost-effectiveness that is more costly than this range may be
    excluded as not BACT at Step 4.
    After     completing      the     average        cost-effectiveness
    calculations, DEP concluded that an electric motor was not BACT
    for the Weymouth station because its average cost-effectiveness
    far exceeded the range set by DEP.           As inputs to the denominator,
    DEP considered two alternative baseline emissions rates for the
    - 15 -
    gas-fired turbine: 9 ppmvd5 (or 10.03 tons per year) and 25 ppmvd
    (or 30.32 tons per year).
    For the numerator, DEP adopted Algonquin's estimate of
    the   total    capital   cost     of     installing    an   electric    motor
    ($12,242,077), measured as the net additional cost of an electric
    motor over a gas-fired turbine.6               As for the capital recovery
    factor, DEP applied an interest rate of 10.137% and assumed a
    fifty-year economic life for the electric motor, resulting in
    annualized capital costs of $1,250,993.             The final component DEP
    considered for the numerator was annual operating costs.                    To
    calculate     this   figure,    DEP    determined     the   annual   cost   of
    electricity to fuel the proposed electric motor ($7,943,500) and
    subtracted annual operating costs uniquely associated with a gas-
    fired turbine ($2,106,763), arriving at annual operating costs of
    $5,836,737.     Summing the annualized capital costs and the annual
    5 The unit ppmvd stands for parts per million by volume (dry
    basis), which is a measure of the concentration of a specified
    substance in air. Emissions in ppmvd are converted into tons of
    pollutant per year for purposes of the Step 4 cost-effectiveness
    calculations.
    6 All parties assume that the relevant control option costs
    in the numerator of the formula are the net costs associated with
    the use of an electric motor over a gas-fired turbine.        Going
    forward, references to "capital costs" represents the capital
    costs unique to installing an electric motor reduced by the capital
    costs unique to a gas-fired turbine and references to "operating
    costs" represents the operating costs unique to running an electric
    motor reduced by the operating costs unique to a gas-fired turbine.
    - 16 -
    operating costs, DEP determined that the total annualized control
    cost was $7,087,730.
    Dividing the total annualized control cost ($7,087,730)
    by the respective baseline emissions rates (10.03 tons per year
    and 30.32 tons per year), DEP found that an electric motor's
    average cost-effectiveness was significantly higher than DEP's
    cost-feasibility range of $11,000 to $13,000 per ton of NOx removed
    per year.7    Indeed, according to DEP's calculations, even entirely
    excluding the capital costs required to install an electric motor
    at the Weymouth station, the average cost-effectiveness of an
    electric motor still greatly exceeded the upper bound of DEP's
    guideline range.8
    In its briefing before this court, the City argues that
    DEP's conclusion that an electric motor should be excluded at
    Step 4 of the BACT analysis as cost-infeasible was erroneous for
    several reasons.     First, the City asserts that DEP erred by using
    incorrect baseline emissions rates for a gas-fired turbine in the
    7  According to DEP's calculations, the average cost-
    effectiveness of an electric motor was $706,653 per ton of NOx
    controlled (assuming a 9 ppmvd baseline emissions rate) or $233,764
    per ton of NOx controlled (assuming a 25 ppmvd baseline emissions
    rate).
    8  Excluding capital costs entirely, DEP calculated the
    average cost-effectiveness of an electric motor to be $581,928 per
    ton of NOx controlled (assuming a 9 ppmvd baseline emissions rate)
    or $192,505 per ton of NOx controlled (assuming a 25 ppmvd baseline
    emissions rate).
    - 17 -
    denominator of the cost-effectiveness calculation (9 and 25 ppmvd)
    and should have used a higher baseline emissions rate (120 ppmvd)
    instead.    The City explains that 120 ppmvd is a more accurate
    representation of the upper-bound emissions expected from a gas-
    fired turbine during non-standard conditions like low-load and
    sub-zero temperature operation.         Second, the City contends that
    DEP improperly considered the cost of electricity in the numerator
    of the formula as an annual operating cost of an electric motor.
    The City argues that DEP should have written off an electric
    motor's    annual   operating   costs    because      Algonquin    could    have
    completely recovered the cost of electricity used by the motor
    from its consumers.9       Third, as to the annual capital costs
    component of the numerator, the City asserts that DEP's acceptance
    of   Algonquin's     calculations       for     the    total      capital    and
    infrastructure costs of installing an electric motor was not
    supported by substantial evidence.            Fourth, the City argues that
    DEP applied an unrealistic interest rate of 10.137% to calculate
    9  The City's expert, Dr. Sahu, argued in testimony before
    the Presiding Officer that the natural gas costs Algonquin used in
    its calculation of the annual operating cost of the gas-fired
    turbine were underestimated to make the operating costs for the
    electric motor look comparatively more expensive. In his own BACT
    Step 4 calculations, Dr. Sahu used the retail rate of natural gas
    as opposed to the lower wholesale rate proposed by Algonquin, which
    drastically reduced the total annual control cost in the numerator
    of the cost-effectiveness calculations.      However, it does not
    appear that the City attempts to renew this contention on appeal.
    We, therefore, consider it waived.
    - 18 -
    the annualized capital costs of an electric motor and should have
    used the bank prime interest rate of 3%.                      Finally, the City
    contends   that      DEP   improperly    relied   on    its    own    guidance    by
    evaluating     an    electric    motor's     cost-effectiveness        against    an
    outdated average cost-effectiveness range that was unadjusted for
    inflation.10    In proceedings before the agency, the City proposed
    an   inflation-adjusted         cost-effectiveness     range     of    $20,350    to
    $24,050.
    It       is   unnecessary    to    delve    too    deeply    into     the
    labyrinthine ledgers of Algonquin's and DEP's cost-effectiveness
    calculations.        Algonquin in its brief (and DEP at oral argument)
    contend that even if we were to agree with the City as to all its
    other proposed figures, an electric motor would still be properly
    eliminated at Step 4 unless we also agree with the City that the
    cost of electricity should be excluded.                The City in its reply
    brief offered no cogent response to this contention.                   And our own
    review of the record does indeed indicate that the City's critical
    path to demonstrating that an electric motor is cost-effective at
    Step 4 runs through the City's claim that the cost of electricity
    to fuel an electric motor should be excluded from the electric
    motor's annual operating costs.
    10DEP's BACT Guidance, issued in 2011, explains that the
    cost-effectiveness range applied here has been in use "[s]ince
    1990." DEP BACT Guidance, supra, at 5.
    - 19 -
    As an illustration, let us assume that the City is
    correct that the proper baseline emissions rate for the gas-fired
    turbine is 120 ppmvd (or 145.54 tons per year NOx), the highest
    estimated rate proposed by the City's expert.11   We can also assume
    that we should adopt the City's proposed interest rate of 3%.12
    Calculating the average cost-effectiveness based on these figures
    results in an estimate of $43,373 per ton of NOx reduced.13       This
    well exceeds the City's proposed higher cost-effectiveness range
    11  The City's expert, Dr. Sahu, proposed a baseline emissions
    rate of 120 ppmvd for a gas-fired turbine. From that rate, Dr.
    Sahu converted the emissions rate from ppmvd to tons per year based
    on two different conversion rates.      For the purposes of this
    illustration, we assume the higher of the converted baseline
    emissions rates: 145.54 tons per year NOx. This represents the
    upper-bound of the City's proposed baseline emissions rate.
    12 Adopting the City's proposed interest rate of 3% results
    in annualized capital costs of $475,794 based on Algonquin's
    estimate of $12,242,077 in total capital costs of installing an
    electric motor over a gas-fired turbine, and an assumption that
    the economic life of an electric motor is 50 years (an assumption
    both parties accept).
    Annualized capital costs = $12,242,077       *   [0.03   *   (1   +
    0.03)^50] / [(1 + 0.03)^50 - 1] = $475,794.
    13 Annual operating costs = $7,943,500 (annual operating
    costs of an electric motor) - $2,106,763 (unique annual operating
    costs of a gas-fired turbine) = $5,836,737.
    Annualized cost of an electric motor = $5,836,737 (annual
    operating costs) + $475,794 (annualized capital costs) =
    $6,312,531.
    Reduction in NOx emissions from an electric motor = 145.54
    tons per year (baseline emissions rate of a gas-fired turbine) -
    0 tons per year (emissions rate of an electric motor).
    Average cost-effectiveness of an electric motor = $6,312,531
    per year / 145.54 tons per year = $43,373 per ton.
    - 20 -
    of $20,350 to $24,050 per ton of NOx reduced. To take this further,
    suppose we also agree with the City that DEP's estimates for the
    total capital costs of installing an electric motor are wholly
    inaccurate.    Although the City does not provide its own figure, we
    can proceed under the assumption that the additional capital costs
    of installing an electric motor over a gas-fired turbine are $0,
    a number that is likely lower than any the City could have
    provided.     The average cost-effectiveness of an electric motor in
    this scenario is still nearly double the City's proposed range.14
    Only if we accept the City's argument that the annual
    operating costs of an electric motor should be completely written
    off does the cost of an electric motor become low enough so that
    the other alleged errors to which the City points could make a
    difference in the outcome.      Thus, the City's argument turns on
    whether the annual operating costs -- i.e., the cost of electricity
    necessary each year to operate an electric motor -- should be set
    at $0 in the cost-effectiveness calculation at Step 4 of the BACT
    analysis.15
    14 Annualized cost of an electric motor = $5,836,737 (annual
    operating costs) + $0 (annualized capital costs) = $5,836,737.
    Average cost-effectiveness of an electric motor = $5,836,737
    per year / 145.54 tons per year = $40,104 per ton.
    15 The City presents, in the statement of the case section
    of its opening brief, a potential alternative argument:      that
    Algonquin inflated the annual cost of electricity to power an
    electric motor.   The City proposes that a more accurate figure
    would be $6,574,775 per year. This argument is waived because the
    - 21 -
    The City asserts that the annual electricity costs of an
    electric motor should be $0 because Algonquin can simply pass along
    its utility costs to its consumers and completely recoup these
    costs each year.         The City's argument focuses on a supposed
    admission from one of Algonquin's witnesses, Christopher Harvey,
    that Algonquin or its parent company could recover the electricity
    costs   required    to   power     an   electric    motor      by   including    an
    additional charge in the rates negotiated with its customers.                     If
    the City is correct and annual operating costs should be set at
    $0, it would significantly shrink the numerator in the cost-
    effectiveness    formula     and    make   an    electric      motor's    economic
    feasibility a closer question.
    The Presiding Officer, though, found that Christopher
    Harvey's   testimony     only      established     that    Algonquin's      parent
    company could negotiate electric power costs into the rates it
    charges its customers as a general matter, not that it could be
    done for the Weymouth station or the Atlantic Bridge Project in
    particular.        Indeed,   Harvey's      testimony      explained      that    the
    recovery   of   electricity      costs     "varie[d]      by   contract    and   by
    individual pipeline."
    City failed to develop it outside of a casual mention in the
    background section of its brief. See United States v. Zannino,
    
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1990). In any event, adopting the City's
    proposed figure would still not make an electric motor cost-
    effective.
    - 22 -
    Additionally, even assuming that Algonquin could recover
    all   of   the    electricity   costs    of     an   electric    motor   from   its
    customers,       the   City   points    to    no     authority   supporting     its
    contention that recoverable utility costs must be excluded from
    the cost-effectiveness analysis.                Nor do we see any basis for
    finding this contention so compelling as to make its rejection by
    DEP arbitrary and capricious.            It is not self-evident why pass-
    along costs must, as a categorical matter, be excluded from the
    annual operating costs of a control technology simply because they
    can be recouped from consumers.              Unless a business is to run at a
    loss, all costs are presumably passed along to customers in some
    form or another.
    Relevant EPA guidance, which DEP has adopted, expressly
    contemplates that electricity and other utility costs be factored
    into the assessment of the operating costs of a proposed control
    technology.       For instance, the NSR Workshop Manual explains that
    when assessing the "energy requirements of the control technology"
    in Step 4, "the energy impacts analysis can, in most cases, simply
    be factored into the economic impacts analysis" because energy
    consumption "can usually be quantified in terms of additional cost
    or income to the source."          NSR Workshop Manual, supra, at B.29–
    B.30; see also id., app. B, at b.9 (considering electricity as a
    direct cost in an example cost estimate).                Similarly, DEP's BACT
    Guidance makes clear that "[a]s a matter of course, energy impacts
    - 23 -
    and costs are considered in the economic impacts assessment of
    Top-Down BACT."      DEP BACT Guidance, supra, at 4; see also id. at
    5 (listing "[f]uel and electricity costs" as line items to include
    in the economic impacts analysis).       Finally, the EPA Air Pollution
    Control Cost Manual, which DEP expressly references in its BACT
    Guidance,     contemplates   including     the   electricity    costs   of   a
    control as an operating cost.        See EPA, Office of Air Quality
    Planning and Standards, EPA Air Pollution Control Cost Manual,
    ch. 2, § 2.4.1, at 9 (2017) (categorizing utility costs as an
    operating cost and including electricity as a utility cost); see
    also id. § 2.6.5.4, at 33 (describing electricity as an example of
    an   annual    utility   cost).    Thus,    in   including     the   cost    of
    electricity as an annual operating cost for an electric motor, DEP
    simply followed its established guidance and procedures.             See DEP
    BACT Guidance, supra, at 4 (incorporating the EPA Air Pollution
    Control Cost Manual by reference).
    For all of these reasons, the City has not convinced us
    that DEP inappropriately considered the cost of electricity as a
    component of the annual operating cost of an electric motor.            And,
    as we have explained, that decision obviates any need to consider
    the collectively inconsequential other alleged errors in DEP's
    BACT analysis.
    Because DEP's finding that an electric motor could be
    excluded at Step 4 of the BACT analysis was neither arbitrary nor
    - 24 -
    capricious, we have no need to also decide whether an electric
    motor could also be excluded at Step 1.             Therefore, we decline to
    address whether an electric motor would "redefine the source" at
    Step 1.
    B.
    The City's only other argument is that DEP failed to
    comply with Massachusetts's Environmental Justice Policy (the "EJ
    Policy").       We previously rejected a nearly identical claim based
    on this policy brought by the City and other petitioners in Town
    of Weymouth.      See 961 F.3d at 54.       Although the City points us to
    intervening changes to the EJ Policy since our decision, we see
    nothing in those changes that disturbs our prior reasoning.                 In
    any event, in Town of Weymouth we remanded to DEP to conduct
    further proceedings "limited to the purposes we [had] identified."
    Id.   at   59    (remanding   to   that    agency   to   reconduct   the   BACT
    analysis).      A reassessment of the air permit under the EJ Policy
    was not one of those purposes.
    IV.
    We deny the City's petition for review and affirm DEP's
    final decision after remand.
    - 25 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 21-1131P

Filed Date: 12/17/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/17/2021