El Dorado Chemical Co. v. EPA, et al., No. 13-1936 (8th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseArkansas imposed more stringent limits on the dissolved minerals EDCC could discharge into two unnamed tributaries (UTA and UTB), and granted EDCC three years to comply. EDCC then initiated a Third Party Rulemaking to increase the levels of dissolved minerals permitted in both UTA and UTB. Arkansas adopted these revisions but the EPA rejected the changes. On appeal EDCC, argued that EPA overstepped its authority in considering the effects on aquatic life in the two creeks at issue. The court concluded that the EPA's reading of its own regulations - that it may look at downstream waters when evaluating a state's water quality standards - was not plainly erroneous; the EPA's refusal to approve the proposed water quality criteria on the basis of incomplete information was not arbitrary or capricious and there was a rational basis for the EPA's disapproval; and the EPA's disapproval of the mass balance approach was not arbitrary or capricious.
Court Description: Civil case - Environmental law. The district court did not err in upholding the EPA's ruling rejecting Arkansas's water quality standards governing plaintiff's discharge of dissolved minerals; the EPA's reading of the relevant regulations to permit it to look at downstream waters when evaluating a state's water quality standards was not plainly erroneous; the EPA's determination that Arkansas's supporting documentation was insufficient to demonstrate that the proposed standards were appropriately protective of aquatic life in the downstream waters had a rational basis and the decision to reject the State's standards was not arbitrary or capricious.
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