Center for Biological Diversity et al v. United States Environmental Protection Agency et al
Filing
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ORDER: The motions asking the Court to expand the administrative record relevant to issues not reached herein (D Interv. (Docs. 104 (R); 122 (S) and Plaintiffs' (Doc. 108 ) are DENIED AS MOOT. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Strik e (Doc. 173 ) Plaintiffs' Statement of Material Facts (Docs. 156 (R); 167 (S)) is DENIED; IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Crossmotion for Summary Judgment (Docs. 170 (R); 198 (S)) filed by the EPA is DENIED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the M otion for Summary Judgment (Docs. 174 (R); 197 (S)) filed by Intervenor Defendants is DENIED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion for Summary Judgment (Docs. 155 (R); 167 (S)) filed by Plaintiffs is GRANTED. IT FURTHER ORDERED that 2020 registrations for XtendiMax, Enginia, and Tavium are VACATED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Court shall enter Judgment accordingly. Signed by Senior Judge David C Bury on 2/5/24. (MYE)
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
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Center for Biological Diversity, et al.,
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Plaintiffs,
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v.
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United States Environmental Protection
Agency, et al.,
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ORDER
Defendants,
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No. CV-20-00555-TUC-DCB
and
Bayer Cropscience LP, et al.,
Intervenor-Defendants.
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The Court finds the EPA violated FIFRA notice and comment mandates for issuing
“new use” pesticide registrations for OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybean). For
the reasons explained below, the Court vacates the 2020 registrations for XtendiMax,
Enginia, and Tavium.
A. HISTORIC AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs challenge the registrations issued in 2020 and amendments made in 2022
and 2023 by the Defendant, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for
over-the-top (OTT) use of dicamba products manufactured by the Intervenor Defendants,
agrochemical companies. Plaintiffs allege violations of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), the Endangered Species Act (ESA), and the Administrative
Procedures Act (APA).
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Dicamba, a chemical herbicide, combats weeds and has been used for more than
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fifty years. Dicamba is an effective weed killer, but its toxicity is not limited to weeds; it
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kills broadleaf plants, generally, including desirable plants, bushes, and trees. Dicamba
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easily moves off-field due to wind drift during spraying and is volatile, meaning it
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evaporates into a gas during spraying if there is a temperature inversion1 or even hot
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weather can cause it to vaporize after spraying. Either way, its volatility causes it to reach
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nontarget plants offsite, i.e., off-field, due to wind drift. Originally, dicamba was registered
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for limited use, largely, in late winter or early spring before crops were planted or in the
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early growing season for post-emergent use on crops, like wheat and corn, that are naturally
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tolerant to dicamba. Nat'l Fam. Farm Coal. v. U.S. Env't Prot. Agency (NFFC)
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(Monsanto)2, 960 F.3d 1120, 1125 (9th Cir. 2020).
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After many years, many weeds developed a resistance to glyphosate, the main
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ingredient in the original dicamba, “Round-up,” products. Monsanto and other
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agrochemical companies developed “low-volatility” dicamba products, which in
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combination with deregulation in 2015 of genetically engineered dicamba-tolerant (DT)
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crops (cotton and soybean), opened the door for post-emergent OTT spaying during the
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growing season of dicamba products on DT crops (cotton and soybean). Id. at 1125-26.
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In 2016, EPA granted three low-volatility OTT dicamba products two-year
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conditional registrations, as follows: Monsanto Company (now Bayer) for XtendiMax;
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Corteva (formerly DuPont) for FeXapan, and BASF for Enginia. In response to soring
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numbers of complaints about offsite damage due to dicamba drift during the 2017 growing
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season, Monsanto proposed, and EPA adopted by amendment a more restrictive use and
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corresponding label restrictions for the OTT dicamba products. The 2018 growing season
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saw similar complaints. Id. at 1126-1128.
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The conditional registrations for all three OTT dicamba products were set to expire
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in 2018, but on October 31, 2018, the EPA approved and granted requests for extensions
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The earth’s cooling at night cools the air near the surface, which becomes trapped there
by warmer air above it. The pesticide, like any other pollutant, is trapped in the cooler air
near the earth and subject to moving offsite.
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The Court distinguishes between cases based on Defendant Intervenors.
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and issued “conditional two-year amended registrations.” Id. at 1124. EPA imposed further
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use restrictions for OTT application of dicamba herbicides to DT soybeans and cotton,
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most importantly as follows: “(1) application was permitted only between one hour after
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sunrise and two hours before sunset (rather than any time between sunrise and sunset); (2)
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only two OTT applications were permitted per crop for soybeans, with the last application
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made no later than forty-five days after planting; (3) only two OTT applications were
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permitted per crop for cotton, with the last application made no later than sixty days after
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planting; (4) an omnidirectional, in-field fifty-seven-foot buffer was required in certain
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counties to protect listed plant species; and (5) applications could be made only by certified
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applicators.” Id. at 1130.
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A lawsuit followed, with Plaintiffs prevailing. The court revoked the EPA’s
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conditional “new use” registrations for dicamba-based herbicides for post-emergent, OTT
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spraying of genetically modified DT soybeans and cotton. Id. at 1144–45. In NFFC
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(Monsanto), the court held EPA violated FIFRA six ways, id. at 1124, 1144 (summarizing
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holdings), separated into two parts: 1) EPA “substantially understated three risks it
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acknowledged” and 2) “also entirely failed to acknowledge three other risks.” Id. at 1124.
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The court’s detailed decision was also filled with factual record findings recounting
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catastrophic results for farmers and the environment, such as millions of acres of off-field
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dicamba drift, as well as damage to crops, wild plants, and native ecosystems each growing
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season since EPA approved OTT spraying in 2016. Id.
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The first group of holdings in NFFC (Monsanto) related to costs to farmers from
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dicamba drift, including that the EPA understated the dicamba amount sprayed (and thus
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the drift harm from it), id. at 1124, 1136, improperly minimized the amount of under-
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reporting of drift damage, id. at 1137–38, and, despite the record evidence the registration
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decision “refused to quantify or estimate the amount of damage caused” by drift as an
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economic cost, id. at 1138.
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The second group of violations noted in NFFC (Monsanto) were predicated on the
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court’s finding that the EPA based registration on unrealistic and unanalyzed mitigation,
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failed to account for the substantial non-compliance with the dicamba use instructions or
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grapple with the near impossibility of following the label in real-world farming conditions,
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and what that would mean for increased drift damage. Id. at 1144. In other words, the EPA
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improperly based its approval on the premise that the label’s mitigation would be followed
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and, accordingly, limit off-field drift, while the record evidence showed that label
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instructions were “difficult if not impossible” to follow. Id. at 1124. The court held the
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EPA failed to recognize and factor in the “clear” economic cost from drift damage coercing
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farmers to defensively adopt dicamba-tolerant crops, and those anti-competitive,
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monopolistic ramifications. Id. EPA entirely failed to consider the social costs to farming
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communities from pitting neighbor against neighbor related to drift damage to crops, and
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trees and gardens. Id. at 1143.
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On June 3, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit decided
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NFFC (Monsanto) finding that substantial evidence did not support the EPA’s registration
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decisions because it was contrary to the record and the agency had “failed to perform a
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proper analysis of the risks and the resulting costs of the uses.” Id. at 1144. Relevant here,
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the appellate court’s jurisdiction in NFFC (Monsanto) hinged on its conclusion that the
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October 31, 2018, decision to register the three dicamba herbicides for OTT application
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qualified as an “order” issued by the EPA. Id. at 1132. Equally important, the court
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concluded “that the 2018 registration decision was issued by the EPA “following a public
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hearing,” because the decision arose “from a notice-and-comment period held prior to the
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related 2016 registration decision.” Id., see also 7 U.S.C. § 1326n(b) (direct appellate
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review following a public hearing).
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The court vacated the registration decision because remand without vacatur is
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warranted “only in limited circumstances.” Id. at 1144 (quoting Pollinator Stewardship
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Council v. EPA, 806 F.3d 520, 532 (9th Cir. 2015)). The court “weigh[ed] the seriousness
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of the agency's errors against the disruptive consequences of an interim change that may
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itself be changed.” Id. at1145. The court considered “the extent to which either vacating or
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leaving the decision in place would risk environmental harm” and “also looked at whether
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the agency would likely be able to offer better reasoning or whether by complying with
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procedural rules, it could adopt the same rule on remand, or whether such fundamental
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flaws in the agency's decision make it unlikely that the same rule would be adopted on
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remand.’” Id.
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The court expressly addressed the practical effects of the decision, including the
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impact on growers who had already purchased DT soybean and cotton seeds, and
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“acknowledge[d] the difficulties these growers may have in finding effective and legal
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herbicides to protect their DT crops.” Id. at 1145. Nevertheless, it vacated the registrations
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because the “fundamental flaws” in the EPA's analysis were so substantial that it was
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exceedingly “unlikely that the same rule would be adopted on remand.” Id.
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On June 8, 2020, EPA issued the “Final Cancellation of Three Dicamba Products”
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(Final Cancellation Order) for OTT use of dicamba but allowed for already purchased
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products to be used in the 2020 growing season. (P MSJ, SOF, Stevenson Decl., Ex. J:
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Final Cancellation Order (June 8, 2020) (Doc. 161-10) at 2-13.) Then within approximately
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four months of the June 3, 2020, NFFC (Monsanto) decision, on October 27, 2020, EPA
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again approved OTT dicamba spraying. EPA issued the three dicamba registrations at issue
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in this case: Bayer Defendant Intervenor’s product XtendiMax (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A13 (AR3
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A.13) (Doc. 158-8) at 2-37); BASF Defendant Intervenor’s product Enginia, id., Ex. A12
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(AR A.12) (Doc. 158-7) at 2-39), and Syngenta Defendant Intervenor’s product Tavium
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Plus Vapor Grip, id., Ex. A05 (AR A.5) (Doc. 158-4) at 1-56). Tavium was registered in
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2019 with an automatic expiration date of December 20, 2020.
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All three registrations had been registered conditionally for two years but were
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issued in 2020, unconditionally, for five years. All three had been and remained classified
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as restricted use, including similar but progressively tougher restrictions to mitigate offsite
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drift. All the 2020 registrations, and the original 2019 Tavium registration, were issued
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without notice and comment. Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit.
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Administrative Record.
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On March 15, 2022, EPA granted voluntary registrant-proposed amendments to the
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registrations for Iowa and Minnesota. On February 26, 2023, EPA approved registrant-
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proposed amendments for Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and South Dakota, leaving the same 2022
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restrictions in place for Minnesota. These amendments have added further use restrictions
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for OTT spraying of DT soybean and cotton crops in these states, only. Plaintiffs have
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twice amended the Complaint to encompass the 2022 and 2023 amendments to the
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registrations.
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B. STANDARD OF REVIEW
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1. FIFRA, ESA, and APA
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The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) prohibits the
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distribution or sale to any person of any pesticide that is not registered by the EPA. 7 U.S.C.
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§ 136a(a). “A FIFRA registration is a license establishing the terms and conditions under
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which a pesticide may be lawfully sold, distributed, and used.”
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Association v. Regan, 77 F.4th 873, 875 (D.C. Cir. 2023) (citing 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(A)-(F)
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(citing registration labeling requirements). “Pesticide means any substance or mixture of
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substances intended for preventing, destroying, repelling, or mitigating any pest, or
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intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant, or desiccant . . ..” 40 C.F.R § 152.3.
American Soybean
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In registering pesticides, the EPA applies the core standard of “unreasonable
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adverse effects.” “That is, EPA applies a cost-benefit analysis ‘to ensure that there is no
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unreasonable risk created for people or the environment from a pesticide.’” (P MSJ (Doc.
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155(R)/167(S))4 at 16 (quoting Pollinator, 806 F.3d at 522–23)). Balancing benefit against
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risk “is supposed to take every relevant factor that the Administrator can conceive of into
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account.” S. Rep. 838, 92d Cong. 2d Sess., reprinted in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3993, 4032.
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Congress defined “unreasonable adverse effects on the environment” broadly to mean:
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“any unreasonable risk to man or the environment, taking into account the economic,
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social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use of any pesticide.” 7 U.S.C. §
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136(bb).
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R (redacted); S (sealed).
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When the EPA registers a pesticide pursuant to notice and comment provisions in
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FIFRA for “any pesticide if it contains any new active ingredient or if it would entail a
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changed use pattern,” 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(4), FIFRA provides for direct appellate review.
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7 U.S.C. § 136n(b). Then, the EPA decision must be supported with “substantial evidence,”
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id., and the agency’s reasoning “must also be coherent and internally consistent,” Nat. Res.
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Def. Council (NRDC) v. United States Env't Prot. Agency (EPA) (Nat. Assoc. Wheat
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Growers (NAWG)),5 38 F.4th 34, 44 (9th Cir. 2022). This was the standard of review
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applied by the Ninth Circuit appellate court in NFFC (Monsanto) when it reviewed and
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revoked the 2016, as amended 2018 dicamba registrations. See also, 40 C.F.R. § 152.102.
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In this case, EPA did not follow the FIFRA notice-and comment provisions and
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issued the 2020 Decision as an “unconditional” registration, which EPA may only grant if
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it concludes that the pesticide (1) “will perform its intended function without unreasonable
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adverse effects on the environment,” 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(5)(C), and (2) “when used in
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accordance with widespread and commonly recognized practice [the pesticide] will not
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generally cause unreasonable adverse effects on the environment,” id. § 136a(c)(5)(D); see
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also 40 C.F.R. § 152.112(e). Accordingly, district court review exists in this Court over
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this action. 7 U.S.C. § 136n(a); see also, (Order (Doc. 83) at 2; Order (Doc. 64) at 2
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(explaining this Court’s jurisdiction over this case)). Unlike the statutory directive to the
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appellate court, FIFRA does not expressly provide a standard of review for this Court to
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review registrations issued without notice and comment.
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Likewise, there is no express standard of review in the Endangered Species Act
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(ESA), the other substantive statute relied on by Plaintiffs. Congress enacted ESA to ensure
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the survival and recovery of endangered species. 16 U.S.C. § 1531(b), (c). Under ESA,
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there is no FIFRA-like cost-benefit analysis. In ESA, Congress made a “conscious
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decision” and gave endangered species priority over the “primary missions” of all federal
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agencies. Tennessee Valley Auth. v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 185 (1978). Section 7 is ESA’s
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“heart,” and crucial to the recovery of ESA-protected species. Karuk Tribe v. U.S. Forest
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See n.2.
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Serv., 681 F.3d 1006, 1019 (9th Cir. 2012) (en banc). Under section 7, the EPA, like all
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other federal agencies, has a substantive duty to “ensure” any authorization of a pesticide
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is not likely to jeopardize any species or adversely modify any critical habitat. 16 U.S.C. §
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1536(a)(2); 50 C.F.R. § 402.02. If the EPA determines that its actions, including
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registration decisions, “may affect” protected species or critical habitat, the EPA has a
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procedural duty to evaluate the registration’s effects “in consultation with and with the
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assistance of” the wildlife agencies that Congress has designated as having endangered
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species expertise, here, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). 16 U.S.C. §
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1536(a)(2); 50 C.F.R. §§ 402.14(a), 402.01(b). In this case, the EPA made a “no effects”
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finding and did not consult FWS to evaluate the effects of OTT dicamba on protected
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species and habitat.
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“‘[T]he strict substantive provisions of the ESA justify more stringent enforcement
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of its procedural requirements, because [they] are designed to ensure compliance with the
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substantive provisions.’” (P MSJ (Doc. 155(R)/167(S)) at 18 (quoting Thomas v. Peterson,
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753 F.2d 754, 764 (9th Cir. 1985), abrogated on other grounds by Cottonwood Env’t Law
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Ctr. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 789 F.3d 1075, 1088–89 (9th Cir. 2015)).
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Accordingly, the Court applies the standard of review applicable under the APA for
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the ESA claim and under FIFRA because the EPA issued the challenged registration
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decision without notice and comment. See, e.g., Ctr. for Food Safety v. Regan, 56 F.4th
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648, 656 (9th Cir. 2022) (explaining that “because the ESA does not specify a standard of
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review, we review EPA’s compliance under the [APA]”); Ellis v. Housenger, 252 F. Supp.
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3d 800, 808 (N.D. Cal. 2017) (reviewing FIFRA challenge under 7 U.S.C. § 136n(a) under
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APA standards); Friends of Animals v. EPA, 383 F. Supp. 3d 1112, 1120 (D. Or. 2019)
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(holding APA standards for “other final actions” of EPA under § 136n(a)).
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Plaintiffs argue that the EPA’s 2020 Decision does not pass muster under either
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because there is “no substantive difference” between FIFRA’s “substantial evidence”
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standard and the APA. Ass’n of Data Processing Serv. Orgs. v. Bd. of Governors of the
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Fed. Reserve Sys., 745 F.2d 677, 683–84 (D.C. Cir. 1984). The APA standard of review,
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referred to as the arbitrary and capricious test, is defined in § 706 of the APA, as follows:
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To the extent necessary to a decision and when presented, the reviewing court
shall decide all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and
statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or applicability of the terms
of an agency action. The reviewing court shall—
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(1) compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed; and
(2) hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions
found to be—
(A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise
not in accordance with law;
(B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or
immunity;
(C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations,
or short of statutory right;
(D) without observance of procedure required by law;
(E) unsupported by substantial evidence in a case subject to
sections 556 and 557 of this title or otherwise reviewed on the
record of an agency hearing provided by statute; or
(F) unwarranted by the facts to the extent that the facts are
subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court.
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The scope of APA review 5 U.S.C. § 706(2) is narrow and highly deferential, with
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the court presuming the agency’s action to be valid. The Court must not substitute its
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judgment for that of the agency and only determines whether the agency has examined the
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relevant data and articulated a satisfactory explanation for its action including making a
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“rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.” Burlington Truck Lines
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v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168, (1962); Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State
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Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983). An action is “‘arbitrary and capricious
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if the agency has relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely
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failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision
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that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not
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be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.’” (P MSJ (Doc.
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155(R)/167(S)) at 15-16 (quoting Motor Vehicle Mfrs., 463 U.S. at 43), see also Ranchers
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Cattlemen Action Legal Fund v. United States Dept. of Agric., 499 F.3d 1108, 1115 (9th
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Cir. 2007) (same). In APA review, the Court makes a “searching and careful inquiry,” to
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ensure the agency “engaged in reasoned decision making.” NW. Coal. for Alts. to Pesticides
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v. EPA, 544 F.3d 1043, 1052 n.7 (9th Cir. 2008) (cleaned up).
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2. Cross Motions for Summary Judgment
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Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a) provides for summary judgment when
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“there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
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as a matter of law.” Material facts are facts that may affect the outcome of the case.
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Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). A dispute is “genuine” if
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there is sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to return a verdict for the nonmoving
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party on a material question of fact. Id. On summary judgment, the court may not weigh
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the evidence and must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
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party. Id. at 255. In short, the standard for granting summary judgment mirrors the
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standard for a directed verdict under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a): “whether the evidence
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presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-
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sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.” Id. at 251-252.
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The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the
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court of the basis for its motion and of identifying those portions of the pleadings or
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materials in the record that demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
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Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). A moving party having the burden of
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proof at trial “must affirmatively demonstrate that no reasonable trier of fact could find
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other than for the moving party.” Soremekun v. Thrifty Payless, Inc., 509 F.3d 978, 984
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(9th Cir.2007) (relying on Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323). Where the moving party’s opponent
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will have the burden of proof at trial, the moving party can prevail merely by “pointing
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out to the district court ... that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving
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party's case.” Celotex, 477 U.S. at 325. If the moving party meets its initial burden, the
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opposing party must then set out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial to defeat
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the motion. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 250.
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Because APA review is generally limited to the administrative record, the district
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court is not managing a “garden variety civil suit,” but rather “sits as an appellate
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tribunal.” Cnty of Lost Angeles v. Shalala, 192 F.3d 1005, 1011 (D.C. Cir. 1999). The
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usual “genuine dispute of material fact” standard for summary judgment normally does
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not apply in an APA case because normally there are not disputed facts to resolve.
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Occidental Eng’g Co. v. I.N.S, 753 F.2d 7666, 769 (9th Cir. 1985). “The function of the
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district court is to determine whether or not as a matter of law the evidence in the
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administrative record permitted the agency to make the decision it did.” Id.; City & Cnty
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of San Francisco v. United States, 130 F.3d 873, 877 (9th Cir. 1997). Here, the parties
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submit cross-motions for summary judgment, therefore, the Court considers each motion
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on its own merits to determine for each party whether judgment may be entered in
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accordance with Rule 56. Fair Housing Council of Riverside County, Inc. v. Riverside
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Two, 249 F.3d 1132, 1136 (9th Cir.2001).
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C. PROCEDURAL VIOLATIONS: FIFRA, ESA and APA
1. Did EPA violate FIFRA Public Hearing Requirements for “New Use” and
Cancelled Registrations?
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While the substantive merits of whether the dicamba registrations require the Court
to consider an extensive and complicated scientific record, the Court is in familiar territory
when considering relevant questions of law, interpreting constitutional and statutory
provisions, and determining the meaning or applicability of the terms of the EPA’s action,
to decide issues of alleged procedural error. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2).6
Plaintiff alleges that the EPA issued the 2020 dicamba registrations without
complying with FIFRA notice and comment requirements for “new use” registrations.
Under FIFRA: “The Administer shall publish in the Federal Register, . . ., a notice of each
application for registration of any pesticide if it contains any new active ingredient or if it
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Under Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. 467 U.S. 837 (1984), the
Court grants APA deference to agencies on questions of law in the face of statutory
ambiguity and accepts an agency’s construction/interpretation of a statutory term if it has
a reasonable basis in law. Chevron deference is currently under review by the Supreme
Court but reversal or narrowing of the doctrine will not affect this case because the Court
finds agency error. This Court applies Chevron.
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would entail a changed use pattern. The notice shall provide for a period of 30 days in
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which any Federal agency or any other interested person may comment.” 7 U.S.C. §
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136a(c)(4). “New use” means, in part: “Any additional use pattern that would result in a
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significant increase in the level of exposure, or a change in the route of exposure, to the
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active ingredient of man or other organisms.” Id.; 40 C.F.R. § 152.3. It is undisputed that
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dicamba was previously registered for pre-emergent use. Plaintiffs are correct that the
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relevant FIFRA “new use” provision in this case is a changed use pattern that significantly
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increases in the level of exposure. Likewise, notice of cancellation or change in
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classification7 must be sent to the registrant and made public, and any person adversely
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affected by the notice is afforded an opportunity to request a hearing. 7 U.S.C. § 136d((b).
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Notice requirements ensure that agency regulations and/or decisions are tested via
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exposure to diverse public comment and to give affected parties an opportunity to develop
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evidence in the record to support their objections to the rule and, thereby, enhance the
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quality of judicial review. Cf., Am. Coke and Cal Chems. Inst. v. EPA, 452 F.3d 930, 938
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(D.C. Cir. 2006) (discussing APA notice and comment requirements). Notice and comment
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occur before an agency takes action to ensure that affected parties have an opportunity to
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participate and influence agency decision-making at an early stage when the agency is more
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likely to give real consideration to alternative ideas. See Advocates for Highway and Auto
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Safety v. FHA, 28 F.3d 1288, 1291-92 (D.C. Cir 1994) (stressing importance of comments
20
being made during formative stages because this promotes a flexible and open-minded
21
attitude and addresses the concern that an agency is not likely to be receptive to suggested
22
changes after it puts its credibility on the line in the form of a final rule or decision).
23
Post hoc notice and comment cannot cure this procedural violation because such
24
allowance would render the statutory notice-and-comment requirements meaningless. See
25
NRDC v. EPA (NRDC (Bayer)), 676 F. Supp.2d 307, 314-316 (NY 2009) (finding no
26
7
27
28
When registered, a pesticide is classified for general use, restricted use, or both. A change
in classification requires notice and an opportunity for comment. 7 U.S.C. §§ 136a(d),
136d(b). The notice-and-comment issues in this case do not involve changed
classifications. OTT dicamba has always been a “restricted use” pesticide and may only be
sprayed by Certified Applicators.
- 12 -
1
distinguishable difference between FIFRA and APA notice and comment provisions;
2
failure to abide by those unambiguous provisions in FIFRA constituted a fundamental flaw
3
and serious deficiency). In the context of considering whether to vacate spirotetramat, a
4
pesticide used to kill insects, the court held that it was not a matter of cancelling the
5
registration, a procedure that is costly and time consuming, because notice and comment
6
failures in the registration meant spirotetramat was not lawfully registered in the first place,
7
and revocation was more appropriate. Id.
8
The jurisdictional implications for decisions issued by the EPA with or without
9
public hearing gives special meaning to FIFRA’s “public hearing” requirement, which
10
must ensure anyone “adversely affected by a resulting order” can become “a party to the
11
proceedings,” in the appellate courts. For this to be true-- the agency must at least provide
12
notice of its proposed action to the public and opportunity to comment. “Without public
13
notice of the pending action, the agency’s consideration of it cannot be considered a
14
‘public’ hearing—i.e., a proceeding “’[o]pen or available for all’ who might wish to
15
participate.” American Soybean Assoc., 77 F.4th at 877.
16
“FIFRA ‘is a comprehensive regulatory scheme aimed at controlling the use, sale,
17
and labeling of pesticides.’” NFFC (Dow), 966 F.3d at 912 (quoting Nathan Kimmel, Inc.
18
v. DowElanco, 275 F.3d 1199, 1204 (9th Cir. 2002)). Under FIFRA, registration occurs in
19
a variety of ways. Unconditional registration, under 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(5), requires the
20
EPA to “review[ ] all relevant data in [its] possession” and “determine[ ] that no additional
21
data are necessary” to its decision. 40 C.F.R. § 152.112(b), (c). EPA can unconditionally
22
register a pesticide only if it will “not generally cause unreasonable adverse effects on the
23
environment” “when used in accordance with widespread and commonly recognized
24
practice.” Id. § 152.112(e). This balances “risk to man or the environment, taking into
25
account the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use of any
26
pesticide,” NFFC (Dow), 966 F.3d at 912-913 (quoting 7 U.S.C. § 136(bb)); see also 7
27
U.S.C. §136a(c)(3)(A) (citing 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(5)). Also, EPA may unconditionally
28
register or amend a registration of a pesticide which is identical or substantially similar to
- 13 -
1
a currently registered pesticide or that would differ in composition and labeling from such
2
currently registered pesticide only in ways that would not significantly increase the risk of
3
unreasonable adverse effects on the environment. 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(3)(B). These
4
registrations are often called “me-too” registrations.
5
In comparison, the EPA may “conditionally amend the registration of a pesticide to
6
permit additional uses of such pesticide notwithstanding that data concerning the pesticide
7
may be insufficient to support an unconditional amendment, if the [EPA] determines that
8
[] the applicant has submitted satisfactory data pertaining to the proposed additional use
9
and [] amending the registration in the manner proposed ... would not significantly increase
10
the risk of any unreasonable adverse effect on the environment.” Id. at § 136a(c)(7)(B); 40
11
C.F.R. § 152.113(a). Also, EPA may “conditionally” issue “me too” registrations or
12
amended registrations based on data as would be required to obtain unconditional
13
registration of a similar pesticide but if such data has not yet been generated, the registration
14
or amendment may be issued under such conditions as required not later than the time such
15
data are required to be submitted with respect to the similar and already registered
16
pesticide. 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(7)(A); 40 C.F.R. § 152.113(b).
17
For a conditional registration, the EPA must review “at a minimum, data needed to
18
characterize any incremental risk that would result from approval of the application and
19
determine that approval would not significantly increase the risk of any unreasonable
20
adverse effect on the environment. 40 C.F.R. §152.113(a)(1-2). Conditional registration of
21
substantially similar products and new uses issued under §152.113 require submission or
22
citation of all data which are required for unconditional registration . . . under FIFRA
23
3(c)(5), but which have not yet been submitted, no later than the time such data are required
24
to be submitted for similar pesticide products already registered.” 40 C.F.R. §152.115(a).
25
Unconditional registrations hinge on whether the registrant-pesticide “cause[s] any
26
unreasonable adverse effects” compared to the standard for conditional registrations which
27
is whether it “significantly increases the risk of any unreasonable adverse effect.” The
28
differing standards reflect that conditional registration is an option only when a pesticide
- 14 -
1
or active ingredient has already been registered using the unconditional registration,
2
causation-based standard. “The conditional registration standard is therefore best
3
understood as limiting the scope of new evidence EPA must consider in making its
4
registration decision.” NFFC (Dow), 966 F3d at 916. “EPA need only consider evidence
5
that bears on whether the new or additional use changes EPA’s original conclusion that the
6
pesticide or active ingredient will ‘not generally cause unreasonable adverse effects.’” Id.
7
(quoting 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(7)(A)).
8
FIFRA's implementing regulations provide a specific approach in cases involving
9
“‘active ingredient[s]’ that have already been registered as part of other ‘pesticide
10
product[s].’” Id. at 913 (quoting 40 C.F.R. § 152.111). “In such cases, ‘the Agency will not
11
commence a complete review of the existing data based on a given chemical in response
12
to receipt of an application for registration.’” Id. “‘Instead, the Agency will review the
13
application using the criteria for conditional registration’ under 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(7)(A)
14
and (B),” id., which as noted above requires the EPA to consider evidence relevant to show
15
whether the new or additional use changes the original conclusion that the pesticide or
16
active ingredient will not generally cause unreasonable adverse effects.
17
a. New Use Registrations
18
These summarized provisions are relevant in this case because dicamba is an active
19
ingredient that was registered as part of other pesticide products, such as “Roundup,” which
20
due to its volatility and propensity to drift offsite and damage nontarget plants was used
21
pre-emergent, generally, on baren fields before or early in the growing seasons. As noted
22
in the historical notes herein, eventually agrochemical manufactures developed new,
23
“lower-volatility” dicamba products and DT cotton and soybean seeds and sought to
24
register OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybeans) for post-emergent use during
25
the growing season. The 2016 dicamba registrations, and 2018 amendments, were
26
undeniably for an “additional use pattern that would result in a significant increase in the
27
level of exposure, or a change in the route of exposure from dicamba.
28
- 15 -
1
In 2016 after notice and comment, the EPA granted “new use” applications and
2
issued two-year “conditional” registrations for three “lower volatility” OTT dicamba
3
products for DT crops (cotton and soybean), i.e., post-emergent spraying during the
4
growing season for XtendiMax; FeXapan, and Enginia. NFFC (Monsanto), 960 F.3d at
5
1132. All three registrations were set to automatically expire at the end of 2018. All
6
included restrictions which were “‘expected to eliminate any offsite exposures to
7
dicamba.’” Id. at 1127 (quoting 2016 registration decision). When the 2017 and 2018
8
growing seasons reflected the contrary, dicamba manufacturers proposed, and EPA
9
adopted by amendment in 2018, further restrictions, id. at 1127-1130, again to address
10
volatility and spray drift aimed at eliminating offsite exposures and extended the
11
conditional registrations for the three dicamba products for two more years. Id. at 1127.
12
The EPA issued “conditional” 2016 registrations, and 2018 registration
13
amendments, under § 7 U.S.C. § 136(c)(7)(B), which allows such registration
14
“notwithstanding that data concerning the pesticide may be insufficient to support an
15
unconditional amendment, if the Administrator determines that (i) the applicant has
16
submitted satisfactory data pertaining to the proposed additional use, and (ii) amending the
17
registration in the manner proposed by the applicant would not significantly increase the
18
risk of any unreasonable adverse effect on the environment.” NFFC (Monsanto), 960 F.3d
19
at 1133. On June 2, 2020, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in NFFC (Monsanto) vacated
20
the 2016 registrations, as amended in 2018, after finding that the October 31, 2018,
21
decision upon which they were premised was not supported by substantial evidence. Id. at
22
1125.
23
On June 8, 2020, EPA issued the Final Cancellation of Three Dicamba Products
24
(Final Cancellation Order), expressly canceled these registrations but allowed use of
25
already purchased existing OTT dicamba stock. (P MSJ, SOF, Stevenson Decl., Ex. J: Final
26
Cancellation Order (Doc. 161-10) at 2-13.)8 The EPA noticed the manufacturers but did
27
not issue a public notice regarding the cancellations.
28
8
The Court takes judicial notice of this publicly available document which is a government
publication. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). It is central to the procedural question of notice and
- 16 -
1
Within four months, on October 27, 2020, without notice and comment, the EPA
2
issued a decision to “unconditionally” register dicamba under FIFRA § 136a(c)(5) to be
3
used post-emergent for OTT spraying, post-emergent, on DT crops (cotton and soybean)
4
finding “when used in accordance with widespread and commonly recognized practice it
5
will not generally cause unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.” (P MSJ, SOF,
6
Ex. A04 (AR A.4): 2020 Decision Supporting Approval (Doc. 158-3) at 3, 1-19, 22); see
7
7 U.S.C. § 163a(c)(5)(D); 40 C.F.R. § 152.112(e).
8
registrations for XtendiMax and Enginia, which had been vacated on June 2, 2020, in
9
NFFC (Monsanto) and canceled by the EPA on June 8, 2020. Simultaneously, the EPA
10
amended a 2019 registration for Tavium to extend its automatic expiration date of
11
December 20, 2020, to December 20, 2025. Tavium had been conditionally registered on
12
April 5, 2019, under FIFRA “me too” provisions. 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(7)(A). In 2020, the
13
EPA issued an unconditional amended registration.
The EPA issued unconditional
14
According to the EPA, the 2020 dicamba registrations did not fall under FIFRA
15
“new use” provisions because “[i]n relevant part, those requirements apply to registrations
16
of “a product containing a particular active ingredient” when: (1) there is “no product
17
containing the active ingredient that is currently registered for that use pattern”; or (2) when
18
the registration would authorize an “additional use pattern that would result in a significant
19
increase in the level of exposure, or a change in the route of exposure, to that active
20
ingredient.” (EPA CMSJ (Doc. 170) at 28 (citing 40 C.F.R. § 152.3). “Neither condition
21
applies here.” Id. “Tavium was registered for OTT dicamba application to DT cotton and
22
DT soybean in 34 states,” and therefore “the 2020 Registrations involved the same active
23
ingredient, applied in the same manner, to the same crops, in the same states.” Id. “The
24
2020 Registrations thus did not involve a new or additional “use pattern,” and 40 C.F.R. §
25
152.102’s procedural requirements did not apply.” Id.
26
EPA included this rationale in the 2020 Decision to explain the unconditional
27
registration decision even though the Defendant Intervenors Bayer and BASF, both,
28
comment, and directly referenced and quoted by the parties. See (EPA CMSJ (Doc. 170)
at 28, EPA Reply (Doc. 239) at 15).
- 17 -
1
submitted registration applications for new registrations of XtendiMax and Enginia.
2
Syngenta submitted a request to amend Tavium’s conditional registration to extend its
3
expiration date. See (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A04 (AR A.4): 2020 Decision Supporting Approval
4
(Doc. 158-3) at 4 n. 3) (explaining “[since Tavium is currently registered for use on DT
5
cotton and DT soybeans, none of these registrations are considered to include any new
6
uses”)).
7
Then and now, EPA ignores that the 2019 Tavium registration, the linchpin for the
8
2020 registrations, was a “me too” conditional registration. This means, Tavium was
9
registered as being identical or substantially similar, or differs only in ways that would not
10
significantly increase the risk of unreasonable adverse effects on the environment,
11
compared to the XtendiMax and Enginia dicamba products, as conditionally approved in
12
2016, and amended in 2018. In 2019, it was true that Tavium involved the same active
13
ingredient, applied in the same manner, and to the same crops as approved for those
14
XtendiMax and Enginia registrations. And, the 2019 Tavium “me too” registration did not
15
require any additional data beyond that required by the 2016 and 2018 amendments for
16
XtendiMax and Enginia registrations. The Tavium 2019, two-year, conditional registration
17
did not involve a new or additional “use pattern,” and FIFRA’s notice and comment
18
procedural requirements did not apply.
19
The same was not true in 2020 because the 2016, and 2018 amended XtendiMax
20
and Enginia registrations were vacated and cancelled. These registrations approving the
21
new post-emergent use of OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybeans) were vacated
22
and cancelled because the 2016 Decision approving this new pattern of use was found to
23
not be supported by substantial evidence. In 2020, OTT dicamba was not an approved use.
24
It does not matter whether the Tavium registration was or was not challenged, or whether
25
the 2019 Tavium registration should have remained in place after the XtendiMax and
26
Enginia registrations were vacated and canceled. What matters is that the 2019 Tavium
27
registration was issued under FIFRA “me too” provisions because it was identical or
28
substantially similar to the then registered, and subsequently vacated and cancelled, OTT
- 18 -
1
dicamba products, XtendiMax and Enginia. EPA erred when it relied on the Tavium 2019
2
registration, which was premised on these vacated and cancelled XtendiMax and Enginia
3
registrations. In 2020, just like in 2016, as amended in 2018, EPA was considering
4
approving OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybean). This is the relevant use
5
pattern. It was a new use in 2016, when amended in 2018, and after those decisions were
6
vacated, it remained so when the EPA considered registering OTT dicamba products again
7
in 2020. The EPA is wrong that the OTT dicamba applications in 2020 did not meet the
8
“new use” definition under 40 C.F.R. § 152.3, which means: “any additional use pattern
9
that would result in a significant increase in the level of exposure, or a change in the route
10
of exposure, to the active ingredient of man or other organisms.” Just like the 2016, as
11
amended in 2018, registrations did, the 2020 registrations met this definition. The 2020
12
registrations required notice by publication in the Federal Register and public comment
13
under FIFRA. 40 C.F.R. § 152.102.
14
b. Cancelled Registrations
15
Plaintiff argues that on June 8, 2020, when EPA cancelled the vacated 2016, as
16
amended 2018 registrations, it triggered notice-and-comment provisions under section 6 of
17
FIFRA. 7 U.S.C. § 136d. (P MSJ, SOF, Stevenson Decl., Ex. J: Final Cancellation Order
18
(Doc. 161-10) at 2-13.)9 “EPA may commence cancellation proceedings ‘[i]f it appears to
19
the Administrator that a pesticide or its labeling or other material required to be submitted
20
does not comply with the provisions of this subchapter or, when used in accordance with
21
widespread and commonly recognized practice, generally causes unreasonable adverse
22
effects on the environment.’” Id. Then, EPA may either issue a notice of intent to cancel
23
or issue a notice of intent to hold a hearing to determine whether a registration should be
24
canceled. If the first option is chosen, the registrant may demand a hearing. 7 U.S.C. §
25
136d(b). Once a final decision to cancel has been made, the registrant may seek judicial
26
review by filing a petition for review in a court of appeals. 7 U.S.C. § 136n.
27
28
9
Id.
- 19 -
1
In reverse, § 6, Subpart D, 40 C.F.R. § 164.130, explains: “EPA has determined that
2
any application under section 3 . . . to allow use of a pesticide . . . for which registration
3
has been finally cancelled or suspended by the Administrator constitutes a petition for
4
reconsideration of such order. . . .[and] such orders may not be reversed or modified
5
without . . . notice and hearing opportunities, [pursuant] subpart D.” Additionally, § 3,
6
subpart F, 40 C.F.R. § 152.100, requires the Agency to “follow the procedures in this
7
subpart for all applications for registration, except an application for registration of a
8
pesticide that has been the subject of a previous Agency cancellation or suspension notice
9
under FIFRA section 6” and “follow the procedures of subpart D of part 164 when
10
“evaluating any application for registration of a pesticide involving use of the pesticide in
11
a manner that is prohibited by a suspension or cancellation order.”
12
“[T]he existence and content of Section 6 is strong evidence that Congress intended
13
EPA to use Section 6,” not some other enforcement action, to remove a product from the
14
market if it determines that the product is no longer eligible for registration.” Benckiser v.
15
Jackson, 762 F. Supp.2d 34, 43-44 (D.C. 2011). In Benckiser, the court explained it would
16
be illogical to allow EPA to bring an enforcement action for misbranding that would
17
effectively cancel the registration because this would allow EPA to by-pass cancellation
18
proceedings and circumvent the rigorous cancellation process Congress provided for in
19
section 6. Congress intended applicants dissatisfied with the Secretary’s action in refusing
20
or canceling a registration to have recourse in advisory committee proceedings, public
21
hearings, and eventually judicial review,” “designed to both ‘afford [] adequate protection
22
to the public,’ and ‘protect [] applicants for registration from arbitrary or ill-advised action
23
by the Department.” Id. at 47 (citation).
24
Subpart D, 40 C.F.R. § 164.130, explains EPA is required to consider any
25
application under § 3 to allow use of a pesticide where the Administrator has cancelled its
26
registration to constitute a petition for reconsideration of such cancellation “[b]ecause of
27
the extensive notice and hearing opportunities mandated by FIFRA . . . before a final
28
cancellation or suspension order may be issued, EPA has determined that such orders may
- 20 -
1
not be reversed or modified without affording interested parties—who may in fact have
2
participated
3
opportunities.”
in
lengthy
cancellation
proceedings—similar
notice
and
hearing
4
It is undisputed that the EPA only sent the Final Cancellation Order to the
5
manufacturer, and Bayer did not seek a hearing. The EPA did not afford notice, comment,
6
or any opportunity for hearing when it issued the 2020 dicamba registrations. Arguably the
7
purpose as stated in section 6 for requiring mirror public hearing procedures before
8
reconsidering a cancellation order does not apply factually because no notice and comment
9
or hearing was afforded prior to EPA’s issuance of the June 8, 2020, Final Cancellation
10
Order. Nevertheless, Benckiser suggests a preference to proceed under cancellation
11
provision in section 6 rather than bypassing it.
12
The EPA argues that the cancellation provisions in part 164, subpart D only apply
13
if the pesticide at issue has been the subject of a previous Agency cancellation under FIFRA
14
section 6 (7 U.S.C. § 136d). Otherwise, part 152, subpart F applies, and it issued the 2020
15
cancelation under FIFRA section 3 (7 U.S.C. § 136a). (EPA Reply (Doc. 239) at 15) (citing
16
Final Cancellation Order (June 8, 2020) at 4.)) In the Final Cancellation Order, the EPA
17
explained that “the three registrations were vacated by court order immediately, without
18
any opportunity for a cancelation order to be issued by EPA. Nonetheless, the Agency
19
believes that the Court’s action in vacating [] these dicamba registrations has been
20
consistently viewed under FIFRA as equivalent to the cancellation of those registrations
21
under FIFRA section 3 (7 U.S.C. § 136a) including any additional uses authorized under
22
section 24(c) of FIFRA), because the vacatur is based upon the lack of substantial evidence
23
to support the registration under section 3 of FIFRA.” Id.
24
Section 3, subpart F pertains to agency review of applications and procedures to
25
either grant or deny them. For example, EPA argued it could not take action in 2022 and
26
2023 except to approve or deny the voluntary-registrant amendments that were submitted
27
for a few states subsequent to “[e]vents during the 2021 growing season [that]confounded
28
EPA’s expectations.” (EPA CMSJ (Doc. 170) at 15.) EPA issued a status report, the 2021
- 21 -
1
Report, and released it to state stakeholders, who then sought further restrictions. However,
2
in the 2020 Decision, the EPA advised that states could no longer act, as they had before
3
pursuant to § 24(c) to impose restrictions greater than those imposed by the federal
4
government. See (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A0 (AR A.44): 2020 Decision Supporting Approval
5
(Doc. 158-3) at 21 n.19.) Therefore, in 2022 and 2023, the states were dependent on the
6
Intervenor Defendants seeking voluntary-registrant amendments. Which they did in this
7
case for a few states.
8
The Court does not reach the Plaintiffs’ charge that the EPA engaged in improper
9
rule making, without notice and comment.10 In the context of EPA’s assertion that the Final
10
Cancellation Order was issued pursuant to section 3, the Court rejects the assertion that
11
EPA had no authority to cancel the 2020 registrations. Section 3 establishes the Agency’s
12
obligation to review data when it determines that it would otherwise serve the public
13
interest, 40 C.F.R. § 152.107, and provides no substitute procedures to formal cancellation
14
in the event such review should warrant such action. Cf., 7 U.S.C. § 136a(c)(8) (providing
15
for “Interim administrative review,” [n]otwithstanding any other provision of this
16
subchapter, and precluding Administrator from initiating a public interim administrative
17
review process without initiating prior formal action to cancel); 7 U.S.C. § 136a(g)
18
(requiring formal cancellation proceedings for periodic (15 year) reviews).
19
While section 3, 40 C.F.R. § 152 et seq, including subpart F, pertains to pesticide
20
registration procedures, it carves out application of section 6, subpart D, 40 C.F.R. §
21
152.100, for “any application for registering a pesticide that has been the subject of a
22
previous Agency cancellation notice under section 6.” There are no other relevant
23
provisions in section 3, subpart F. The Court concludes, any action to cancel a registration
24
10
25
26
27
28
APA agency actions that qualify as rules must go through notice-and-comment. 5 U.S.C.
§§ 553(b), (c). The APA defines “rule” as “the whole or a part of an agency statement of
general or particular applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret, or
prescribe law or policy.” Id. § 551(4). Legislative rules are agency decisions that “create
rights, impose obligations, or effect a change in existing law pursuant to authority delegated
by Congress.” Hemp Indus. Ass’n v. Drug Enforcement Admin., 333 F.3d 1082, 1087 (9th
Cir. 2003). An agency can issue a legislative rule only by using the notice-and-comment
procedure described in the APA. 5 U.S.C. § 553(b), (b)(B). In contrast, an agency need not
follow the notice-and-comment procedure to issue an interpretive rule. § 553(b)(A).
- 22 -
1
whether it arises from section 3 review or otherwise is subject to section 6 cancellation
2
provisions, including public hearing notice and comment requirements.
3
Section 6 of FIFRA provides: “The Administrator may permit the continued sale
4
and use of existing stocks of a pesticide whose registration is suspended or cancelled under
5
this section or section 136a []11, to such extent, under such conditions, and for such uses as
6
the Administrator determines that such sale or use is not inconsistent with the purposes of
7
this subchapter.” 7 U.S.C. § 136d(a)(1).
8
Subsection b provides for the Administrator to cancel a pesticide if “its labeling or
9
other material required to be submitted does not comply with the provisions of this
10
subchapter or, when used in accordance with widespread and commonly recognized
11
practice, generally causes unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.” Then, “the
12
Administrator may issue a notice of the Administrator's intent either--(1) to cancel its
13
registration . . . with the reasons (including the factual basis) for the Administrator's action,
14
or (2) to hold a hearing to determine whether or not its registration should be canceled . .
15
..” 7 U.S.C. § 136d(b).
16
It is undisputed that the Final Cancellation Order was a “stock order,” issued
17
pursuant to 7 U.S.C. § 136d(a) for “a pesticide whose registration is suspended or canceled
18
under this section,” referring to section 6. EPA expressly issued the notice as a
19
“cancellation,” an action authorized pursuant to 7 U.S.C. § 136d(b). The Court finds the
20
Final Cancellation Order was issued under section 6. Even if the Final Cancellation Order
21
is something other than a cancellation order issued under 7 U.S.C. § 136d, the nature of the
22
EPA’s action to cancel the 2016, as amended in 2018, OTT dicamba registrations taken on
23
June 8, 2020, is not procedurally determinative because in this case the EPA approved a
24
“new use” registration on October 27, 2020, and that action required notice and comment.
25
Either way, the EPA failed to provide notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to issuing
26
the 2020 dicamba registrations for OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybean).
27
28
11
[136a-1] omitted (pertains to reregistration of registered pesticides).
- 23 -
1
2. Yes: EPA Violated FIFRA Hearing (Notice and Comment) Mandates
2
The court in NFFC (Monsanto) vacated the 2016, 2018 amended registrations,
3
because they were not supported by substantial evidence in part because the EPA failed to
4
consider certain risks and associated costs to stakeholders not using OTT dicamba, such as
5
economic costs associated with defensive planting of DT soybeans, impacts to other seed
6
technologies and other seed companies, social cost to farming communities from disputes
7
between OTT and non-OTT dicamba users, etc. NFFC, 960 F.3d at 1142-1144. The EPA
8
substantially understated and failed to quantify dicamba damage to specialty crops, like
9
vegetables and orchards, vineyards, non-agricultural trees and plants, and beekeepers. Id.
10
at 1138-39. EPA failed to consider non-compliance with label restrictions caused by so
11
many limitations, such as time of day, temperature and wind restrictions, etc., that growers
12
were unable to find any unrestricted means to use OTT dicamba. Id. at 1139-1141.
13
Given the unequivocal revocation and cancellation of the XtendiMax and Enginia
14
registrations that authorized the “new use” of low-volatility dicamba products for post-
15
emergent OTT spraying for DT cotton and soybean crops, the EPA’s determination that
16
the 2020 registrations were not also “new use” registrations is so implausible the Court
17
cannot ascribe it to be a mere difference in view. It is not a product of agency expertise.
18
The EPA erred when it relied on the 2019 Tavium registration as a jumping off point, data-
19
wise and procedurally for the 2020 dicamba registrations because by its very definition as
20
a “me too” registration it was premised on the vacated and cancelled XtendiMax and
21
Enginia registrations.
22
EPA sidestepped the statutory mandate under FIFRA that notice and comment be
23
afforded all stakeholders for new use registrations. The EPA denied the public its statutory
24
right to meaningfully weigh in during the decision-making process before EPA concludes
25
whether OTT dicamba has unreasonable adverse effects on the environment. 7 U.S.C. §
26
136a(c)(4), 40 C.F.R. § 152.102. The Court finds a violation of the APA because the EPA’s
27
agency approval of the new use, OTT dicamba, registrations without notice and hearing,
28
- 24 -
1
was not in accordance with law, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), and without observance of
2
procedure required by law, id. § 706(2)(D).
3
“If the court finds that an agency committed an error, the court must take ‘due
4
account’ of ‘the rule of prejudicial error.’” NRDC (Bayer), 676 F. Supp. 2d at 311; 5 U.S.C.
5
§ 706 (in determining APA violations, “the court shall review the whole record or those
6
parts of it cited by a party, and due account shall be taken of the rule of prejudicial error.”
7
“‘The rule of prejudicial error typically eliminates the necessity of remand following
8
judicial review when the error that the agency has made was not prejudicial and did not
9
impinge on fundamental rights.’” Id. (quoting Green Island Power Auth. v. FERC, 577
10
F.3d 148, 167 (2nd Cir. 2009). The Court finds the error of issuing the 2020 registrations
11
without notice and comment was prejudicial and impinged on the fundamental right to be
12
heard. This right is important because it ensures registration decisions are not made
13
arbitrarily or capriciously. Without it, there was prejudice because not all stakeholders,
14
especially non-OTT users at risk from OTT dicamba, were not afforded an opportunity to
15
be heard to create a record of objections to be considered by the EPA before it issued the
16
2020 OTT dicamba registrations. Because the Court finds error, vacatur is required. The
17
real question in this case is whether the Court should make an exception and remand the
18
2020 OTT dicamba registrations to the EPA, without vacatur.
19
D. REMEDY: VACATUR OR REMAND WITHOUT VACATUR
20
The Court should order remand without vacatur “‘only in limited circumstances.’”
21
(NFFC (Monsanto), 960 F.3d at 1144 (quoting Pollinator, 806 F.3d at 532), “‘when equity
22
demands that we do so,’” Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th at 663 (quoting Pollinator, 806
23
F.3d at 532) (cleaned up). Vacatur is the presumptive remedy when an agency violates the
24
law. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Remand without vacatur, as a remedy, is used sparingly. Wood
25
v. Burwell, 837 F.3d 969, 975-76 (9th Cir. 2016).
26
A district court has “broad latitude in fashioning equitable relief “when necessary
27
to remedy an established wrong,” Nat'l Wildlife Fed'n v. Nat'l Marine Fisheries Serv., 524
28
F.3d 917, 936 (9th Cir. 2008), and may exercise its discretion where appropriate to order
- 25 -
1
partial, rather than complete, vacatur on remand. See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Van Antwerp,
2
719 F. Supp. 2d 77, 79-80 (D.D.C. 2010) (narrowing vacatur of permits to allow continued
3
construction of partially-completed county road and to maintain storm water maintenance
4
programs because these activities promoted purposes of Clean Water Act).
5
Two factors guide the Court in deciding whether to depart from, or limit, the
6
presumptive remedy of vacatur: (1) the seriousness of an agency's errors; and (2) the
7
disruptive consequences that would result from vacatur. (NFFC (Monsanto), 960 F.3d at
8
1144 (relying on Pollinator, 806 F.3d at 532)). In applying these factors, the Court
9
considers the following: 1) the extent to which vacating or leaving the decision in place
10
would risk environmental harm, 2) looks at whether the agency would likely be able to
11
offer better reasoning or whether complying with procedural rules, it could adopt the same
12
registrations on remand, or 3) if the fundamental flaws in the agency’s decision make it
13
unlikely that the same rule would be adopted on remand. Id.
14
1. Seriousness of the Procedural Error
15
In this case, the EPA violated the statutory mandate in FIFRA for notice and
16
comment for “new use” registrations and failed to determine no additional data was
17
necessary before issuing the 2020 unconditional registrations for OTT dicamba. EPA
18
violated FIFRA in 2020 when it issued the registrations for XtendiMax, Enginia, and
19
Travium. The seriousness of this error is compounded by the finding in NFFC that the
20
original registrations issued for OTT dicamba in 2016, amended in 2018, failed to consider
21
risks to certain stakeholders, including those not using OTT dicamba.
22
In NFFC (Monsanto), the court considered these factors for the 2016, as amended
23
2018, OTT dicamba registrations and vacated them. Supra. at 4 (citing NFFC (Monsanto),
24
960 F.3d at 1144-1145). The appellate court concluded the fundamental flaws in the EPA’s
25
analysis was so substantial that it was “exceedingly unlikely that the same rule would be
26
adopted on remand.” Id. at 1145. In part the seriousness of the error was attributed to the
27
EPA’s failure to consider certain risks to stakeholders such as the Plaintiffs, who are non-
28
users of OTT dicamba. Supra. at 25 (citing NFFC (Monsanto), 960 F.3d at 1138-1144).
- 26 -
1
In NFFC v. EPA (Dow), 966 F.3d 893, 929 (9th Cir. 2022), the court found far less
2
serious errors and remanded without vacatur because one was typographical and EPA’s
3
substantial compliance with ESA mitigated the other error, which was EPA’s failure to
4
first determine whether any effect was “adverse” to the Monarch butterfly before
5
determining whether use of Enlist Due caused adverse effects to the environment. While
6
noting EPA’s risk quotient-level methodology for determining effects has been called into
7
question, the court deferred to the EPA given the technical nature of alleged error and
8
concluded EPA would likely be able to offer better reasoning and adopt the same rule on
9
remand.
10
In comparison to NFFC (Monsanto), the Ninth Circuit issued a decision in 2022 in
11
Ctr. for Food Safety finding procedural errors similar to those at issue here, and remanded
12
without vacating registrations for sulfoxaflor, an insecticide that can harm honeybees. In
13
Ctr. for Food Safety, the court considered unconditional registrations issued by the EPA
14
subsequent to a judicial vacatur of conditional registrations. Like this Court’s finding here,
15
the court in Ctr. for Food Safety held the registrations issued after the judicial vacatur were
16
“new use” registrations, and the EPA failed to comply with FIFRA’s notice and comment
17
requirements. Unlike this case, the EPA in Ctr. for Food Safety admittedly erred and asked
18
for remand, without vacatur. After sharply rebuking the EPA for thumbing its nose at its
19
prior judicial decision and court directives to comply with ESA, the majority nevertheless
20
“reluctantly” remanded without vacatur, Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th at 668-69, “because
21
a vacatur may end up harming the environment more and disrupting the agricultural
22
industry,” id. at 652. In Ctr. for Food Safety, there was no alternative pesticide compared
23
to the enhanced environment protection covered by the sulfoxaflor registration. Id. at 668.
24
The court in Ctr. for Food Safety did not issue a blanket remand. It ordered the EPA to act
25
“immediately,” within 180 days to comply with ESA. Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th at 669.
26
In Ctr. for Food Safety, the record reflected several public hearing opportunities.
27
The EPA first issued conditional new use registrations for sulfoxaflor in 2010 after notice
28
and comment. In 2013, EPA again noticed and heard comment when it intended to issue
- 27 -
1
conditional registrations with mitigating measures pending further data development, but
2
ultimately registered sulfoxaflor unconditionally. The 2013 decision and unconditional
3
registrations were vacated, remanded for further study to support expanding use of
4
sulfoxaflor. Subsequently, manufacturers amended the registration applications to add
5
restrictions to eliminate exposure, such as including buffer zones and limiting spraying
6
post-bloom. In 2016, EPA invited public comment to address the Ninth Circuit vacatur
7
directive to obtain further studies and data for effects of sulfoxaflor on bees, then EPA
8
found no need for additional data and unconditionally registered sulfoxaflor for limited
9
uses with restrictions. In 2019, without notice and comment, EPA expanded the
10
unconditional registrations to approve spraying on post-blooming crops from the 2014
11
vacated registrations and removed restrictions that were required in 2016. Id. at 653-656.
12
Center for Food Safety sued the EPA.
13
In Ctr. for Food Safety, the court rejected EPA’s asserted reliance on notice and
14
comment afforded in 2014 and 2018, granted EPA’s requested remand without vacatur,
15
and imposed an “immediate” deadline for ESA compliance. Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th
16
at 653-656, 660-663. Concurring with the majority findings of error, Circuit Judge Miller
17
dissented in the remedy because he found the errors serious. “It is the EPA’s job, not ours,
18
to assess the risks of a pesticide. But it is difficult for us to know whether the EPA did so
19
correctly when its errors obscure our view of the alternatives.” Ctr. for Food Safety, 56
20
F.4th at 670 (Miller concurring and dissenting in parts). He did not share the confidence of
21
the majority that EPA’s violations could not have made a difference because without notice
22
and comment to afford affected parties an opportunity to create an evidentiary record to
23
support their objections, the court cannot know whether the agency made a fair assessment
24
of all the data. Id. at 670-71. “Total ignorance is not necessary for vacatur; an erroneous or
25
incomplete assessment will also do.” Id. at 671 (citing Pollinator, 806 F3d at 532-33;
26
NRDC v. EPA (HeiQ Materials), 735 F.3d 873, 883-883-84 (9th Cir. 2013)). “Just because
27
the EPA did not completely neglect the risks does not mean the agency would necessarily
28
make the same decision if it understood them better.” Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th at 671.
- 28 -
1
He concluded, if beekeepers were given an opportunity to be heard on remand, a different
2
result may be reached. Id. Accordingly, he would have followed the ordinary course of
3
vacating the agency action due to error. Id.
4
Judge Miller gave credit to the majority for acknowledging “the bad incentives
5
created by remand without vacatur,” and for mitigating them by imposing a time limit (180
6
days). Id. at 672. He pointed out, however, and this Court agrees, deadlines for compliance
7
create a different set of problems because courts “generally ‘may not, after determining
8
that additional evidence is required for adequate review, proceed by dictating to the agency
9
the methods, procedures, and time dimension of the needed inquiry.’” Id. (quoting Vermont
10
Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 544–45 (1978)). “‘The function
11
of the reviewing court ends when an error of law is laid bare. At that point the matter once
12
more goes to the [agency] for reconsideration.’” Id. (quoting FPC v. Idaho Power Co., 344
13
U.S. 17, 20 (1952)). The best approach is to vacate EPA’s unlawful action “and let it
14
determine how, and at what pace, to proceed.” Id. at 673.
15
Remand without vacatur incentivizes lawsuits like the one filed here where the EPA
16
operates with a “whack-a-mole” mentality and postpones compliance with statutory
17
mandates until sued and a court orders compliance, and sometimes waits until several
18
judicial directives are issued. Id. at 659 (majority opinion). This behavior gives the EPA
19
an unfair advantage because “‘there is evidence of potentially serious disruption if a
20
pesticide that has been registered for over [many years] can no longer be used.’” Id. at 668
21
(quoting NFFC (Dow), 966 F.3d at 929-30)). For example, OTT dicamba has been used
22
since 2016, without a registration substantially supported by the evidence. NFFC, 960 F.3d
23
at 1144. See infra Part D.2 (describing disruptive consequences if OTT dicamba is vacated
24
because growers have relied on its use for many years, without incident).
25
Both sides press the court to decide the merits of complicated scientific issues that
26
have been statutorily relegated to the EPA, an agency with expertise to evaluate scientific
27
and technical evidence of risks and benefits, including social and economic, for pesticides.
28
This Court’s jurisdiction is to assess whether the EPA complied with the law, including
- 29 -
1
statutory procedural requirements, considered all risks, and issued a decision that is not
2
arbitrary and capricious. The EPA’s position is that in spite of any procedural error, it got
3
it right; the Plaintiffs argue that the EPA failed to consider all risks and, therefore, got it
4
wrong. Both positions require the Court to look, with deference, at the technical merits of
5
the EPA’s determination that OTT dicamba use on DT crops (cotton and soybean) is not
6
an unreasonable risk to the environment. The procedural error at issue in this case, lack of
7
notice and hearing, upsets the delicate balance created by Congress between Agency
8
determinations and judicial review. Accordingly, the Court finds the procedural error is
9
very serious. This case is not like Ctr. for Food Safety where there were multiple public
10
hearing opportunities, EPA admitted its errors, and sought a limited period of time to
11
rectify them.
12
Here, the EPA provided notice and opportunity to comment regarding the use of
13
OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybean) in 2016. That was the last time
14
stakeholders whose interests are in opposition to OTT dicamba were given notice and
15
comment for EPA consideration prior to approving an OTT dicamba registration. In NFFC
16
(Monsanto), the court found the omission of risks associated with these same stakeholders
17
in part resulted in the 2016, as amended in 2018, Decision and XtendiMax and Enginia
18
registrations to be not substantially supported by evidence, and this fundamental flaw was
19
then considered so substantial that it was “exceedingly unlikely that the same rule would
20
be adopted on remand.” NFFC (Monsanto), 660 F3d at 1145. The Court explains below
21
why this remains true today.
22
Most obviously, the EPA’s 2020 Decision failed to reconcile the unconditional 2020
23
registrations with the conditional 2019 Tavium “me too” registration, which by definition
24
was premised on there being insufficient data for an unconditional registration and
25
mirrored the data requirements from the 2016, as amended by 2018 dicamba XtendiMax
26
and Enginia conditional registrations. To support an unconditional registration, the EPA
27
must determine that no additional data are necessary relevant to determining that there is
28
no unreasonable adverse effect to the environment.
- 30 -
1
The Court looks for evidence to support the change in 2020 to issue unconditional
2
registrations instead of conditional registrations. The Defendant Intervenors refer the Court
3
to scientific submissions of “new field studies” conducted by independent academic
4
experts and registrants, including 19 registrant studies identifying efficacy of VRA
5
(volatility reduction adjuvants) and other evidence of “new measures” to address dicamba
6
volatility including: calendar cutoff dates restricting use to earlier in the season when
7
temperatures are lower; reports from users regarding pesticide benefits, and increased
8
yields. (Defendant Intervenors (D Interv. MSJ (Doc 174 (R)/197 (S)) at 20.)
9
The Court accepts that EPA considered “new” data subsequent to 2018, meaning
10
data presented in the Intervenor Defendants’ 2020 new use registration applications. The
11
Court does not accept the representations that the EPA considered “new measures” in the
12
2020 registrations to address dicamba volatility or that there was “new data” showing
13
VRAs significantly reduce volatility. See (D Interv. MSJ (Doc 174 (R)/197 (S)) at 20.)
14
A quick comparison between the 2018 and 2020 registrations reflects changes in
15
control measures are better described as tightened restrictions and not “new measures.”
16
Since their inception, OTT registrations have all been similarly restricted to address off-
17
target dicamba movement, including buffer zones, time of day or year and other application
18
restrictions addressing windy, hot, including heat inversions, and rainy weather conditions;
19
tank mix adjuvants; hooded spray equipment, and product labeling to ensure proper
20
application and to address weed resistance. All these restrictions were tightened in 2018
21
when the 2016 registrations were amended, and again tightened in 2020.
22
In 2020, EPA mandated “a qualified VRA/pH buffering adjuvant in the tank for
23
every application.” (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A04 (AR A.4): 2020 Decision Supporting Approval
24
(Doc. 158-3) at 5.) In 2018, EPA merely advised tank mixes add a pH buffering adjuvant.
25
Spray drift downwind buffers were expanded from 110 ft. (2018) to 240 ft (2020), with
26
ESA downwind spray drift buffers expanded from 110 ft to 310 ft. Volatility measures
27
remained restricted by the “limit of two OTT applications of dicamba per field per year,”
28
with applications only between one hour after sunrise and two hours before sunset. In 2018,
- 31 -
1
volatility was addressed by spray restrictions specified by crop growth. Instead in 2020,
2
the EPA added calendar application cutoff dates (June 30 for DT soybean and July 30 for
3
DT cotton.) For ESA areas with federally listed species, a 57 ft. omni-directional buffer
4
existed in 2018 and remained the same in 2020. The EPA added an option to use a hooded
5
sprayer, and correspondingly allowed a reduced buffer zone to 110 ft (FIFRA) and 240 ft
6
(ESA). The label was improved for clarity in 2020 by including calendar cutoff dates
7
instead of growth parameters and covered only pre and post-emergent uses for DT cotton
8
and DT soybean crops eliminating instructions for non-DT crops. The 2018 conditional
9
registrations ended after two years, and the unconditional 2020 registrations were for 5
10
years. Id.
11
Responding to Plaintiff’s accusation that EPA rushed the 2020 Decision, issuing it
12
four months after the Ninth Circuit vacated the registrations in June of 2022, the Defendant
13
Intervenors submit new data acquisition began subsequent to the 2018 amended conditional
14
OTT dicamba registrations. Accordingly, the Court begins with the EPA’s findings in
15
2018.
16
The EPA identified a list of uncertainties associated with establishing distances to
17
effect, such as there was no data for reproductive stage plants using yields (a more
18
appropriate measure) and no measurements from some direction other than downwind for
19
treatment, where downwind direction was established at the time of application. The effects
20
on plants only evaluated non-DT soybeans, which is considered the most sensitive plant
21
based on laboratory studies--- but “there is uncertainty as to how representative these
22
results are for other plant species with different growth and reproduction strategies.”
23
Studies reflected volatility of dicamba increases with temperature, but only three studies
24
were representative of warmer temperatures with sustained temperatures during the day
25
above 90 degrees. Only one study reported the pH of the tank mixture resulting in
26
“uncertainty as to how various tank mixtures in field studies may have depressed pH values
27
resulting in increased volatility.” EPA reported there was a limited number of large field
28
studies for Enginia, which might not directly translate for XtendiMax. Likewise, there was
- 32 -
1
uncertainty whether results for field studies conducted primarily in areas with high levels
2
of alleged incidents would robustly account for variability of dicamba movement and
3
attendant effects for non-target species located across other landscapes proximal to sites of
4
dicamba use. (P MSJ, SOF, Stevenson Decl., Ex. E, 2018 New Information and Analysis
5
of Dicamba Use on DT Soybean and Cotton, including Updated Effects Determinations
6
for ESA . . . § 4.6 (Doc. 161-5) at 49-50).12
7
See also id. at 80 (among other things recognizing that growth stages of listed plants
8
in the wild will likely not always coincide with that of soybeans or other agricultural crops).
9
As amended in 2018, the OTT dicamba registrations were expressly conditioned on
10
data gathering and monitoring requirements: 1) Confirmatory Data, including field studies
11
examining offsite movement of dicamba and investigation into temperature effects on
12
volatility, ecological effects on non-target plants, related to survival, growth and
13
reproduction for select sensitive tree/shrub/woody perennial species, and effects of lower
14
pH on secondary movement; and 2) Monitoring Needs for the 2019 and 2020 Growing
15
Season, including enhanced incident reporting to aggregate potential damage to non-target
16
vegetation and information for dicamba-resistant weeds and weed control failure, data by
17
state for acres of sales of DT tolerant cotton and soybean seed and product used for OTT
18
dicamba applications. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. M168 (AR M.168): 2018 Decision for Continued
19
Use of Dicamba on DT Cotton and Soybean (Doc. 158-33) at 20, 24.)13 In 2018, EPA noted
20
it was particularly important to study the impact of off-target movement from dicamba
21
OTT applications on high-value specialty crops, as well as privately-owned gardens,
22
landscaping, and orchards because these stakeholders, unlike cotton and soybean growers,
23
cannot defensively use DT seed. Id. at 24.
24
In 2020, the EPA’s silence (no express discussion or conclusion) regarding the need
25
for additional data is particularly deafening because the 2020 Decision concludes that for
26
12
27
28
The Court takes judicial notice of this publicly available document which is a
government publication. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). See (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A04 (AR A.4): 2020
Decision Supporting Approval (Doc. 158-3) at 11 (describing the 2020 Decision as
including consideration of earlier submitted relevant information, including earlier
registration actions).
13
Id.
- 33 -
1
a variety of sensitive crops “[q]uantification of this damage is difficult. There have been a
2
few greenhouse studies that have attempted to follow plants with a known level of injury
3
through maturity and harvest to quantify changes in yield or quality. These studies are
4
currently insufficient to extrapolate to a field level to estimate an impact per acre of affected
5
crop. Damage to plants in non-crop areas (e.g., shelterbelts, trees, residential plantings,
6
etc.) usually lack an objective valuation that could be used to estimate overall damages.”
7
(P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A06 (AR A.6): 2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users and Non-Users
8
(Doc. 158-5) at 47.)
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
EPA continued regarding risk to non-target crops, as follows:
. . ., the damage can be bounded by examining the per-acre
value of sensitive crops (USDA NASS, 2020c; calculated from
yield per acre and value price per unit harvested). Soybean and
cotton have a per-acre value of $410 and $510, respectively.
Vegetable crops can have a value 10-fold higher (e.g., tomato,
$5,900 per acre). Perennial crops can have an even higher value
(e.g., peaches, $7,300 per acre). If the tree is no longer viable
it would have to be replaced and the new tree would not be
commercially productive for about four years. Damage to noncrop areas (shelterbelts, trees, residential plantings, etc.) is
difficult to quantify.
Overall, the impacts to non-users from the registration of these
OTT dicamba products will depend on how well the selected
control measures address the offsite movement of dicamba or
reduces the potential for damage, if offsite movement does
occur. Some measures only address one type of offsite
movement (e.g., volatility) while others may address both
volatility and spray drift (e.g., buffers). The performance of
these measures depends on the efficacy of each measure
separately, as well as in combination with the other required
measures.
26
For example, the calendar-based application restriction is
intended to limit applications of OTT dicamba to earlier in the
growing season when temperatures are cooler. This addresses
offsite movement that may occur through volatility but will
have limited effect on offsite movement resulting from spray
drift. Additionally, if offsite movement does occur at this
timing, there may be a reduced impact because sensitive plants
may not yet be present in adjacent areas. If the number of
incidents is reduced, state agencies will expend fewer
resources.
27
***
28
***
22
23
24
25
- 34 -
These control measures should benefit non-users by addressing
offsite movement. However, impacts to non-users of OTT
dicamba products may still occur, if misuse occurs.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Id. at 47-48 (emphasis added).
The EPA tightened the control measures for a third time and concluded: “If all
mandatory control measures on the product labels are implemented there is a high degree
of certainty that these will address offsite movement.” (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A06 (AR A.6):
2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users and Non-Users (Doc. 158-5) at 41.) The EPA did not
assess costs associated with risks for non-users of OTT dicamba users because “any
negative impacts to non-users from OTT dicamba will be minimal. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A04
10
(AR A.4): 2020 Decision Supporting Approval (Doc. 158-3) at 18 (review of “Impacts of
11
Registration to Non-Users of Dicamba, found “the control measures give EPA a 90%
12
confidence that there will be no offsite movement of dicamba.”)
13
The 2020 Decision approved OTT dicamba, summarizing its action as follows:
14
EPA received studies and other information, necessary to
comply with the data requirements for the uses of these
products. The EPA also reviewed a large body of data and
information to determine how these products have been and
will be used to determine the risks and benefits. All of these
evaluations informed EPA’s determination that registering
these products will not generally cause unreasonable adverse
effects on the environment when used in accordance with
widespread and commonly recognized practice.
15
16
17
18
19
20
Id. at 20.
21
This is conclusory boilerplate language given the unexplained incongruity between
22
the unconditional and conditional registrations issued in such close proximity to each other.
23
EPA relied on a circular risk analysis with all roads leading back to efficacy of the control
24
measures because effects from the registration of OTT dicamba depends on how well the
25
control measures address the offsite movement of dicamba and thereby reduces the
26
potential for offsite OTT dicamba related damage. If the control measures eliminate or
27
reduce it to “minimal,” there is no risk. If there is no risk, there is no need to assess the cost
28
of this risk. Of course, the reverse is true if the control measures are not sufficiently
- 35 -
1
effective to mitigate volatility and spray drift to eliminate damaging effects from OTT
2
dicamba. EPA’s approach is especially problematic for the ESA “no effects”
3
determination. “[M]itigation measures that merely ‘reduce,’ but cannot scientifically
4
‘eliminate’ an ‘effect’ probably compel a ‘may effect’ finding.” (NFFC (Dow), 966 F.3d
5
at 924 (quoting Karuk Tribe of Calif v. EPA, 681 F.3d 1006, 1028 (9th Cir. 2011)).
6
Mitigation measures can cut against a “no effect” finding if they reduce but cannot
7
eliminate the impact to threatened species. Id. When a failure to consult stretches over
8
years, it is a substantial procedural violation; it is not a violation that is merely technical or
9
de minimis. Washington Toxics Coal. v. Env't Prot. Agency, 413 F.3d 1024, 1034 (9th Cir.
10
2005) abrogated on other grounds as recognized by Cottonwood Envtl. Law Center v. U.S.
11
Forest Service, 789 F.3d 1075 (9th Cir. 2015).
12
The Defendant Intervenors reference “new data” asserting it shows no risk from
13
offsite movement of OTT dicamba because of control measures, as follows: the mandated
14
VRA tank mix adjuvant in the 2020 registrations, A.9 (Doc. 188-9) at 56-57; pH buffering
15
tank adjuvants stabilize dicamba by preventing salts from converting into dicamba acid
16
which is prone to volatization, A.4 (Doc. 188-4) at 14, A.9 (Doc. 188-9) at 56-57; studies
17
show when VRA is in tank mix, dicamba volatility is significantly reduced, A.4 (Doc. 188-
18
4) at 14; five new field studies on VRAs and humidome studies show 85 to 99.9% volatility
19
reduction if VRAs are in tank mixes, B.25 (Doc. 189-3) (S) at 1, F.85 (Doc. 189-28) (S) at
20
8; field studies reflect much lower dicamba volatility (89% reduction) and show
21
volatization likely reduced with cooler air temperatures, A.4 (Doc. 188-4) at 14, and
22
significant reduction means distances from where “dicamba produced effects are seen, A.9
23
(Doc. 188-9) at 56-57. (Interv. D MSJ (Doc. 174 (R)/197 (S)) at 20), SOF (Doc. 176
24
(R)/196 (S) ¶¶ 150-158).
25
The Court has reviewed the “new studies” and finds that, with the exception of
26
showing lower temperatures reduce volatility, the studies rely on tank mix adjuvants to
27
reduce spray drift and volatility to support the unconditional 2020 OTT dicamba
28
registrations. In 2020, EPA considered two types of adjuvants: a drift reduction adjuvant
- 36 -
1
(DRA) and a pH buffering volatility reduction adjuvant (VRA). (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A06
2
(AR A.6): 2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users and Non-Users (Doc. 158-5) at 25.) DRAs
3
reduce the number of fine droplets produced by nozzles, which are more likely to drift
4
during application; DRAs reduce spray drift. VRAs reduce volatility by keeping the
5
dicamba spray solution closer to a neutral pH because lower pH causes dicamba to form
6
the more volatile dicamba acid. Both tank-mix adjuvants were recommended by Bayer in
7
its 2020 application to register XtendiMax. (D Interv. MSJ, Ex. B16 XtendiMax Support
8
for Registration, July 24, 2020 (Doc. 192-2) at 8.) In the end, only VRAs made it into the
9
2020 dicamba registrations. The EPA concluded “the requirement of both additives would
10
increase the cost of the OTT dicamba program,” and “the added cost will reduce the benefit
11
of dicamba relative to other control [herbicide] options, . . .” “with the two adjuvants, the
12
dicamba tolerant program would be similar in cost to the 2,4-D program” for weed control.
13
(P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A06 (AR A.6): 2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users and Non-Users
14
(Doc. 158-5) at 25-26.)
15
In reviewing the record, the studies related to DRA tank mix agents were not
16
definitive. Id. at 57, see also Ex. A09 (AR A.9): 2020 Ecological Assessment Including
17
Effects Determination for ESA (Doc. 158-6) at 266) (a majority (88%) of studies with a
18
DRA tank mix agent, Intact, showed “mixed results on drift reduction,”), (DRA field
19
studies included so many variables, such as wind speed wind direction, temperature,
20
relative humidity, etc, during application that “it is difficult to ascertain the impact of the
21
DRA alone” and “[l]aboratory studies in controlled environments would allow for the
22
elimination of site-specific variables and a complete evaluation of the extent of any drift
23
reduction that adding a DRA to a tank mix would provide.”) The “EPA did not separate
24
out the data based on whether or not a drift reducing agent [DRA] or volatility reducing
25
agent [VRA] was included in the tank mix, as the variety of tank mix partners (i.e., with or
26
without glyphosate) and nozzles was limited.” (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A09 (AR A.9): 2020
27
Ecological Assessment Including Effects Determination for ESA (Doc. 158-6) at 266.)
28
Those studies while too few in number (45) to be applied when determining off-field
- 37 -
1
distance to effect, id. at 270, were considered by EPA in assessing the probability that the
2
in-filed 57 ft omnidirectional volatility setback would prevent the offsite movement of
3
dicamba from causing 10% VSI (visual signs of injury, with 10% VSA being treated
4
similarly to the protective threshold of no more than 5% reduction in plant height and
5
yield), id.
6
In 2020, the EPA recognized the limited scope played by VRAs in reducing effects
7
and impacts. EPA reported a high level of confidence in describing the distance to effects
8
without consideration of the mandatory control measures for near-filed zones out to
9
between 300 to 400 feet from the field edge, but admitted this was not true for wide-area
10
effects, unrelated to the field study applications of the herbicide. Then, the largest body of
11
evidence came from incident reports which contained information on approximately 5600
12
off-target incidents (reported at various distances) for the years 2017 through 2019. EPA
13
concluded these reports showed incidents occurring beyond the distances from treated
14
fields, including the setback restrictions contained on earlier labeling for these products,
15
intended to address spray drift and vapor drift routes of exposure. EPA concluded as
16
follows:
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
[It could not] definitively exclude the potential impact of vapor
phase drift in the wide area zone based on an evaluation of the
available large field off-field movement studies. Moreover,
EPA cannot identify any single volatility control measure (e.g.,
volatility reducing agent, VRA) that is certain to prevent
dicamba from transforming into its acid, that results in offsite
volatilization.”
(P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A09 (AR A.9): 2020 Ecological Assessment Including Effects
Determination for ESA (Doc. 158-6) at 20). See also 2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users
and Non-Users (Doc. 158-5)).
The other control measure, temperature, was addressed in the 2020 registrations by
calendar cutoff application dates for each DT crop (cotton and soybean). In addition to
being clear and easily understood, two things result from shifting application dates earlier
in the season when temperatures are cooler. The likelihood of offsite movement from
volatility is reduced. Also, there is less likelihood of sensitive crops being present early in
- 38 -
1
the growing season. The downside to an early cutoff date is that it precludes growers from
2
applying dicamba if weeds emerge later in the season. The June 30 cutoff date for soybean
3
and July 30 cutoff date for cotton accommodated two applications per growing season. The
4
June 30 cutoff for DT soybean crops potentially prevented 55% of reported incidents and
5
allowed approximately 45% of soybean crops to be treated twice and 84% to be treated
6
once. The July 30 cutoff date allowed 90% of DT cotton crops to be treated twice but
7
potentially prevented less than 5% of the reported incidents. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. A06 (AR
8
A.6): 2020 Incidents and Impacts to Users and Non-Users (Doc. 158-5) at 15-18.) EPA
9
“did not assess the impact of reducing the number of applications so that impact on risk
10
was not [] estimated, but limiting the number of applications can be expected to decrease
11
risk, generally. In addition, fewer applications would reduce the selection pressure on
12
dicamba resistant weeds but create concerns by users regarding season long weed control
13
or potential need to purchase a different herbicide for season long control.” Id. at 19
14
(cleaned up).
15
In short, EPA’s circular approach to assessing risk, hinging on its high confidence
16
that control measures will all but eliminate offsite movement, lead to its corresponding
17
failure to assess costs from offsite movement of OTT dicamba for stakeholders that are
18
non-OTT users. While recognizing that between 2018 and 2020, incident reports continued
19
to be filed by such stakeholders, the EPA nevertheless issued unconditional 2020 OTT
20
dicamba registrations, without any need for additional data.
21
To be clear, the Court does not include the above examples and discussions in the
22
context of assessing whether the 2020 Decision and registrations were arbitrary or
23
capricious. The Court considers the record to answer the question of whether remand
24
should be with or without vacatur because it is likely or not likely that the EPA will issue
25
the same registrations on remand if it complies with FIFRA’s procedural rules requiring
26
notice and comment to all stakeholders. In this context, the Court also considers a status
27
report, the 2021 Report, issued by the EPA on December 15, 2021. EPA issued the 2021
28
Report for OTT dicamba usage, incidents and consequences of off-target movement and
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1
impacts during the 2020 growing season under the control measures it had been highly
2
confident would preclude any such movement or impacts. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR U.1
3
(S)): 2021 Report (Doc. 168-18) (S)).
4
incident reports reflect the type of stakeholder input EPA’s procedural error precluded
5
during its consideration of the 2020 registrations. If EPA hears from these stakeholders on
6
remand, is it likely or not that EPA would adopt the same registrations for XtendiMax,
7
Enginia and Tavium?
14
It is relevant to the question of vacatur because
8
Like every year since the inception of OTT dicamba use in 2016, the EPA recorded
9
dicamba related incidents during the 2020 growing season. In 2017, there were
10
approximately 1,400 incidents reported, and they increased as follows: 3,000 in 2018,
11
3,300 in 2019, and 3,461 in 2020. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR U.1 (S)): 2021 Report (Doc.
12
168-18) (S) at 17-18.) In 2021, EPA cataloged incidents in 29 of the 34 states where use of
13
dicamba on DT crops is authorized. Id. at 18. It issued the status report to provide
14
transparency about incident reports and other information provided to the Agency during
15
the 2020 growing season. Id. at 7. EPA continued to believe that incidents are
16
underreported by about 25%. Id. at 7, 10. EPA reported social conflicts caused by dicamba
17
continued in 2021.15 Id. at 6. Essentially, “[there is no change from previous years in the
18
number, severity, or geographic extent of incidents.” Id. at 44. Notably there were 63
19
counties that have endangered species or critical habitat with at least one reported dicamba
20
incident and a total of 290 incidents across the counties,” suggesting the EPA’s “no effects”
21
conclusion sits on shaky ground because it was based on the premise that the 2020 control
22
measures would preclude offsite movement of dicamba during the 2020 growing season.
23
Id. at 25-26 (“incidents suggest the possibility that a ‘take’ could occur”).
24
“Newly available data indicated incidents are more extensive than had been
25
described and are continuing into 2021,” id. at 24-25, referencing incidents of dicamba
26
symptomology at landscape level at a 160,000-acre national wildlife refuge and an
27
14
28
Objections that the 2021 Report is beyond the administrative record do not apply to the
Court’s consideration of it in the context of vacatur.
15
See NFFC, 960 F.3d at 1142-1144 (criticizing EPA failure to consider social cost to
farming communities from disputes between OTT and non-OTT dicamba users).
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1
Audubon Arkansas study (2021) finding probable dicamba symptoms in over 20 species
2
of trees and shrubs, id. at 24-25, 43. With the majority of incident reports related to non-
3
DT soybeans, incident reports also reflected injury to other non-target crops, such as sugar
4
beet, rice, sweet potato, peanut, grapes/vineyards, cucurbits, vegetables, fruit trees,
5
cranberries, cotton, tree nurseries, and timber. Id. at 44. EPA noted the discovery of a
6
species (snap peas) more sensitive to dicamba than soybean (non-DT soybean). Id. at 20-
7
21. Survey data in 2021 reflected financial losses for specialty crop growers from herbicide
8
drift, not necessarily dicamba, with 50% reporting losses less than $10,000 per grower,
9
15% reporting losses of $10,000 or more per grower, and 1% reporting losses greater than
10
$500,000. Id. at 27-28.
11
The 2021 Report referenced “new information about dicamba resistance, id. at 9,
12
that showed weed resistance was confirmed during the 2020 growing season and was
13
becoming much more widespread, id. at 14, suggesting that weed resistance is not being
14
effectively managed by current training materials that are conditions of registration, id. at
15
15. “If weed resistance to dicamba were to follow the same trajectory as glyphosate, the
16
value of dicamba for OTT uses and for other registered dicamba uses would be effectively
17
lost, severely jeopardizing the ability of soybean and cotton producers to control
18
problematic broadleaf weeds.” Id. at 15. “As dicamba resistance spreads, the benefits of
19
the DT-crop system declines.” Id. at 45.
20
“While states indicate incidents may occur due to drift, several reported landscape
21
level injury, which indicates dicamba volatility was widespread,” with some states
22
reporting dicamba sources more than a mile away from the injured crop, and reported
23
incidents suggesting people are being impacted for multiple years. Id. at 22. State agencies
24
reported budget shortfalls and other constraints due to the number of dicamba-related
25
incidents requiring investigation. Id. at 30. Many states complained about the
26
“clarification” in the 2020 Decision that States do not have authority under FIFRA § 24(c)
27
to impose additional restrictions on a federal registration to either make them more or less
28
- 41 -
1
restrictive. Id. The Court has not addressed the rule-making challenge to this clarification,16
2
and relies on this evidence to show that states have a stake in the restrictions imposed in
3
these registrations, especially if they may no longer use section 24(c) to tweak them in one
4
way or the other. The Court finds State Agencies are stakeholders that were not afforded
5
notice and comment prior to EPA’s issuance of the 2020 Decision and registrations.
6
“In 2020, the Agency assessed the practicality of, and likely compliance with,
7
individual control measures of the 2020 label” and found compliance with application
8
cutoff dates likely improved by recordkeeping requirements, however, compliance was
9
also influenced by crop progress, weed pressure, and weather. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR
10
U.1 (S)): 2021 Report (Doc. 168-18) (S) at 33.) “At the time of the 2020 Decision, the
11
Agency did not have information about the current availability of the required buffering
12
agents and was not able to estimate compliance with requirements to add buffering agents.”
13
Id. Subsequently EPA “found that the complexity of determining the appropriate buffer
14
(varying distances dependent on county, wind direction, adjacent sensitive crops or other
15
plants) suggested noncompliance was likely.” Id. Summarizing what EPA heard from
16
states and academics regarding product usability pursuant to the 2020 label restriction, it
17
concluded many factors contribute to incidents. Id. at 38. Some states reported applicators
18
are applying OTT dicamba according to label restrictions and the buffering agents are not
19
sufficiently reducing volatility to keep OTT dicamba from moving off fields; others opined
20
applicators struggle with the label requirements and some blatantly ignore the restrictions.
21
Id. at 38. Either way, OTT dicamba can move offsite and damage non-target plants.
22
The 2021 Report supports the Ninth Circuit’s conclusion in NFFC that the EPA
23
failed to consider whether restrictions were too limited in allowances for application times
24
and conditions for growers to use OTT dicamba if they used it in substantial compliance
25
with such restrictions. In NFFC, the court held the EPA failed to consider the risk of
26
substantial non-compliance and corresponding dicamba damage. (NFFC (Monsanto), 960
27
F.3d at 1139-1142 (criticizing restrictions such as wind speed and temperature inversion
28
16
See n. 10.
- 42 -
1
limitations that allowed only 44 hours of application time in 2016 or only 47 hours and two
2
days in June for application in 2018). “A week after the 2020 Registrations, farmers across
3
the United States, including soybean farmers in the Upper Midwest and cotton farmers in
4
the South, filed suit in D.D.C., alleging that EPA’s new application restrictions were now
5
too restrictive.” (D Interv. MSJ (Doc 174 (R)/197 (S)) at 16.)
6
The Court finds that the administrative record for the 2020 Decision and
7
registrations and the 2021 Report reflect the EPA is unlikely to issue the same registrations
8
on remand if it follows FIFRA procedures for notice and comment and hears from all
9
stakeholders, especially those who have from the inception of OTT dicamba use been
10
subjected to the risks of OTT dicamba offsite movement. While the EPA has been highly
11
confident control measures would eliminate any such risk to only a minimal effect, the
12
incident reports filed year after year complaining of offsite movement of OTT dicamba
13
reflect otherwise. Yet, this dichotomy has not caused the EPA to seek additional data to
14
establish these associated costs that have flowed from OTT dicamba for the past
15
approximately seven years that OTT dicamba has been used in the United States. Like
16
Judge Miller believed hearing from beekeepers was likely to change the sulfoxaflor
17
pesticide decision on remand, this Court believes hearing from all stakeholders is likely to
18
change the OTT dicamba registrations at least from unconditional to conditional, with data
19
gathering requirements reinstated. Hearing from non-users of OTT dicamba may change
20
the EPA’s circular approach to assessing costs for risks from OTT dicamba offsite
21
movement. Instead of simply concluding there is no risk and, therefore, no costs to these
22
stakeholders, EPA is likely to include the costs to these stakeholders when balancing the
23
risks and benefits for OTT dicamba. Accordingly, the Court finds the EPA’s procedural
24
error to unconditionally issue the “new use” 2020 dicamba registration, without notice and
25
comment, was serious. The Court turns to the disruptive consequences of vacatur.
26
2. Disruptive Consequences of Vacatur
27
The EPA and Intervenor Defendants ask the Court to remand without vacatur, if it
28
finds error. Both submit the economic importance for using OTT dicamba for DT crops
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1
(soybean and cotton) post-emergent during growing seasons to control weeds, outweighs
2
any risk to the environment, endangered species or critical habitat. They contend OTT
3
dicamba has been used for many years, and the Plaintiffs fail to produce any evidence that
4
offsite dicamba movement has caused any harm. There is zero evidence of potential risks
5
to endangered species or protected habitat. (D. Interv. Reply (Doc. 241) at 15-16.) The
6
burden, however, is not on Plaintiffs but on Defendants. See, Alliance for the Wild Rockies
7
v. U.S. Forest Serv., 907 F.3d 1105, 1121-22 (9th Cir. 2018) (explaining presumption of
8
vacatur under the APA must be overcome by the party seeking remand without vacatur).
9
The Court accepts that there are substantial benefits from OTT dicamba for DT
10
crops (cotton and soybean) for weed control, especially for controlling weeds that are
11
resistant to other herbicides or when there is no herbicide resistance, OTT dicamba affords
12
flexibility in herbicide choices for rotating or mixing herbicides to manage weed resistance.
13
(P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR U.1 (S)): 2021 Report (Doc. 168-18) (S) at 10.) By 2020 about
14
three-quarters percent of cotton acreage used DT seed and about two-thirds percent of
15
soybean acreage used DT seed. Id. at 12. Defendants submit evidence that the cost of
16
herbicide resistant weeds on U.S. agriculture is more than 2 billion dollars, with 52%
17
potential loss in yield in soybean production due to weeds and $392 million dollars loss
18
possible in one year due to decrease cotton yields. (D Interv. Reply (Doc. 241) at 18 (citing
19
experts Griffin Decl. at 25 and Sunding Decl. at 66-67). The Defendant Intervenors argue:
20
“The Ninth Circuit has previously explicitly considered such effects when deciding not to
21
vacate.” Id. (citing Ctr. for Food Safety, 56 F.4th at 668 (considering “disruption to the
22
agricultural industry” and “serious disruption if a pesticide that has been registered for
23
[many years] can no longer be used”).
24
Defendants ignore that likewise the Ninth Circuit in NFFC (Monsanto) previously
25
explicitly considered such effects and decided to vacate these OTT dicamba registrations.
26
“Being aware of the practical effects” of vacatur and “difficulties these growers may have
27
in finding effective and legal herbicides to protect their DT crops” due to vacatur,” the
28
court nevertheless found the seriousness of the agency error, including in part its failure to
- 44 -
1
assess risks and costs for non-users of OTT dicamba compelled vacatur. NFFC
2
(Monsanto), 960 F.3d at 1145. There is no evidence before the Court that the ramifications
3
of vacatur of these registrations on growers or the environment is more dire now than it
4
was in 2020 when the Ninth Circuit vacated the 2016, as amended in 2018, OTT dicamba
5
registrations. There is some evidence the benefits for OTT dicamba is waning due to weed
6
resistance. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR U.1 (S)): 2021 Report (Doc. 168-18) (S) at 8-10,
7
44.)
8
In considering Ctr. for Food Safety, the Court finds that unlike sufloxefor, where
9
growers had no other pesticide options, growers do have options for OTT dicamba because
10
they can switch to using the OTT 2,4-D system. (P MSJ, SOF, Ex. UO1 (AR U.1 (S)):
11
2021 Report (Doc. 168-18) (S) at 7). The Court notes that in response to vacatur of the
12
2016, as amended in 2018, OTT dicamba registrations, the EPA cancelled the registrations
13
but allowed use of existing stock. Vacating the registrations poses no greater risk to the
14
environment than leaving it in place because other similar herbicide options are available
15
to replace it in the interim. Threats of noncompliance or that growers will use more
16
dangerous non-OTT dicamba products if these registrations are vacated are weakened by
17
concerns reflected in the 2021 Report that such noncompliance already occurs.
18
Recently the Ninth Circuit considered Ctr. for Food Safety in Migrant Clinicians
19
Network v. U.S. Env't Prot. Agency, 88 F.4th 830, 847–49 (9th Cir. 2023) (citing FIFRA
20
prohibition to unconditionally approve or amend a registration until it has “reviewed all
21
relevant data” and “determined that no additional data are necessary.” 40 C.F.R. §
22
152.112(b)–(c)). In Network, the court discussed the reluctant remand without vacatur of
23
the pesticide registration issued in Ctr. for Food Safety, and the 180-day mandate for
24
immediate compliance. Network, 88 F.4th at 848. In Network as here, the EPA attempted
25
to downplay the seriousness of its noncompliance by arguing that its FIFRA analysis was
26
sufficient to demonstrate that streptomycin use on citrus is unlikely to threaten any
27
endangered species or its habitat, therefore, it would, after complying with the ESA, still
28
“adopt the same rule on remand.” Id. (quoting Pollinator, 806 F.3d at 532) Similarly, EPA
- 45 -
1
argues that its FIFRA analysis here was sufficient to demonstrate OTT dicamba poses no
2
unreasonable risk to the environment or threat to endangered species or critical habitat.
3
EPA argues that vacatur would have considerable disruptive consequences for growers
4
who have few alternatives for weed management; in Network, growers needed
5
streptomycin to manage HLB and citrus canker.
6
In Network, the court denied remand without vacatur because such “a blank check
7
remand without vacatur would not be an appropriate remedy given the seriousness of the
8
EPA's failures. Id. “[A]ny remand without vacatur would at least require as a condition a
9
mandatory timetable for compliance similar to the 180-day deadline that [was] imposed in
10
Center for Food Safety.” Id. (citing Ctr. for Food Safety, at 669). In Network, the EPA
11
failed to explain how the equities there would justify a more lenient remand than ordered
12
in Ctr. for Food Safety. Id. at 849. EPA fails similarly here.
13
At most, Ctr. for Food Safety provides for a narrow reprieve of 180 days. Under the
14
existing registrations, EPA has continued to gather incident data and generated the 2021
15
Report for the purpose of determining if changes to these registrations are warranted. The
16
Court understands the EPA has moved forward with new ESA effects assessments for all
17
dicamba products, including OTT dicamba. Nevertheless, the EPA does not submit that if
18
the Court finds error it can immediately (within 280 days) correct such error.
19
The Court follows Network and finds that remand without vacatur would not be a
20
sensible remedy. The Court follows NFFC (Monsanto) in concluding that growers, through
21
no fault of their own, will be placed in the difficult position of finding effective and legal
22
herbicides to protect their DT crops if these registrations are vacated. Nevertheless, the
23
Court finds vacatur is compelled given the seriousness of EPA’s procedural error in failing
24
to afford notice and comment for the 2020 “new use” OTT dicamba registrations.
25
Accordingly,
26
IT IS ORDERED that the question of procedural error was determined based on
27
the administrative record and express statutory provisions under FIFRA, not on any
28
evidence outside the administrative record, therefore, the motions asking the Court to
- 46 -
1
expand the administrative record relevant to issues not reached herein (D Interv. (Docs.
2
104 (R); 122 (S) and Plaintiffs’ (Doc. 108) are DENIED AS MOOT.
3
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Strike (Doc. 173) Plaintiffs’
4
Statement of Material Facts (Docs. 156 (R); 167 (S)) is DENIED; Defendants had ample
5
opportunity to and did object by way of filing controverting statements of facts to their
6
dispositive motions. The Court has designated the evidentiary record herein upon which it
7
relied, which falls well beyond any objectionable statements of fact; the findings in NFFC
8
(Monsanto), 960 F.3d 1120 (9th Cir. 2020) speak for themselves. See (P Resp. (Doc. 210)
9
(providing reasons to deny motion to strike).
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Crossmotion for Summary Judgment (Docs.
170 (R); 198 (S)) filed by the EPA is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion for Summary Judgment (Docs. 174
(R); 197 (S)) filed by Intervenor Defendants is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion for Summary Judgment (Docs. 155
(R); 167 (S)) filed by Plaintiffs is GRANTED.
IT FURTHER ORDERED that 2020 registrations for XtendiMax, Enginia, and
Tavium are VACATED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Court shall enter Judgment
accordingly.
Dated this 5th day of February, 2024.
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
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