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Hydro Newsletter - Volume 11, Issue 4
Friday, October 11, 2024

National Hydropower Association and Northwest Hydroelectric Association Challenge FWS and NMFS's ESA Section 7 Regulation Changes

On August 2, 2024, the National Hydropower Association (“NHA”) and the Northwest Hydroelectric Association (“NWHA”) filed a joint challenge to recent changes to the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”) interagency consultation regulations of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“FWS”) and the National Marine Fisheries Service’s (“NMFS”) (together, the “Services”).

The Case at a Glance

  • Date Filed: August 2, 2024
  • Venue: U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
  • Plaintiffs: NHA and NWHA
  • Defendants: FWS and NMFS (and related parties)

Key Issue: Whether the Services’ new interpretation of their authority as allowing them to require offsets as Reasonable and Prudent Measures in Incidental Take Statements is inconsistent with the ESA and/or arbitrary and capricious.

Why This Matters

The lawsuit challenges a significant shift in the Services’ ESA consultation regulations that could have far-reaching implications for the hydropower industry and the rest of the regulated community. Under the text of the ESA itself, and under the Services’ prior long-standing interpretation, the Services were limited to requiring Reasonable and Prudent Measures to minimize the impact of the take of listed species. The new regulatory interpretation, which took effect on May 6, 2024, expands the scope of the Services’ authority to not only require minimization measures, but also offsets for the take of listed species. This change could significantly increase the cost and burden associated with maintaining coverage for incidental take of listed species. NHA and NWHA are challenging this new interpretation as exceeding the statutory authority granted by the ESA.

What’s Next

Services filed their answer to the complaint on October 7, and briefing in the case is anticipated in late-2024 through 2025. Other challenges to the same regulations have also been filed by other organizations and will likely proceed in parallel to NHA and NWHA’s lawsuit.

Puyallup Tribe of Indians v. Electron Hydro LLC: An Important Decision Impacting Hydropower Related to ESA "Take" and Spillways

In a recent ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed a lower court decision in favor of the Puyallup Tribe of Indians (“Tribe”) against Electron Hydro LLC (“Electron Hydro”). The district court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the Tribe holding that Electron Hydro’s temporary spillway on the Puyallup River caused a “take” of threatened species, including the Chinook salmon, the steelhead trout, and the bull trout. The district court also issued a permanent injunction requiring Electron Hydro to remove the center portion of the spillway. Electron Hydro appealed.

The Ninth Circuit agreed that Electron Hydro’s temporary spillway on the Puyallup River caused significant harm to the fishes’ abilities to migrate and spawn. Specifically, Electron Hydro did not dispute that the dominant flow of the river was over the temporary spillway, which created “false attraction flows” that lure migrating fish away from their natural paths and the designated fish ladder. The court reaffirmed its precedent that significant habitat modification “that significantly impair[s] essential behavioral patterns” qualifies as an “actual injury” under the ESA. It further reiterated that evidence of dead or injured fish around the spillway is not required to establish a take under the ESA regulations, 50 C.F.R. § 17.3, or the Circuit’s prior holding. The court affirmed the district court’s rejection of Electron’s proposed alternatives finding that there were significant drawbacks and accepted the permanent injunction requiring that Electron Hydro remove the center portion of the spillway to mitigate the harm to fish populations—what it called a “lasting remedy ‘tailored to remedying the specific harm[s] alleged,’” which it found to include both the false attraction flows and the upstream migration impediments. This case may influence future hydropower project designs and operations and has the potential to increase costs related to fish passage solutions and structure modifications.

Nevada Irrigation District Continues Challenge to Clean Water Act Section 401 Decision in the D.C. Circuit

On August 15, the Nevada Irrigation District (“NID”) filed its opening brief in a consolidated proceeding challenging Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“Commission”) orders (1) denying Pacific Gas and Electric Company’s (“PG&E”) request to find that the California State Water Resources Control Board (“State Board”) waived its certification authority with regard to the Deer Creek development of PG&E’s Drum-Spaulding project; and (2) denying NID’s supplemental petition for declaratory order on waiver of water quality certification. As previously discussed, the issues in this case center on whether or not the State Board waived its authority to issue a Clean Water Act Section 401 certification by coordinating an arrangement in which applicants withdrew and refiled their Section 401 certification requests year after year to avoid the State Board having to act on the requests.

The Commission filed its brief on October 11, and briefing will continue into December.

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