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Los Angeles-Area Gas Appliance Ban Upheld by US Appeals Court


These translations are done via Google Translate

By Jonathan Stempel

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July 2 (Reuters) – A divided federal appeals court on Thursday upheld a ban covering four Los Angeles-area counties on the manufacture, sale and installation ​of various appliances that emit nitrous oxides, rejecting claims by appliance ‌makers and trade groups that the pollution control measure conflicted with federal law.


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  • In a 2-1 decision, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said nothing in the text and ​history of the federal Energy Policy and Conservation Act suggested that ​Congress intended to block states from using reasonable means to ⁠regulate appliance emissions.
  • The South Coast Air Quality Management District passed the zero-emissions ​rule for large water heaters, small boilers and process heaters in June 2024 ​to address the nation’s worst smog, and comply with ozone standards under the federal Clean Air Act.
  • Compliance deadlines began taking effect on January 1, and the rule is expected to ​eliminate nearly 10% of emissions in the South Coast Air Basin, which ​includes large portions of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
  • The National Association of ‌Home ⁠Builders, and several California manufacturing, lodging and restaurant groups were among the entities challenging the rule. Their lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
  • Circuit Judge Lucy Koh wrote for a 2-1 majority that voiding the rule ​would amount to ​an implied repeal ⁠of the Clean Air Act, and opponents didn’t show that Congress clearly intended such an outcome.
  • Koh also said the ​opponents didn’t show the rule was unconstitutional in every respect, ​because ⁠process heaters are not covered by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act and the U.S. Department of Energy has not issued federal standards.
  • Circuit Judge Kenneth Lee dissented, ⁠saying ​the case was “strikingly similar” to a 2023 decision ​where the appeals court said federal law preempted a Berkeley, California ordinance banning natural gas infrastructure ​in new buildings.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Chizu Nomiayma

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