JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
The operators of two power plants filed petitions challenging the legal sufficiency of the notice of violation issued by the Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") under Section 7413(a) of the Clean Air Act. The EPA filed a second, amended notice of violation and moved to dismiss the petitions for want of jurisdiction. The operators challenged the sufficiency of the second notice. Because the notices were not "final actions" of the EPA, we dismiss the petitions for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Luminant Generation Company, L.L.C. ("Luminant"), owns and operates the Martin Lake Power Plant and operates the Big Brown Power Plant owned by Big Brown Power Company LLC ("Big Brown"). Energy Future Holdings Company ("EFH") is the ultimate corporate parent of Luminant and Big Brown. Both plants have multiple coal-fired units, each connected to turbine generators. Each plant operates pursuant to a Title V permit issued by the State of Texas and approved by the EPA.
In June 2008, the EPA began sending Luminant requests under 42 U.S.C. § 7414(a) to determine compliance with the Clean Air Act and its implementing regulations. In July 2012, the EPA issued a section 7413(a) notice of violation ("2012 NOV") to Luminant and EFH claiming that (a) during scheduled outages from 2005 to 2010, Luminant completed substantial capital projects at the Martin Lake and Big Brown Power Plants; (b) the projects involved physical or operational changes to certain emission units; and (c) the changes increased emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide. The EPA asserted that, as a result of that activity, Luminant and EFH violated (1) the Act's Prevention of Significant Deterioration ("PSD") provisions, (2) Texas's State Implementation Plan ("SIP"), (3) Texas's PSD provisions, (4) Title V of the Act, and (5) Texas's Title V program.
Luminant filed its opening brief in June 2013; instead of filing a brief, the EPA, in July, issued a second notice of violation (the "2013 NOV") to Luminant and Big Brown. In August, the United States filed a federal complaint against Luminant Generation and Big Brown in the Northern District of Texas.
For this court to have subject-matter jurisdiction, the challenged agency action must have been a "final action."
"Final action" under section 7607(b)(1) has the same meaning as "final agency action" under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"). See Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457, 478, 121 S.Ct. 903, 149 L.Ed.2d 1 (2001). Therefore, just as under the APA, two conditions must be met: "First, the action must mark the `consummation' of the agency's decisionmaking process — it must not be of a merely tentative or interlocutory nature. And second, the action must be one by which rights or obligations have been determined, or from which legal consequences will flow."
The EPA has consistently maintained that the notices lack finality under either prong.
As to the first prong, Luminant
We disagree and conclude that the EPA does not undertake final action when it issues a section 7413(a) notice of violation. First, issuing a notice does not commit the EPA to any particular course of action. The statute makes clear the intermediate, inconclusive nature of issuing a notice. After giving notice and waiting thirty days, the EPA may "issue an order," "issue an administrative penalty" after a formal administrative hearing, or "bring a civil action." 42 U.S.C. § 7413(a)(1) (2012). Alternatively, the EPA could choose to withdraw or amend the notice or take no further action. Issuing notice, therefore, does not end the EPA's decisionmaking: It still must make further significant decisions even if it does not confer on Luminant the ability to influence those decisions. It similarly does not matter that it took the EPA twelve years to file notice. "[The agency's] initial `finding' marks only the beginning of a process designed to test the accuracy of the agency's initial conclusions." Sierra Club v. EPA, 557 F.3d 401, 408 (6th Cir.2009).
Second, a notice does not itself determine Luminant's rights or obligations, and no legal consequences flow from the issuance of the notice. The Clean Air Act and the Texas SIP, not the notices, set forth Luminant's rights and obligations.
Fourth, contrary to Luminant's suggestion, neither PPG Industries nor Sackett compels a contrary result. In PPG Industries, a chemical manufacturing company wished to construct a new power generating facility that would be equipped with "two gas turbine generators, two `waste-heat' boilers, and a turbogenerator." PPG Indus., 446 U.S. at 582, 100 S.Ct. 1889. The EPA requested the company submit information on whether the waste-heat boilers should be consider "new sources." Once it did, the EPA responded with a letter "conclud[ing] that the waste-heat boilers were, indeed, subject to the `new source' standards." The parties agreed that the decision was final action but disagreed as to whether it was "any other" final action.
Sackett similarly does not help Luminant. There, the EPA issued a compliance order under § 309 of the Clean Water Act. See Sackett, 132 S.Ct. at 1371-72. Applying Bennett, the Court determined
Fifth, if we were to accept Luminant's position, we would be the first circuit to treat such notices as final actions. The Third and Ninth Circuits expressly do not consider a notice of violation to be a "final action."
Finally, Luminant may challenge the adequacy of the notices before the district court as a defense to the enforcement action. Regulated entities have a full opportunity to challenge the adequacy or sufficiency of such notices once the EPA takes final action.
The petitions are DISMISSED for want of subject-matter jurisdiction.