Center for Food Safety et al v. EPA Reference : 19-72109 Complaint date : August 20, 2019 Status : Final judgment Place of jurisdiction : United States, San Francisco Plaintiffs types : Health/Food groups, Environmental NGOs Plaintiffs names : Center for Food Safety (CFS), Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), Pollinator Stewardship Council Defendants : EPA, Andrew Wheeler Lawyers for Health and Environmental Justice : Stephanie M. Parent, George A. Kimbrell, Sylvia Wu, Amy van Saun Case nature : Administrative Specificities : Application for judicial review Type(s), Product(s), Active substance(s) : Sulfoxaflor, , Neonicotinoid Requests : Review the orders of the EPA granting the unconditional registration for new uses of the active ingredient sulfoxaflor and amending the registration of existing uses to remove restrictions. Name of the Court : United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit of San Francisco, United States Jurisdiction level : Decision date : December 21, 2022 Decision nature : Partially Positive Decision content : The petition for review is granted in part and denied in part. The case is remanded without vacatur to the EPA. Legal basis : Court Ruling : Link to the ruling Summary : The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals partially granted the plaintiff environmental groups' request in a December 21, 2022 ruling, stating that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's ("EPA") 2019 decision to allow new uses of sulfoxaflor on over 200 million acres of crops, including soybeans, cotton, strawberries, squash, and citrus, violated the Endangered Species Act (1973), as it failed to open its proposed decision for public comment and failed to prove that the insecticide does not have unreasonable adverse environmental impacts. In a September 10, 2015 ruling (No. 13-72346), the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals had already overturned EPA's previous 2013 approval decision for sulfoxaflor due to failures in studies of the insecticide's impacts on certain pollinators, resulting in violations of the federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act. In 2016, the EPA had re-approved the use of sulfoxaflor, subject to restrictions to reduce the risk to honey bees and other pollinators. In 2019, EPA removed these restrictions and approved new uses of sulfoxaflor on a wide range of crops. On August 20, 2019, CFS and CBD then filed a petition for review with the Court of Appeals for the 9th District of this new unconditional registration. On July 19, 2022, three years after registration, EPA released a draft biological assessment showing that sulfoxaflor potentially jeopardizes the existence of 24 insect species, including the Karner blue butterfly and the American burying beetle, as well as 94 plant species that depend on insect pollinators. In the December 21, 2022 ruling, the court ordered EPA to seek public comment on the expanded uses of sulfoxaflor and to prepare a new decision on sulfoxaflor within 180 days. However, it rejected a request to simply rescind the 2019 decision. This means that sulfoxaflor can continue to be used while the review is underway. Scientific references : Sulfoxaflor exposure reduces bumblebee reproductive success Related links : Petition for review, 2019 Article Earthjustice "Trump’s EPA Said This Bee-Killing Insecticide Is Safe, Now Beekeepers Are Suing", 2019 Article CFS. "Federal Court Rejects Bid by EPA, Pesticide Industry to Keep Bee-Killing Pesticide Sulfoxaflor on Market Despite Known Risks to Endangered Species", 2021 Article CFS. "EPA Finds New Insecticide Is Putting Over 100 Species in Jeopardy of Extinction", 2022 Article CBD. "Legal Victory: Court Rules EPA’s Registration of Bee-Killing Insecticide Unlawful, Citing Failure to Assess Risks to Endangered Species", 2022