Grand Canyon Trust v. United States Bureau of Reclam ( 2012 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    GRAND CANYON TRUST,                    
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES BUREAU OF
    RECLAMATION; UNITED STATES
    FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE;
    MICHAEL L. CONNOR,
    Commissioner U.S. Bureau of
    Reclamation,
    Defendants-Appellees,            No. 11-16326
    STATE OF ARIZONA; STATE OF                      D.C. No.
    NEVADA; COLORADO RIVER
    COMMISSION OF NEVADA; STATE OF            3:07-cv-08164-DGC
    COLORADO; SOUTHERN NEVADA                     ORDER AND
    WATER AUTHORITY; CENTRAL                       AMENDED
    ARIZONA WATER CONSERVATION                      OPINION
    DISTRICT; NEW MEXICO INTERSTATE
    STREAM COMMISSION; STATE OF
    UTAH; STATE OF WYOMING;
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO; STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA; COLORADO RIVER
    ENERGY DISTRIBUTORS ASSOCIATION;
    SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
    METROPOLITAN WATER DISTRICT;
    IMPERIAL IRRIGATION DISTRICT,
    Intervenor-Defendants-Appellees.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    David G. Campbell, District Judge, Presiding
    11341
    11342   GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    Argued and Submitted
    June 11, 2012—San Francisco, California
    Filed August 13, 2012
    Amended September 17, 2012
    Before: Ferdinand F. Fernandez, Ronald M. Gould, and
    Carlos T. Bea, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Gould
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.    11345
    COUNSEL
    McCrystie Adams (argued), Earthjustice, Denver, Colorado,
    and Neil Levine, Grand Canyon Trust, Denver, Colorado, for
    the appellant-plaintiff.
    Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General, Mark R. Haag
    and David C. Shilton (argued), Environmental & Natural
    Resources Division, United States Department of Justice,
    Washington, D.C., for the appellees-defendants.
    Kenneth C. Slowinski and Nicole D. Klobas, Arizona Depart-
    ment of Water Resources, Legal Division, Phoenix, Arizona;
    Kamala D. Harris, California Attorney General, Kathleen A.
    Kenealy, Senior Assistant Attorney General, and Gary E.
    Tavetian, Deputy Attorney General, Los Angeles, California;
    John W. Suthers, Colorado Attorney General, and Karen M.
    Kwon (argued), First Assistant Attorney General, Denver,
    Colorado; Catherine Cortez Maso, Nevada Attorney General,
    and Jennifer T. Crandell, Senior Deputy Assistant Attorney
    General, Las Vegas, Nevada; Dana R. Walsh, Southern
    Nevada Water Authority, Las Vegas, Nevada; Gary K. King,
    New Mexico Attorney General, Stephen R. Farris, Assistant
    Attorney General, Anne Moore, Assistant Attorney General,
    and Amy Haas, Special Assistant Attorney General, Santa Fe,
    New Mexico; Mark L. Shurtleff, Utah Attorney General, Nor-
    man K. Johnson, Natural Resources Division Chief, and
    Michael M. Quealy, Assistant Attorney General, Salt Lake
    City, Utah; Gregory A. Phillips, Attorney General, Peter K.
    11346    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    Michael, Chief Deputy Attorney General, and Jeremiah I.
    Williamson, Assistant Attorney General, Cheyenne, Wyo-
    ming; Kathy Robb, Hunton & Williams LLP, New York, New
    York; Jay M. Johnson and Suzanne Ticknor, Central Arizona
    Project, Phoenix, Arizona; Marcia L. Scully, Joseph A.
    Vanderhorst, and Peter E. Von Hamm, Metropolitan Water
    District of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; John
    P. Carter, Horton, Knox, Carter & Foote, El Centro, Califor-
    nia; Bennett W. Raley, Trout, Raley, Montaño, Witwer &
    Freeman, P.C., Denver, Colorado, for the intervenors-
    appellees.
    ORDER
    The opinion filed on August 13, 2012 and published at ___
    F.3d ___, 
    2012 WL 3264499
    , is AMENDED as follows:
    At slip opinion page 9166, line 20, change 
    to . The amended sentence states:
    Because FWS used the draft 2009 Recovery Goals as
    best available science, a discretionary use, the dis-
    trict court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to
    consider the draft 2009 Recovery Goals under the
    ESA citizen suit provision.
    At slip opinion page 9168, line 1, change 
    to . The amended sentence states:
    Here, FWS used the draft 2009 Recovery Goals to
    satisfy its obligation to address the recovery of the
    humpback chub in the 2009 BiOp.
    Future petitions for rehearing and rehearing en banc will
    not be entertained.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.       11347
    OPINION
    GOULD, Circuit Judge:
    Grand Canyon Trust appeals the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment in favor of the United States Bureau of
    Reclamation (“Reclamation”) and the United States Fish and
    Wildlife Service (“FWS”) rejecting the Trust’s claims alleg-
    ing that Reclamation and FWS violated the Endangered Spe-
    cies Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and the
    Administrative Procedure Act in the operation of the Glen
    Canyon Dam. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    We dismiss as moot in part and affirm in part.
    I
    Grand Canyon Trust (“the Trust”) is an organization
    devoted to the protection and restoration of the canyon coun-
    try of the Colorado Plateau. Reclamation and FWS are agen-
    cies within the Department of the Interior. Reclamation is
    responsible for the operation of the Glen Canyon Dam (“the
    Dam”) situated on the Colorado River, and FWS is responsi-
    ble for the protection of the humpback chub, a fish that exists
    primarily in the relatively inaccessible canyons of the Colo-
    rado River and that is listed as endangered under the Endan-
    gered Species Act (“ESA”). Intervenor-Appellees are the
    seven Colorado River Basin States of Arizona, California,
    Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; the
    Colorado River Commission of Nevada; the Southern Nevada
    Water Authority; the Colorado River Energy Distributors
    Association; the Central Arizona Water Conservation District;
    the Imperial Irrigation District; and the Metropolitan Water
    District of Southern California (collectively, “Intervenors”).
    A
    We first review the statutory framework relevant to this
    appeal. “The ESA reflects a conscious decision by Congress
    11348      GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    to give endangered species priority over the primary missions
    of federal agencies.” W. Watersheds Project v. Kraayenbrink,
    
    632 F.3d 472
    , 495 (9th Cir.) (quoting Tenn. Valley Auth. v.
    Hill, 
    437 U.S. 153
    , 180 (1978) (internal quotations marks
    omitted)) cert. denied 
    132 S. Ct. 366
     (2011). Under the ESA,
    a federal agency must ensure that an “agency action” is not
    likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any listed spe-
    cies or destroy or adversely modify the critical habitat of any
    listed species. 16 U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2); see Kraayenbrink, 632
    F.3d at 495 (“The heart of the ESA is section 7(a)(2), 16
    U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2).”). If the agency action “may affect” any
    listed species, the acting agency must formally consult with
    the federal agency responsible for the protection of the spe-
    cies in question (“the consulting agency”). 16 U.S.C. § 1536
    (a), (b); 50 C.F.R. § 402.14(a); Natural Res. Def. Council v.
    Houston, 
    146 F.3d 1118
    , 1126 (9th Cir. 1998).1
    To begin formal consultation, the acting agency must make
    a written request describing the circumstances of the request
    and must provide the consulting agency with the best avail-
    able scientific and commercial data. 50 C.F.R. § 402.14(c),
    (d). After considering the submissions, the consulting agency
    must issue a biological opinion (“BiOp”) stating its position
    as to whether the agency action will jeopardize or adversely
    modify or destroy the critical habitat of a listed species. 16
    U.S.C. § 1536(b)(3)(A). If the consulting agency issues a
    BiOp indicating that the agency action jeopardizes a listed
    species, the consulting agency must suggest reasonable and
    prudent alternatives to the acting agency that mitigate the neg-
    ative environmental effects of the agency action. Id.
    1
    “If an agency determines that an action ‘may affect’ critical species or
    habitats, formal consultation is mandated.” Id. at 1126. “The purpose of
    consultation is to obtain the expert opinion of wildlife agencies to deter-
    mine whether the action is likely to jeopardize a listed species or adversely
    modify its critical habitat and, if so, to identify reasonable and prudent
    alternatives that will avoid the action’s unfavorable impacts.” Karuk Tribe
    of Cal. v. United States Forest Serv., 
    681 F.3d 1006
    , 1020 (9th Cir. 2012)
    (en banc).
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.                  11349
    The ESA also prohibits the acting agency from “taking”2 a
    threatened or endangered species in the course of the agency
    action. 16 U.S.C. § 1538(a)(1)(B), (G). If the consulting
    agency determines that the agency action may incidentally
    “take” a threatened or endangered species, the consulting
    agency must issue an incidental take statement (“ITS”), speci-
    fying, inter alia, the impact of the incidental taking and rea-
    sonable and prudent measures that minimize the impact. 16
    U.S.C. § 1536(b)(4), (o)(2); Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
    ,
    158, 170 (1997).3
    The National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) requires
    that an environmental impact statement (“EIS”) be issued for
    every “major Federal action[ ] significantly affecting the qual-
    ity of the human environment.” 42 U.S.C. § 4332(C); 40
    C.F.R. § 1508.11. An EIS must carefully assess the environ-
    mental impact of the proposed action, unavoidable environ-
    mental effects, and alternatives to the proposed action. 42
    U.S.C. § 4332(C). An agency undertaking a major federal
    action may first prepare an environmental assessment (“EA”)
    to determine whether an EIS is necessary. 40 C.F.R. § 1508.9.
    If after conducting an EA the agency determines that the pro-
    posed action will not result in a significant impact, the agency
    must issue a finding of no significant impact (“FONSI”) in
    lieu of an EIS. 40 C.F.R. §§ 1508.9, 1508.13; Barnes v.
    United States Dep’t. of Transp., 
    655 F.3d 1124
    , 1131 (9th Cir.
    2011).
    2
    “The term ‘take’ means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound,
    kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct.”
    16 U.S.C. § 1532(19).
    3
    “Thus, the [ITS] constitutes a permit authorizing the action agency to
    ‘take’ the endangered or threatened species so long as it respects the Ser-
    vice’s ‘terms and conditions.’ The action agency is technically free to dis-
    regard the Biological Opinion and proceed with its proposed action, but
    it does so at its own peril (and that of its employees), for ‘any person’ who
    knowingly ‘takes’ an endangered or threatened species is subject to sub-
    stantial civil and criminal penalties, including imprisonment.” Id. at 170.
    11350      GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    B
    The Colorado River Storage Project Act of 1956 authorized
    the construction of the Dam. See 43 U.S.C. § 620 et seq. Fin-
    ished in 1963, the Dam is located on the Colorado River in
    Northern Arizona, and it creates Lake Powell, the second
    largest reservoir in the United States, which provides drinking
    water for more than 25 million people. Also, the Dam each
    year produces more than 3 million megawatt hours of electric-
    ity.
    The Colorado River Basin Project Act of 1968 (“CRBPA”)
    required the Secretary of the Interior (“the Secretary”) to
    adopt criteria for the long-range operation of all reservoirs
    and dams constructed and operated under the CRBPA, includ-
    ing the Dam. See 43 U.S.C. § 1552(a). The Secretary adopted
    the Long-Range Operating Criteria in 1970, which established
    a minimum annual water release from Lake Powell of 8.23
    million acre feet.4 See Colorado River Reservoirs: Coordi-
    nated Long-Range Operation, 35 Fed. Reg. 8,951-52 (June
    10, 1970). The CRBPA also required the Secretary to transmit
    annual operating plans (“AOPs”) to Congress and the Gover-
    nors of the Colorado River Basin States. See 43 U.S.C.
    § 1552(b). AOPs must describe “the actual operation under
    the adopted criteria for the preceding compact water year and
    the projected operation for the current year.” Id.
    The placement and management of the Dam have changed
    the historical flow and characteristics of the Colorado River
    below the Dam. The Dam traps a large majority of the sedi-
    ment that would otherwise flow down the Colorado River,
    impairing critical habitat of the humpback chub below the Dam.5
    4
    An “acre foot” of water is the amount of water needed to cover one
    acre of land to a depth of one foot.
    5
    See 16 U.S.C. § 1532(5)(A); 50 C.F.R. § 424.12. 173 miles of the Col-
    orado River and 8 miles of the Little Colorado River have been designated
    as critical habitat for the humpback chub.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.         11351
    Also, the average temperature of the River below the Dam is
    cooler because the Dam releases waters from the deeper and
    colder reaches of Lake Powell. This harms the humpback
    chub, which thrives in warmer waters.
    In part to address this and other negative environmental
    consequences of the Dam, Congress passed the Grand Canyon
    Protection Act of 1992 (“GCPA”). The GCPA requires the
    Secretary generally to operate the Dam “in such a manner as
    to protect [and] mitigate adverse impacts” on the environment
    and specifically required the Secretary, by 1994, to “complete
    a final Glen Canyon Dam [EIS], in accordance with [NEPA].”
    Pub. L. No. 102-575, §§ 1802(a), 1804(a), (c)(1)(A). The
    GCPA also codified Reclamation’s obligation to complete
    and to transmit to Congress and the Governors of the Colo-
    rado River Basin States an AOP describing the operation of
    the Dam for the preceding year “and the projected year opera-
    tions undertaken pursuant to [the GCPA].” Id. at § 1804(c)(2).
    In preparing that AOP, Reclamation is required to consult
    with members of the general public, including academics and
    scientists, environmental organizations, the recreation indus-
    try, and purchasers of Federal power generated by the Dam.
    Id. at § 1804(c)(3).
    Reclamation completed its Final EIS in 1995, in which it
    evaluated several alternatives for managing the Dam, includ-
    ing operation under a modified low fluctuating flow
    (“MLFF”) regime and operation under a seasonally-adjusted
    steady flow (“SASF”) regime. MLFF implements fluctuating
    water releases from the Dam which vary depending on
    demand for electricity.6 With this approach, water releases
    would tend to be higher in summer and winter, corresponding
    with greater electricity demand, and lower in the spring and
    fall, corresponding with decreased electricity demand. SASF,
    on the other hand, mimics the natural flow of the River, by
    6
    Between 1963 and 1991, Reclamation operated the Dam in a manner
    similar to MLFF, namely in primary response to power demand.
    11352    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    implementing high, steady flows in the spring and low, steady
    flows in the summer and fall. In 1996, the Secretary selected
    MLFF as the Dam’s specific operating criteria in a NEPA-
    required Record of Decision. 40 C.F.R. § 1505.2; Operating
    Criteria and 1997 Annual Plan of Operations for Glen Canyon
    Dam, 62 Fed. Reg. 9,447 (March 3, 1997).
    Reclamation formally consulted with FWS regarding the
    operation of the Dam under MLFF. FWS then issued a 1994
    BiOp (“the 1994 BiOp”) concluding that MLFF jeopardized
    the humpback chub and adversely modified its critical habitat.
    FWS suggested reasonable and prudent alternatives to address
    the adverse environmental effects of MLFF. They included
    the development of an adaptive management program
    (“AMP”) to study the impact of flows and to implement rec-
    ommendations necessary for survival and recovery of listed spe-
    cies,7 and the implementation of a program of experimental
    flows and associated studies designed to address the negative
    impact of the Dam on listed species.
    Through the AMP process, Reclamation adopted a 2008
    Experimental Plan (“the 2008 Plan”) that continued the MLFF
    system as the operating criteria and also called for a one-time
    high water release in March 2008, intended to replenish sedi-
    ment in the River below the Dam, and steady flows in Sep-
    tember and October of 2008 through 2012. Per NEPA
    requirements, Reclamation completed an EA with respect to
    the 2008 Plan and concluded that the environmental impact
    would not be significant.
    Reclamation also formally consulted with FWS regarding
    the 2008 Plan, and FWS issued a new BiOp (“the 2008
    BiOp”) that expressly superseded the 1994 BiOp. FWS con-
    cluded that the 2008 Plan, implemented in accordance with
    7
    To implement AMP, Reclamation formed the Adaptive Management
    Working Group (“AMWG”) that makes recommendations to the Secretary
    about the Dam’s operation. The Trust is a member of AMWG.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.                11353
    MLFF operation, did not jeopardize the humpback chub or
    adversely modify or destroy its critical habitat and that opera-
    tion of the Dam under MLFF generally no longer jeopardized
    the humpback chub or adversely modified or destroyed its
    critical habitat. Thus, the 2008 BiOp reversed FWS’s long-
    held “jeopardy” position, as previously expressed in the 1994
    BiOp.
    C
    The Trust then filed suit in the District of Arizona, alleging
    that Reclamation violates the ESA by not consulting with
    FWS on the development of each of the Dam’s AOPs; that
    Reclamation violates NEPA by not preparing an EA or EIS
    for each AOP; and that FWS’s 2008 BiOp violates the ESA.8
    The district court granted summary judgment to Reclamation,
    concluding that AOPs are not “agency action[s]” subject to
    ESA’s consultation requirements,9 and that AOPs are not
    “major federal action[s]” triggering compliance with NEPA
    procedural requirements. As to whether the 2008 BiOp vio-
    lated the ESA, the district court granted summary judgment
    to the Trust. The district court found that the portions of the
    2008 BiOp approving the 2008 Plan were valid, but invali-
    dated FWS’s reversal of its long-held position that MLFF
    jeopardized the humpback chub and adversely modified or
    destroyed its critical habitat. The district court decided that
    the 2008 BiOp lacked a reasoned basis, under the best avail-
    able science, for FWS’s new conclusion that MLFF does not
    8
    The procedural history of this action is extensive. In all, the Trust
    alleged 13 claims against Reclamation and FWS, which the district court
    addressed in four separate orders. We recount those claims relevant to the
    Trust’s appeal.
    9
    The district court reasoned: (1) that AOPs describe mere projections
    about water releases from the Dam; (2) that actual release decisions are
    made during the course of the year; (3) that the Trust’s real complaint was
    with the Record of Decision that implemented MLFF as the operating
    criteria for the Dam; (4) and that Reclamation has no discretion to deviate
    from that decision through AOPs.
    11354    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    destroy or adversely modify chub critical habitat and lacked
    a discussion on the effects of MLFF on chub recovery. The
    district court remanded the 2008 BiOp to FWS for reconsider-
    ation in light of the district court’s decision.
    In response to the district court’s remand, FWS issued a
    2009 Supplement to the 2008 BiOp which together with the
    2008 BiOp constituted the 2009 BiOp. In the 2009 BiOp,
    FWS explained its conclusion that the operation of the Dam
    under MLFF no longer jeopardized the humpback chub or
    adversely modified or destroyed its critical habitat, and, con-
    sistent with ESA requirements, included an incidental take
    statement (“2009 ITS”) that specified the level of humpback
    chub “take” permissible under MLFF operations. The Trust
    then filed a second supplemental complaint asserting that the
    2009 BiOp and the 2009 ITS violate the ESA; that the 2009
    ITS violates NEPA; and that FWS’s draft 2009 Recovery
    Goals, on which FWS relied to address humpback chub
    recovery in the 2009 BiOp, violate the ESA.
    As to whether FWS violated NEPA with respect to the
    2009 ITS, the district court gave summary judgment to FWS,
    concluding that the issuance of the 2009 ITS was not a major
    federal action requiring NEPA compliance. With respect to
    the draft 2009 Recovery Goals, the district court granted sum-
    mary judgment to FWS, concluding that the district court
    lacked jurisdiction under the APA to consider the 2009
    Recovery Goals because they are in draft form and are not a
    “final agency action” subject to APA review. The district
    court also concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to review the
    draft 2009 Recovery Goals under the citizen suit provision of
    the ESA because FWS had yet to violate the ESA’s mandate
    that recovery goals be submitted for public notice and com-
    ment and peer review before final approval.
    The district court granted summary judgment to FWS as to
    the 2009 BiOp, and summary judgment to the Trust as to the
    2009 ITS. The district court concluded that FWS fulfilled its
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.       11355
    duty under the APA to explain its new position regarding
    MLFF, but concluded that the 2009 ITS was insufficient
    under the ESA because FWS did not sufficiently explain why
    the take of young chub could not be quantified, did not pro-
    vide a causal link between the adult-based surrogate used and
    the take of young chub, and did not provide a rational expla-
    nation why no additional reasonable and prudent measures
    were necessary. The district court remanded the 2009 ITS to
    FWS for reconsideration in light of the district court’s deci-
    sion.
    In response to the district court’s ruling, FWS issued a
    2010 ITS that replaced the 2009 ITS, and the Trust again sup-
    plemented its complaint alleging that the 2010 ITS violates
    the ESA and NEPA. The district court granted summary judg-
    ment to FWS, concluding that the 2010 ITS had cured the
    problems that the district court previously identified in the
    2009 ITS, and that the 2010 ITS was not a major federal
    action subject to NEPA compliance.
    The Trust then filed this appeal raising issues: (1) whether
    the 2009 BiOp is unlawful under the ESA; (2) whether the
    court has jurisdiction to review the 2009 Recovery Goals; (3)
    whether Reclamation violates the ESA by relying on the 2009
    BiOp; (4) whether FWS’s 2010 ITS is unlawful; (5) whether
    Reclamation violates the ESA by relying on the 2010 ITS;
    and (6) whether Reclamation must comply with the ESA and
    with NEPA procedures before issuing an AOP.
    II
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment. Karuk Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1017. A grant of sum-
    mary judgment is appropriate where “the movant shows that
    there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(a). We review Reclamation and FWS’s compliance
    with the ESA and with NEPA under the standard set forth in
    11356      GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    the APA. Karuk Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1017. “Under the APA, a
    court may set aside an agency action if the court determines
    that the action was ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discre-
    tion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’ ” Id. (quoting
    5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)). We review de novo the district court’s
    decision regarding subject matter jurisdiction. Hambleton
    Bros. Lumber Co. v. Balkin Enters., Inc., 
    397 F.3d 1217
    , 1226
    (9th Cir. 2005).
    III
    After the Trust filed its notice of appeal and pursuant to
    Reclamation’s January 2011 request to initiate formal consul-
    tation on Reclamation’s proposed 10-year continued operation
    of the Dam under MLFF along with High Flow Experimental
    Releases and non-native fish controls, FWS issued a new
    2011 BiOp and 2011 ITS, which cover the operation of the
    Dam through 2020.10 The 2011 BiOp and 2011 ITS have sup-
    planted the 2009 BiOp and the 2010 ITS, the documents at
    issue in this appeal. We first address the issue of mootness in
    light of these intervening developments.
    [1] “The doctrine of mootness, which is embedded in Arti-
    cle III’s case or controversy requirement, requires that an
    actual, ongoing controversy exist at all stages of federal court
    proceedings.” Pitts v. Terrible Herbst, Inc., 
    653 F.3d 1081
    ,
    1086 (9th Cir. 2011). “A claim is moot if it has lost its charac-
    ter as a present, live controversy.” Am. Rivers v. Nat’l Marine
    10
    We GRANT the Intervenors-Appellees’ unopposed motion to take
    judicial notice of: 1) the 2011 Annual Operating Plan for Colorado River
    Reservoirs; 2) excerpts from the Colorado River September 24 Month
    Study (2011); and 3) FWS’s Final 2011 BiOp.
    We DENY the Trust’s motion to take judicial notice of, or in the alter-
    native to supplement the record with, various ESA consultation and NEPA
    documents, as listed in the Trust’s motion. We DENY the Trust’s motion
    to supplement the record with “The Rahel Study” and the Trust’s motion
    to supplement the record with the November 26, 2007 letter from the Trust
    to the Office of the Solicitor in the Department of the Interior.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.               11357
    Fisheries Serv., 
    126 F.3d 1118
    , 1123 (9th Cir. 1997). “If an
    event occurs that prevents the court from granting effective
    relief, the claim is moot and must be dismissed.” Id.
    [2] We have held that the issuance of a superseding BiOp
    moots issues on appeal relating to the preceding BiOp. See id.
    at 1124; Idaho Dep’t of Fish & Game v. Nat’l Marine Fish-
    eries Serv., 
    56 F.3d 1071
     (9th Cir. 1995)11; see also Rio
    Grande Silvery Minnow v. Bureau of Reclamation, 
    601 F.3d 1096
    , 1111-12 (10th Cir. 2010) (concluding that a supersed-
    ing BiOp mooted issues related to the validity of previous
    BiOps). Here, there is no dispute that the 2009 BiOp and the
    2010 ITS have been replaced by the 2011 BiOp and the 2011
    ITS. Defendants-Appellees argue, and the Trust concedes,
    that the Trust’s claims related to the 2009 BiOp and the 2010
    BiOp are now moot. We agree. The Trust’s claims that the
    2009 BiOp is unlawful under the ESA; that Reclamation vio-
    lates the ESA by relying on the 2009 BiOp; that the 2010 ITS
    is unlawful; and that Reclamation violates the ESA by relying
    on the 2010 ITS are moot. We turn to the remaining issues.
    11
    In Idaho Department of Fish & Game, we considered a challenge to
    the National Marine Fisheries Service’s 1993 BiOp. Because the district
    court issued its judgment that the 1993 BiOp was arbitrary and capricious
    just twelve days before the 1993 BiOp’s expiration, by the time the matter
    came up on appeal, the 1993 BiOp had been superseded by the 1994-1998
    BiOp. Id. at 1074. We concluded that the challenge to the 1993 BiOp was
    mooted by the issuance of the superceding 1994-1998 BiOp. Id. at
    1074-75.
    Similarly, in American Rivers v. National Marine Fisheries Service, we
    considered another challenge to the same 1994-1998 BiOp at issue in
    Idaho Dep’t of Fish & Game. Appellants challenged the validity of the
    1994-1998 BiOp, which was then itself replaced by the 1995 BiOp. Am.
    Rivers, 126 F.3d at 1123. We concluded that the appeal was moot by vir-
    tue of that replacement. Id. at 1124 (“As in Idaho Dep’t of Fish & Game,
    the biological opinion in the present case has been superseded by the 1995
    Biological Opinion. Therefore, any challenge to the 1994-1998 Biological
    Opinion is moot.”).
    11358    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    A
    The Trust contends that Reclamation violates the ESA by
    not consulting with FWS before issuing each AOP. The dis-
    trict court concluded that Reclamation’s decision not to con-
    sult with FWS under the ESA does not violate APA
    standards. The district court reasoned that AOPs are not the
    kind of affirmative “agency action” requiring formal consulta-
    tion under the ESA and its implementing regulations because
    in issuing each AOP, Reclamation does not exercise discre-
    tion that could inure to the benefit of the humpback chub. We
    agree.
    [3] The ESA requires formal consultation when a federal
    agency “authorize[s], fund[s], or carrie[s] out” any action that
    may affect a listed species. 16 U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2); 50 C.F.R.
    § 402.14(a); Karuk Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1020. Federal regula-
    tion limits this consultation requirement “to all actions in
    which there is discretionary Federal involvement or control.”
    50 C.F.R. § 402.03 (emphasis added). In National Association
    of Home Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    551 U.S. 644
    (2007), the Supreme Court acknowledged this regulatory limi-
    tation, stating that “the ESA’s requirements would come into
    play only when an action results from the exercise of agency
    discretion.” Id. at 665. ESA consultation requirements do not
    apply to an action “that an agency is required by statute to
    undertake once certain specified triggering events have
    occurred.” Id. at 669 (emphasis in original); see Karuk Tribe,
    681 F.3d at 1021 (“[T]his limitation harmonizes the ESA con-
    sultation requirement with other statutory mandates that leave
    an agency no discretion to consider the protection of listed
    species.”).
    [4] We have further held that “the ESA consultation
    requirement applies only if the agency has the discretionary
    control ‘to inure to the benefit of a protected species.’ ” Wash.
    Toxics Coal. v. EPA, 
    413 F.3d 1024
    , 1033 (9th Cir. 2005)
    (quoting Turtle Island Restoration Network v. Nat’l Marine
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.               11359
    Fisheries Serv., 
    340 F.3d 969
    , 977 (9th Cir. 2003)).12 The par-
    ties here primarily dispute whether the issuance of an AOP is
    a discretionary act that triggers the ESA’s consultation
    requirement, and we determine that this issue controls our
    rejection of an ESA consultation requirement concerning pro-
    duction of each AOP.
    1
    The Supreme Court has said that “not every action autho-
    rized, funded, or carried out by a federal agency is a product
    of that agency’s exercise of discretion.” Home Builders, 551
    U.S. at 668. In Home Builders, the Court considered whether
    the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”)
    exercised the requisite discretion for the purposes of the ESA
    consultation requirement when, under the Clean Water Act
    (“CWA”), EPA transferred pollution discharge permitting
    authority to a state requesting the transfer. The Court noted
    that the CWA mandated the transfer after nine specified
    criteria were met, without reference to additional compliance
    with ESA consultation requirements. Id. at 671-72. The Court
    concluded that although EPA exercised some discretion in
    determining whether a state had met the specified criteria,
    once EPA decided that the state satisfied all nine criteria, EPA
    did not have discretion, under the CWA, to deny the transfer.
    Id.
    Here, Reclamation is required by statute to prepare and
    submit an AOP each year to Congress and the Governors of
    the Colorado River Basin States. 43 U.S.C. § 1552(b); Pub. L.
    No. 102-575, § 1804(c)(2). The Trust argues that because the
    specific content of each AOP is not dictated by statute, Recla-
    12
    More recently, we explained: “Our ‘agency action’ inquiry is two-
    fold. First, we ask whether a federal agency affirmatively authorized,
    funded, or carried out the underlying activity. Second, we determine
    whether the agency had some discretion to influence or change the activity
    for the benefit of a protected species.” Karuk Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1021.
    11360      GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    mation is left with the discretion to decide, through the AOP
    process, to operate the Dam in a manner that would benefit
    the humpback chub by choosing to implement SASF, or some
    other similar flow regime.
    [5] The plain language of the CRBPA, however, belies that
    Reclamation, through the AOP process, exercises that sort of
    discretion. The CRBPA provides that AOPs must “describ[e]
    the actual operation [of the Dam] under the adopted criteria
    for the preceding compact water year and the projected opera-
    tion for the current year.” 43 U.S.C. § 1552(b) (emphasis
    added). As stated above, the adopted operating criteria for the
    Dam is MLFF which was selected by the Secretary in 1996
    in the NEPA-required Record of Decision, and Reclamation
    does not have the discretion, through its promulgation of an
    AOP, to deviate from the implementation of MLFF. The stat-
    ute underscores that reality by limiting the content of each
    AOP to a mere description of how Reclamation in the past
    year has, and in the upcoming year will, operate the Dam
    “under the adopted criteria.” In this light, we conclude that
    the statute requires Reclamation to “perform [a] specific non-
    discretionary act[ ] rather than achieve broad goals;” namely,
    Reclamation does not have the discretion to select different
    operating criteria for the Dam by saying so in an AOP. Karuk
    Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1024. In other words, Reclamation does not
    exercise discretion signifying agency action requiring ESA
    consultation compliance.
    That the statute does not dictate with specificity the precise
    content of each AOP does not detract from this conclusion.
    The operation of the Dam is subject to some uncertainty,
    which stems from variances in hydrologic conditions, such as
    snowpack, and in yearly electricity and water demand, based
    on obligations established by the so-called Law of the River,13
    13
    The “Law of the River” comprises the legal obligations that govern
    the allocation and use of the water of the Colorado River. See, e.g., Ari-
    zona v. California, 
    547 U.S. 150
     (2006). It includes both inter-state and
    international agreement with respect to the River’s use.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.       11361
    that are necessarily unknowable before their occurrence but
    affect the operation of the Dam. For example, a year with
    extreme temperatures might increase the demand for electric-
    ity necessary to run heating and cooling systems. Reclamation
    exercises some discretion in preparing each AOP insofar as
    Reclamation must make projections about how it will operate
    the Dam for the upcoming year based on forecasts. That dis-
    cretion, however, does not affect Reclamation’s specific, non-
    discretionary obligation to implement MLFF in its operation
    of the Dam, which the Trust identifies as the primary harm to
    the humpback chub.
    The crux of Reclamation’s decision-making process on
    water flows and other features of the Dam’s operation is in its
    establishment of operating criteria for the Dam, such as use
    of MLFF rather than SASF, and interested parties had oppor-
    tunity to challenge agency decisions on the Dam’s operating
    criteria. It is neither practical nor required by law to permit
    challenges to each operating plan that is necessarily fashioned
    reflecting the operating criteria in its current setting.
    The 2008 AOP, which the Trust challenges, suggests limi-
    tations on discretion imposed on Reclamation in its prepara-
    tion and issuance of an AOP. In it, Reclamation describes its
    statutory mandate as follows:
    This 2008 Annual Operating Plan (AOP) was devel-
    oped in accordance with Section 602 of the Colorado
    River Basin Project Act . . . and the Criteria for
    Coordinated Long-Range Operation of Colorado
    River Reservoirs Pursuant to the Colorado River
    Basin Project Act of September 30, 1968 (Operating
    Criteria), as amended, promulgated by the Secretary
    of the Interior “(Secretary)”. This AOP implements
    the requirement of Section 602(b) of the Colorado
    River Basin Project Act that the Secretary annually
    prepare “a report describing the actual operation
    under the adopted critera [i.e., the Operating
    11362    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    Criteria] for the preceding compact water year [i.e.,
    from October 1 to September 30] and the projected
    operation of the current year.”
    In accordance with the [CRBPA] and the Operating
    Criteria, the AOP must be developed and adminis-
    tered consistent with applicable Federal laws . . . and
    other documents relating to the use of the waters of
    the Colorado River, which are commonly and collec-
    tively known as the “Law of the River.”
    Reclamation further describes the 2008 AOP’s purpose as fol-
    lows:
    The purposes of the AOP are to determine or
    address: (1) the projected operation of the Colorado
    River reservoirs to satisfy project purposes under
    varying hydrologic and climatic conditions; (2) the
    quantity of water considered necessary to be in stor-
    age in the Upper Basin Reservoirs . . . pursuant to
    Section 602(a) of the Colorado River Basin Project
    Act; (3) water available for delivery pursuant to the
    1944 United States-Mexico Water Treaty and Min-
    utes No. 242 and 310 of the International Boundary
    and Water Commission . . . ; (4) whether the reason-
    able consumptive use requirements of mainstream
    users in the Lower Division States will be met under
    a ‘Normal,’ ‘Surplus,’ or ‘Shortage’ Condition as
    outlined in . . . the Operating Criteria and as imple-
    mented by the Interim Guidelines; and (5) whether
    water apportioned to, but unused by one or more
    Lower Division States exists and can be used to sat-
    isfy beneficial consumptive use requests of main-
    stream users in other Lower Division States as
    provided in the Consolidated Decree of the Supreme
    Court of the United States in Arizona v. California,
    
    547 U.S. 150
     (2006).
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.        11363
    This description supports the conclusion that the AOP is
    merely a descriptive tool by which Congress and the Gover-
    nors of the Colorado River Basin States may be kept apprised
    of how Reclamation is meeting its multiple preexisting obli-
    gations while implementing MLFF at the Dam.
    The GCPA reinforces that it was not Congress’ intention to
    subject AOPs to ESA consultation requirements. The Act
    explicitly requires Reclamation, in preparing each AOP, to
    consult with the Governors of the Colorado River Basin
    States and with members of the general public, including aca-
    demics and scientists, environmental organizations, the recre-
    ation industry, and those who buy power that the Dam
    produces. Pub. L. No. 102-575, § 1804(c)(3). This list indi-
    cates that Congress knew how to mandate consultation in the
    preparation of each AOP, yet chose not to include in that list
    formal consultation under the ESA. We read that exclusion to
    mean that Congress did not intend that Reclamation comply
    with the ESA before issuing an AOP. See Home Builders, 551
    U.S. at 663 (concluding that the addition of implicit ESA
    compliance to the explicitly enumerated criteria for transfer
    would impermissibly alter the CWA’s statutory mandate).
    [6] Because we conclude that Reclamation, in preparing
    each AOP describing the operation of the Dam, does not exer-
    cise discretion that inures to the benefit of the chub, we hold
    that Reclamation does not violate the ESA by issuing each
    AOP without formally consulting with FWS.
    2
    Our decision in California Sportfishing Protection Alliance
    v. Federal Energy and Regulatory Commission, 
    472 F.3d 593
    (9th Cir. 2006), is also instructive with respect to our “agency
    action” inquiry here. In that case we considered a petition for
    review of the Federal Energy and Regulatory Commission’s
    (“FERC”) decision not to formally consult with the National
    Marine Fisheries Service (“NMFS”) about the continued
    11364     GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    operation of the DeSabla-Centerville hydroelectric project, a
    system of dams, reservoirs, canals, and powerhouses in Butte
    County, California. In 1980, FERC issued a 30-year operating
    permit to Pacific Gas and Electric (“PG&E”) to operate the
    DeSabla-Centerville hydroelectric project. Id. at 594. Petition-
    ers challenged FERC’s decision not to consult formally with
    NMFS about the continued operation of the hydroelectric
    project after the Chinook Salmon was declared a threatened
    species under the ESA in 1999. Id. We decided that the rele-
    vant “agency action” was the granting of the permit in 1980.
    Id. at 598. Since FERC consulted with NMFS before issuing
    the permit to PG&E, and because that agency action was
    complete, we held that PG&E’s continued operation of the
    hydroelectric project pursuant to that permit, notwithstanding
    the subsequent listing of the Chinook Salmon, was merely an
    ongoing activity that is not agency action for the purpose of
    ESA consultation. Id. at 598-99.
    In substance, by challenging the AOPs and urging each one
    requires separate ESA consultation, the Trust is continuously
    challenging Reclamation’s implementation of MLFF on an
    annual basis and its purported effects on the humpback chub.
    It is truly the selection of MLFF as the operating criteria
    which creates the environmental effects of concern to the
    Trust, and so the “agency action,” for the purposes of the
    ESA, with which the Trust truly takes issue was the selection
    of MLFF as one of the operating criteria, rather than the agen-
    cy’s routine reporting in each AOP. Reclamation, however,
    fully complied with ESA consultation requirements before the
    Secretary chose MLFF.14 Consistent with our decision in Cali-
    fornia Sportfishing, Reclamation’s yearly issuance of an AOP
    is part of Reclamation’s ongoing operation of the Dam under
    MLFF and does not trigger formal consultation under the
    ESA. Id. at 599.
    14
    Reclamation again complied with ESA consultation requirements
    when it proposed to alter the operation of the Dam by implementing the
    2008 Plan.
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.         11365
    Our decision on this is also pragmatically required. It is cal-
    led for and legally required to permit environmental challenge
    under the ESA for want of consultation about an endangered
    or threatened species whenever the agency establishes mate-
    rial operating criteria for a dam, and when it embarks on a
    significant new direction in its operations. But to allow ESA
    challenge on an annual basis for each AOP would be unduly
    cumbersome and unproductive in addressing the substance of
    environmental issues. Annual challenges could not likely be
    resolved fully before the next AOP came along, and there is
    no benefit to endangered species in having an unending judi-
    cial process concerning annual reporting requirements that
    Congress mandated.
    B
    The Trust next contends that Reclamation violates NEPA
    by not preparing either an EA or EIS for each AOP. The dis-
    trict court concluded that AOPs are not major federal actions
    for which NEPA requires that an EA and/or EIS be prepared.
    42 U.S.C. § 4332(C). We agree.
    [7] In Upper Snake River Chapter of Trout Unlimited v.
    Hodel, 
    921 F.2d 232
     (9th Cir. 1990), we considered whether
    Reclamation was required to comply with NEPA before mak-
    ing changes to the flow of water from the Palisades Dam and
    Reservoir located on the South Fork of the Snake River in
    Idaho. Reclamation had previously adopted a standard operat-
    ing procedure in which it maintained the flow of water from
    the dam in the South Fork at a level above 1,000 cubic feet
    per second (“cfs”). Id. at 233. In response to drought condi-
    tions, however, Reclamation reduced the flow to below 1,000
    cfs without first preparing an EIS. Id. at 234. We noted that
    “if an ongoing project undergoes changes which themselves
    amount to ‘major Federal actions,’ the operating agency must
    prepare an EIS;” however, we said that “where a proposed
    federal action would not change the status quo, an EIS is not
    necessary.” Id. at 234-35. We characterized the fluctuations in
    11366    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    flow as “routine managerial actions” that Reclamation had
    continuously implemented while “operating the facility in the
    manner intended.” Id. at 235. In that light, we concluded that
    Reclamation was not required to comply with NEPA when it
    made changes to the volume of water it released from the
    Dam based on changes in weather conditions. Id. at 235-36.
    [8] Here, Reclamation is not making material changes to
    the operating criteria for the Dam when it prepares and issues
    an AOP. As in Upper Snake River Chapter of Trout Unlim-
    ited, Reclamation does not change the status quo through the
    AOP process. Reclamation is not authorized to operate the
    Dam under another flow regime by simply declaring such a
    change in an AOP. Instead, as stated above, an AOP merely
    chronicles Reclamation’s ongoing operation of the Dam under
    the existing operating criteria, MLFF, during the preceding
    year and projects how Reclamation will do the same in the
    upcoming year.
    [9] In addition, we have said that “[t]he standards for
    ‘major federal action’ under NEPA and ‘agency action’ under
    the ESA are much the same. If there is any difference, case
    law indicates ‘major federal action’ is the more exclusive
    standard.” Marbled Murrelet v. Babbitt, 
    83 F.3d 1068
    , 1075
    (9th Cir. 1996); see also Karuk Tribe, 681 F.3d at 1024
    (“Although the ‘major federal action’ standard under NEPA
    is similar to the more liberal ‘agency action’ standard under
    the ESA, Marbled Murrelet, 83 F.3d at 1075, the terms are
    not interchangeable.”). Because we conclude above that AOP
    promulgation is not an agency action subject to ESA-
    mandated consultation, it follows that AOP promulgation
    does not trigger compliance with NEPA procedural require-
    ments. Marbled Murrelet, 83 F.3d at 1075 (“Where, as here,
    there is no ‘agency action’ under what is probably the more
    liberal standard of the ESA, there is no ‘major federal action’
    under the more exclusive standard of NEPA.”).
    [10] Our conclusion above that producing an AOP is not
    a major federal action requiring compliance with NEPA pro-
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.       11367
    cedures is also reinforced by the same pragmatic and realistic
    concerns that supported our decision that AOPs do not rou-
    tinely require ESA consultation. Similarly, we hold that Rec-
    lamation is not required to comply with NEPA procedural
    requirements before preparing each AOP for the Dam. The
    time for an agency to give a hard look at environmental con-
    sequences, and the opportunity for serious NEPA litigation on
    whether alternatives were adequately considered, should
    come in this context at the points where an agency establishes
    operating criteria for a dam, or embarks on some significant
    shift of direction in operating policy, not merely when there
    is routine and required annual reporting.
    C
    The Trust next challenges the district court’s conclusion
    that it lacked jurisdiction to review the draft 2009 Recovery
    Goals for the humpback chub. FWS issued recovery goals for
    the chub in 2002 (“2002 Recovery Goals”). The district court
    invalidated them, however, because they did not include time
    and cost estimates as required by the ESA. Because the dis-
    trict court did not find fault with the science of the 2002
    Recovery Goals, FWS restyled them as the draft 2009 Recov-
    ery Goals and relied on them as the best available science
    regarding humpback chub recovery in the 2009 BiOp. See 16
    U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2) (requiring use of “the best scientific and
    commercial data available”). Taking into account the science
    of the draft 2009 Recovery Goals, the district court concluded
    that FWS, in the 2009 BiOp, cured the recovery-related defi-
    ciency that the district court identified in the 2008 BiOp.
    The Trust challenged the draft 2009 Recovery Goals, con-
    tending that they violated the ESA because they had not been
    offered for public notice and comment or for peer review. The
    district court concluded, however, that the court did not have
    jurisdiction under either the citizen suit provision of the ESA
    or under the APA to review the draft 2009 Recovery Goals.
    We agree that under the citizen suit provision of the ESA, the
    11368    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    district court does not have jurisdiction to review the draft
    2009 Recovery Goals, and we conclude that the issue of
    whether the district court similarly lacks jurisdiction under the
    APA to review the draft 2009 Recovery Goals is moot.
    1
    [11] For the purpose of delisting endangered species and
    threatened species, the ESA requires the Secretary to “de-
    velop and implement [recovery plans or goals] for the conser-
    vation and survival of endangered species and threatened
    species listed pursuant to this section, unless he finds that
    such a plan will not promote the conservation of the species.”
    16 U.S.C. § 1533(f)(1). This obligation is separate from the
    Secretary’s obligation to “adequately consider the proposed
    actions’ impacts on the listed species’ chances of recovery” in
    a BiOp. See Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n. v. Nat’l. Marine Fisheries
    Serv., 
    524 F.3d 917
    , 931 (9th Cir. 2008) (affirming the district
    court’s conclusion that a BiOp was “legally deficient”
    because it did not address recovery).
    Recovery goals must include: (1) “site-specific manage-
    ment actions . . . necessary to achieve the plan’s goal for the
    conservation and survival of the species,” (2) “objective, mea-
    surable criteria” that would lead toward delisting, and (3) time
    and cost estimates “to carry out those measures.” 16 U.S.C.
    § 1533(f)(1)(B). The Secretary must also provide the opportu-
    nity for public notice and comment before final approval of
    a recovery plan, and “prior to implementation of a new or
    revised recovery plan, consider all information presented dur-
    ing the public comment period.” 16 U.S.C. § 1553(f)(4), (5).
    [12] The ESA citizen suit provision states that “any person
    may commence a civil suit on his own behalf . . . against the
    Secretary where there is alleged a failure of the Secretary to
    perform any act or duty under section 1533 . . . which is not
    discretionary with the Secretary.” 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g)(1)(C)
    (emphasis added). The Trust argues that because public notice
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.        11369
    and comment, peer review, and the inclusion of time and cost
    estimates are non-discretionary requirements that the ESA
    imposes on FWS’s approval of recovery goals, FWS’s use of
    the draft 2009 Recovery Goals as the best available science to
    define recovery of the chub in the 2009 BiOp, without first
    meeting those non-discretionary requirements, violates the
    ESA. The district court concluded, however, that it only had
    jurisdiction under the ESA to consider the draft 2009 Recov-
    ery Goals qua recovery goals for delisting purposes, their
    non-discretionary use. Because FWS used the draft 2009
    Recovery Goals as best available science, a discretionary use,
    the district court concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to con-
    sider the draft 2009 Recovery Goals under the ESA citizen
    suit provision. We agree.
    Our decision in Coos County Board of County Commis-
    sioners v. Kempthorne, 
    531 F.3d 792
     (9th Cir. 2008) is analo-
    gous and persuasive on the lack of jurisdiction supporting the
    challenge to the agency use of the draft recovery goals. In
    Coos County, FWS did not delist the marbled murrelet (a sea-
    bird) after FWS’s determined in a Five-Year Review that
    marbled murrelets “do not meet the definition of a ‘distinct
    population segment,’ one of the population categories which
    may be protected under the ESA, see 16 U.S.C. § 1532(16),
    but determined that they nonetheless remained threatened.”
    Id. at 794. Coos County sued FWS arguing that FWS has a
    duty to delist the bird. We reasoned that Coos County’s
    “[ESA citizen suit] and [APA] causes of action [could] pro-
    ceed only if FWS has a nondiscretionary duty to begin the
    delisting process—promptly or otherwise—as a result of the
    determination made in the Five-Year Review and has failed
    to act upon that duty.” Id. at 803. Deciding that there was no
    such duty under the statute, we concluded that there was no
    jurisdiction because “Coos County has not alleged a failure to
    perform a nondiscretionary act or duty imposed by § 1533,
    whether premised on the petition process deadlines or on the
    agency’s more general duty to act on its own determinations.”
    Id. at 812.
    11370    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.
    [13] Here, the ESA mandates peer review and notice and
    comment on recovery goals when offered as recovery goals.
    See 16 U.S.C. § 1533(f)(1) (“The Secretary shall develop and
    implement [recovery plans] for the conservation and survival
    of endangered species and threatened species listed pursuant
    to this section”), (f)(4) (“The Secretary shall, prior to final
    approval of a new or revised recovery plan, provide public
    notice and an opportunity for public review and comment on
    such plan. The Secretary shall consider all information pres-
    ented during the public comment period prior to approval of
    the plan.”). Nothing in these provisions either limits the Sec-
    retary’s use of the science of draft recovery goals to support
    a BiOp’s conclusions about an agency action’s effect on a
    listed species’ recovery or mandates that the Secretary meet
    the requirements of § 1533(f)(4), (5) before such alternate dis-
    cretionary use. We conclude that the ESA citizen suit provi-
    sion does not support jurisdiction here because FWS did not
    fail to perform a non-discretionary act before using the sci-
    ence incorporated in the draft 2009 Recovery Goals to support
    its 2009 BiOp.
    2
    [14] The district court also concluded that it lacked juris-
    diction under the APA to review the draft 2009 Recovery
    Goals because they were not a “final agency action” as
    required by that statute. 5 U.S.C. § 704. Here, FWS used the
    draft 2009 Recovery Goals to satisfy its obligation to address
    the recovery of the humpback chub in the 2009 BiOp. Any
    inquiry into whether that use violated the APA would require
    us to delve into the merits of the 2009 BiOp, a document that
    is no longer operative. Given our conclusion above that issues
    on appeal related to the 2009 BiOp are moot because the 2009
    BiOp has been replaced by the 2011 BiOp, we hold that the
    issue of whether the APA supports review of the draft 2009
    Recovery Goals as used in the 2009 BiOp is also moot.
    [15] Finally, we vacate the judgment of the district court
    with respect to the 2009 BiOp and the 2010 ITS. See Log
    GRAND CANYON TRUST v. U.S. BUREAU OF REC.         11371
    Cabin Republicans v. United States, 
    658 F.3d 1162
    , 1167-68
    (9th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (“Vacatur ensures that those who
    have been prevented from obtaining the review to which they
    are entitled are not . . . treated as if there had been a review.
    It prevents an unreviewable decision from spawning any legal
    consequences, so that no party is harmed by what the
    Supreme Court has called a preliminary adjudication.” (inter-
    nal quotation marks, alterations, and citations omitted)).
    DISMISSED in part; AFFIRMED in part.