Virginia Uranium, Inc. v. Warren , 204 L. Ed. 2d 377 ( 2019 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2018                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U.S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC., ET AL. v. WARREN ET AL.
    CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
    THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 16–1275. Argued November 5, 2018—Decided June 17, 2019
    Petitioner Virginia Uranium, Inc., wants to mine raw uranium ore from
    a site near Coles Hill, Virginia, but Virginia law flatly prohibits ura-
    nium mining in the Commonwealth. The company filed suit, alleging
    that, under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause, the Atomic Energy
    Act (AEA) preempts state uranium mining laws like Virginia’s and
    ensconces the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) as the lone
    regulator in the field. Both the District Court and the Fourth Circuit
    rejected the company’s argument, finding that while the AEA affords
    the NRC considerable authority over the nuclear fuel life cycle, it of-
    fers no hint that Congress sought to strip States of their traditional
    power to regulate mining on private lands within their borders.
    Held: The judgment is affirmed.
    
    848 F.3d 590
    , affirmed.
    JUSTICE GORSUCH, joined by JUSTICE THOMAS and JUSTICE KA-
    VANAUGH, concluded that the AEA does not preempt Virginia’s law
    banning uranium mining. Pp. 3–17.
    (a) Virginia Uranium claims that the AEA is best read to reserve to
    the NRC alone the regulation of uranium mining based on nuclear
    safety concerns. But the AEA contains no provision expressly
    preempting state law. More pointedly, it grants the NRC extensive
    and sometimes exclusive authority to regulate nearly every aspect of
    the nuclear fuel life cycle except mining, expressly stating that the
    NRC’s regulatory powers arise only “after [uranium’s] removal from
    its place of deposit in nature,” 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2092. And statutory con-
    text confirms this reading: If the federal government wants to control
    uranium mining on private land, it must purchase or seize the land
    by eminent domain and make it federal land, §2096, indicating that
    2                VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Syllabus
    state authority remains untouched. Later amendments to the AEA
    point to the same conclusion. Section 2021 allows the NRC to devolve
    certain of its regulatory powers to the States but does nothing to ex-
    tend the NRC’s power to activities, like mining, historically beyond
    its reach. And §2021(k) explains that States remain free to regulate
    the activities discussed in §2021 for purposes other than nuclear
    safety without the NRC’s consent. Virginia Uranium contends in-
    stead that subsection (k) greatly expands the AEA’s preemptive effect
    by demanding the displacement of any state law enacted for the pur-
    pose of protection the public against “radiation hazards.” But subsec-
    tion (k) merely clarifies that nothing in §2021 limits States’ ability to
    regulate the activities subject to NRC control for other purposes. In
    addition, the company’s reading would prohibit not only the States
    from regulating uranium mining to protect against radiation hazards
    but the federal government as well, since the AEA affords it no au-
    thority to regulate uranium mining on private land. Pp. 4–7.
    (b) Virginia Uranium also submits that preemption may be found
    in this Court’s precedents, pointing to Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. State
    Energy Resources Conservation and Development Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    , which rejected a preemption challenge to a state law prohibiting
    the construction of new nuclear power plants after the Court ob-
    served that it was enacted out of concern with economic development,
    not for the purpose of addressing radiation safety hazards. But Pacif-
    ic Gas concerned a state moratorium on construction of new nuclear
    power plants, and nuclear plant construction has always been an
    area exclusively regulated by the federal government. It is one thing to
    inquire exactingly into state legislative purposes when state law
    comes close to trenching on core federal powers; it is another thing al-
    together to insist on the same exacting scrutiny for state laws far re-
    moved from core NRC powers. Later cases confirm the propriety of
    restraint in this area. See, e.g., Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 
    464 U.S. 238
    ; English v. General Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    . This Court has
    generally treated field preemption as depending on what the State
    did, not why it did it. See, e.g., Arizona v. United States, 
    567 U.S. 387
    . And because inquiries into legislative purpose both invite well-
    known conceptual and practical problems and pose risks to federal-
    ism and individual liberty, this Court has long warned against un-
    dertaking potential misadventures into hidden state legislative in-
    tentions without a clear statutory mandate for the project, see, e.g.,
    Shady Grove Orthopedic Associates, P. A. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    559 U.S. 393
    , 404–405. Pp. 7–14.
    (c) Virginia Uranium alternatively suggests that that the AEA dis-
    places state law through so-called conflict preemption—in particular,
    that Virginia’s mining law stands as an impermissible “obstacle to
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                      3
    Syllabus
    the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives
    of Congress,” Hines v. Davidowitz, 
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67. But any
    “[e]vidence of pre-emptive purpose,” whether express or implied,
    must be “sought in the [statute’s] text and structure.” CSX Transp.,
    Inc. v. Easterwood, 
    507 U.S. 658
    , 664. Efforts to ascribe unenacted
    purposes and objectives to a federal statute face many of the same
    challenges as inquiries into state legislative intent. The only thing a
    court can be sure of is what can be found in the law itself. And the
    compromise that Congress actually struck in the AEA leaves mining
    regulation on private land to the States and grants the NRC regula-
    tory authority only after uranium is removed from the earth. It is al-
    so unclear whether laws like Virginia’s might have a meaningful im-
    pact on the development of nuclear power in this country given the
    other available foreign and domestic sources of uranium. Pp. 14–17.
    JUSTICE GINSBURG, joined by JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR and JUSTICE KA-
    GAN, agreed with JUSTICE GORSUCH that the Commonwealth’s mining
    ban is not preempted but concluded that his discussion of the perils
    of inquiring into legislative motive sweeps well beyond the confines of
    this case. Further, Virginia Uranium’s obstacle preemption argu-
    ments fail under existing doctrine, so there is little reason to question
    whether that doctrine should be retained. Pp. 1–14.
    (a) The Commonwealth has forbidden conventional uranium min-
    ing on private land. The AEA leaves that activity unregulated. State
    law on the subject is therefore not preempted, whatever the reason
    for the law’s enactment. Pp. 7–8.
    (b) Section 2021(k) lends no support for Virginia Uranium’s cause.
    That provision is most sensibly read to clarify that the door newly
    opened for state regulation of certain activities for nuclear safety
    purposes left in place pre-existing state authority to regulate activi-
    ties for nonradiological purposes. House and Senate Reports endorse
    this reading of §2021(k). Pp. 8–9.
    (c) Virginia Uranium leans heavily on a statement in Pacific Gas &
    Elec. Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
    Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    , that “the Federal Government has occupied
    the entire field of nuclear safety concerns.” 
    Id., at 212.
    But neither
    in that case nor in later decisions in its wake—Silkwood v. Kerr-
    McGee Corp., 
    464 U.S. 238
    ; English v. General Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    —did the Court rest preemption on the purposes for which state
    laws were enacted. Indeed, in all three, the Court held that the laws
    at issue were not preempted. Moreover, the state law involved in Pa-
    cific Gas addressed an activity—construction of nuclear power
    plants—closely regulated by the AEA. Inquiry into why the state law
    at issue in that case was enacted was therefore proper under
    §2021(k). The Commonwealth’s mining ban, in contrast, governs an
    4               VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Syllabus
    activity not regulated by the AEA. Pp. 9–10.
    (d) The Solicitor General’s argument—that the Commonwealth’s
    mining ban is preempted because it is a pretext for regulating the ra-
    diological safety hazards of milling and tailings storage—is unper-
    suasive. To the degree the AEA preempts state laws based on the
    purposes for which they were enacted, §2021(k) stakes out the
    boundaries of the preempted field. National Meat Assn. v. Harris,
    
    565 U.S. 452
    , distinguished. Pp. 10–11.
    (e) Virginia Uranium and the United States also fail to show that
    the mining ban creates an “unacceptable ‘obstacle to the accomplish-
    ment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.’ ”
    Wyeth v. Levine, 
    555 U.S. 555
    , 563–564. Pp. 12–14.
    GORSUCH, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered an
    opinion, in which THOMAS and KAVANAUGH, JJ., joined. GINSBURG, J.,
    filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which SOTOMAYOR and
    KAGAN, JJ., joined. ROBERTS, C. J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which
    BREYER and ALITO, JJ., joined.
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                              1
    OpinionofofGthe
    Opinion          Court
    ORSUCH, J.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 16–1275
    _________________
    VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.
    JOHN WARREN, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    [June 17, 2019]
    JUSTICE GORSUCH announced the judgment of the Court
    and delivered an opinion, in which JUSTICE THOMAS and
    JUSTICE KAVANAUGH join.
    Virginia Uranium insists that the federal Atomic Energy
    Act preempts a state law banning uranium mining, but we
    do not see it. True, the AEA gives the Nuclear Regulatory
    Commission significant authority over the milling, trans-
    fer, use, and disposal of uranium, as well as the construc-
    tion and operation of nuclear power plants. But Congress
    conspicuously chose to leave untouched the States’ historic
    authority over the regulation of mining activities on pri-
    vate lands within their borders. Nor do we see anything to
    suggest that the enforcement of Virginia’s law would
    frustrate the AEA’s purposes and objectives. And we are
    hardly free to extend a federal statute to a sphere Con-
    gress was well aware of but chose to leave alone. In this,
    as in any field of statutory interpretation, it is our duty to
    respect not only what Congress wrote but, as importantly,
    what it didn’t write.
    2           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    I
    Virginia Uranium thought its plan was pretty straight-
    forward. First, the company wanted to use conventional
    mining techniques to extract raw uranium ore from a site
    near Coles Hill, Virginia. Next, it intended to mill that ore
    into a usable form. Typically performed at the mine site,
    milling involves grinding the ore into sand-sized grains
    and then exposing it to a chemical solution that leaches
    out pure uranium. Once dried, the resulting mixture
    forms a solid “yellowcake,” which the company planned to
    sell to enrichment facilities that produce fuel for nuclear
    reactors. Finally, because the leaching process does not
    remove all of the uranium from the ore, the company
    expected to store the leftover “tailings” near the mine to
    reduce the chances of contaminating the air or water.
    But putting the plan into action didn’t prove so simple.
    Pursuant to the AEA, ch. 724, 60 Stat. 755, 
    42 U.S. C
    .
    §2011 et seq., the NRC regulates milling and tailing stor-
    age activities nationwide, and it has issued an array of
    rules on these subjects. See, e.g., 10 CFR §40 et seq.
    (2018). None of those, though, proved the real problem for
    Virginia Uranium. The company hit a roadblock even
    before it could get to the point where the NRC’s rules kick
    in: State law flatly prohibits uranium mining in Virginia.
    See Va. Code Ann. §§45.1–161.292:30, 45.1–283 (2013);
    
    848 F.3d 590
    , 593–594 (CA4 2017).
    To overcome that obstacle, Virginia Uranium filed this
    lawsuit. The company alleged that, under the Constitu-
    tion’s Supremacy Clause, the AEA preempts state uranium
    mining laws like Virginia’s and ensconces the NRC as the
    lone regulator in the field. And because the NRC’s regula-
    tions say nothing about uranium mining, the company
    continued, it remains free to mine as it will in Virginia or
    elsewhere.
    Both the district court and a divided panel of the Fourth
    Circuit rejected the company’s argument. The courts
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            3
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    acknowledged that the AEA affords the NRC considerable
    authority over the nuclear fuel life cycle. But both courts
    found missing from the AEA any hint that Congress
    sought to strip States of their traditional power to regulate
    mining on private lands within their borders. Given the
    significance of the question presented, we granted review.
    584 U. S. ___ (2018).
    II
    The Supremacy Clause supplies a rule of priority. It
    provides that the “Constitution, and the Laws of the United
    States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof,” are “the
    supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing in the Constitu-
    tion or Laws of any state to the Contrary notwithstand-
    ing.” Art. VI, cl. 2. This Court has sometimes used differ-
    ent labels to describe the different ways in which federal
    statutes may displace state laws—speaking, for example,
    of express, field, and conflict preemption. But these cate-
    gories “are not rigidly distinct.” Crosby v. National For-
    eign Trade Council, 
    530 U.S. 363
    , 372, n. 6 (2000) (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted). And at least one feature
    unites them: Invoking some brooding federal interest or
    appealing to a judicial policy preference should never be
    enough to win preemption of a state law; a litigant must
    point specifically to “a constitutional text or a federal
    statute” that does the displacing or conflicts with state
    law. Puerto Rico Dept. of Consumer Affairs v. ISLA Petro-
    leum Corp., 
    485 U.S. 495
    , 503 (1988); see also 3 J. Story,
    Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States
    §1831, p. 694 (1st ed. 1833) (“the supremacy of the laws is
    attached to those only, which are made in pursuance of
    the constitution”).
    Before us, Virginia Uranium contends that the AEA
    (and only the AEA) unseats state uranium mining regula-
    tions and that it does so under the doctrines of both field
    and conflict preemption. We examine these arguments
    4             VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    about the AEA’s preemptive effect much as we would any
    other about statutory meaning, looking to the text and
    context of the law in question and guided by the traditional
    tools of statutory interpretation. Here, no more than in
    any statutory interpretation dispute, is it enough for any
    party or court to rest on a supposition (or wish) that “it
    must be in there somewhere.”
    A
    We begin with the company’s claim that the text and
    structure of the AEA reserve the regulation of uranium
    mining for the purpose of addressing nuclear safety con-
    cerns to the NRC alone—and almost immediately prob-
    lems emerge. Unlike many federal statutes,1 the AEA
    contains no provision preempting state law in so many
    words. Even more pointedly, the statute grants the NRC
    extensive and sometimes exclusive authority to regulate
    nearly every aspect of the nuclear fuel life cycle except
    mining. Companies like Virginia Uranium must abide the
    NRC’s rules and regulations if they wish to handle en-
    riched uranium, to mill uranium ore or store tailings, or to
    build or run a nuclear power plant. See 
    42 U.S. C
    .
    §§2111(a), 2113(a), 2073. But when it comes to mining,
    the statute speaks very differently, expressly stating that
    the NRC’s regulatory powers arise only “after [uranium’s]
    removal from its place of deposit in nature.” §2092 (em-
    phasis added). As the government itself has conceded, this
    means that “uranium mining” lies “outside the NRC’s
    jurisdiction,” Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 14,
    and the agency’s grip takes hold only “at the mill, rather
    than at the mine,” In re Hydro Resources, Inc., 63 N. R. C.
    510, 512 (2006).
    ——————
    1 See, e.g., Chamber of Commerce of United States of America v. Whit-
    ing, 
    563 U.S. 582
    , 594–595 (2011); Geier v. American Honda Motor Co.,
    
    529 U.S. 861
    , 867 (2000).
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           5
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    What the text states, context confirms. After announc-
    ing a general rule that mining regulation lies outside the
    NRC’s jurisdiction, the AEA carves out a notably narrow
    exception. On federal lands, the statute says, the NRC
    may regulate uranium mining. §2097. And if the federal
    government wants to control mining of uranium on private
    land, the AEA tells the NRC exactly what to do: It may
    purchase or seize the land by eminent domain and make it
    federal land. §2096. Congress thus has spoken directly to
    the question of uranium mining on private land, and every
    bit of what it’s said indicates that state authority remains
    untouched.
    Later amendments to the AEA point to the same conclu-
    sion. Some years after the statute’s passage, Congress
    added a provision, currently codified in §2021, allowing
    the NRC to devolve certain of its regulatory powers to the
    States. Unsurprisingly, Congress indicated that the NRC
    must maintain regulatory control over especially sensitive
    activities like the construction of nuclear power plants.
    §2021(c). But under §2021(b) the NRC may now, by
    agreement, pass to the States some of its preexisting
    authorities to regulate various nuclear materials “for the
    protection of the public health and safety from radiation
    hazards.” Out of apparent concern that courts might
    (mis)read these new provisions as prohibiting States from
    regulating any activity even tangentially related to nuclear
    power without first reaching an agreement with the NRC,
    Congress added subsection (k):
    “Nothing in this section [that is, §2021] shall be con-
    strued to affect the authority of any State or local
    agency to regulate activities for purposes other than
    protection against radiation hazards.”
    Section 2021, thus, did nothing to extend the NRC’s
    power to activities, like mining, historically beyond its
    reach. Instead, it served only to allow the NRC to share
    6           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    with the States some of the powers previously reserved to
    the federal government. Even then, the statute explained
    in subsection (k) that States remain free to regulate
    the activities discussed in §2021 for purposes other than
    nuclear safety without the NRC’s consent. Indeed, if
    anything, subsection (k) might be described as a non-
    preemption clause.
    Virginia Uranium’s case hinges on a very different
    construction of subsection (k). The company suggests
    that, properly read, the provision greatly expands the
    preemptive effect of the AEA and demands the displace-
    ment of any state law (touching on mining or any other
    subject) if that law was enacted for the purpose of protect-
    ing the public against “radiation hazards.” And, the com-
    pany adds, Virginia’s law bears just such an impermissible
    purpose.
    In our view, this reading nearly turns the provision on
    its head. Subsection (k) does not displace traditional
    state regulation over mining or otherwise extend the
    NRC’s grasp to matters previously beyond its control. It
    does not expose every state law on every subject to a
    searching judicial inquiry into its latent purposes. Instead
    and much more modestly, it clarifies that “nothing in
    this [new] section [2021]”—a section allowing for the
    devolution-by-agreement of federal regulatory authority—
    should be construed to curtail the States’ ability to regu-
    late the activities discussed in that same section for pur-
    poses other than protecting against radiation hazards. So
    only state laws that seek to regulate the activities dis-
    cussed in §2021 without an NRC agreement—activities
    like the construction of nuclear power plants—may be
    scrutinized to ensure their purposes aim at something
    other than regulating nuclear safety. Really, to accom-
    plish all it wants, Virginia Uranium would have to per-
    suade us to read 13 words out of the statute and add 2
    more:
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            7
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    Nothing in this section shall be construed to affect the
    authority of any State or local agency to may regulate
    activities only for purposes other than protection
    against radiation hazards.
    That may be a statute some would prefer, but it is not the
    statute we have.
    Just consider what would follow from Virginia Urani-
    um’s interpretation. Not only would States be prohibited
    from regulating uranium mining to protect against radia-
    tion hazards; the federal government likely would be
    barred from doing so as well. After all, the NRC has long
    believed, and still maintains, that the AEA affords it no
    authority to regulate uranium mining on private land.
    Nor does Virginia Uranium dispute the federal govern-
    ment’s understanding. Admittedly, if Virginia Uranium
    were to prevail here, the NRC might respond by changing
    course and seeking to regulate uranium mining for the
    first time. But given the statute’s terms, the prospects
    that it might do so successfully in the face of a legal chal-
    lenge appear gloomy. Admittedly, as well, federal air and
    water and other regulations might apply at a uranium
    mine much as at any other workplace. But the possibility
    that both state and federal authorities would be left un-
    able to regulate the unique risks posed by an activity as
    potentially hazardous as uranium mining seems more
    than a little unlikely, and quite a lot to find buried deep in
    subsection (k). Talk about squeezing elephants into
    mouseholes. See Whitman v. American Trucking Assns.,
    Inc., 
    531 U.S. 457
    , 468 (2001).
    B
    If the best reading of the AEA doesn’t require us to hold
    the state law before us preempted, Virginia Uranium
    takes another swing in the same direction. Only this time,
    the company submits, our precedents have adopted a
    different, even if maybe doubtful, reading of the AEA that
    8           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    we must follow. Most prominently, Virginia Uranium
    points to this Court’s decision in Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v.
    State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
    Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    (1983).
    But here, too, problems quickly appear. Pacific Gas
    rejected a preemption challenge to a state law prohibiting
    the construction of new nuclear power plants. Along the
    way, the Court expressly dismissed the notion that §2021
    establishes the federal government as “the sole regulator
    of all matters nuclear.” 
    Id., at 205.
    The Court observed
    that subsection (k) addresses itself only to “the preemptive
    effect of ‘this section,’ that is [§2021].” 
    Id., at 210.
    And
    the Court acknowledged that subsection (k) does not “cut
    back on pre-existing state authority outside the NRC’s
    jurisdiction,” a field that surely includes uranium mining.
    
    Id., at 209.
    None of this remotely helps Virginia Urani-
    um’s cause.
    Still, Virginia Uranium seeks to make the best of a bad
    situation. The company points out that Pacific Gas upheld
    the state law at issue there only after observing that it
    was enacted out of concern with economic development,
    not for the purpose of addressing radiation safety hazards.
    
    Id., at 205.
    From this, the company reasons, we should
    infer that any state law enacted with the purpose of
    addressing nuclear hazards must fall thanks to our
    precedent.
    But even that much does not follow. Since the passage
    of the AEA, the NRC has always played a significant role
    in regulating the construction of nuclear power plants.
    Indeed, under §2021(c) this remains one area where the
    NRC generally cannot devolve its responsibilities to the
    States. See 
    id., at 197–198,
    206–207. And because §2021
    classifies the construction of nuclear power plants as one
    of the core remaining areas of special federal concern, any
    state law regulating that activity risks being subjected to
    an inquiry into its purposes under subsection (k). But the
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            9
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    activity Virginia’s law regulates—mining on private
    land—isn’t one the AEA has ever addressed, and it isn’t
    one §2021 discusses, so subsection (k) does not authorize
    any judicial inquiry into state legislative purpose in this
    case.
    Admittedly, there is a wrinkle here. Pacific Gas seemed
    to accept California’s argument that its law addressed
    whether new power plants may be built, while the NRC’s
    regulatory power under §2021(c) extends only to the ques-
    tion how such plants are constructed and operated. 
    Id., at 212.
    And accepting (without granting) these premises, it
    would appear that California’s law did not implicate an
    activity addressed by §2021, so an inquiry into state legis-
    lative purpose under subsection (k) was not statutorily
    authorized. Yet Pacific Gas inquired anyway, perhaps on
    the unstated belief that the state law just came “too close”
    to a core power §2021(c) reserves to the federal govern-
    ment. Does that mean we must do the same? Certainly
    Virginia Uranium sees it that way.
    We do not. Just because Pacific Gas may have made
    more of state legislative purposes than the terms of the
    AEA allow does not mean we must make more of them yet.
    It is one thing to do as Pacific Gas did and inquire exact-
    ingly into state legislative purposes when state law pro-
    hibits a regulated activity like the construction of a nuclear
    plant, and thus comes close to trenching on core federal
    powers reserved to the federal government by the AEA. It
    is another thing to do as Virginia Uranium wishes and
    impose the same exacting scrutiny on state laws prohibit-
    ing an activity like mining far removed from the NRC’s
    historic powers. And without some clearer congressional
    mandate suggesting an inquiry like that would be appro-
    priate, we decline to undertake it on our own authority.
    The preemption of state laws represents “a serious intru-
    sion into state sovereignty.” Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr, 
    518 U.S. 470
    , 488 (1996) (plurality opinion). And to order
    10          VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    preemption based not on the strength of a clear congres-
    sional command, or even on the strength of a judicial gloss
    requiring that much of us, but based only on a doubtful
    extension of a questionable judicial gloss would represent
    not only a significant federal intrusion into state sover-
    eignty. It would also represent a significant judicial intru-
    sion into Congress’s authority to delimit the preemptive
    effect of its laws. Being in for a dime doesn’t mean we
    have to be in for a dollar.
    This Court’s later cases confirm the propriety of re-
    straint in this area. In a decision issued just a year after
    Pacific Gas (and by the same author), this Court consid-
    ered whether the AEA preempted state tort remedies for
    radiation injuries after a nuclear plant accident. Silkwood
    v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 
    464 U.S. 238
    (1984). In doing so, the
    Court did not inquire into state legislative purposes, ap-
    parently because it thought state tort law (unlike a law
    prohibiting the construction of a nuclear power plant) fell
    beyond any fair understanding of the NRC’s reach under
    the AEA. 
    Id., at 251.
    Exactly the same, as we have seen,
    can be said of Virginia’s mining law. In fact, if the Silk-
    wood Court had inquired into state legislative purposes,
    the law there might well have been harder to sustain than
    the one now before us. State tort laws, after all, plainly
    intend to regulate public safety. And as applied in Silk-
    wood, state tort law sought to regulate the safety of a
    nuclear plant’s operations, an area of special federal inter-
    est under §2021(c). 
    Id., at 256.
    Nothing comparable, of
    course, can be said of the mining regulations before us.
    Some years later, this Court in English v. General Elec.
    Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    (1990), went further still, casting doubt
    on whether an inquiry into state legislative purposes had
    been either necessary or appropriate in Pacific Gas 
    itself. 496 U.S., at 84
    –85, n. 7 (“Whether the suggestion of the
    majority in Pacific Gas that legislative purpose is relevant
    to the definition of the pre-empted field is part of the
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                    11
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    holding of that case is not an issue before us today” (em-
    phasis added)).
    If Pacific Gas and its progeny alone marked our path,
    this case might be a close one, as our dissenting colleagues
    suggest. Post, at 3–5 (opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.). But for
    us any lingering doubt dissipates when we consult other
    cases in this area and this Court’s traditional tools of
    statutory interpretation.2
    Start with the fact that this Court has generally treated
    field preemption inquiries like this one as depending on
    what the State did, not why it did it. Indeed, this Court
    has analyzed most every other modern field preemption
    doctrine dispute in this way—from immigration, Arizona
    v. United States, 
    567 U.S. 387
    (2012), to arbitration,
    AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, 
    563 U.S. 333
    (2011),
    to foreign affairs, Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Coun-
    cil, 
    530 U.S. 363
    (2000), to railroads, Kurns v. Railroad
    Friction Products Corp., 
    565 U.S. 625
    (2012), to energy,
    Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing, LLC, 578 U. S. ___
    (2016), to civil procedure, Shady Grove Orthopedic Associ-
    ates, P. A. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    559 U.S. 393
    (2010). It is
    unclear why we would proceed differently here without
    some clear congressional instruction requiring it.3
    ——————
    2 Far from “sweep[ing] well beyond the confines of this case,” as our
    concurring colleagues suggest, see post, at 1 (GINSBURG, J., concurring
    in judgment), these considerations are, to us, essential to its resolution.
    3 Certainly the dissent’s case, National Meat Assn. v. Harris, 
    565 U.S. 452
    (2012), doesn’t command a different result. There, the Court
    merely enforced an express statutory preemption clause that prohibited
    States from setting standards for handling non-ambulatory pigs that
    differed from federal standards. As we’ve seen, the AEA contains no
    comparable preemption clause forbidding Virginia to regulate mining in
    any way. Admittedly, National Meat went on to say that a State could
    not enforce a preempted animal-handling standard indirectly by
    banning the sale of meat from non-ambulatory pigs if its law “func-
    tion[ed] as a command to slaughterhouses to structure their operations
    in the exact way” state regulators desired rather than as federal
    12            VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    Our field preemption cases proceed as they do, more-
    over, for good reasons. Consider just some of the costs to
    cooperative federalism and individual liberty we would
    invite by inquiring into state legislative purpose too pre-
    cipitately. The natural tendency of regular federal judicial
    inquiries into state legislative intentions would be to stifle
    deliberation in state legislatures and encourage resort to
    secrecy and subterfuge. That would inhibit the sort of
    open and vigorous legislative debate that our Constitution
    recognizes as vital to testing ideas and improving laws. In
    Virginia Uranium’s vision as well, federal courts would
    have to allow depositions of state legislators and gover-
    nors, and perhaps hale them into court for cross-
    examination at trial about their subjective motivations in
    passing a mining statute. And at the end of it all, federal
    courts would risk subjecting similarly situated persons to
    radically different legal rules as judges uphold and strike
    down materially identical state regulations based only on
    the happenstance of judicial assessments of the “true”
    intentions lurking behind them. In light of all this, it can
    surprise no one that our precedents have long warned
    against undertaking potential misadventures into hidden
    state legislative intentions without a clear statutory man-
    date for the project. See, e.g., Shady 
    Grove, 559 U.S., at 404
    –405; Rowe v. New Hampshire Motor Transp. Assn.,
    
    552 U.S. 364
    , 373–374 (2008); Palmer v. Thompson, 
    403 U.S. 217
    , 225 (1971); Arizona v. California, 
    283 U.S. 423
    ,
    455, n. 7 (1931) (collecting cases).
    To be sure, Virginia Uranium insists that we don’t need
    to worry about concerns like these in this case. We don’t,
    the company says, because Virginia has admitted that it
    enacted its law with the (impermissible) purpose of pro-
    ——————
    standards required. 
    Id., at 464.
    But here, by contrast, no one sug-
    gests that Virginia’s mining law requires anyone to disregard NRC
    regulations.
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           13
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    tecting the public from nuclear safety hazards. But the
    Commonwealth denies making any such admission. In-
    stead, it says it has merely accepted as true the allega-
    tions in the company’s complaint about the intentions
    animating state law for purposes of the Commonwealth’s
    own motion to dismiss this suit under Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). If the case were to proceed be-
    yond the pleadings stage, Virginia insists, a more search-
    ing judicial inquiry into the law’s motivation would be
    inevitable. Whoever may be right about the status of
    Virginia’s admissions in this case, though, the point re-
    mains that following Virginia Uranium’s lead would re-
    quire serious intrusions into state legislative processes in
    future cases.
    Beyond these concerns, as well, lie well-known concep-
    tual and practical ones this Court has also advised against
    inviting unnecessarily. State legislatures are composed of
    individuals who often pursue legislation for multiple and
    unexpressed purposes, so what legal rules should deter-
    mine when and how to ascribe a particular intention to a
    particular legislator? What if an impermissible intention
    existed but wasn’t necessary to her vote? And what per-
    centage of the legislature must harbor the impermissible
    intention before we can impute it to the collective institu-
    tion? Putting all that aside, how are courts supposed to
    conduct a reasonable inquiry into these questions when
    recorded state legislative history materials are often not
    as readily available or complete as their federal counter-
    parts? And if trying to peer inside legislators’ skulls is too
    fraught an enterprise, shouldn’t we limit ourselves to
    trying to glean legislative purposes from the statutory text
    where we began? Even Pacific Gas warned future courts
    against too hastily accepting a litigant’s invitation to
    “become embroiled in attempting to ascertain” state legis-
    lative “motive[s],” acknowledging that such inquiries
    “often” prove “unsatisfactory venture[s]. What motivates
    14          VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    one legislator to vote for a statute is not necessarily what
    motivates scores of others to enact 
    it.” 461 U.S., at 216
    (citation omitted). See also Shady 
    Grove, 559 U.S., at 403
    –404, n. 6; 
    Palmer, 403 U.S., at 225
    ; Edwards v.
    Aguillard, 
    482 U.S. 578
    , 636–639 (1987) (Scalia, J., dis-
    senting). Cf. Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc.,
    
    523 U.S. 75
    , 79 (1998). We think these warnings wise,
    and we heed them today.
    C
    If the AEA doesn’t occupy the field of radiation safety in
    uranium mining, Virginia Uranium suggests the statute
    still displaces state law through what’s sometimes called
    conflict preemption. In particular, the company suggests,
    Virginia’s mining law stands as an impermissible
    “obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the
    full purposes and objectives of Congress.”           Hines v.
    Davidowitz, 
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67 (1941).            On Virginia
    Uranium’s account, Congress sought to capture the
    benefits of developing nuclear power while mitigating its
    safety and environmental costs.         And, the company
    contends, Virginia’s moratorium disrupts the delicate
    “balance” Congress sought to achieve between these
    benefits and costs. Maybe the text of the AEA doesn’t
    touch on mining in so many words, but its authority to
    regulate later stages of the nuclear fuel life cycle would be
    effectively undermined if mining laws like Virginia’s were
    allowed.
    A sound preemption analysis cannot be as simplistic
    as that. No more than in field preemption can the
    Supremacy Clause be deployed here to elevate abstract
    and unenacted legislative desires above state law; only
    federal laws “made in pursuance of ” the Constitution,
    through its prescribed processes of bicameralism and
    presentment, are entitled to preemptive effect. Art. VI, cl.
    2; ISLA 
    Petroleum, 485 U.S., at 503
    . So any “[e]vidence of
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           15
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    pre-emptive purpose,” whether express or implied, must
    therefore be “sought in the text and structure of the
    statute at issue.” CSX Transp., Inc. v. Easterwood, 
    507 U.S. 658
    , 664 (1993).
    Sound and well-documented reasons underlie this rule
    too. Efforts to ascribe unenacted purposes and objectives
    to a federal statute face many of the same challenges as
    inquiries into state legislative intent. Trying to discern
    what motivates legislators individually and collectively
    invites speculation and risks overlooking the reality that
    individual Members of Congress often pursue multiple and
    competing purposes, many of which are compromised to
    secure a law’s passage and few of which are fully realized
    in the final product. Hefty inferences may be required, as
    well, when trying to estimate whether Congress would
    have wanted to prohibit States from pursuing regulations
    that may happen to touch, in various degrees and different
    ways, on unenacted federal purposes and objectives.
    Worse yet, in piling inference upon inference about hidden
    legislative wishes we risk displacing the legislative
    compromises actually reflected in the statutory text—
    compromises that sometimes may seem irrational to an
    outsider coming to the statute cold, but whose genius lies
    in having won the broad support our Constitution
    demands of any new law. In disregarding these legislative
    compromises, we may only wind up displacing perfectly
    legitimate state laws on the strength of “purposes” that
    only we can see, that may seem perfectly logical to us, but
    that lack the democratic provenance the Constitution
    demands before a federal law may be declared supreme.
    See, e.g., Pacific 
    Gas, 461 U.S., at 222
    (acknowledging
    that under the AEA “the promotion of nuclear power is not
    to be accomplished ‘at all costs’ ”); Cyan, Inc. v. Beaver
    County Employees Retirement Fund, 583 U. S. ___, ___–___
    (2018) (slip op., at 14–15); 
    Aguillard, 482 U.S., at 636
    –639
    (Scalia, J., dissenting); United States v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 16
                VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    367, 382–384 (1968); Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87, 130
    (1810).
    So it may be that Congress meant the AEA to promote
    the development of nuclear power. It may be that
    Congress meant the AEA to balance that goal against
    various safety concerns. But it also may be that Members
    of Congress held many other disparate or conflicting goals
    in mind when they voted to enact and amend the AEA,
    and many different views on exactly how to manage the
    competing costs and benefits. If polled, they might have
    reached very different assessments, as well, about the
    consistency of Virginia’s law with their own purposes and
    objectives. The only thing a court can be sure of is what
    can be found in the law itself. And every indication in the
    law before us suggests that Congress elected to leave
    mining regulation on private land to the States and grant
    the NRC regulatory authority only after uranium is
    removed from the earth. That compromise may not be the
    only permissible or even the most rationally attractive
    one, but it is surely both permissible and rational to think
    that Congress might have chosen to regulate the more
    novel aspects of nuclear power while leaving to States
    their traditional function of regulating mining activities
    on private lands within their boundaries.4
    As an alternative to proceeding down the purposes-and-
    objectives branch of conflict preemption, Virginia Uranium
    might have pursued another. Our cases have held that we
    ——————
    4 The concurrence takes a slightly different tack. It seems to accept
    the premise that the Court can divine the unenacted “purposes” and
    “objectives” underlying the AEA and weigh them against Virginia’s
    mining law. But in rejecting Virginia Uranium’s argument, it winds up
    emphasizing repeatedly that the text of the AEA does not address
    mining. See post, at 12–14. That may not fully address Virginia
    Uranium’s assertion that state mining regulations interfere with a
    latent statutory purpose lying beyond the text, but it does highlight the
    propriety of confining our inquiries to the statute’s terms.
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           17
    Opinion of GORSUCH, J.
    can sometimes infer a congressional intent to displace a
    state law that makes compliance with a federal statute
    impossible. 
    English, 496 U.S., at 79
    . But Virginia
    Uranium hasn’t pursued an argument along any of these
    lines, and understandably so. Not only can Virginia
    Uranium comply with both state and federal laws; it is
    also unclear whether laws like Virginia’s might have a
    meaningful impact on the development of nuclear power in
    this country. Some estimate that the United States
    currently imports over 90 percent of the uranium used in
    this country. App. to Pet. for Cert. 19a. Domestic
    uranium mines currently exist on federal lands as well
    and are thus beyond the reach of state authorities. 
    Ibid. And if the
    federal government concludes that development
    of the Coles Hill deposit or any other like it is crucial, it
    may always purchase the site (or seize it through eminent
    domain) under the powers Congress has supplied. 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2096. All this may be done without even
    amending the AEA, itself another course which Congress
    is always free to pursue—but which this Court should
    never be tempted into pursuing on its own.
    *
    The judgment of the court of appeals is
    Affirmed.
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            1
    GINSBURG
    GINSBURG         , J., concurring
    , J., concurring  in judgment
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 16–1275
    _________________
    VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.
    JOHN WARREN, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    [June 17, 2019]
    JUSTICE GINSBURG, with whom JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR
    and JUSTICE KAGAN join, concurring in the judgment.
    Soon after discovery of a large deposit of uranium ore in
    Virginia in the late 1970s, the Commonwealth banned
    uranium mining. Petitioners (collectively, Virginia Ura-
    nium) now seek to mine that deposit. They challenge the
    Commonwealth’s uranium mining ban as preempted by
    the Atomic Energy Act (AEA or Act), 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2011
    et seq., either because the ban intrudes on the federally
    occupied field of nuclear safety, or because it obstructs
    realization of federal purposes and objectives.
    I reach the same bottom-line judgment as does JUSTICE
    GORSUCH: The Commonwealth’s mining ban is not
    preempted. And I agree with much contained in JUSTICE
    GORSUCH’s opinion. See ante, at 4–10. But his discussion
    of the perils of inquiring into legislative motive, see ante,
    at 11–14, sweeps well beyond the confines of this case, and
    therefore seems to me inappropriate in an opinion speak-
    ing for the Court, rather than for individual members of
    the Court. Further, Virginia Uranium’s obstacle preemp-
    tion arguments fail under existing doctrine, so there is
    little reason to question, as JUSTICE GORSUCH does, see
    ante, at 14–16, whether that doctrine should be retained.
    For these reasons, I join the Court’s judgment, and sepa-
    rately state how I would resolve the instant controversy.
    2            VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    I
    A
    The production of nuclear fuel begins with mining ura-
    nium, a radioactive metal. See ante, at 1–2; Brief for
    Former Nuclear Regulators as Amici Curiae 7. Conven-
    tionally, uranium ore is mined and then “milled”—crushed
    and treated with chemicals that extract the usable ura-
    nium. 
    Ibid. The resulting concentrated
    uranium oxide,
    known as yellowcake, is shipped elsewhere for conversion,
    enrichment, and fabrication into fuel. 
    Ibid. Producing just a
    pound of usable uranium requires milling hundreds
    or even thousands of pounds of ore. H. R. Rep. No. 95–
    1480, pt. 1, p. 11 (1978). Milling thus generates vast
    quantities of “tailings”: Sandy waste that is radioactive,
    contains toxic heavy metals, ibid., and must “be carefully
    regulated, monitored, and controlled,” U. S. NRC, Con-
    ventional Uranium Mills (rev. May 15, 2017), https://www
    .nrc.gov /materials /uranium - recovery /extraction - methods /
    conventional-mills.html (as last visited June 12, 2019).
    Milling and tailings storage typically occur within 30
    miles of the place where uranium is mined. 
    Ibid. The Federal Government
    regulates much of this process,
    primarily to protect public health and safety from radia-
    tion, but also for national security reasons. English v.
    General Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    , 81–82 (1990); Pacific Gas
    & Elec. Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation and
    Development Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    , 207, 211–212 (1983)
    (PG&E). Under the AEA, a federal license is required to,
    inter alia, “transfer or receive in interstate commerce”
    nontrivial quantities of “source material,” including ura-
    nium ore, “after removal from its place of deposit in na-
    ture,” §§2092, 2014(z). See also §§2091–2099. Licensing
    requirements also apply to the production, possession, or
    disposal of “byproduct material,” including tailings. See
    §§2014(e), 2111–2114. Federal regulations govern, as
    well, subsequent processes, including uranium enrichment
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            3
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    and nuclear power generation. See, e.g., §§2131–2142.
    The Federal Government does not regulate conventional
    uranium mining on private land, having long taken the
    position that its authority begins “at the mill, rather than
    at the mine.” In re Hydro Resources, Inc., 63 N. R. C. 510,
    512–513 (2006); Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
    4. See also ante, at 4–6. And while the Federal Govern-
    ment has exclusive authority over the radiation hazards of
    milling and subsequent stages of the nuclear fuel cycle,
    States may regulate these activities for other purposes.
    See §2018 (AEA does not affect state authority over “the
    generation, sale, or transmission of electric power pro-
    duced” by nuclear powerplants); 
    English, 496 U.S., at 81
    –
    82; 
    PG&E, 461 U.S., at 207
    , 211–212.
    The AEA provides a means by which States may take
    over federal responsibility for regulating the nuclear
    safety aspects of milling and the disposal of tailings. See
    
    42 U.S. C
    . §2021. In 1959, Congress amended the AEA to
    “recognize the interests of the States in the peaceful uses
    of atomic energy, and to clarify the respective responsibili-
    ties under th[e] Act of the States and [federal authorities]
    with respect to the regulation of byproduc[t and] source
    . . . materials.” Act of Sept. 23, 1959, 73 Stat. 688, as
    amended, 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2021(a)(1). The Nuclear Regulatory
    Commission (NRC) and a State may agree for the former
    to devolve to the latter authority to regulate source or
    byproduct materials “for the protection of the public
    health and safety from radiation hazards.” §2021(b).
    “During the duration of such an agreement . . . the State
    shall have authority to regulate the materials covered by
    the agreement for the protection of the public health and
    safety from radiation hazards.” 
    Ibid. Section 2021(c) prohibits
    the NRC, however, from devolving its authority
    over “more dangerous activities—such as nuclear reac-
    tors.” S. Rep. No. 870, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 8 (1959).
    Finally, and of critical importance to this case, §2021(k)
    4           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    provides that “[n]othing in this section shall be construed
    to affect the authority of any State or local agency to
    regulate activities for purposes other than protection
    against radiation hazards.”
    B
    In the late 1970s, uranium ore was discovered under
    Coles Hill, an unincorporated community in Pittsylvania
    County, Virginia. App. to Pet. for Cert. 216a. Totaling
    119 million pounds of uranium ore, the deposit is the
    Nation's largest. 
    Id., at 201a.
    See also 
    848 F.3d 590
    , 593
    (CA4 2017) (case below). After a private company began
    leasing mineral rights to the deposit, the Virginia General
    Assembly directed the state Coal and Energy Commission
    to study the effects on the environment and public health
    of uranium exploration, mining, and milling. H. J. Res.
    No. 324, 1981 Va. Acts p. 1404; App. to Pet. for Cert. 216a.
    The next year, the General Assembly authorized ura-
    nium exploration but imposed a one-year moratorium on
    uranium mining. 1982 Va. Acts ch. 269. The Assembly’s
    stated purpose was “to encourage and promote the safe
    and efficient exploration for uranium resources within the
    Commonwealth, and to assure . . . that uranium mining
    and milling will be subject to statutes and regulations
    which protect the environment and the health and safety
    of the public.” 
    Ibid. The Assembly soon
    extended the ban
    “until a program for permitting uranium mining is estab-
    lished by statute.” 1983 Va. Acts ch. 3. The Common-
    wealth has not established a permitting program, so the
    ban remains in force.
    A slowdown in construction of new nuclear powerplants
    in the 1980s contributed to a “precipitous decline in the
    price of uranium ore.” Huffman v. Western Nuclear, Inc.,
    
    486 U.S. 663
    , 666–667, and n. 5 (1988). Rising prices in
    the first decade of the new millennium prompted renewed
    interest in mining the deposit, and Virginia Uranium
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                  5
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    lobbied to have the ban repealed. App. to Pet. for Cert.
    222a; Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 9.
    When efforts to persuade the state legislature proved
    unsuccessful, Virginia Uranium brought this suit seeking
    a declaration that the ban is preempted by federal law and
    an injunction requiring the Commonwealth to issue ura-
    nium mining permits. App. to Pet. for Cert. 237a. Re-
    spondents, Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals, and
    Energy officials (together, the Commonwealth Defend-
    ants), moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a
    claim, and the District Court granted the motion. Virginia
    Uranium, Inc. v. McAuliffe, 
    147 F. Supp. 3d 462
    , 478 (WD
    Va. 2015).1 The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
    affirmed, holding in principal part that because the Com-
    monwealth’s mining ban did not regulate an activity
    overseen by the NRC, there was no need to consider the
    purposes for which the ban was 
    imposed. 848 F.3d, at 597
    –598. Given the importance of the issue, and to re-
    solve a division of authority among the Courts of Appeals,
    we granted Virginia Uranium’s petition for a writ of certi-
    orari. Compare 
    id., at 594–599
    (case below), with, e.g.,
    Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians v. Nielson, 
    376 F.3d 1223
    , 1246 (CA10 2004) (state laws grounded in nuclear
    safety concerns are preempted).
    II
    Under the Supremacy Clause, the “Constitution, and
    the Laws of the United States which shall be made in
    Pursuance thereof,” are “the supreme Law of the Land.”
    Art. VI, cl. 2. “Put simply, federal law preempts contrary
    ——————
    1 The District Court also dismissed the Commonwealth’s Governor
    and several other state officials as defendants on the ground that the
    Eleventh Amendment barred suit against them.            Virginia Ura-
    nium, Inc. v. McAuliffe, 
    147 F. Supp. 3d 462
    , 467–468 (WD Va. 2015).
    Virginia Uranium did not appeal from that part of the District Court’s
    decision.
    6           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    state law.” Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing, LLC, 578
    U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (slip op., at 11).
    This Court has delineated three circumstances in which
    state law must yield to federal law. 
    English, 496 U.S., at 78
    –79. First, and most obvious, federal law operates
    exclusively when Congress expressly preempts state law.
    
    Ibid. Second, state law
    can play no part when “Congress
    has legislated comprehensively to occupy an entire field of
    regulation, leaving no room for the States to supplement
    federal law.” Hughes, 578 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 11)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Third, state law is
    rendered inoperative when it “actually conflicts with
    federal law,” 
    English, 496 U.S., at 79
    , as when a private
    party cannot “comply with both state and federal require-
    ments,” Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v. Albrecht, 587
    U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op., at 2) (internal quotation
    marks omitted), or when state law “creates an unaccept-
    able ‘obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the
    full purposes and objectives of Congress,’ ” Wyeth v. Levine,
    
    555 U.S. 555
    , 563–564 (2009) (quoting Hines v. Da-
    vidowitz, 
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67 (1941)). Whatever the category
    of preemption asserted, “the purpose of Congress is the
    ultimate touchstone” in determining whether federal law
    preempts state law. Hughes, 578 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
    11) (internal quotation marks omitted). Virginia Uranium
    invokes both field and obstacle preemption; I address each
    in turn.
    A
    Virginia Uranium’s primary contention is that Congress
    has occupied the field of nuclear safety regulation,
    preempting state laws enacted because of concerns about
    the radiation safety of federally regulated activities.
    Defining the preempted field by reference to the purpose
    for which state laws were enacted finds “some support in
    the text of the [AEA],” 
    English, 496 U.S., at 84
    , and, in
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            7
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    particular, §2021(k). Again, this provision states that
    “[n]othing in [§2021] shall be construed to affect the au-
    thority of any State . . . to regulate activities for purposes
    other than protection against radiation hazards.” (Em-
    phasis added.)      Section 2021(k) presupposes federal
    preemption of at least some state laws enacted to guard
    “against radiation hazards.” Virginia Uranium and the
    dissent read this subsection to include within the
    preempted sphere all state laws motivated by concerns
    about the radiation hazards of NRC-regulated activities.
    Brief for Petitioners 35; post, at 2. The Commonwealth
    Defendants would exclude from federal foreclosure state
    laws directed to activities not regulated by the NRC. E.g.,
    Tr. of Oral Arg. 33–34. The Commonwealth Defendants
    have the better reading of the statute.
    1
    The Commonwealth has forbidden only conventional
    uranium mining on private land, an activity all agree is
    not federally regulated. E.g., 
    id., at 9–10,
    17–18, 30. The
    controlling AEA provision, §2092, triggers federal regula-
    tion only when source material is “remov[ed] from its place
    of deposit in nature.” Federal authorities have long read
    that provision to preclude federal regulation of conven-
    tional uranium mining. Ante, at 
    4; supra, at 4
    . In con-
    trast to the AEA’s express provisions for uranium mining
    on public lands, §§2097–2098, the Act is nearly silent
    about conventional uranium mining on private lands. See
    ante, at 4–6. Indeed, insofar as the Act addresses private
    conventional mining, it does so to bar federal regulators
    from obtaining reports about ore “prior to removal from its
    place of deposit in nature.” §2095. Every indication, then,
    is that Congress left private conventional mining unregu-
    lated. And if Congress did not provide for regulation of
    private conventional mining, it is hard to see how or why
    state law on the subject would be preempted, whatever the
    8           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    reason for the law’s enactment.
    2
    Virginia Uranium’s argument to the contrary rests on
    §2021(k), but that provision, correctly read, lends no sup-
    port for Virginia Uranium’s cause. By its terms, §2021(k)
    addresses only state authority to regulate “activities” for
    nonradiological purposes. Read in context of §2021 as a
    whole, “activities” means activities regulated by the NRC.
    See §2021(c), (l), (m), (o); ante, at 6 (§2021(k) “might be
    described as a non-preemption clause”).
    The AEA’s context and history are corroborative. Prior
    to enactment of §2021(k), the Federal Government and
    States shared responsibility for most steps of the nuclear
    fuel cycle, with the former regulating primarily for public
    health and safety, and the latter regulating for economic
    and other nonradiological purposes. 
    See supra, at 4
    .
    Section 2021 was designed “to heighten the States’ role,”
    
    PG&E, 461 U.S., at 209
    , by enabling federal regulators to
    cede their previously exclusive authority over the nuclear
    safety of several lower risk activities, §2021(b). Given this
    aim, §2021(k) is most sensibly read to clarify that the door
    newly opened for state regulation left in place pre-existing
    state authority “to regulate activities for purposes other
    than protection against radiation hazards.” See ante, at
    5–6. The House and Senate Reports are explicit on this
    point: Section §2021(k) was “intended to make it clear that
    the bill does not impair the State[s’] authority to regulate
    activities of [federal] licensees for the manifold health,
    safety, and economic purposes other than radiation protec-
    tion”; the bill simply provides a means for States to obtain
    heretofore exclusively federal authority to regulate these
    activities for “protection against radiation hazards.”
    S. Rep. No. 870, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., at 12; accord H. R.
    Rep. No. 1125, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 12 (1959). Nothing
    suggests that Congress “intended to cut back on pre-
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           9
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    existing state authority outside the NRC’s jurisdiction.”
    
    PG&E, 461 U.S., at 209
    –210. That authority encom-
    passed state laws regulating conventional uranium min-
    ing, even if enacted because of concerns about the radio-
    logical safety of postextraction, NRC-regulated steps in
    the nuclear fuel cycle.
    3
    Virginia Uranium leans most heavily on a statement in
    the Court’s PG&E opinion: “[T]he Federal Government
    has occupied the entire field of nuclear safety 
    concerns.” 461 U.S., at 212
    . But in neither PG&E nor in later deci-
    sions in its wake, Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 
    464 U.S. 238
    (1984), and English, 
    496 U.S. 72
    , did the Court rest
    preemption on the purposes for which state laws were
    enacted. Indeed, in all three, the Court held that the state
    laws at issue were not preempted. See ante, at 7–10.
    Moreover, without gainsaying that it may sometimes be
    appropriate to inquire into the purpose for which a state
    law was enacted, PG&E calls for no such inquiry here.
    PG&E considered whether the AEA preempted a Califor-
    nia law conditioning approval to build new nuclear plants
    on a finding that an adequate method existed for disposing
    of spent nuclear 
    fuel. 461 U.S., at 197
    –198. The Court
    upheld the law because it was enacted out of concern for
    economic development, not because of radiation safety
    hazards. 
    Id., at 205,
    213–216.
    It is unsurprising that the PG&E Court asked why the
    California law had been enacted. The State’s law ad-
    dressed construction of a nuclear powerplant, an activity
    closely regulated by the Federal Government for nuclear
    safety purposes. See 
    42 U.S. C
    . §§2021(c)(1), 2132–2142;
    10 CFR pt. 50 (2018). The Court therefore inquired
    whether the state law was enacted, in §2021(k)’s words,
    “for purposes other than protection against radiation
    hazards.” Here, in contrast, the Commonwealth’s mining
    10            VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    ban targets an exclusively state-regulated activity.             See
    ante, at 8–10.2
    4
    I am not persuaded by the Solicitor General’s argument
    that the Commonwealth’s mining ban is preempted be-
    cause it is a pretext for regulating the radiological safety
    hazards of milling and tailings storage. See Brief for
    United States as Amicus Curiae 28–30. To the degree the
    AEA preempts state laws enacted for certain purposes,
    §2021(k) stakes out the boundaries of the preempted field,
    i.e., state laws that apply to federally licensed activities
    and are driven by concerns about the radiological safety of
    those activities. We have no license to expand those
    boundaries.
    The case on which the Solicitor General primarily relies,
    National Meat Assn. v. Harris, 
    565 U.S. 452
    (2012), does
    not counsel otherwise. National Meat concerned a set of
    California laws that “dictat[ed] what slaughterhouses
    must do with pigs that cannot walk, known in the trade as
    nonambulatory pigs.” 
    Id., at 455.
    The question presented:
    Did California’s prescriptions conflict with the Federal
    Meat Inspection Act’s express preemption of state law that
    imposed requirements “in addition to, or different than
    those made under” the Act? 
    21 U.S. C
    . §678. One of the
    California provisions, a ban on the sale of meat or prod-
    ucts from nonambulatory pigs, regulated a subject outside
    the scope of the Federal Meat Inspection Act. National
    
    Meat, 565 U.S., at 463
    . The Court nevertheless concluded
    ——————
    2 The dissent insists that we are bound by language in Pacific Gas &
    Elec. Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
    Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    (1983) (PG&E ), unnecessary to that decision.
    Post, at 4–6. But as JUSTICE GORSUCH explains, PG&E ’s inquiry into
    the purpose for which some state laws were enacted does not mean we
    must now extend that inquiry to all state laws. Ante, at 10 (“Being in
    for a dime doesn’t mean we have to be in for a dollar.”).
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                    11
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    that the sale ban fell within the scope of the Act’s express
    preemption clause because it was intended to work to-
    gether with other California provisions to impose addi-
    tional requirements on slaughterhouse operations. 
    Id., at 463–464.
       National Meat is not controlling here. No express
    preemption provision is involved. The mining ban sets no
    safety standards for federally supervised milling or tail-
    ings storage activities. True enough, the ban makes it far
    less likely, though not impossible, that such activities will
    take place in the Commonwealth.3 In that regard, the
    Commonwealth’s mining ban is more aptly analogized to
    state bans on slaughtering horses, upheld by courts of
    appeals and distinguished in National Meat from Califor-
    nia’s nonambulatory pig laws. Horse slaughtering bans,
    National Meat explained, “work[ed] at a remove from the
    sites and activities that the FMIA most directly governs”
    by ensuring that “no horses will be delivered to, inspected
    at, or handled by a slaughterhouse, because no horses will
    be ordered for purchase in the first instance.” 
    Id., at 465,
    467 (citing Cavel Int’l, Inc. v. Madigan, 
    500 F.3d 551
    (CA7
    2007), and Empacadora de Carnes de Fresnillo, S. A. de
    C. V. v. Curry, 
    476 F.3d 326
    (CA5 2007)). The distinction
    drawn in National Meat thus supports this conclusion: A
    state law regulating an upstream activity within the
    State’s authority is not preempted simply because a down-
    stream activity falls within a federally occupied field.4
    ——————
    3 Were a similar deposit found over the state line, the mining ban at
    issue would not prevent uranium ore mined in North Carolina from
    being milled, and the resulting tailings stored, in the Commonwealth.
    4 The distinction drawn here does not turn, as the dissent misper-
    ceives, post, at 8, on whether the state-regulated activity is upstream or
    downstream of the federally preempted field. The Commonwealth
    regulated an activity, conventional uranium mining, that Congress left
    to state regulation. Again, nothing in the AEA shows that Congress
    intended to preempt such a law based on the purpose for which it was
    enacted.
    12          VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    B
    Nor is the Commonwealth’s mining ban preempted as
    an “unacceptable obstacle to the accomplishment and
    execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”
    
    Wyeth, 555 U.S., at 563
    –564 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Together, Virginia Uranium and the United
    States identify four ways in which the mining ban suppos-
    edly conflicts with federal purposes and objectives. None
    carry the day.
    First, Virginia Uranium contends that the mining ban
    conflicts with the “delicate balance” federal law has struck
    between promoting nuclear power and ensuring public
    safety. Brief for Petitioners 55–56; see Brief for United
    States as Amicus Curiae 31–33. But the Federal Govern-
    ment does not regulate the radiological safety of conven-
    tional uranium mining on private land, so federal law
    struck no balance in this area.
    Second, Virginia Uranium contends that the mining ban
    “prohibit[s] the achievement of one of Congress[’] ‘primary
    purpose[s]’: ‘the promotion of nuclear power.’ ” Brief for
    Petitioners 56 (quoting 
    PG&E, 461 U.S., at 221
    ). PG&E,
    however, dismissed the suggestion that Congress had a
    policy of promoting nuclear power “at all costs.” 
    Id., at 222
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Given the ab-
    sence of federal regulation in point, it is improbable that
    the Federal Government has a purpose or objective of
    promoting conventional uranium mining on private land.
    Cf. ante, at 16.
    Virginia Uranium warns of dire consequences if all 50
    States enact bans similar to the Commonwealth’s. Brief
    for Petitioners 56–57. But, as the Court of Appeals ex-
    plained, numerous domestic uranium recovery facilities
    are federally regulated (either because they sit on federal
    land or use unconventional mining techniques) and are
    “thus beyond the reach of any state bans”; and the AEA
    authorizes the Federal Government to develop uranium
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)          13
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    deposits on public lands and to acquire private 
    deposits. 848 F.3d, at 599
    ; see 
    42 U.S. C
    . §§2096–2097. Federal
    purposes and objectives do not require judicial supplemen-
    tation of the AEA’s express provisions for maintaining the
    uranium supply. Cf. ante, at 17.
    The dissent suggests that national security may require
    further domestic uranium production. Post, at 2, n. 2. If
    the Executive Branch—which presumably knows more
    about “the critical role of uranium to the country’s energy
    industry and national defense,” ibid.—agrees, it can ar-
    range for acquisition of the site by the United States, and
    then for commencement of mining notwithstanding the
    Commonwealth’s ban. Yet the site remains in private
    hands.
    Third, Virginia Uranium argues that §2021 provides the
    sole means for States to regulate radiological safety haz-
    ards resulting from milling and tailings storage, and that
    Virginia has effectively regulated milling and tailings
    storage without obtaining authority to do so through an
    adequate §2021 agreement. Brief for Petitioners 57–59
    (citing Gade v. National Solid Wastes Management Assn.,
    
    505 U.S. 88
    , 98–101 (1992)); see Brief for United States as
    Amicus Curiae 33–34. As explained, 
    see supra, at 7
    –9, 11,
    Virginia has not regulated the radiological safety of tail-
    ings storage; it has prohibited only an antecedent activity
    subject to exclusive state authority.
    Finally, the United States contends that Virginia’s
    mining ban frustrates federal purposes and objectives by
    “prevent[ing] the occurrence of ” activities that Congress
    intended the Federal Government to regulate. Brief for
    United States as Amicus Curiae 31 
    (quoting 848 F.3d, at 600
    (Traxler, J., dissenting)). But federal regulation of
    certain activities does not mean that States must author-
    ize activities antecedent to those federally regulated. For
    example, federal regulation of nuclear powerplants does
    not demand that States allow the construction of such
    14          VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    GINSBURG, J., concurring in judgment
    powerplants in the first place. 
    PG&E, 461 U.S., at 222
    .
    *     *    *
    For the reasons stated, I concur in the Court’s judgment
    affirming the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)           1
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 16–1275
    _________________
    VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v.
    JOHN WARREN, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    [June 17, 2019]
    CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS, with whom JUSTICE BREYER
    and JUSTICE ALITO join, dissenting.
    Although one party will be happy with the result of
    today’s decision, both will be puzzled by its reasoning.
    That’s because the lead opinion sets out to defeat an ar-
    gument that no one made, reaching a conclusion with
    which no one disagrees. Specifically, the opinion devotes
    its analysis to whether the field of uranium mining safety
    is preempted under the Atomic Energy Act, ultimately
    concluding that it is not. But no party disputes that.
    Rather, the question we agreed to address is whether a
    State can purport to regulate a field that is not preempted
    (uranium mining safety) as an indirect means of regulat-
    ing other fields that are preempted (safety concerns about
    uranium milling and tailings). And on that question, our
    precedent is clear: The AEA prohibits state laws that have
    the purpose and effect of regulating preempted fields.
    As relevant here, processing uranium ore involves three
    steps: mining, milling, and storing “tailings.” Mining is
    the extracting of uranium ore from the ground; milling is
    the process of turning the substance into a usable form;
    and tailings are the leftover radioactive waste that must
    be safely stored.
    There is no dispute over which of these fields the AEA
    reserves to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Nuclear Regu-
    2             VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    latory Commission. The parties agree that the field of
    uranium mining safety is not preempted. See Brief for
    Petitioners 3, 22, n. 4, 27; Reply Brief 8; Brief for Re-
    spondents 1; Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 4,
    14. And it is undisputed that radiological safety concerns
    about milling and tailings are preempted fields. See Brief
    for Petitioners 32; Tr. of Oral Arg. 36–37 (counsel for
    respondents); Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 23.
    Indeed, that shared understanding was the basis of the
    question presented.1
    Despite all this, the lead opinion insists that petitioners
    (hereafter the company) press an entirely different argu-
    ment. “Before us, Virginia Uranium contends that the
    AEA (and only the AEA) unseats state uranium mining
    regulations,” ante, at 3, but “almost immediately problems
    emerge,” ante, at 4. Problems do immediately emerge in
    the opinion, but they are of its own making. The company
    does not argue that the AEA reserves the field of uranium
    mining safety. After attributing this failing argument to
    the company, the lead opinion then proceeds to explain
    why the argument must, in fact, fail. See ante, at 3–10.
    Turning to the question presented, however, the company’s
    theory of the case is fairly straightforward. The property
    at issue here contains the largest known uranium deposit
    in the country and one of the largest in the world.2 Shortly
    ——————
    1 “Does the AEA preempt a state law that on its face regulates an
    activity within its jurisdiction (here uranium mining), but has the
    purpose and effect of regulating the radiological safety hazards of
    activities entrusted to the NRC (here, the milling of uranium and the
    management of the resulting tailings)?” Pet. for Cert. i.
    2 Oddly, the lead opinion and concurrence suggest that developing
    this site is unnecessary because domestic production accounts for less
    than ten percent of the uranium used in the country. See ante, at 16–
    17 (lead opinion); ante, at 12–13 (GINSBURG, J., concurring in judg-
    ment). But given the critical role of uranium to the country’s energy
    industry and national defense, the near complete reliance on foreign
    sources of uranium—including substantial imports from Russia, Ka-
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                    3
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    after its discovery, Virginia enacted a complete ban on
    uranium mining. According to the company, the ban was
    not motivated by concerns about mining safety. Instead, it
    was motivated by Virginia’s desire to ban the more hazard-
    ous steps that come after mining—uranium milling and
    the storage of radioactive tailings—due to the Common-
    wealth’s disagreement with the NRC over how to safely
    regulate those activities. And, crucially, Virginia has yet
    to put forward any other rationale to support the ban.3
    Thus, the question before us is whether, consistent with
    the AEA and our precedents, the Commonwealth may
    purport to regulate a non-preempted field (mining safety)
    with the purpose and effect of indirectly regulating a
    preempted field (milling and tailings). That should have
    made for an easy case.
    Under our AEA precedents, a state law is preempted not
    only when it “conflicts with federal law,” but also when its
    purpose is to regulate within a preempted field. Pacific
    Gas & Elec. Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation
    ——————
    zakhstan, and Uzbekistan—would seem to suggest just the opposite.
    See App. to Pet. for Cert. 353a (detailing foreign sources of uranium
    imports); 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2012(d) (“The processing and utilization of
    source, byproduct, and special nuclear material must be regulated in
    the national interest and in order to provide for the common defense
    and security and to protect the health and safety of the public.”);
    Energy Futures Initiatives, Inc., The U. S. Nuclear Energy Enterprise:
    A Key National Security Enabler 18 (Aug. 2017) (“A vibrant domestic
    nuclear energy industry, including a healthy supply chain . . . is essen-
    tial for the achievement of U. S. national security objectives.”).
    3 As the lead opinion acknowledges, Virginia has thus far in the liti-
    gation accepted the company’s claim that the actual purpose of the
    mining ban is to regulate the radiological safety of uranium milling and
    tailings storage. See ante, at 11–12. Virginia contends that if the case
    were to proceed past the pleadings stage, it could establish a nonsafety
    rationale for the ban. See Brief for Respondents 47. That may well be
    true. See 
    id., at 11
    (discussing environmental concerns). But for our
    purposes today, we must resolve the case on the terms that it has come
    to us.
    4           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    and Development Comm’n, 
    461 U.S. 190
    , 212–213 (1983).
    Because “the Federal Government has occupied the entire
    field of nuclear safety concerns,” a state law that is
    “grounded in [such] safety concerns falls squarely within
    the prohibited field.” Ibid.; see also English v. General
    Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    , 84 (1990) (state regulations “moti-
    vated by [nuclear] safety concerns” are preempted by the
    AEA (citing 
    42 U.S. C
    . §2021(k))). For example, even
    though a State may generally regulate its roads, it may
    not shut down all of the roads to a nuclear power plant
    simply because it disagrees with the NRC’s nuclear safety
    regulations. Here, because Virginia has not even disputed
    that its uranium mining ban was “grounded in” its “nuclear
    safety concerns” about uranium milling and tailings,
    the company’s preemption claim should not have been
    dismissed.
    The lead opinion and the concurrence miss that simple
    analysis because they shrink from our AEA precedents,
    particularly Pacific Gas. In Pacific Gas, California had
    banned the construction of nuclear power plants until the
    State could ensure that new plants would have a viable
    method for permanently disposing of nuclear waste. 
    See 461 U.S., at 197
    –198. On its face, the ban did not purport
    to regulate a preempted field; it did not regulate the man-
    ner in which nuclear power plants may be constructed or
    operated, which is a field preempted by the AEA. See 
    id., at 212.
    If it had, the Court noted, the ban “would clearly
    be impermissible.” 
    Ibid. The California statute
    instead
    purported to address the antecedent question whether new
    plants should be constructed at all—an area within the
    State’s traditional authority over the generation and cost
    of electricity.
    But the Court did not stop its preemption analysis
    there. Instead, it was “necessary” to look beyond the face
    of the statute to determine California’s “rationale” for the
    ban. 
    Id., at 213.
    California had argued that it could
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)            5
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    exercise its traditional authority over power generation to
    “completely prohibit new construction until its safety
    concerns [we]re satisfied by the Federal Government.” 
    Id., at 212.
    The Court flatly “reject[ed] this line of reasoning.”
    
    Ibid. Because the AEA
    reserves the “field of nuclear
    safety concerns” to the Federal Government, a state law
    that was “grounded in” those concerns would fall “squarely
    within the prohibited field.” 
    Id., at 212–213.
    In other
    words, if the purpose of California’s ban on nuclear plant
    construction was to regulate radiological safety, it would
    be preempted. California’s statute ultimately avoided that
    outcome, however, because the State had put forward an
    independent “nonsafety rationale”—namely, its concern
    that new nuclear plants would not be economically viable
    if they were unable to permanently dispose of nuclear
    waste. 
    Id., at 213.
    On that basis, the Court determined
    that the ban was not preempted. 
    Id., at 216
    (“[W]e accept
    California’s avowed economic purpose as the rationale for
    enacting [the statute]. Accordingly, the statute lies out-
    side the occupied field of nuclear safety regulation.” (em-
    phasis added)).
    Pacific Gas should control the outcome here. Like
    California’s ban in that case, Virginia’s ban on its face
    regulates a non-preempted field—uranium mining safety.
    Like the plaintiffs challenging the California ban, the
    mining company argues that the statute’s purpose is
    really to regulate a preempted field—safety concerns
    about uranium milling and tailings. But unlike California
    in Pacific Gas, Virginia in this case has not put forward a
    “nonsafety rationale.” That should have been the end of
    the story, at least at this stage of the litigation.
    Neither the lead opinion nor the concurrence explain
    why this Court inquired into purpose in Pacific Gas but
    can dispense with that “necessary” step here, 
    id., at 213;
    they just say the Court can. See ante, at 8–9 (lead opin-
    ion); ante, at 10, n. 2 (opinion of GINSBURG, J.). At one
    6           VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    point, the lead opinion suggests that the AEA “author-
    ize[s]” a purpose inquiry only when a state law “comes
    close to trenching on core federal powers.” Ante, at 9. But
    the opinion does not say where that rule comes from.
    Certainly not the statute or our precedents. And the lead
    opinion never explains why the safety concerns about
    nuclear plants in Pacific Gas are more “core” to the AEA
    than the safety concerns about uranium milling and tail-
    ings storage at issue here.
    The central argument from my colleagues appears to be
    that the AEA authorizes a purpose inquiry only when a
    State “targets” or “seek[s] to regulate” an activity that is
    also regulated by the federal statute. Ante, at 6 (lead
    opinion); ante, at 10 (opinion of GINSBURG, J.). And be-
    cause the Virginia statute seeks to regulate mining, the
    AEA “does not authorize any judicial inquiry into state
    legislative purpose in this case.” Ante, at 8–9 (lead opin-
    ion); see ante, at 9–10 (opinion of GINSBURG, J.). But it is
    conceded that the mining ban was adopted because of
    radiological safety concerns about milling and tailings.
    That is why Virginia argues, as it must, that its mining
    ban would not be preempted even if it expressly stated
    that it was enacted due to the Commonwealth’s disagree-
    ment with the NRC’s nuclear safety regulations. Tr. of
    Oral Arg. 33. If such a statute does not “target” or “seek to
    regulate” a preempted field, what would?
    States may try to regulate one activity by exercising
    their authority over another. That is the whole point of
    the purpose inquiry mandated by Pacific Gas. Indeed,
    Pacific Gas specifically “emphasize[d]” that the California
    law did not expressly seek to regulate “the construction or
    operation of a nuclear powerplant,” that is, the statute on
    its face was not directed at a preempted 
    field. 461 U.S., at 212
    .
    The AEA’s purpose inquiry is most useful precisely
    when the challenged state law does not purport to regulate
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)             7
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    a preempted field. If a State disagrees with the AEA’s
    nuclear safety regulations, and thus wants to block nuclear
    development within its borders, it has myriad ways to do
    so through its broad police powers. Under the rule adopted
    by the lead opinion and the concurrence, so long as the
    State is not boneheaded enough to express its real purpose
    in the statute, the State will have free rein to subvert
    Congress’s judgment on nuclear safety.
    A State could, for instance, restrict the ability of a county
    to provide a nuclear facility with municipal services like
    law enforcement, fire protection, and garbage collection. If
    it wanted to target investors, a State could eliminate
    limited liability for the stockholders of companies that
    operate nuclear facilities. Although these examples may
    seem farfetched, they have already happened. See Skull
    Valley Band of Goshute Indians v. Nielson, 
    376 F.3d 1223
    ,
    1247–1248, 1250–1252 (CA10 2004). In Skull Valley,
    however, the Tenth Circuit correctly applied our precedent
    and concluded that the “state cannot use its authority to
    regulate law enforcement and other similar matters as a
    means of regulating radiological hazards.” 
    Id., at 1248;
    see Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, LLC v. Shumlin,
    
    733 F.3d 393
    (CA2 2013) (applying Pacific Gas and con-
    cluding that a state statute was a pretext for regulating
    radiological safety). Neither the lead opinion nor the
    concurrence hazards an answer for cases like Skull Valley.
    As these examples show, AEA preemption cannot turn
    on the label a State affixes to its regulations. That ap-
    proach would simply invite evasion, which is why we have
    rejected it in our preemption cases more generally. For
    example, in National Meat Assn. v. Harris, 
    565 U.S. 452
    (2012), we addressed a preemption challenge involving
    slaughterhouses in California. A federal statute preempted
    state regulation of slaughterhouses’ front-end procedures
    for inspecting, handling, and slaughtering livestock.
    California, however, had regulated the back-end opera-
    8             VIRGINIA URANIUM, INC. v. WARREN
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    tions of slaughterhouses by prohibiting the sale of meat
    from livestock that had not been inspected, handled, and
    slaughtered according to the State’s regulations. 
    Id., at 455,
    463–464.
    Although the federal statute’s preemption clause did
    “not usually foreclose state regulation of the commercial
    sales activities of slaughterhouses,” we unanimously held
    that California’s sales regulation was preempted because
    it was a transparent attempt to circumvent federal law.
    
    Id., at 463
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Conclud-
    ing otherwise, we noted, would allow a State to “impose
    any regulation on slaughterhouses just by framing it as a
    ban on the sale of meat produced in whatever way the
    State disapproved.” 
    Id., at 464.
    And that “would make a
    mockery of the [federal statute’s] preemption provision.”
    Ibid.; see also Engine Mfrs. Assn. v. South Coast Air Qual-
    ity Management Dist., 
    541 U.S. 246
    , 255 (2004) (stating
    that it “would make no sense” to allow a state regulation
    to evade preemption simply because it addressed the
    purchase, rather than manufacture, of a federally regulated
    product).
    The concurrence argues that National Meat is distin-
    guishable because there the State regulated a down-
    stream, non-preempted activity (sale of meat) in an effort
    to regulate an upstream, preempted activity (processing of
    livestock). Here, however, Virginia’s regulation is up-
    stream (mining) and the preempted activity is down-
    stream (milling and tailings). Ante, at 11. That’s true but
    beside the point. Regardless whether the state regulation
    is downstream like National Meat, upstream like here and
    Pacific Gas, or entirely out of the stream like Skull Valley,
    States may not legislate with the purpose and effect of
    regulating a federally preempted field.4
    ——————
    4 In a footnote, the concurrence appears to reject its own analysis,
    stating that it makes no difference whether the state law is upstream
    Cite as: 587 U. S. ____ (2019)                     9
    ROBERTS, C. J., dissenting
    That common sense approach is consistent with the text
    of the AEA, which recognizes that States continue to have
    authority “to regulate activities for purposes other than
    protection against radiation hazards.”          
    42 U.S. C
    .
    §2021(k) (emphasis added). The lead opinion finds this
    purpose-based approach discomfiting, citing the “well-
    known conceptual and practical” difficulties about inquir-
    ing into legislative motive. Ante, at 13. The statute and
    our precedent plainly require such an approach here,
    however, and the difficulty of the task does not permit us
    to choose an easier way. I respectfully dissent.
    ——————
    or downstream of the federally preempted field. See ante, at 11, n. 4.
    Instead, the concurrence contends, the difference is that here the
    Commonwealth “regulated an activity, conventional uranium mining,
    that Congress left to state regulation.” 
    Ibid. But that is
    equally true in
    National Meat, where the State had likewise regulated an activity, the
    sale of meat, that Congress left to state regulation. 
    See 565 U.S., at 463
    . The concurrence and lead opinion also note that National Meat
    involved an “express” preemption provision whereas this case does not.
    Ante, at 11, n. 3 (lead opinion); ante, at 11 (opinion of GINSBURG, J.).
    But they do not explain why that matters, and there’s no reason it
    should. In both cases, the plaintiffs alleged that the State regulated an
    undisputedly non-preempted activity as an indirect means to regulate
    an undisputedly preempted activity.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-1275

Citation Numbers: 139 S. Ct. 1894, 204 L. Ed. 2d 377, 2019 U.S. LEXIS 4177

Judges: Neil Gorsuch

Filed Date: 6/17/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (21)

Palmer v. Thompson , 91 S. Ct. 1940 ( 1971 )

National Meat Assn. v. Harris , 132 S. Ct. 965 ( 2012 )

English v. General Electric Co. , 110 S. Ct. 2270 ( 1990 )

Whitman v. American Trucking Assns., Inc. , 121 S. Ct. 903 ( 2001 )

Arizona v. California , 51 S. Ct. 522 ( 1931 )

Cavel International, Inc. v. Madigan , 500 F.3d 551 ( 2007 )

Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians v. Nielson Ex Rel. ... , 198 A.L.R. Fed. 741 ( 2004 )

Huffman v. Western Nuclear, Inc. , 108 S. Ct. 2087 ( 1988 )

Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr , 116 S. Ct. 2240 ( 1996 )

United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co. , 26 S. Ct. 282 ( 1906 )

Chamber of Commerce of United States of America v. Whiting , 131 S. Ct. 1968 ( 2011 )

Geier v. American Honda Motor Co. , 120 S. Ct. 1913 ( 2000 )

Shady Grove Orthopedic Associates, P. A. v. Allstate ... , 130 S. Ct. 1431 ( 2010 )

Edwards v. Aguillard , 107 S. Ct. 2573 ( 1987 )

Engine Manufacturers Ass'n v. South Coast Air Quality ... , 124 S. Ct. 1756 ( 2004 )

Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, Inc. , 118 S. Ct. 998 ( 1998 )

Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council , 120 S. Ct. 2288 ( 2000 )

At&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion , 131 S. Ct. 1740 ( 2011 )

Empacadora De Carnes De Fresnillo, S.A. De C v. v. Curry , 476 F.3d 326 ( 2007 )

Puerto Rico Department of Consumer Affairs v. Isla ... , 108 S. Ct. 1350 ( 1988 )

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