Justice Souter
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue in this case is whether operating a dam to produce hydroelectricity “may result in any discharge into the navigable waters” of the United States. If so, a federal license under §401 of the Clean Water Act requires state certification that water protection laws will not be violated. We hold that a dam does raise a potential for a discharge, and state approval is needed.
I
The Presumpscot River runs through southern Maine from Sebago Lake to Casco Bay, and in the course of its 25 miles petitioner, S. D. Warren Company, operates several hydro-power dams to generate electricity for its paper mill. Each dam creates a pond, from which water funnels into a “power canal,” through turbines, and back to the riverbed, passing around a section of the river just below the impoundment.
It is undisputed that since 1935, Warren has needed a license to operate the dams, currently within the authority of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) under the Federal Power Act. 16 U. S. C. §§817(1), 792; see also Public Utility Act of 1935, §210, 49 Stat. 846. FERC grants these licenses for periods up to 50 years, 16 U. S. C. § 799,
after a review that looks to environmental issues as well as the rising demand for power, § 797(e).
Over 30 years ago, Congress enacted a specific provision for licensing an activity that could cause a “discharge” into navigable waters; a license is conditioned on a certification from the State in which the discharge may originate that it will not violate certain water quality standards, including those set by the State’s own laws. See Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970, § 103, 84 Stat. 108. Today, this requirement can be found in § 401 of the Clean Water Act, 86 Stat. 877, 33 U. S. C. § 1341: “Any applicant for a Federal license or permit to conduct any activity ... which may result in any discharge into the navigable water[s] shall provide the licensing or permitting agency a certification from the State in which the discharge originates .. . .” § 1341(a)(1).
“Any certification provided under this section shall set forth any effluent limitations and other limitations, and monitoring requirements necessary to assure that any applicant for a Federal license or permit will comply with [§§ 1311, 1312, 1316, and 1317] and with any other appropriate requirement of State law set forth in such certification, and shall become a condition on any Federal license or permit subject to the provisions of this section.”
§ 1341(d).
In 1999, Warren sought to renew federal licenses for five of its hydroelectric dams. It applied for water quality certifications from the Maine Department of Environmental Pro
tection (the state agency responsible for what have come to be known as “401 state certifications”), but it filed its application under protest, claiming that its dams do not result in any “discharge into” the river triggering application of §401.
The Maine agency issued certifications that required Warren to maintain a minimum stream flow in the bypassed portions of the river and to allow passage for various migratory fish and eels. When FERC eventually licensed the five dams, it did so subject to the Maine conditions, and Warren continued to deny any need of §401 state certification. After appealing unsuccessfully to Maine’s administrative appeals tribunal, the Board of Environmental Protection, Warren filed this suit in the State’s Cumberland County Superior Court. That court rejected Warren’s argument that its dams do not result in discharges, and the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine affirmed. 2005 ME 27, 868 A. 2d 210. We granted certiorari, 546 U. S. 933 (2005), and now affirm as well.
II
The dispute turns on the meaning of the word “discharge,” the key to the state certification requirement under §401.
The Act has no definition of the term, but provides that “[t]he term ‘discharge’ when used without qualification includes a discharge of a pollutant, and a discharge of pollutants.”
33 U. S. C. § 1362(16). It does define “discharge of a pollutant” and “discharge of pollutants” as meaning “any addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point source.”
§ 1362(12). But “discharge” presumably is broader, else superfluous, and since it is neither defined in the statute nor a term of art, we are left to construe it “in accordance with its ordinary or natural meaning.”
FDIC
v.
Meyer,
510 U. S. 471, 476 (1994).
When it applies to water, “discharge” commonly means a “flowing or issuing out,” Webster’s New International Dictionary 742 (2d ed. 1954); see also
ibid.
(“[t]o emit; to give outlet to; to pour forth; as, the Hudson
discharges
its waters into the bay”), and this ordinary sense has consistently been the meaning intended when this Court has used the term in prior water cases. See,
e. g., Marsh
v.
Oregon Natural Resources Council,
490 U. S. 360, 364 (1989) (describing a dam’s “'multiport’ structure, which will permit discharge of water from any of five levels”);
Arizona
v.
California,
373 U. S. 546, 619, n. 25 (1963) (Harlan, J., dissenting in part) (quoting congressional testimony regarding those who “ 'take . .. water out of the stream which has been discharged from the reservoir’ ”);
United States
v.
Arizona,
295 U. S. 174, 181 (1935) (“Parker Dam will intercept waters discharged at Boulder Dam”).
In fact, this understanding of the word “discharge” was accepted by all Members of the Court sitting in our only other case focused on §401 of the Clean Water Act,
PUD No. 1 of Jefferson Cty.
v.
Washington Dept. of Ecology,
511 U. S. 700 (1994). At issue in
PUD No. 1
was the State of Washington’s authority to impose minimum stream flow rates on a hydroelectric dam, and in posing the question presented, the Court said this:
“There is no dispute that petitioners were required to obtain a certification from the State pursuant to §401. Petitioners concede that, at a minimum, the project will result in two possible discharges — the release of dredged and fill material during the construction of the project, and the discharge of water at the end of the
tailrace after the water has been used to generate electricity.”
Id.,
at 711.
The
Pud No. 1
petitioners claimed that a state condition imposing a stream flow requirement on discharges of water from a dam exceeded the State’s §401 authority to prevent degradation of water quality, but neither the parties nor the Court questioned that the “discharge of water” from the dam was a discharge within the ambit of §401.
Ibid.
And although the Court’s opinion made no mention of the dam as adding anything to the water, the majority’s use of the phrase “discharge of water” drew no criticism from the dissent, which specifically noted that “[t]he term ‘discharge’ is not defined in the [Clean Water Act] but its plain and ordinary meaning suggests ‘a flowing or issuing out,’ or ‘something that is emitted.’ ”
Id.,
at 725 (opinion of Thomas, J.) (quoting Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 360 (1991)).
In resort to common usage under §401, this Court has not been alone, for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and FERC have each regularly read “discharge” as having its plain meaning and thus covering releases from hydroelectric dams. See,
e. g.,
EPA, Water Quality Standards Handbook § 7.6.3, p. 7-10 (2d ed. 1994) (“EPA has identified five Federal permits and/or licenses that authorize activities that may result in a discharge to the waters[, including] licenses required for hydroelectric projects issued under the Federal Power Act”);
FPL Energy Maine Hydro LLC,
111 FERC ¶ 61,104, p. 61,505 (2005) (rejecting, in a recent adjudication, the argument that Congress “used the term ‘discharge’ as nothing more than a shorthand expression for ‘discharge of a pollutant or pollutants’ ”).
Warren is, of course, entirely
correct in cautioning us that because neither the EPA nor FERC has formally settled the definition, or even set out agency reasoning, these expressions of agency understanding do not command deference from this Court. See
Gonzales
v.
Oregon,
546 U. S. 243, 258 (2006)
(“Chevron
deference ... is not accorded merely because the statute is ambiguous and an administrative official is involved”);
Skidmore
v.
Swift & Co.,
323 U. S. 134, 140 (1944). But even so, the administrative usage of “discharge” in this way confirms our understanding of the everyday sense of the term.
m
Warren makes three principal arguments for reading the term “discharge” differently from the ordinary way. We find none availing.
A
The first involves an interpretive canon we think is out of place here. The canon,
noscitur a sociis,
reminds us that “a word is known by the company it keeps,”
Gustafson
v.
Alloyd Co.,
513 U. S. 561, 575 (1995), and is invoked when a string of statutory terms raises the implication that the “words grouped in a list should be given related meaning,”
Dole
v.
Steelworkers,
494 U. S. 26, 36 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
Beecham
v.
United States,
511 U. S. 368, 371 (1994) (“That several items in a list share an attribute counsels in favor of interpreting the other items as possessing that attribute as well”).
Warren claims that the canon applies to §502(16) of the Clean Water Act, which provides that “[t]he term ‘discharge’ when used without qualification includes a discharge of a pollutant, and a discharge of pollutants.” 33 U. S. C. § 1362(16). Warren emphasizes that the “include[d]” terms, pollutant discharges, are themselves defined to require an “addition” of pollutants to water. § 1362(12). Since “discharge” pure and simple is keeping company with “discharge” defined as adding one or more pollutants, Warren says “discharge” standing alone must require the addition of something foreign to the water into which the discharge flows. And because the release of water from the dams adds nothing to the river that was not there above the dams, Warren concludes that water flowing out of the turbines cannot be a discharge into the river.
The problem with Warren’s argument is that it purports to extrapolate a common feature from what amounts to a single item (discharge of a pollutant plus the plural variant involving more than one pollutant). See
Beecham, supra,
at 371. The argument seems to assume that pairing a broad statutory term with a narrow one shrinks the broad one, but there is no such general usage; giving one example does not convert express inclusion into restrictive equation, and
noscitur a sociis
is no help absent some sort of gathering with
a common feature to extrapolate. It should also go without saying that uncritical use of interpretive rules is especially risky in making sense of a complicated statute like the Clean Water Act, where technical definitions are worked out with great effort in the legislative process. Cf. H. R. Rep. No. 92-911, p. 125 (1972) (“[I]t is extremely important to an understanding of [§402] to know the definition of the various terms used and a careful reading of the definitions ... is recommended. Of particular significance [are] the words ‘discharge of pollutants’ ”).
B
Regardless, Warren says the statute should, and even must, be read its way, on the authority of
South Fla. Water Management Dist.
v.
Miccosukee Tribe,
541 U. S. 95 (2004). But that case is not on point.
Miccosukee
addressed §402 of the Clean Water Act, not § 401, and the two sections are not interchangeable, as they serve different purposes and use different language to reach them. Section 401 recast pre-existing law and was meant to “continu[e] the authority of the State ... to act to deny a permit and thereby prevent a Federal license or permit from issuing to a discharge source within such State.” S. Rep. No. 92-414, p. 69 (1971). Its terms have a broad reach, requiring state approval any time a federally licensed activity “may” result in a discharge (“discharge” of course being without any qualifiers here), 33 U. S. C. § 1341(a)(1), and its object comprehends maintaining state water quality standards, see n. 1,
supra.
Section 402 has a historical parallel with §401, for the legislative record suggests that it, too, was enacted to consolidate and ease the administration of some predecessor regulatory schemes, see H. R. Rep. No. 92-911, at 124-125. But it contrasts with §401 in its more specific focus. It establishes what Congress called the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System, requiring a permit for the “discharge of any pollutant” into the navigable waters of the United States, 33 U. S. C. § 1342(a). The triggering statu
tory term here is not the word “discharge” alone, but “discharge of a pollutant,” a phrase made narrower by its specific definition requiring an “addition” of a pollutant to the water. § 1362(12).
The question in
Miccosukee
was whether a pump between a canal and an impoundment produced a “discharge of a pollutant” within the meaning of §402, see 541 U. S., at 102-103, and the Court accepted the shared view of the parties that if two identified volumes of water are “simply two parts of the same water body, pumping water from one into the other cannot constitute an 'addition’ of pollutants,”
id.,
at 109.
Miccosukee
was thus concerned only with whether an “addition” had been made (phosphorous being the substance in issue) as required by the definition of the phrase “discharge of a pollutant”; it did not matter under § 402 whether pumping the water produced a discharge without any addition. In sum, the understanding that something must be added in order to implicate §402 does not explain what suffices for a discharge under §401.
c
Warren’s third argument for avoiding the common meaning of “discharge” relies on the Act’s legislative history, but we think that if the history means anything it actually goes against Warren’s position. Warren suggests that the word “includes” in the definition of “discharge” should not be read with any spacious connotation, because the word was simply left on the books inadvertently after a failed attempt to deal specifically with “thermal discharges.” As Warren describes it, several Members of Congress recognized that “heat is not as harmful as what most of us view as ‘pollut-. ants,’ because it dissipates quickly in most bodies of receiving waters,” 1 Legislative History of the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 (Committee Print compiled for the Senate Committee on Public Works by the Library of Congress), Ser. No. 93-1, p. 273 (1973) (remarks of Rep. Clark), and they proposed to regulate thermal discharges less stringently than others. They offered an amendment to exclude thermal discharges from the requirements under § 402, but they also wanted to ensure that thermal discharges remained within the scope of § 401 and so sought to include them expressly in the general provision covering “discharge.” See
id.,
at 1069-1070, 1071. The proposed definition read, “[t]he term ‘discharge’ when used without qualification includes a discharge of a pollutant, a discharge of pollutants, and a thermal discharge.”
Id.,
at 1071.
Of course, Congress omitted the reference to “thermal discharge,” and settled on the definition we have today. See Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, § 502(16), 86 Stat. 887. Warren reasons that once Congress abandoned the special treatment for thermal pollutants, it merely struck the words “thermal discharge” from 33 U. S. C. § 1362(16) and carelessly left in the word “includes.”
Thus, Warren argues, there is no reason to assume that describing “discharge” as including certain acts was meant to extend the reach of § 401 beyond acts of the kind specifically
mentioned;
the terminology of § 401 simply reflects a failed effort to narrow the scope of § 402.
This is what might be called a lawyer’s argument. We will assume that Warren is entirely correct about the impetus behind the failed attempt to rework the scope of pollutant discharge under § 402. It is simply speculation, though, to say that the word “includes” was left in the description of a “discharge” by mere inattention, and for reasons given in Part IV of this opinion it is implausible speculation at that. But if we confine our view for a moment strictly to the drafting history, the one thing clear is that if Congress had left “thermal discharge” as an included subclass of a “discharge” under §502(16), Warren would have a stronger
noscitur a sociis
argument. For a thermal discharge adds something, the pollutant heat, see n. 3,
supra.
Had the list of examples of discharge been lengthened to include thermal discharges, there would have been at least a short series with the common feature of addition. As it stands, however, the only thing the legislative history cited by Warren demonstrates is the congressional rejection of language that would have created a short series of terms with a common implication of an addition.
Warren’s theory, moreover, has the unintended consequence of underscoring that Congress probably distinguished the terms “discharge” and “discharge of pollutants” deliberately, in order to use them in separate places and to separate ends. Warren hypothesizes that Congress attempted to tinker with the definition of “discharge” because it wanted to subject thermal discharges to the requirements of §401, but not §402. But this assumption about Con
gress’s motives only confirms the point that when Congress fine-tunes its statutory definitions, it tends to do so with a purpose in mind. See
Bates
v.
United States,
522 U. S. 23, 29-30 (1997) (if “Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
IV
Warren’s arguments against reading the word “discharge” in its common sense fail on their own terms.
They also miss the forest for the trees.
Congress passed the Clean Water Act to “restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters,” 33 U. S. C. § 1251(a); see also
PUD No. 1,
511 U. S., at 714, the “national goal” being to achieve “water quality which provides for the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and provides for recreation in and on the water,” 33 U. S. C. § 1251(a)(2). To do this, the Act does not stop at controlling the “addition of pollutants,” but deals with “pollution” generally, see § 1251(b), which Congress defined to mean “the man-made or man-induced alteration of the chemical, physical, biological, and radiological integrity of water,” § 1362(19).
The alteration of water quality as thus defined is a risk inherent in limiting river flow and releasing water through turbines. Warren itself admits that its dams “can cause changes in the movement, flow, and circulation of a river ... causing] a river to absorb less oxygen and to be less passable by boaters and fish.” Brief for Petitioner 23. And several
amici
alert us to the chemical modification caused by the dams, with “immediate impact on aquatic organisms, which of course rely on dissolved oxygen in water to breathe.” Brief for Trout Unlimited et al. as
Amici Curiae
13; see also,
e. g.,
Brief for National Wildlife Federation et al. as
Amici Curiae
6 (explaining that when air and water mix in a turbine, nitrogen dissolves in the water and can be potentially lethal to fish). Then there are the findings of the Maine Department of Environmental Protection that led to this appeal:
“The record in this case demonstrates that Warren’s dams have caused long stretches of the natural river bed to be essentially dry and thus unavailable as habitat for indigenous populations of fish and other aquatic organisms; that the dams have blocked the passage of eels
and sea-run fish to their natural spawning and nursery-waters; that the dams have eliminated the opportunity for fishing in long stretches of river, and that the dams have prevented recreational access to and use of the river.”
In re S. D. Warren Co.,
L-19713-33-E-N etc. (2003), in App. to Pet. for Cert. A-49.
Changes in the river like these fall within a State’s legitimate legislative business, and the Clean Water Act provides for a system that respects the States’ concerns. See 33 U. S. C. § 1251(b) (“It is the policy of the Congress to recognize, preserve, and protect the primary responsibilities and rights of States to prevent, reduce, and eliminate pollution”); § 1256(a) (federal funds for state efforts to prevent pollution); see also §1370 (States may impose standards on the discharge of pollutants that are stricter than federal ones).
State certifications under § 401 are essential in the scheme to preserve state authority to address the broad range of pollution, as Senator Muskie explained on the floor when what is now § 401 was first proposed:
“No polluter will be able to hide behind a Federal license or permit as an excuse for a violation of water quality standard[s]. No polluter will be able to make major investments in facilities under a Federal license or permit without providing assurance that the facility will comply with water quality standards. No State water pollution control agency will be confronted with a fait accompli by an industry that has built a plant without consideration of water quality requirements.” 116 Cong. Rec. 8984 (1970).
These are the very reasons that Congress provided the States with power to enforce “any other appropriate requirement of State law,” 33 U. S. C. § 1341(d), by imposing conditions on federal licenses for activities that may result in a discharge,
ibid.
Reading § 401 to give “discharge” its common and ordinary meaning preserves the state authority apparently intended. The judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine is therefore affirmed.
It is so ordered.