Judgment Striking down Morgantown Fracturing Ban is now final after City...
On August 17, 2011, the Oil & Gas Law Brief reported that a West Virginia judge had entered an order striking down a ban on hydraulic fracturing enacted by the City of Morgantown. The judge ruled...
View ArticleThe FTC Reins in Facebook
In the wild, wild west of the internet, it looks like the Federal Trade Commission is saddling up to play the role of sheriff. On November 29, 2011, the FTC announced its proposed settlement of...
View ArticleWhat Do Reputable Scientific Organizations Consider To Be Evidence?
The new IOM report, Breast Cancer and the Environment: A Life Course Approach, again emphasizes the difference between how scientific panels go about making a causal inference and the approach too...
View Article“What All the Fuss Is About”: The Supreme Court Confirms Property Owners’...
The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected the federal government’s argument that compliance orders issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) under the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251 et...
View ArticleHydraulic Fracturing Risks and Opportunities
On April 18, 2012, Winston & Strawn and the Environmental Law Institute co-hosted an informative seminar on, “Hydraulic Fracturing Risks and Opportunities: Regulator, NGO, Industry and Investor...
View ArticleSo What’s Left Post Kivalina For Climate Change Litigation?
With an election brewing, plaintiffs trying to impact climate change may find themselves lobbying politicians rather than running to the nearest courtroom. On September 21, 2012, the Ninth Circuit...
View ArticleClimate Change Legislation Post-Sandy
Even before Hurricane Sandy devastated the East Coast, climate change policy had been on the forefront of federal and state legislative agendas. However, the size and scope of Sandy has brought a...
View ArticleThe Road to a Climate Change Legacy Runs Through the EPA
It was reported on February 20, 2013, that President Obama appears to have selected federal air regulator, Gina McCarthy, to take over for Lisa Jackson as head of the EPA. The news indicates that the...
View ArticleEPA Required Greenhouse Gas Permitting Continues in Texas
EPA and Texas have an ongoing fight about many things, greenhouse gas regulation and permitting being only one of them. The State refused to accept EPA’s decision under what is known as the Tailoring...
View ArticleClimate Change Regulations: A Showdown among the States
No good deed goes unpunished when it comes to the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s (“U.S. EPA”) efforts to regulate climate change. Rather, U.S. EPA’s authority to regulate climate...
View ArticleClimate Change Update: Presidents Obama and Xi Pledge to Cooperate to Reduce...
On June 8, 2013, President Barack Obama and President Xi Jinping of China issued a joint statement announcing that the two countries have agreed to work together to phase down the consumption and...
View ArticlePresident Obama Makes End Run around Congress by Issuing Climate Action Plan
On June 25, 2013, in a speech at Georgetown University, President Obama unveiled his Climate Action Plan (CAP) which sidesteps Congress and instead focuses on executive branch action, and more...
View ArticleNYC Mayor Bloomberg Encourages Cities to Take the Lead in Battle against...
Throughout his three terms as Mayor of New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg has kept policies designed to fight climate change at the forefront of his agenda. Most recently, nearly one year...
View ArticleDoes the U.S. Supreme Court Decision Limiting EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Authority...
On June 23, 2014, the United States Supreme Court issued its widely anticipated decision in Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA concerning the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s regulation of...
View ArticleCompanies Leading the Charge on Carbon Pricing
While it is unlikely that the 113th Congress will take any action on climate change (especially not in advance of the November 2014 elections), many major public companies aren’t waiting for...
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