Project Finance

  • February 06, 2024

    DC Circ. Unsure FERC Can't Order NextEra To Cover Plant Costs

    NextEra Energy's request to be made whole for upgrades to its New Hampshire nuclear power plant's circuit breaker seemed to get a frosty reception from the D.C. Circuit during oral arguments Tuesday.

  • February 06, 2024

    ​​​​​​​FCC Says School Bus Wi-Fi Challengers Can't Zoom To Court

    The Federal Communications Commission urged the Fifth Circuit on Tuesday to toss a challenge from two individuals to the agency's plan to subsidize school bus Wi-Fi, saying they can't go straight to court after failing to lodge a protest with the FCC.

  • February 06, 2024

    Report Shows Fragile US Solar Growth Under Safeguard

    The U.S. solar energy industry has grown despite bumpy conditions since 2020 and is on track to expand into photovoltaic cell production before the end of the year, according to a report released Tuesday by the U.S. International Trade Commission.

  • February 06, 2024

    Suncor Energy Must Pay $10.5M For Air Pollution, Colo. Says

    The state of Colorado said Suncor Energy Inc. must dish out at least $10.5 million toward penalties and improvement projects as a result of its Commerce City refinery's air pollution violations between July 2019 and June 2021.

  • February 06, 2024

    ​​​​​​​Top Groups Lobbying The FCC

    The Federal Communications Commission heard from companies and interest groups more than 100 times in January on a wide variety of topics, from net neutrality proposals to cybersecurity to planned new rules to revamp spectrum.

  • February 06, 2024

    NC Panel Backs $5M Win For Developers In Water Fee Fight

    The North Carolina state appeals court on Tuesday backed a $5.3 million judgment developers won in their suit accusing the city of Greensboro of imposing illegal pre-service water fees, finding the fees were charged late in the construction process but before volume-measuring water and sewer services were available on the properties.

  • February 06, 2024

    Builders Ask Judge To Rethink Monetary Relief For Fees Suit

    Builders urged a Florida state judge to reconsider two "'overarching'" rulings that they claim denied monetary relief for their proposed class action against the city of Miami over allegedly illegal building permit and inspection fees.

  • February 06, 2024

    Ex-Contech Exec Asks 4th Circ. To Toss More Convictions

    The U.S. Department of Justice and the former Contech executive who was convicted of bid-rigging both agree that the Fourth Circuit should rethink the decision that wiped out that conviction, but for different reasons — one wants the conviction reinstated, while the other says the panel didn't go far enough.

  • February 06, 2024

    Nev. Teachers Union Sues To Upend Oakland A's Stadium Deal

    A Nevada teachers' union has sued in state court to block a measure lawmakers approved in June to provide $380 million in public money to a new ballpark for the Oakland A's on the Las Vegas Strip, arguing the package passed in a special session last summer wasn't vetted for flaws.

  • February 06, 2024

    Legato Merger's Third SPAC Prices $175M Offering

    Legato Merger Corp. III, a special-purpose acquisition company targeting infrastructure and construction-related industries, was slated to begin trading Tuesday after raising $175 million in an initial public offering, represented by Graubard Miller and underwriters' counsel Loeb & Loeb LLP.

  • February 06, 2024

    Construction Group Of The Year: King & Spalding

    King & Spalding LLP secured a $1.9 billion arbitration award in June in a case stemming from cost overruns at a Colombian oil refinery and is defending the award in forums on three continents, earning a spot among Law360's 2023 Practice Groups of the Year for Construction.

  • February 05, 2024

    Groups Urge 9th Circ. To Overturn Alaskan Willow Project

    The Bureau of Land Management should have looked before it leaped in reapproving ConocoPhillips' planned Willow drilling project in Arctic Alaska, the Center for Biological Diversity said Monday, arguing that the agency refused to evaluate the effects of any alternative plans that stranded economically viable oil on the company's land leases.

  • February 05, 2024

    Justices Urged To Turn Away $392M Arbitrator Bias Suit

    An oil company has urged the U.S. Supreme Court to deny a petition asking it to overturn the Second Circuit standard for vacating arbitral awards over apparent arbitrator bias, arguing that any differences in the federal appeals courts over the evident partiality standard are "academic."

  • February 05, 2024

    US Backs Spain In $386M Solar Award Cases

    The Biden administration is urging the D.C. Circuit not to enforce some $386 million in arbitral awards issued to investors after Spain dialed back its renewable energy incentives, arguing that courts need not defer to arbitrators when deciding whether an arbitration agreement exists.

  • February 05, 2024

    'Just Good Enough' Won't Cut It With BEAD Plans, Gov't Told

    Cable industry groups want the U.S. Department of Commerce, which is in charge of disbursing billions in broadband deployment aid, to reject states' efforts to build out other technologies at the expense of the fiber-optic projects the government has said they should prioritize.

  • February 05, 2024

    FERC Says It Followed Court's Orders With LNG Reapproval

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission defended its reapproval of a Texas liquefied natural gas terminal Monday, telling the D.C. Circuit it addressed the appeals court's concerns after the court ordered the agency to revise its environmental reviews of the project.

  • February 05, 2024

    State Telecom Roundup: The States With The Worst Internet

    The Biden administration has said it expects to start releasing some of the $42 billion in Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program state broadband funding in early 2024. The idea is for the funds to be used to narrow the digital divide that prevents millions of Americans from having access to affordable and high-quality internet, but some states have more to do than others.

  • February 05, 2024

    States, Businesses Push To Sink Feds' Amended WOTUS Rule

    Texas, Idaho and more than a dozen industry groups are asking a Texas federal judge to throw out the U.S. government's latest rule to define the "waters of the United States," arguing that it oversteps federal authorities under the Clean Water Act, is overly vague and flies in the face of a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling.

  • February 02, 2024

    Clean Energy Can Revive Fossil Fuel Sites, But Risks Abound

    Building clean energy projects on the sites of shuttered or aging coal- and gas-fired power plants is a multibillion-dollar opportunity to accelerate the U.S. energy transition, but there are steep legal and practical hurdles to clear. Here's a rundown of what developers must grapple with if they want to build green on fossil fuel sites.

  • February 02, 2024

    Youths Say DOJ Using Extreme Tactics To Delay Climate Trial

    Young people who claim the U.S. government is violating their rights with energy policies that are worsening climate change hit back against the Justice Department's latest bid to pause their suit before it can go to trial, saying courts should not tolerate its extreme delay tactics and shocking conduct.

  • February 02, 2024

    Infrastructure Co. Cuts Deal To Resolve DOL Equal Pay Probe

    An infrastructure consulting company has agreed to pay roughly $122,000 to shutter a U.S. Department of Labor investigation into allegations that the company paid women less than their male counterparts despite the workers having the same levels of experience and skill, the DOL said.

  • February 02, 2024

    Troutman Pepper Nabs FERC Pro From Steptoe

    Troutman Pepper has nabbed a former Steptoe LLP partner to lead its enforcement practice in its energy practice group, further strengthening its over 20-member Federal Energy Regulatory Commission team.

  • February 02, 2024

    Mich. Electric Co. Can't Put Upgrade Delay Cost On Customers

    An electric company cannot pass the extra costs of construction delays during a power plant upgrade onto customers, an appellate panel said Thursday, affirming a Michigan regulator's decision that the utility must eat the loss.

  • February 01, 2024

    Colo. Climate Case May Be Stuck In 'Catch-22,' Judge Says

    A Colorado state judge asked Exxon on Thursday whether its argument would put local governments seeking to hold it responsible for the effects of climate change in a "Catch-22," since the oil giant maintains that its emissions were too widespread to be subject to state law while federal law doesn't give the plaintiffs an opportunity to sue.

  • February 01, 2024

    Kirkland Under Chancery Fire In Space Biz Merger Suit

    Scant disclosures from Kirkland & Ellis LLP about its partners' potential financial stake in a $1.2 billion deal the firm was advising drew sharp scrutiny from Delaware's Court of Chancery at a hearing in Wilmington on Thursday.

Expert Analysis

  • IRS Guidance Powers Up Energy Tax Credit Transfers

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    Recent IRS guidance on the monetization of energy tax credits provides sufficient clarity for parties to start negotiating transfer agreements, but it is unclear when the registration process required for credits to change hands will be up and running, say attorneys at Shearman.

  • Ghosting In BigLaw: How To Come Back From Lack Of Feedback

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    Junior associates can feel powerless when senior colleagues cut off contact instead of providing useful feedback, but young attorneys can get back on track by focusing on practical professional development and reexamining their career priorities, says Rachel Patterson at Orrick.

  • Steps To Success For Senior Associates

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Adriana Paris at Rissman Barrett discusses the increased responsibilities and opportunities that becoming a senior associate brings and what attorneys in this role should prioritize to flourish in this stressful but rewarding next level in their careers.

  • Legal Profession Must Do More For Lawyers With Disabilities

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    At the start of Disability Pride month, Rosalyn Richter at Arnold & Porter looks at why lawyers with disabilities are significantly underrepresented in private practice, asserting that law firms and other employers must do more to conquer the implicit bias that deters attorneys from seeking accommodations.

  • Is There A New 'Moderate Questions' Doctrine?

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    The D.C. Circuit's recent Heating v. EPA decision signals that courts may begin to approach agency reliance on general statutory authorization with skepticism similar to the "major questions" doctrine the U.S. Supreme Court announced in West Virginia v. EPA last year, even in less major cases, says Jason Neal at HWG.

  • Ohio Tax Talk: Building On Federal Affordable Housing Credit

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    Ohio's soon-to-be-implemented low-income housing tax credit could significantly affect the state's affordable housing landscape and influence tax-credit deal financing for these projects, though Senate changes may have dampened the new credit's immense potential, say Raghav Agnihotri and Rachael Chamberlain at Frost Brown.

  • Opinion

    Appellate Funding Disclosure: No Mandate Is Right Choice

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    The Advisory Committee on Appellate Rules' recent decision, forgoing a mandatory disclosure rule for litigation funding in federal appeals, is prudent, as third-party funding is only involved in a minuscule number of federal cases, and courts have ample authority to obtain funding information if necessary, says Stewart Ackerly at Statera Capital.

  • Using Agreements To Cover Gaps In Hydrogen Storage Regs

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    The Inflation Reduction Act's incentives for energy storage have spurred investment in hydrogen storage and production, but given the lack of comprehensive regulations surrounding the sector, developers should carefully craft project and financing agreements to mitigate uncertainties, say Omar Samji and Sarah George at Weil, and attorney Manushi Desai.

  • Despite Signs Of A Nuclear Power Revival, Outlook Still Mixed

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    The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's certification of a small modular reactor design earlier this year, and recent legislation introduced in Congress, may help renew U.S. nuclear energy development — but political opposition remains an obstacle, say attorneys at Latham.

  • Justices' Corruption Ruling May Shift DOJ Bank Fraud Tactics

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    After the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last month in Ciminelli v. U.S., curtailing a government theory of wire fraud liability, prosecutors may need to reconsider their approach to the bank fraud statute, particularly when it comes to foreign bank enforcement, says Brian Kearney at Ballard Spahr.

  • Scope Of Fla. Anti-ESG Law: What We Know And Don't Know

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    Florida's ambitious new law restricting the use of ESG factors takes effect July 1, and even businesses not directly affected should study H.B. 3, as it may be the harbinger of more expansive restrictions to come in Florida and elsewhere, says Bessie Daschbach at Hinshaw.

  • The Road Ahead For EPA's Greenhouse Gas Reduction Efforts

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    Recent U.S. Environmental Protection Agency actions could help the Biden administration's goals of decarbonizing the electricity sector, but they will have to potentially overcome technical, legal and political challenges, says Andrew Shaw at Dentons.

  • How Attys Can Avoid Exposing Their Firms To Cyberattacks

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    Attorneys are the weakest link in their firms' cyberdefenses because hackers often exploit the gap between individuals’ work and personal cybersecurity habits, but there are some steps lawyers can take to reduce the risks they create for their employers, say Mark Hurley and Carmine Cicalese at Digital Privacy & Protection.

  • Chapter 100 Incentives Can Offer Relief For Mo. Solar Projects

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    Although the Missouri Supreme Court's decision last year in Johnson v. Springfield Solar 1 overturned the state's tax exemption for solar energy systems, solar developers may still be able to use other mechanisms, like Chapter 100 incentives, to offset project costs, say Lizzy McEntire and Anna Kimbrell at Husch Blackwell.

  • Foreign Investment In Real Estate Is Getting More Complicated

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    Increasing federal scrutiny and a proliferation of new state laws targeting foreign investment in real estate may complicate or prevent transactions even by U.S. companies or funds that have shareholders or limited partners from China and other countries of concern, say attorneys at Akin.

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