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Energy
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March 23, 2026
US Pays TotalEnergies $1B To Abandon Offshore Wind Leases
The Trump administration said Monday that it would pay TotalEnergies nearly $1 billion to give up a pair of offshore wind leases in exchange for the French energy giant sinking the cash into U.S. oil and gas development.
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March 23, 2026
Pa. AG Tells Justices He Must Intervene In Grid Fight
Pennsylvania's attorney general urged the U.S. Supreme Court to let him intervene in Third Circuit proceedings after a panel allowed a utility's transmission line project to proceed, saying it'd "stripped" Pennsylvania of its right to regulate state land use.
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March 23, 2026
Zurich Says No Coverage For $19M Faulty Pipeline Award
A pipeline construction company is not entitled to coverage for a $19 million interim arbitral award issued to a midstream energy company, several Zurich insurers told a Missouri federal court, saying the damages for defective welding are not for property damage caused by an occurrence or are otherwise excluded.
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March 20, 2026
Texas Biz Court Hears Arguments On $50M ERCOT Charge
The Texas business court on Friday considered whether a power scheduler must cover roughly $50 million in charges assessed against a commercial electricity supplier by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas after reserve capacity tied to an industrial customer was not submitted during Winter Storm Uri in 2021.
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March 20, 2026
Firms Must Face Discovery In $102M Award Feud
A New York federal judge on Friday permitted Levona Holdings to closely scrutinize declarations provided by attorneys with Greenberg Traurig LLP and Reed Smith LLP as it pursues sanctions against the firms following the court's vacatur of a $102 million arbitral award procured through fraud.
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March 20, 2026
Ex-Fla. Rep Denied 11th-Hour Depo In Foreign Agent Case
A Florida federal judge Friday denied a former congressman's requests to depose a key witness and have the government turn over interview notes before the start of a trial on charges of failing to register as a Venezuelan foreign agent, saying the defense counsel can still ask questions on cross-examination.
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March 20, 2026
Colorado Fights DOE Order To Keep Coal Plant Running
Colorado is the latest state to challenge U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright's use of his emergency authority to keep fossil fuel power plants open, asking the D.C. Circuit to overturn his order to keep running a coal-fired plant.
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March 20, 2026
Davis Polk, Skadden Lead UK Mining Firm's Upsized $60M IPO
London-based Guardian Metal Resources PLC began trading Friday in the U.S. after raising $60 million in its initial public offering.
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March 20, 2026
WTO Projects Slowed 2026 Trade Growth Due To Iran War
After a better-than-expected increase in global trade in 2025 due in part to the frontloading of imports and artificial intelligence spending, the World Trade Organization is projecting a nosedive in 2026 trade growth because of energy price shocks driven by the Middle East conflict.
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March 20, 2026
Nelson Mullins Launches Venezuela-Focused Practice
Following the recent U.S. military operations in Venezuela and citing the rapidly changing geopolitical situation developing inside the country, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP has launched a practice group dedicated to advising clients in the South American nation, according to a firm announcement Friday.
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March 20, 2026
White House Pushes Congress To Override State AI Laws
The White House directed Congress to preempt "burdensome" state laws on artificial intelligence in a legislative framework released Friday.
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March 20, 2026
US, Japan Agree To Develop Critical Mineral Trade Plan
The U.S. and Japan have committed to working together to develop trade policies related to protecting supply chains of critical minerals and their downstream industries, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced.
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March 19, 2026
Alaska Natives Retain Access To Land In Petroleum Reserve
An Alaska federal judge has stayed the Trump administration's cancellation of a conservation right-of-way issued to a tribal group seeking access to about 1 million acres of key habitat for a caribou herd within the vast National Petroleum Reserve located on the state's North Slope.
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March 19, 2026
Oil Company Sues X Critic Over Assets Amid Investor Suit
Oil and gas asset company Next Bridge Hydrocarbons Inc. claims that an X commenter has falsely accused the company of misleading investors about the value of its assets, in a dispute that comes as investors are appealing the dismissal of claims against the Texas company about misrepresentation of assets.
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March 19, 2026
States Join Push To Revive EPA Climate Danger Finding
A coalition of state and local governments on Thursday became the latest group to ask that the D.C. Circuit overrule the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's rescission last month of its long-held position on the danger greenhouse gases pose to public health.
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March 19, 2026
Oil Co. Needn't Give $105M To Bond Insurers, Judge Rules
A Texas federal judge found Thursday that two insurers are not entitled to receive some $105 million in collateral from Houston-based oil and gas producer W&T Offshore, approving a magistrate judge's report that noted the insurers' allegations are mere "speculation."
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March 19, 2026
FERC Chair Aims To Ease Energy Squeeze From War On Iran
The U.S.-Israel war on Iran that is roiling global energy markets underscores the need for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to approve gas infrastructure projects more quickly so that energy prices can be kept in check, FERC Chair Laura Swett said Thursday.
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March 19, 2026
Justice Kagan Denies Apache Bid To Block Ariz. Land Transfer
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan on Thursday declined to block a federal government land transfer in Arizona after four Apache women looked to stop the exchange on behalf of their daughters, arguing that the area contains a site used for a coming of age ceremony that will be destroyed.
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March 19, 2026
Feds' Bid To Wipe Calif. Clean Car Regs Spells More Upheaval
The Trump administration's assault on California's more than decade-old clean car regulations deliberately upends the U.S. auto industry's transition toward alternative-powered vehicles, spelling even more regulatory uncertainty as the antagonistic political climate and long legal battles persist, experts say.
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March 19, 2026
Zimbabwe Urges Justices To Pass On $50M Award Suit
Zimbabwe urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday not to review a D.C. Circuit decision from last summer ending litigation seeking to enforce an 11-year-old, $50 million arbitral award against that African country, arguing that the question presented is "narrow and unimportant."
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March 19, 2026
Texas Court Erases $7.8M In Taxes On Stored Export Oil
A Texas company storing presold crude oil to be exported to foreign countries was wrongly taxed $7.8 million by a county assessor, a state appeals court ruled Thursday, reversing a trial court decision.
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March 19, 2026
PI Loses Bid To Block Extradition To US On Hacking Charges
A private investigator accused of hacking activists on behalf of ExxonMobil to subvert climate change litigation lost his bid on Thursday to overturn a decision to allow his extradition to the U.S. to face trial.
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March 19, 2026
Commerce Investigating Chinese, Indian Graphite Electrodes
The U.S. Department of Commerce on Thursday said it will open probes into imported Chinese and Indian electrodes used for smelting to determine whether those goods have been subsidized or sold at less than fair value, joining an ongoing U.S. International Trade Commission investigation.
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March 19, 2026
PE Behemoths Eye $10B OpenAI JV, Plus More Rumors
Private equity firms, including TPG and Bain Capital, are considering forming a $10 billion joint venture with OpenAI, Finnish lift maker Kone Oyj is mulling an acquisition of its rival TK Elevator, and Australian investment firm Macquarie has backed out of a bidding war for a stake in Kuwait's oil pipeline network due to the conflict in the Middle East.
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March 18, 2026
13 State AGs Urge EPA To Walk Back 'Compliance First' Memo
Attorneys general for New York, Massachusetts, Washington and 10 other states have called on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to rescind a December memo unveiling a "compliance first" approach to enforcement, arguing the strategy sidelines staff expertise and creates "bureaucratic bottlenecks" that will ultimately enable polluters.
Expert Analysis
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Key Policy Moves Are Powering Nuclear Growth
The past year has seen a shift toward strong federal support for new nuclear power generation, and both recent and anticipated policy developments are likely to encourage progress toward that goal — but making sure that this momentum continues may be the hard part, say attorneys at Balch & Bingham.
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Series
Playing Tennis Makes Me A Better Lawyer
An instinct to turn pain into purpose meant frequent trips to the tennis court, where learning to move ahead one point at a time was a lesson that also applied to the steep learning curve of patent prosecution law, says Daniel Henry at Marshall Gerstein.
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NY Securities Class Action Ruling Holds Rare Timing Insights
A New York federal court's recent decision in Leone v. ASP Isotopes adopted the unusual posture of simultaneously denying a motion to dismiss and certifying claims to proceed as a class action, and its unique scheduling carries certain procedural and substantive implications, say attorneys at Labaton Keller.
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Bid Protest Spotlight: Evaluations, Redactions, Remands
Victoria Angle at MoFo examines three December bid protest decisions highlighting the scope of agency discretion when evaluating contractor proposals, the extent to which an agency may redact documents that comprise the record of its evaluation decisions, and the breadth of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims' discretion to grant government requests for remand.
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How FERC Is Shaping The Future Of Data Center Grid Use
Two recent orders from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission affecting the PJM Interconnection and Southwest Power Pool regions offer the first glimpse into how FERC will address the challenges of balancing resource adequacy, grid reliability and fair cost allocation for expansions to accommodate artificial intelligence-driven data centers, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: January Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses five rulings from October and November, and identifies practice tips from cases involving consumer fraud, oil and gas leases, toxic torts, and wage and hour issues.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Judicial Use Informs Guardrails
U.S. Magistrate Judge Maritza Dominguez Braswell at the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado discusses why having a sense of how generative AI tools behave, where they add value, where they introduce risk and how they are reshaping the practice of law is key for today's judges.
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Navigating Battery Validation Risk In The EV Supply Chain
Vehicle electrification has moved battery system supply chains from a background component into the center of the automotive universe — and for legal teams, battery validation is now a driver of contractual disputes, regulatory exposure and even shareholder litigation, say Samuel Madden at Secretariat Advisors and Vanessa Miller at Foley & Lardner.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 5 Tips From Ex-SEC Unit Chief
My move to private practice has reaffirmed my belief in the value of adaptability, collaboration and strategic thinking — qualities that are essential not only for successful client outcomes, but also for sustained professional satisfaction, says Dabney O’Riordan at Fried Frank.
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2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: Awards Against Sovereign States
The enforcement of arbitral awards against sovereign states is one of the most contentious and rapidly evolving areas in international arbitration, with three defining issues on the 2026 horizon: the scope of sovereign immunity, assignability of rights, and availability of fraud and corruption defenses, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Start A Law Firm
Launching and sustaining a law firm requires skills most law schools don't teach, but every lawyer should understand a few core principles that can make the leap calculated rather than reckless, says Sam Katz at Athlaw.
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Key False Claims Act Trends From The Last Year
The False Claims Act remains a powerful enforcement tool after some record verdicts and settlements in 2025, and while traditional fraud areas remain a priority, new initiatives are raising questions about its expanding application, says Veronica Nannis at Joseph Greenwald.
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What Texas Can Learn From La. About CO2 Well Primacy
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's granting Texas primary authority over wells used to inject carbon dioxide into deep rock formations is a significant step forward for carbon capture and storage projects in the state — but Louisiana's experience after it was granted primacy offers a cautionary tale, say attorneys at Phelps Dunbar.
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Series
Hosting Exchange Students Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Opening my home to foreign exchange students makes me a better lawyer not just because prioritizing visiting high schoolers forces me to hone my organization and time management skills but also because sharing the study-abroad experience with newcomers and locals reconnects me to my community, says Alison Lippa at Nicolaides Fink.
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2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: M&A And Securities Disputes
Recent developments — such as the high-profile arbitration between ExxonMobil and Chevron, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's shift on its long-standing opposition to mandatory arbitration clauses in registration statements — highlight key issues to consider when drafting relevant agreements and arbitrating M&A disputes, say attorneys at Cleary.