October 10, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday deep-sixed a group of Republican-led states' effort to stop the Biden administration from using estimates for the social cost of greenhouse gases in federal agency rulemaking processes.
September 29, 2023
There's plenty on the U.S. Supreme Court's plate this term to interest the energy sector, including a pair of blockbuster cases that could reshape administrative law as well as potential fights over clean energy and transmission development. Here are the energy-related cases the Supreme Court will consider this term.
September 22, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court has already agreed to review two cases with important implications for environmental and administrative law during its 2023 term, and several more litigants are seeking the justices' attention on issues ranging from financial responsibility for Superfund cleanups to whether the federal government properly estimated the social costs of greenhouse gases.
August 29, 2023
Missouri and other states challenging the Biden administration's calculations of the social cost of greenhouse gases have not been harmed in any way that would give them legal standing to sue over the estimates, the federal government told the U.S. Supreme Court Monday.
August 04, 2023
Courts around the U.S. will be weighing important environmental legal issues over the rest of 2023, including how much courts should defer to agency expertise, whether young plaintiffs can sue the U.S. over its energy policies and whether the Biden administration has overstepped in its efforts to enforce its environmental justice priorities.
June 29, 2023
Conservative states led by Missouri want to convince the U.S. Supreme Court they have standing to challenge the Biden administration's calculations of the social cost of greenhouse gases, metrics they claim will drive up the cost of regulation.