By Amanda Bronstad | August 22, 2022
On Aug. 11, U.S. Magistrate Judge David Grand declared a mistrial after the jury sent a note, stating: 'For the physical and emotional health of the jurors, we don't believe we can continue with further deliberations.'
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Bruce Love | August 19, 2022
Regulators and plaintiffs firms want more than just policy statements. Law firms are having to prove the data behind their clients' ESG efforts to avoid claims that it's all for show.
By Charles Toutant | August 17, 2022
"Climate change is an important problem with national and global implications. But federal courts cannot hear cases just because they are important," Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote for the court.
By Marcia Coyle | August 17, 2022
We're looking ahead a bit to the new term with an interview with the lawyer who will argue first on opening day
By Kendall Coffey | August 11, 2022
Less obviously, it is potentially a transformative decision reducing the power of the president to create rules for industry that have political and business consequences.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dan Roe | August 9, 2022
Demand is up in ESG and corporate practices as clients sweat the SEC's proposed climate risk disclosures.
By Jennifer A. Dlouhy | August 9, 2022
The tax and climate bill passed by the Senate would open coastal waters around five U.S. territories to offshore wind development and compel the U.S. Interior Department to pursue potential lease sales there.
By Enrique Roces | August 9, 2022
Clean energy stocks have been volatile over the last two years, as some researchers strongly tie their performance to government policy fluctuations.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Kenneth J. Warren | August 4, 2022
Relying on the "major questions doctrine," the court in West Virginia v. EPA held that in the absence of clear Congressional authorization, the EPA could not lawfully promulgate regulations that would transform a sector of the economy by requiring coal-fired power plants to reduce their production or to subsidize natural gas, wind or solar sources.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David Lakhdhir | August 4, 2022
Some would argue that addressing the effects of climate change should be sufficient reason for Congress to act. But if it is not, the EU seems poised to provide a near-term economic incentive.
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