By Phillip Bantz | July 18, 2022
Gregory Zerzan brings more than 20 years of experience as a legal, compliance and policy adviser in the public and private sectors to enCore, which wants to ramp up uranium mining in the U.S.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leslie Ritchie Robnett | July 17, 2022
In order to anticipate how the Biden administration will use the DPA to affect policy change over the next year, a better understanding of the DPA's mechanics is in order.
By Brittney Meredith-Miller | July 15, 2022
After seven consecutive years of pre- or early season activity, the NHC formed a team to examine whether to move the start of hurricane season to mid-May.
By Marianna Wharry | July 14, 2022
Honolulu has alleged that the oil and gas companies knew the dangers of climate change, understood how energy exploration and extraction impacted the environment, and did not notify the public of those dangers.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By David G. Mandelbaum | July 14, 2022
As the April column in this series pointed out, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 reinstituted the Superfund chemical excise tax. Somehow, more than a few of our colleagues and clients have formed the expectation that environmental practitioners are the lawyers knowledgeable on this tax. Humoring them, I try here to provide a brief outline of how this tax works.
By David Gialanella | July 13, 2022
Austin was the principal deputy assistant administrator for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Air & Radiation (OAR). She spoke with Texas Lawyer about the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in 'EPA v. West Virginia.'
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael B. Gerrard and Edward McTiernan | July 13, 2022
The most important SEQRA development by far will come if Governor Kathy Hochul signs a bill that would amend the statute by requiring far more baseline and cumulative impact review, and barring the issuance and renewal of permits that would have disproportionate impacts.
By Aleeza Furman | July 12, 2022
The state's suit, according to Superior Court Judge Mary Miller Johnston, failed to state claims for both public nuisance and trespassing.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Aleeza Furman | July 12, 2022
The state's suit, according to Superior Court Judge Mary Miller Johnston, failed to state claims for both public nuisance and trespassing.
By The Associated Press | July 12, 2022
The ruling "may seem a severe result for the lobster industry" and the government, but no one "operates free from the strict requirements imposed by the MMPA [Marine Mammal Protection Act] and ESA [Endangered Species Act]," U.S. District Judge James Boasberg wrote.
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