Political Extinction Risk

Species may be vulnerable not just to changes in climate or habitat, but also to changes in politics

Conservation biologists have long studied many different kinds of risks to endangered species: Risks from climate change, or from habitat fragmentation, or from having small populations for extended periods of time.  But there is another key component of risk that has not been analyzed yet, but may matter as much or more to many endangered species: political risk.  That risk – what we call “political extinction risk” – remains generally unstudied and unexamined...

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The Tariff Decision and the Major Questions Doctrine

The scope of the doctrine is even more confused now than before.

The tariff decision is good news in terms of checking arbitrary presidential actions, but the opinions fell short in one important area.  A key argument against the tariffs was based on the Major Questions Doctrine (or MQD).  That doctrine applies whan a government action has “vast political and economic significance” (whatever that means).  If the government claims that Congress gave it the power to take such an action, it must point to clear statutory language....

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The Most NIMBY Man In The World

As ICE moves to warehouse tens of thousands of immigrants, can locals fight back?

Good piece in the Grey Lady on Wednesday about Trump voters suddenly deciding that some of his policies aren't so great after all. ICE is trying to build huge detention facilities in order to drag legal immigrants off the streets -- specifically, those who are waiting for asylum decisions and those waiting to receive their green cards. It's a way to build the new US concentration camps. And that has some of Donald Trump's voters not so happy, including this soon-to...

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The Overlooked Precedent Supporting EPA Regulation of Greenhouse Gases

Even Roberts and Scalia agreed that Mass. v. EPA is the law

An important precedent has been overlooked in the coverage of the Trump EPA’s repeal of the 2009 Endangerment Finding. The 2009 finding was based on Massachusetts v. EPA, in which the Court had held that the Clean Air Act covers air pollution and directed EPA to determine whether greenhouse gases are harmful. One reason to worry about the forthcoming litigation over the repeal is that the conservative Justices all dissented from Massachusetts v. EPA.  But there’s an...

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A.I. Pollution in the Air — and the Public Comments

The Drain is a weekly roundup of environmental and climate news from Legal Planet.

Artificial intelligence has already replaced some artists, translators, and podcast hosts. Now it’s coming for… concerned citizens? That’s right. AI-assisted campaigns have started flooding the inbox of government agencies that seek to engage with the public. Do you remember last June when the South Coast Air Quality Management District Board killed two common sense clean air quality rules? I do, because I sat on the Zoom and watched hours of IRL public comm...

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Recapping “Our Climate Future”: A California Gubernatorial Candidate Forum

How four top candidates plan to tackle affordability, environmental justice, and clean energy and continue California’s leadership

Californians will elect a new governor in November. The race presents state voters with a wider variety of potential outcomes for climate policy–from increased ambition to continuity to changed priorities–than any election since 2010. To help voters understand where the candidates stand on our most pressing environmental challenges, the Center for Law, Energy, and the Environment (CLEE) recently co-moderated a gubernatorial forum organized by California Environmental...

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Can the Endangerment Finding be Repealed? Not While MASS. v. EPA Still Lives.

On any fair reading of Justice Stevens’s opinion, the Endangerment Finding is valid.

EPA has implicitly admitted defeat in terms of overturning the science behind the Endangerment Finding. Instead, it relies on a series of legal arguments. I tease apart those arguments in  a Regulatory Review essay. Here, I want to make a different point: It is impossible to square those arguments with  Justice Stevens’s  2007 Supreme Court majority opinion in Massachusetts v. EPA.    Below, I’ll prove my point by lining up quotes from the Trump EPA and the Su...

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Is China a Climate Hero? It’s complicated

UCLA's Alex Wang explains China's climate strategies and contradictions in his new book, Chinese Global Environmentalism.

Though China was once viewed as a climate villain, the country now dominates the global supply chains of solar panels, batteries, and electric vehicles. Just this month, Chinese manufacturer BYD overtook Tesla as the world’s biggest maker of EVs. It’s the latest example of how China’s focus on clean technology is setting the pace for the rest of the world as the Trump administration hits the brakes. This reversal may seem relatively new, but it is actually t...

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The Affirmative Case for Finding Endangerment

Despite hairsplitting by the current EPA, finding endangerment is a no-brainer.

The  repeal of the Endangered Finding is shocking mostly because it’s so blatantly wrong. For EPA to decide that vehicle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions aren't harmful is like NASA deciding the earth isn’t round after all.  Let’s not get mired in the legal weeds. It’s crazy that this issue is even being raised. In 2007, the Supreme Court told EPA to do two things: (1) consider whether GHGs endanger human health and welfare, and (2) if the answer is yes, regulat...

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In the Cross Hairs

The Right has taken umbrage at some of the important work of environmental law professors and centers.

I’ve posted before about the importance of the work on climate issues coming out of law schools, often from environmental law centers.  The fossil fuel industry and its conservative allies seem to have woken up to this fact. Their response is to try to repress this valuable work.  This is a backhanded acknowledgement that law schools are making a difference. This campaign has targeted some of the law schools with the most prominent environmental law programs.  The ...

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