Showing posts with label judgement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label judgement. Show all posts

Landmark Court Decisions Acknowledge Citizen Rights to a Healthy Climate (Video)

Ordinary citizens including children are using the courts to force governments to act on climate change. A number of lawsuits and some early judgements suggests that the courts may be able to spur significant climate action.

In August a group of 21 children, supported by renowned climate scientist James Hansen, filed a landmark constitutional climate change lawsuit against the federal government.


This lawsuit and others like it argue that weak action on climate change is a violation of the right to life, liberty and property. They assert that the federal government failed to protect essential public trust resources. They further allege that the government's promotion and development of fossil fuels is a violation of the constitutional rights of citizens and young people in particular.

These young plaintiffs are demanding significant reductions in greenhouse gases (GHGs), not only for themselves but for future generations.

As the leading source of GHGs the fossil fuel industry is understandably nervous. If successful this lawsuit and others like it could significantly diminish the prominent role that fossil fuels play in our economy. The fossil fuel industry knows what is at stake so they have come together and filed a joint motion that would allow them to join the Obama administration's fight against the lawsuit. While the children are not expected to win this time there have been successful outcomes in other parts of the world.

A citizen lawsuit in the Netherlands forced the Dutch government to increase its greenhouse gas emissions reduction and set a powerful precedent in the process. This outcome will have implications for the whole of Europe.



Recently, Hallie Turner, a 13 year old girl from Raleigh, filed a law suit in North Carolina to force that state to reduce carbon emissions by at least 4 percent each year.

Another ruling in Washington bodes well for Turner's case and the future of climate change lawsuits across the US. On November 19th in Seattle, Washington, Kings County Superior Court Judge Hollis R. Rill issued a president setting verdict. His ruling upheld the right of young people to demand more cuts to greenhouse gases a a carbon emissions rule from the Washington Department of Ecology. The suit was filed on behalf of eight young people and future generations.

Judge Hill declared: "[the youths] very survival depends upon the will of their elders to act now, decisively and unequivocally, to stem the tide of global warming…before doing so becomes first too costly and then too late...the state has a constitutional obligation to protect the public’s interest in natural resources held in trust for the common benefit of the people."

The is a landmark ruling that will resonate across America. Governments have a "mandatory duty" to ensure a level of air quality that is not injurious to the health of current and future generations. The repercussions of similar judgements elsewhere in America and around the world could prove to be devastating to the fossil fuel industry.

At the very least these lawsuits will add even more pressure on governments to act on climate change at COP21.

For a comprehensive summary of all climate change legislation in the US click here.

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US Supreme Court Ruling Makes it Easier to Buy Election Outcomes

A recent ruling by the Republican-appointed majority on the US Supreme Court has freed uber-wealthy to flex their financial muscles so that they can buy electoral outcomes. The ruling on the McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission case upholds the $2,600 limit per candidate, however, limitations on the number of candidates that can be given money has been lifted. This means that those with the financial means can now interfere with the democratic process.

Some of America's wealthiest people want to stymie government oversight from agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Their goal is to create a pro-business environment which is unfettered by regulation. This includes billionaires who want to pollute, extract fossil fuels or decimate forests.

The true beneficiaries of this court ruling is the Republican party which has become the mouthpiece for irresponsible corporate interests.

With an investment of $1,216,800, wealthy donors can help their candidates in both the House and the Senate races in every election across the country.

This is not the first time the conservative controlled Supreme Court has aided and abetted the wealthy in their bid to buy election outcomes. In a 2010 decision, the Citizens United case overturned limits on independent campaign spending by corporations, unions and Super PACs.

These PACs effectively determined the outcomes in a number Republican primaries in 2013. They also succeeded in pushing out moderate candidates.

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US Senators Climate Change Slumber Party

US Senators Climate Change Slumber Party
On the night of March 10 into the morning of March 11, Democratic and Independent US Senators pulled an all-nighter to discuss climate change. A total of 28 Senators spoke all night to urge action on climate change.

“Climate change is real, it is caused by humans, and it is solvable,” said Senator Schatz, he went on to say why he was participating in the climate change slumber party: “Congress must act. On Monday night we’re going to show the growing number of Senators who are committed to working together to confront climate change,” Schatz said.

Senator Boxer said: “So many Senators coming together for an all-night session shows our commitment to wake up Congress to the dangers of climate change. All you have to do is look at China to see what happens to your country when you throw the environment under the bus.”

"The cost of Congress' inaction on climate change is too high for our communities, our kids and grandkids, and our economy," Senator Whitehouse said. "On Monday we’ll be sending a clear message: it’s time for Congress to wake up and get serious about addressing this issue."

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Democrats May Have Renewed Interest in Tackling Climate Change

We may be seeing renewed interest in climate change advocacy from Democrats. While Republicans have made their contempt for climate change legislation known, many Democrats are also guilty of dereliction of duty on the subject of climate change. Four years ago there were not enough votes in the Democrat controlled Senate to move forward with climate change legislation.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid recently told reporters that, "Climate change is the worst problem facing the world today." This is a reiteration of comments he made last June, when he said in a speech on the Senate floor that "we have no more important issue in the world than this issue, period."

Rhode Island Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse said Reid's climate remarks are evidence that the profile of the issue has "climbed considerably."

To illustrate the point at least 26 Senate Democrats and two independents staged a climate awareness slumber party on the night of Monday March 10th with the message that "its time for Congress to wake up and get serious about addressing [climate change].

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Event - Making Waves: The Second Annual Canadian Association of Environmental Law Societies (CAELS) Conference

The Environmental Law Conference will take place on February 21 - 22, 2014 at the University of Ottawa’s new Faculty of Social Sciences building in Ottawa, Ontario. The Canadian Association of Environmental Law Societies (CAELS) is an exciting new networking project connecting environmental law students across the country.

The second annual CAELS conference will focusing on Canadian environmental law issues. The conference will bring together law students, academics, and practitioners from around the country to learn and network. This student-run conference will feature keynote addresses from Gord Miller (Environmental Commissioner of Ontario) and Maude Barlow (Council of Canadians). In addition, the conference will have multidisciplinary panels of speakers featuring graduate students, practitioners, and academics.

Environmental law requires expertise in a broad variety of disciplines, from physics and biological sciences to law and policy to social movements. Panels will reflect this diversity. This event will allow CAELS to further establish itself as a forum for students and professionals in Ontario and Canada who are interested in the development and study of environmental law.

Click here for more information or to register.

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The Environmental Implications of the US Omnibus Spending Bill

A new spending bill may have bipartisan support but it has both good and bad implications for the environment. On Monday January 12, 2013, the House and Senate appropriations committee chairs announced that they had agreed on an omnibus appropriations bill (FY14). The bilateral agreement put together by House Appropriations Chair Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) and Senate Appropriations Chair Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) allocates $1.012 trillion in federal spending.

On the upside environmentalists successfully fended off Republican attempts to reduce funding for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that would have impeded the agency's efforts to regulate greenhouse gases (GHGs).

But environmentalists were disappointed that the inefficient incandescent light bulb was saved by the bill. The bill stops energy efficiency regulations imposed during George W. Bush's administration and continued under President Obama that would have phased out incandescent light bulbs in favor of more efficient lighting like LEDs.

The spending legislation will also put an end to the proposed high-speed rail project in California. Finally only a portion of the scientific research funding cut by sequestration is restored by the bill.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Supreme Court to Review EPA's Right to Limit GHGs

The United States Supreme Court has indicated that it may limit the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) efforts to regulate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. On Tuesday, October 22, 2013, the US Supreme Court indicated that it would hear arguments against the EPA's right to regulate GHGs under the Clean Air Act (CAA).

This is in response to six separate petitions for ‎certiorari (a writ or order by which a higher court reviews a case tried in a lower court). The litigation is titled Coalition for Responsible ‎Regulation, Inc. et al., v. Environmental Protection Agency (D.C. Cir. Index No. 09-1322). Those who filed the petitions are putting the interests of the old energy economy ahead of efforts to combat climate change. They include the State of Texas, the US Chamber of Commerce, and predictably industry associations ‎of energy producers and users.‎

These challenges arise from a decision of the Federal Circuit Court for the District of Columbia which upheld ‎EPA's efforts to regulate GHGs under the CAA.

The Supreme Court will review the question: "Whether EPA permissibly determined that its ‎regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from new motor vehicles triggered permitting ‎requirements under the Clean Air Act for stationary sources that emit greenhouse gases."

In an order issued on October 30, 2013, the court told the six petitioners in the consolidated case to keep their legal briefs to 45,000 words total. This represents a substantial reduction from nine separate briefs of 15,000 words each, or 135,000 words total.

Among the EPA efforts that are threatened by this review are GHG emission limits for light-duty vehicles (tailpipe ‎rule) and large, stationary sources (timing and tailoring rules).

In 2007 the Supreme Court ruled that EPA has the authority to regulate GHG emissions ‎‎(Massachusetts v. EPA). However the recent Supreme Court decision to review the D.C. Circuit Court's ruling is a win for the brown economy and those opposed to GHG regulation.

The Supreme Court decision is at odds with US public opinion as a Hart Research Poll indicates that 74 percent of voters support EPA’s proposals to limit power plant emissions. That support cuts across states that supported Barack Obama (73 percent) and Mitt Romney (73 percent) as well as party identification (Democrats 92 percent, independents 72 percent, and Republicans 58 percent).

The court has not scheduled arguments yet, but they are likely to take place in February.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Event - Regulating Climate Change: The Supreme Court, Clean Air Act and EPA's Upcoming Greenhouse Gas Rules

Regulating Climate Change: The Supreme Court, Clean Air Act and EPA's Upcoming Greenhouse Gas Rules October 30, 2013 12 p.m. -1:15pm Faculty Club, D’Agostino Hall New York University School of Law 108 W 3rd St, New York, NY Registration is free, but required: RSVP.

 On October 15, the Supreme Court, by deciding to review only a narrow issue in an expansive DC Circuit Court decision on greenhouse gas regulation, has upheld the EPA's authority to regulate climate-altering pollution from both stationary and mobile sources. This panel will discuss the decision, the implications and the EPA's options in regulating climate change in the coming years.

Panelists:
  • Vickie Patton, General Counsel, Environmental Defense Fund; 
  • Jared Snyder, Assistant Commissioner, Air Resources, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation; 
  • Richard Revesz, Dean Emeritus and Professor; Director, Institute for Policy Integrity, NYU School of Law; Richard Stewart, University Professor; Director, Guarini Center on Environmental and Land Use Law, NYU School of Law. 
If you have questions, please email bryce.rudyk@nyu.edu. 

For building security purposes, please RSVP here.

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The Costs of Oil: BP Liable for up to 90 Billion

BP has been ordered to pay an unprecedented 4.5 billion in fines as the costs of their 2010 oil fiasco in the Gulf of Mexico continue to mount. On Thursday November 15, 2012, BP pleaded guilty to 14 felony counts related to the explosion and subsequent oil spill at the site of its Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The plea agreement with federal prosecutors includes charges of manslaughter for the 11 workers who were killed and one felony count for obstruction of justice for false statements made to Congress about the amount of oil leaking from the out-of-control well.

The breakdown of the 4.5 billion in fines is as follows:

  • $2.4 billion for is to be paid to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation for environmental restoration, preservation, and conservation efforts throughout the affected area
  • $1.3 billion in criminal fines, which the company would pay out in installments over five years
  • $350 million is to be paid to the National Academy of Sciences over five years
  • $525 million civil penalty satisfies a Securities and Exchange Commission charge that BP had obstructed Congress by lying to Congress about the amount of oil flowing from the well
BP's cleanup efforts have already cost the company nearly $18 billion which are part of $42 billion in pre-tax accounting charges the company has taken. Here is a partial breakdown:
  • 4.5 billion announced on November 15 (the largest corporate criminal penalty in U.S. history)
  • $15 billion that BP has paid so far into a $20 billion trust fund to compensate victims of the spill
  • $7.8 billion settlement for private injury claims from roughly 100,000 fishermen and other business owners in the Gulf region that were affected by the spill
Other civil claims are still pending and they could amount to tens of billions in additional penalties. Potential civil claims under the Clean Water Act allows for fines ranging from $1,100 to $4,300 per barrel (and even higher end if gross negligence is determined) which could amount to additional fines of $20 billion.

These are not the only fines that could be levied, there could also be federal and state sanctions under the Natural Resource Damages Act, and assorted private civil claims, securities claims, or state economic loss claims.

Estimates for the total amount of penalties that BP will ultimately have to pay reach as high as $90 billion. Claims may also be filed against BP's corporate partners including the rig owner Transocean and the well services company Halliburton.

In addition to the fines levied against BP, individuals are also being held accountable. three former BP employees are facing felony charges of manslaughter and obstruction of justice. Two of the three men could face up to 10 years in prison for each of the 11 deaths that resulted form the Deepwater Horizon explosion.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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