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Throwing Shade: The Case Against Judicial Interference With Solar Net Metering Policies

Electric utilities are increasingly invoking the takings clause, general notions of fairness, and fears of a “death spiral” in their attempts to erode the efficacy of net metering policies. This Article considers each of these arguments and concludes they are best addressed through the political process, as courts applying the takings clause are ill-equipped to address the minutiae of the ratemaking process. Threats of takings litigation only serve to push risk-averse regulators to create inefficient outcomes.

The Supreme Court’s Stay of the Clean Power Plan: Economic Assessment and Implications for the Future

The Clean Power Plan (CPP) is expected to play an important role in reducing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. In February 2016, responding to appeals from some of the affected industries and states, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a stay suspending implementation of the CPP until after the judicial review process. Industry groups stated the CPP will pose large and “irreparable” costs to the coal sector during the period of judicial review.

Brownfields to Green: A Proposal for Redevelopment of Brownfields Property for Natural Resource Value

There are many sites in the United States that are blighted or undeveloped because of actual or perceived environmental contamination. Often, these sites are “orphans,” without existing owners having the wherewithal to undertake responsibility for environmental remediation. Federal and state laws developed since the 1980s placed strict responsibility for remediation costs on many types of parties associated with such sites, including subsequent owners with no involvement in the acts that caused the contamination.

Climate Change in the Endangered Species Act: A Jurisprudential Enigma

When the ESA was drafted, no one could have foreseen climate change, much less thought seriously about how the ESA should address species loss on a warming earth. Climate change blows up the ESA’s operative mandate for federal agencies to prevent human disturbance of especially vulnerable species. Species loss due to climate change operates on an altogether different paradigm, muddling all causal connections between human actions and harm to a particular species.

The ESA Today: Eco-Pragmatism and State Conservation Efforts

In 2010, FWS found listing the greater sage-grouse under the ESA was “warranted but precluded” by other ESA priorities. In an effort to avoid future listing, one of the largest voluntary conservation efforts was undertaken by state and federal agencies, private landowners, industry, and environmental groups to protect grouse habitat. After a status review, in the fall of 2015 FWS determined listing the grouse was not warranted.

Avoiding the Contribution “Catch-22”: CERCLA Administrative Orders for Cleanup Are Civil Actions

Under CERCLA, nonsettling parties and EPA take the position that the statute of limitations for a right of contribution can be triggered whenever the agency and a potentially responsible party sign an administrative order on consent (AOC). Although the overall costs of the settlement are not set, this view is that the statute of limitations expires three years from the signing of the order no matter how long it takes to fully comply with the order. This amounts to an AOC recipient’s “Catch-22” and is an incorrect interpretation of the statute.

Creating Legal Pathways to a Zero-Carbon Future

An essential part of the decarbonization challenge is proposing, analyzing, and comparing various legal pathways to that result in each individual country. Those legal pathways should be capable of reducing greenhouse gas emissions at a speed and scale needed to give the world its best chance of keeping the global average temperature increase below 2°C while also producing as many economic, social, environmental, and security benefits as possible.

“Waters of the United States” and the Agricultural Production Sector: Sweeping Change or More of the Same?

EPA and the Corps’ promulgation of a new definition of “waters of the United States” under the CWA has prompted a fierce rhetorical and legal debate. EPA maintains that the agencies’ jurisdiction may actually be limited by the new definition, while agricultural organizations maintain that jurisdiction is increased in violation of the agencies’ statutory authority. While heavily engaged in public dialogue, neither side has attempted to offer a systematic legal analysis comparing the scope of jurisdiction under the preexisting rule to its scope under the final rule.

How to Communicate Scientific Uncertainty

Scientific uncertainty is a component of many environmental and public health issues, such as climate change or the use of biotechnology. While some uncertainty is inevitable, the ways in which various professions communicate uncertainty also shape those debates, from the interpretation of scientific data to its dissemination for a mass audience to its use in advocacy and policymaking. Scientists, lawyers, and journalists all play different roles in addressing scientific uncertainty, in part due to differing professional norms and ethical standards.