Menu

In the News

  • LNG is Surging. Can FΕRC Reviews Keep Up?

    Several attorneys and FERC watchers see an ambiguous directive in the law governing FERC’s oversight of LNG. The language was last updated in 2005, at a time when virtually no natural gas was being exported from the continental U.S. While the law — the Natural Gas Act — directs FERC to “issue or deny” applications to site LNG import and export terminals, it gives the commission “absolutely zero guidance” for how to make that decision, said Jennifer Danis, federal energy policy director at the Institute for Policy Integrity.

  • Digging Into the Proposed Circular A-4 Update

    Through its approach to discounting, distribution, and transboundary effects — as well as numerous other updates — a proposed update to Circular A-4 would modernize regulatory review to be consistent with the latest available research and President Biden’s regulatory priorities.

  • US Supreme Court to Review Deference to Agencies; Energy Implications Unclear

    A Supreme Court ruling that overturns the legal doctrine Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council could have wider implications for existing federal regulations, said Don Goodson, a senior attorney with New York University School of Law's Institute for Policy Integrity. "It would pose another practical difficulty in how much relitigation that would open up," Goodson said in an interview. At the same time, Goodson noted that Congress clearly intended to give agencies like the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission broad jurisdiction over areas such as interstate sales and transmission of electricity.

  • Friday is Workers Memorial Day 2023, a Time for Reflection and a Call to Action

    This coming Friday, April 28, is more than just another Friday. It is Workers Memorial Day, the day when people around the world pause, recognize, remember, and honor those workers who have paid the ultimate price—suffering, dying, or becoming disabled as a result of injuries and illnesses related to their jobs.

  • Biden’s Big Bet to Take on Coal Power

    EPA has previously set standards that require industries to invest in new types of pollution controls, said Dena Adler, an attorney with New York University’s Institute for Policy Integrity. “The history of the Clean Air Act is filled with regulations where technologies were projected to be very expensive,” she said. “And after the regulations came down, industry figured out how to install these control technologies better and cheaper.”

  • Biden’s Risky Effort To Take On Coal

    The upcoming rule from the Environmental Protection Agency is expected to depend on rarely used technology for capturing power plants’ greenhouse gas pollution. It will have to survive the conservative Supreme Court that hobbled the EPA’s regulatory powers just 10 months ago. An EPA standard based on carbon capture would be “entirely different” from the Obama regulation’s demand that utilities switch to cleaner fuel sources. Capturing pollution at the source “is really the bread and butter of the Clean Air Act and the type of regulation that EPA has been issuing for decades,” said Dena Adler, an attorney with New York University's Institute for Policy Integrity. 

  • Biden Tailpipe Emission Rules Face ‘Major Questions’ Legal Wave

    An ambitious Biden administration’s plan to clean up emissions from a heavily polluting transportation sector will face industry litigation, but environmental lawyers see the rule holding up during eventual challenges. But the rule is not as transformative as some claim, which provides it with insulation from future claims that the rule raises “major questions,” according to Meredith Hankins, an attorney for the Institute for Policy Integrity, who said the action is rooted in tried-and-true Clean Air Act authority. The Clean Air Act has always been “technology-forcing,” and electric vehicles are squarely in the same vein as catalytic converter emission controls were when they were first mandated for vehicles, Hankins said.

  • 4 Takeaways From New EPA Vehicle Emissions Rule

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's ratcheting up of greenhouse gas emissions standards for vehicles reflects the Biden administration's push to electrify the automotive sector, but the agency's aggressive approach will raise legal and practical questions. Not only are the proposed rules more stringent than the current standards that run through the 2026 model year, but the current ones are also largely undoing rollbacks by the Trump administration, said Meredith Hankins, a senior attorney at the Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law who focuses on air quality and transportation.

  • White House Bolsters Review Process for Power Sector, Other Rules With Expanded Cost-Benefit Analysis

    The update to how agencies assess costs and benefits of proposed regulations will help ensure that economic analysis applies state-of-the-art approaches to a range of issues, from valuing future impacts to considering distribution and equity, according to Max Sarinsky, senior attorney at the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law. 

  • As EPA Proposes Tailpipe Rule, Legal Battle Well Underway

    “It's tricky to know how it's going to play out until the Supreme Court decides another major questions case,” said Meredith Hankins, a senior attorney at New York University's Institute for Policy Integrity, which supports the Biden EPA's rules.
    But Hankins said both the near-term rule and EPA’s forthcoming post-2027 regulation are extending strategies used in prior rules.
    “EPA has been issuing these greenhouse gas regulations for almost 15 years at this point,” they said. “And every single rule, they've indicated that they expect increasing numbers of electric vehicles.”