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  • SEC Gets New Call to Mandate Corporate Climate Disclosures

    Guidance on voluntary disclosures the Securities and Exchange Commission issued in 2010 hasn’t led to “comparable, specific, and decision-useful” climate-risk reporting from companies, the New York University School of Law’s Institute for Policy Integrity and the Environmental Defense Fund said in the report released Thursday. “We’re trying to make a clear case for why additional regulation is needed, despite the popularity of voluntary programs, despite the existing guidance,” said report co-author Jack Lienke, the regulatory policy director at the Institute for Policy Integrity.

  • Academics Urge Biden to Tie SCC Update to Broader Cost-Benefit Fixes

    Legal and economic experts, including NYU's Richard Revesz, are urging the Biden administration to couple its year-long process to bolster the federal government's approach to the social cost of carbon climate damages metric with a broader overhaul of cost-benefit review procedures, arguing such an approach could shield any changes from legal challenges.

  • IPI Outlines Steps for EPA to Bolster Climate-Related Equity Analyses

    The Institute for Policy Integrity (IPI) at New York University School of Law is out with a new report aimed at helping EPA and other federal agencies improve climate-related environmental justice (EJ) analyses, in line with a new executive order (EO) from President Joe Biden seeking to elevate both issues. The report also assesses the original Clinton-era EO issued in 1994 on EJ and provides detailed guidance for how agencies can conduct better EJ analysis going forward in line with Biden’s goals.

  • Can Biden Transmission Order Avoid State Backlash?

    "The question is, do the folks in charge at the Energy Department and does FERC really want to push this and risk the backlash?" said Alexandra Klass, a law professor at the University of Minnesota. "Maybe the answer is yes." A December paper from the New York University School of Law's Institute for Policy Integrity and Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy concluded that needed long-distance transmission can be developed by applying existing federal legal authorities.

  • Canada Plans Hydropower Push as Biden Looks to Clean Up U.S. Grid

    When more renewable energy comes online, power storage facilities that Canada’s reservoirs provide to the U.S. grid should become even more valuable. “There’s this version of Canadian hydro not only being firm (capacity) but being something like a battery. That’s the big picture informing the vision of some policymakers,” said Justin Gundlach, senior attorney at the New York University School of Law’s Institute for Policy Integrity.

  • White House to Steer Environmental Policy with Senior Leaders

    Jayni Hein, a former law professor at the New York University School of Law and natural resources director at the Institute for Policy Integrity, has become the council’s senior director for the National Environmental Policy Act, known as NEPA. Part of her role will be to steer a path through the sweeping changes the Trump administration made to NEPA—or possibly to quarterback a rewrite of them.

  • CEQ Adds Staffers with Agency, Hill and Academic Chops

    Jayni Hein will serve as Counsel and Senior Director for the National Environmental Policy Act. She was most recently the natural resources director at the Institute for Policy Integrity and an adjunct professor at the New York University School of Law. 

  • Fossil Fuel Pollution Kills 8.7 Million a Year, Twice Previous Estimate

    This research might have been prevented from informing public health policy but for a federal court in Montana, which last week vacated a rule written by the EPA under former President Donald Trump that barred scientific research based on standard, anonymized health data from consideration in its work. “The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to rely on this important study is significantly enhanced as a result,” said Richard Revesz, director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at NYU School of Law, of the court case.

  • Contentious Trump-Era ‘Secret Science’ Rule Struck Down

    Experts at the New York University Law School’s Institute for Policy Integrity agreed that the ‘censored science’ rule would have seriously constricted the EPA from considering important scientific evidence in a wide range of environmental rulemakings. In a statement, Richard Revesz, who directs the NYU institute, described the rule as ‘one of the Trump administration’s most brazen efforts to undermine the scientific foundations of regulatory policy’.

  • The Latest Trump EPA Rule to Get Tossed? The “Secret Science” Ban.

    "The 'censored science' rule was one of the Trump administration's most brazen efforts to undermine the scientific foundations of regulatory policy," Richard Revesz, director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University, said in a statement on Monday. "Today, the Trump anti-science effort, which had been opposed by the leadership of major scientific organizations, was quickly dispatched."