Huge Snub for Big Oil at the Supreme Court

The supreme court and the shell oil logo

Oil companies failed to persuade the justices to shield them from the growing number of state lawsuits seeking damages for the harms caused by climate change.

Big Oil has failed to persuade the U.S. Supreme Court to shield it from numerous state climate lawsuits filed across the country seeking damages for the harms caused by climate change — harms like the historic, supercharged urban fires burning in Los Angeles.  The justices held a conference on Friday, January 10 to determine whether to weigh in on this state climate litigation against oil companies — specifically whether to hear arguments in their appeal of a...

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DOGE: A Dodgy Path to Deregulation

It's supposed to be cost-saving, but the savings are trivial on the scale of the federal budget.

Musk and Ramaswami have said that their DOGE project will cut the federal budget by eliminating unnecessary regulations and cutting regulatory agencies. Putting aside what “unnecessary” means here, that’s not even going to be a downpayment on the kind of budget cuts they’re seeking. The numbers are pretty simple. Suppose they eliminated EPA entirely. That would be a $10 billion saving. Sounds like a lot.  But the Dogematic Duo talked  about $2 trillion in cu...

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A Way Forward?

Reducing the Number of Decisions Could Accelerate Fire Management

This is the third of a series of three posts on how to do more to reduce fire risks on federal lands.  The first post is here, the second post is here. In addressing the increasing risks of wildfire, we certainly need to scale up the resources we apply to the problem, doing more prescribed burns and other forms of active management.  However, we also use our resources more efficiently.  Environmental review and compliance do take resources, and they are many occasi...

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Fire and Permitting Reform

Addressing the difficult parts, regulation and litigation

This is the second of three posts on proposed legislation to address the fire crisis on federal lands (the first post is here).  Last post, I talked about why this legislation is essential, and the strengths of the bill that the House passed last Congress.  In this post, I’ll talk about the parts of the legislation that were controversial and their potential problems.  These were the parts of the legislation that sought to narrow the application of the National Envi...

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The Urgent Need to Address Fire Risk

We need legislative action to accelerate fire risk reduction in general

The Manchin-Barrasso energy permitting bill that I’ve posted about is not the only permitting reform bill that died with the last Congress.  The House had passed the “Fix Our Forests Act,” legislation sponsored by Rep. Bruce Westerman, a Republican from Arkansas, with a focus on trying to reduce fire risks on federal (and other) lands.  While it is unlikely that permitting reform will be part of any reconciliation process, some sort of legislation is likely to re...

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The Fires in Los Angeles

Wildfire policy and the tragic fires in Southern California?

National attention is (rightly) focused on the terrible fire situation in Los Angeles.  At the moment, the top priority is supporting first responders who are trying to control the fires, prevent more damage, and help the people who have lost homes and loved ones. There is (of course) a bunch of chatter on social media about what might have prevented the fires or “fix” the wildfire crisis in the US more broadly.  Some of that commentary has been helpful, some…...

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LA Fires and the Climate Connection

New UCLA research connects the dots between the climate crisis and the supercharged LA wildfires. "Hydroclimate whiplash" means worse floods, droughts, and fires.

Like millions of Angelenos, I’ve been staying indoors and off the roads, glued to the Watch Duty app, radio, and TV coverage as LA is engulfed by these historic fires. The last 48 hours of coverage has focused, understandably, on the firefight and immediate devastation. Now, it’s time to start hearing about the climate connection, especially from local officials, policymakers, and the TV news anchors that so many people turn to for information during scary urban ...

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Government by Reconciliation  

The reconciliation process avoids the risk of a Senate filibuster. But it comes wth procedural and political complications.

These days, legislation normally needs sixty votes to pass the Senate. This can be a huge barrier. But there’s an exception: the reconciliation process allows taxing and spending measures to pass the Senate on a majority vote. Republicans have big plans to use reconciliation to advance their agenda. That would certainly have advantages for them, but they’re also going to face some serious challenges. Procedural Limits on Reconciliation The first issue faced by ...

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A Crisis in Climate Communications

Deadly windstorms, wildfires, and hurricanes constitute something more horrific than just “climate change.”

What’s best for communicating urgency: phrases like “global warming” and “climate change” or “climate crisis” and “climate emergency”? What do audiences take away from these semantic choices? Does it matter what words we use? What about when the entire nation is watching a series of wildfires engulf Los Angeles, fueled by unusually dry vegetation during what used to be the wet season? I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about these questions. And...

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What policies lead to greenhouse gas emissions declines?

A recent study emphasizes the role of policy mixes in driving short-term emissions reductions

In a series of posts (beginning here, and ending here) last month, I outlined an approach to climate policy that emphasizes the role of subsidies in building political support and technological progress for climate policy.  In doing so, I drew heavily on existing political science research and case studies from North America and Europe.  But another fruitful approach for climate policy research can be studies that look at policies and emissions results from a large num...

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