How, Exactly, Has Trump Gone After EVs?

A close look at the Administration’s wreckage, in six steps

The second Trump Administration has brought a flood of obstacles to the national effort to transition away from petroleum-powered vehicles to electric vehicles (EVs). These challenges have come in many forms across multiple levels of government; they are in most cases completely unprecedented, and in many cases legally dubious (to put it mildly).  The push to electrify in the US was on precarious but improving footing before Trump took office. The recent legislative,...

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Harmful Activities, the Duty to Rescue, and Climate Change

A concept from tort law suggests another argument for international climate adaptation funding.

Climate change will require massive investments in higher sea walls, stronger levees, stronger disaster responses, and other adaptation measures.  Poorer countries can’t shoulder those expenses. Do countries that caused past carbon emissions have a duty to help pay for adaptation and disaster response?  Much of the argument about this is phrased in terms of compensation for past emissions not unlike arguments that oil companies should pay damages for oil spills. Tort...

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Blow Your Mind on Space Pics to Save the World

NASA

The Drain is a weekly roundup of environmental and climate news from Legal Planet.

Hope, optimism, humility and awe have been in short supply. This week, I felt all of these things not once but twice — first while sitting in the dark at the movies and again while watching the NASA livestream of Artemis II’s lunar flyby. There is nothing like space exploration to change your frame of reference. First, the Hollywood version: I was pleasantly surprised by “Project Hail Mary,” the Ryan Gosling sci-fi blockbuster based on the Andy Weir book o...

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Climate Issues in the 2026 Governor’s Race: Wildfire

Creator: Javier Alonso Huerta

Sixth in a series of posts outlining key challenges and opportunities facing California’s next governor.

Eighteen of California’s 20 most destructive wildfires have occurred in the past 25 years, driven by decades of fire suppression, climate change, and continued development in the wildland-urban interface (WUI). The 2025 Los Angeles fires alone took at least 31 lives and caused property and capital losses ranging from $95 billion to $164 billion. The next governor will confront a rapidly evolving wildfire crisis with cascading implications for utility regulation, in...

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California Has a Neighborhood Decarbonization Law. How Does It Work?

New FAQ from UCLA outlines what we know (and don’t know) about the implementation of SB 1221, California’s landmark neighborhood decarbonization law.

By Sooji Yang, Lauren Dunlap, Elias van Emmerick, and Gregory Pierce The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) is currently navigating a wide array of questions from stakeholders as it designs a first-of-its-kind program to transition entire blocks of buildings from natural gas to zero-emission alternatives. Guidelines for the pilot program—a central component of Senate Bill (SB) 1221—must be finalized by this July. But its mandate is unprecedented. Wh...

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‘Smog and Sunshine’: Achieving Clean Air in California

UCLA's Ann Carlson discusses her new book and how the state can address federal efforts to undo its emissions standards.

Los Angeles is famous for both sunshine and smog. Turns out the two are related. Ozone pollution is caused by the interaction of sunlight and the chemicals that come out of vehicle tailpipes and factory smokestacks. But when Ann Carlson’s family first moved to Southern California, nobody knew what caused smog and there were no laws on the books to prevent it. “I lived through the smoggiest decades of Los Angeles in the 1960s, all the way into the 1990s, and I...

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The Promise of Non-Pipeline Alternatives to Gas Lines

A new UCLA Law brief evaluates the Home Energy Choice Act (AB 2313) by California Assemblymember Marc Berman.

This post was co-written by Guest Contributor Maeve Anderson (J.D. Candidate 2026, UCLA School of Law). California’s transition away from natural gas is accelerating, with new policy tools emerging to speed the shift and ease the financial burden on ratepayers. In February 2026, California Assemblymember Marc Berman introduced the Home Energy Choice Act (AB 2313), a bill that would require utilities to offer customers a financial incentive to electrify their hom...

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Never Give Up! Every Ton of Carbon We Can Cut Still Matters

It’s easy to be disheartened when we miss climate targets. But climate change isn’t a yes/no thing. It’s a matter of degree.

It’s easy to lose heart about our prospects for limiting climate change. The US has pulled out of international climate negotiations. Most of the countries that joined the Paris Agreement have missed targets , targets that weren’t aggressive enough in the first place.  The 1.5° target is already basically out of reach.  Is it time to give up on slowing climate change and focus on adapting to it?  The answer is no.  Here's why we need to continue the fight to red...

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California Climate Leadership

Photo by Joshua Hibbert on Unsplash

Time for California to step it up.

California has been a leader in climate change action for decades.  And, that leadership has made an impact.  A few examples:  AB 32 (2006) was one of the first comprehensive climate action laws in the world; Tesla, despite Musk’s protestations, was the result of California’s climate and clean air regulations; cap & trade, whatever you might think of it, created a market mechanism copied around the world; the Low Carbon Fuel Standard generated alternative fuel...

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The Path to Abundance, Part VI

Abundance reforms at the federal level may have the most political success if they are low-salience, and elite driven

This is the sixth post in a series of six posts.  The first post is here.  The second post is here.  The third post is here.  The fourth post is here.  The fifth post is here. As I discussed in my last blog post, the politics of abundance reform are difficult.  Reform often requires short-term concrete sacrifices by voters of popular policies for long-term diffuse benefits.  It will involve consensus about what abundance is lacking, and how to manage the tradeo...

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