Month: January 2010

ELQ Volume 36, Number 4 available

The latest issue of Ecology Law Quarterly, Volume 36, Number 4, is now available online. Articles in this issue include: Judson Jaffe, Matthew Ranson & Robert N. Stavins, Linking Tradable Permit Systems: A Key Element of Emerging International Climate Policy Architecture Jonathan Nash, Allocation and Uncertainty: Strategic Responses to Environmental Grandfathering Tim Lindl, Letting Solar …

CONTINUE READING

Carbon Tweets

Do you twitter?  If so, you might be interested in this feature at the Washington Post, which aggregates tweets relating to climate issues.

CONTINUE READING

Supreme Court takes another NEPA remedies case

The U.S. Supreme Court has granted review of the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms. The grant is pretty clearly a follow-up to Winter v. NRDC, the sonar case from last term, in which the Court reversed an injunction the Ninth Circuit had imposed limiting  the use of mid-frequency active sonar …

CONTINUE READING

What’s in Your Toothpaste?

A new UCLA study raises health concerns about a nanomaterial found in a broad range of consumer products.  Nanoscale titanium dioxide, which is used in toothpaste, sunscreen, paint, cosmetics, vitamins, food coloring, and nutritional supplements, has not been extensively studied for its toxicological properties.  A team lead by Robert Schiestl, a professor of pathology, radiation oncology …

CONTINUE READING

Campaign to Suspend AB 32 Unlikely to Go Anywhere

Last Monday, the Wall Street Journal editorialized in favor of both a bill and a newly filed ballot initiative to suspend the implementation of California’s landmark greenhouse gas emissions legislation, AB 32, until the state’s unemployment rate falls from it’s current 12+ % to under 5.5% for four consecutive quarters.   On the same day the …

CONTINUE READING

Indian Federalism and Climate Change

Federalism is a hot topic (so to speak) for scholars working on climate change, but we have so far remained resolutely at home, focusing solely on American federalism.  It’s now time to start thinking about how federalism might impact India, which has maintained a federal system for more than 60 years, and has decentralized greatly in …

CONTINUE READING

Worth a click

The environmental news has been coming fast this week.  There’s too much for me to keep up with all of it, but here are some stories worth checking out. Time for federal bee regulation? The AP reports (in the LA Times) that the Xerces Society, Natural Resources Defense Council, Defenders of Wildlife and a UC …

CONTINUE READING

Where Do We Go After Copenhagen?

Berkeley will be holding an interdisciplinary conference of climate change experts on January 28 to sort out the aftermath of Copenhagen.  The participants will include faculty in law, political science, economics, public policy, and engineering.  For more details about the conference or to RSVP, click here.

CONTINUE READING

The lasting legacy of DDT

Picking up on Dan’s theme that “it ain’t over till it’s over,” sometimes that’s a good thing, as with the prospects for U.S. climate change legislation, but sometimes it’s a bad thing. An example comes from the journal Nature, which recently carried a news story about DDT (subscription required). DDT, once widely used as an …

CONTINUE READING

The Politics of Climate Change: It Ain’t Over Till It’s Over

There’s been a lot of talk about whether federal climate change legislation is dead for this session. Bradford Plummer at the New Republic makes a pretty good case that the legislation is still alive and kicking: That said, there don’t seem to be any signs that Democrats are planning to relent just yet. A few …

CONTINUE READING

TRENDING