The Bain-ality of Romney’s Capitalism

Trying to be fair and balanced, Dan says that we should be at least a little heartened by Bain Capital's environmental posture.  I try to be fair, but in modern politics that rarely means being balanced (cue joke here), and I am somewhat less impressed. Look, I like recycling as much as the next guy (although maybe not as much as the next gal), and I think it's great that Bain says it wants to be carbon-neutral in its own operations.  If there are some firms that wa...

CONTINUE READING

Bain and the Environment

We've been hearing a lot about Bain Capital because of the Romney connection.  I thought it would be interesting to see what I could find about Bain and the environment.  I thought I might find that Bain shared Romney's (current) anti-environmental views, but apparently not.  Here's what it says on Bain's webpage: We have worked with clients involved in all forms of renewable energy generation, fuel production and associated services. Our work is growing rapidly at ov...

CONTINUE READING

Where does NOAA belong?

Cross-posted at CPRBlog. Clearly I need to slow down Rick's internet connection to get him to stop scooping me. Rick reported earlier today that the President has floated a proposal to reorganize the Commerce Department and related agencies which would apparently include moving NOAA (all of NOAA, according to OMB's Jeffrey Zeints, not just its ESA functions) into the Department of Interior. Actually, although that's the way the story is being spun out in the media, it...

CONTINUE READING

Obama Administration Proposes Merging NOAA’s Endangered Species Act Functions Into Department of the Interior

As reported in today's Wall Street Journal, President Obama has proposed a major government reorganization merging into a single, cabinet-level agency federal trade and commerce responsibilities currently dispersed among a number of different agencies and departments. These reforms, which would require the consent of Congress to implement, would increase government efficiency and reduced federal expenditures. Hard to argue with that, at least in principle. Buried within...

CONTINUE READING

Ninth Circuit Upholds Oregon’s Measure 49 Against Takings Challenge

Seven years ago, Oregon's voters enacted Measure 37, a ballot initiative that essentially threatened to end all land use controls in the state.  Measure 37 stipulated that any land use control that reduces someone's property values must be compensated by the state, an extraordinary principle that threw the state's land use system into chaos.  Three years later, realizing what they had done, the voters enacted Measure 49 by an even wider margin, which substantially cut ...

CONTINUE READING

Can cap-and-trade break whaling gridlock?

In the current edition of Nature, researchers from UC Santa Barbara and Arizona State propose a market for whale harvest quotas (subscription required). Essentially, they would like to establish a kind of "cap-and-trade" system in permits to hunt whales. Their paper is getting a great deal of attention in the media, both in specialized outlets like ScienceInsider (subscription required) and mainstream ones like the Washington Post. In the Post story, Juliet Eilperin writ...

CONTINUE READING

Localized Renewable Energy Conference in San Diego, February 2nd

A heads-up for Legal Planet readers in the San Diego area (or those who would like to be in the San Diego area) on Thursday, February 2nd: the Environmental Law Section of the California State Bar will be holding a one-day conference on localized renewable energy generation at the University of San Diego School of Law. Confirmed speakers include: Robert Weisenmiller (Chairman of the California Energy Commission) Wade Crowfoot (Deputy Director of the Governor's Office ...

CONTINUE READING

The Very Hungry City

No -- not a children's book for an urban environmentalist.  A grown-up book published just yesterday for anyone interested in urban environmentalism, by the University of Vermont's Austin Troy.  Here's the blurb from the publisher (Yale): As global demand for energy grows and prices rise, a city's energy consumption becomes increasingly tied to its economic viability, warns the author of The Very Hungry City. Austin Troy, a seasoned expert in urban environmental mana...

CONTINUE READING

Guest blogger David Pettit: In the Weeds with GHGs

This post, by David Pettit of the Natural Resources Defense Council, is part of an occasional series by guest bloggers. As Ann Carlson and Rick Frank have previously blogged, on December 29th 2011, U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence J. O’Neill ruled that California’s low carbon fuel standard (LCFS) violates the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, on its face, by both discriminating against out-of-state corn ethanol and crude oil and regulating activities occur...

CONTINUE READING

Will Expanded Federal Transit Financing Result In More Toll Roads?

In a time of infrastructure needs and scaled-back public sector budgets, finding dollars for public transit projects can be a challenge.  Transit advocates hit on a great formula, however, starting in Los Angeles with the "30/10" Plan.  30/10 would allow Los Angeles to build 30 years worth of sales tax-funded transit projects in 10 years, with the help of federal loans that would be paid back from the sales tax.  The concept went national as many jurisdictions with lo...

CONTINUE READING

TRENDING