Permitting Reform and the Incidence of NEPA as a Source of “Delays”
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Federico Holm
1w ago
Since the passage of landmark legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law during the Biden administration, we’ve repeatedly heard that we’re at a critical junction: There is a need to expand and accelerate environmental, climate, and clean energy policy implementation and opportunities to do so, but the pathway toward this goal will be plagued by significant delays. The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) has become a common scapegoat in this fight, with critics charging that the sometimes lengthy and complicated environmental review process NEPA req ..read more
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Climate Policy and the Audacity of Hope
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Daniel Farber
1w ago
The bad news is that we’re not yet on track to avoid dangerous climate change. But there’s also good news: We’ve taken important steps that will ease further progress. We should resist the allure of easy optimism, given the scale of the challenges. Neither should we wallow in despair. There’s a good basis for hope. The post Climate Policy and the Audacity of Hope appeared first on Center for Progressive Reform ..read more
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EPA’s New Power Plant Rules Have Dropped. What Happens Next?
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Daniel Farber
2w ago
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a cluster of new rules designed to limit carbon emissions from power generators. Once upon a time, the presumption would have been that the rules would quietly go into effect, until someday a court rules on their validity. These days, we can expect a lot of action to begin almost right away. The post EPA’s New Power Plant Rules Have Dropped. What Happens Next? appeared first on Center for Progressive Reform ..read more
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The New EPA Car Rule Doesn’t Violate the Major Questions Doctrine
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Daniel Farber
1M ago
In West Virginia v. EPA, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Obama-era Clean Power Plan. The heart of the ruling was that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had engaged in a power grab, basing an unprecedented expansion of its regulatory authority on an obscure provision of the statute. Conservative groups have claimed since then that virtually every government regulation raises a major question. But the doctrine cannot be read that broadly. In particular, the doctrine does not apply to the emission standards for cars that EPA issued last week. As EPA explains in its prologue to ..read more
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North Carolina Needed an Emissions Reduction Plan. They Asked a Utility Company to Create It.
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Sophie Loeb
1M ago
Today, the Center for Progressive Reform is publishing a new policy brief. Missing the Mark: How North Carolina’s Decarbonization Efforts Fall Short and How to Fix Them examines the pitfalls of North Carolina’s decarbonization plan (known as the Carbon Plan and developed by Duke Energy) and alternative models to address those shortcomings. The post North Carolina Needed an Emissions Reduction Plan. They Asked a Utility Company to Create It. appeared first on Center for Progressive Reform ..read more
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Chevron Gets the Headlines, But State Farm May Be More Important
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Daniel Farber
1M ago
The Chevron doctrine requires judges to defer to an agency’s interpretation of a statute if that interpretation is reasonable. The State Farm case, which is much less widely known, requires courts to defer to an agency’s expert judgment unless its reasoning has ignored contrary evidence or has a logical hole. As you probably already know, two cases now before the Court will probably result in abandoning or revamping Chevron. But the “abortion pill” case that will be argued today will test the Court’s adherence to State Farm. Will the conservative Justices stand by State Farm even when doing so ..read more
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What Three Ohio Counties Can Tell Us About a Major Obstacle to Our Clean Energy Future
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Federico Holm
1M ago
My colleagues at the Center for Progressive Reform and I recently published a report and interactive map examining how local ordinances that restrict clean energy development can impose major obstacles in our efforts toward a just clean energy transition. Among the many important findings in our report, we highlighted the high degree of variability that exists between states in the way large-scale clean energy generation is regulated. In some cases, like Illinois and Michigan, governments have empowered state authorities to override local siting measures; other states have given local governme ..read more
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Op-ed: Whether the Government Requires It or Not, Greenhouse Gas Disclosures Are Here to Stay 
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by Victor Flatt
2M ago
Last week, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) released its long-awaited final rule requiring publicly traded companies to report certain climate risks and greenhouse gas emissions as part of their financial risk disclosures. The post Op-ed: Whether the Government Requires It or Not, Greenhouse Gas Disclosures Are Here to Stay  appeared first on Center for Progressive Reform ..read more
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The Ideological Warfare Behind the Attack on Chevron Deference: Part 3
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by James Goodwin
2M ago
As discussed in yesterday’s post, the contemporary conservative movement is prepared to use legal battles over esoteric administrative law doctrines, such as Chevron deference, as a tool of ideological warfare. Importantly, though, these battles present progressives with a great opportunity to engage at the ideological level as well. After all, progressives have been busy developing their own competing vision of what our constitutional democracy should look like. They should seize the opportunity presented by the fight over Chevron deference’s future to articulate and advance that vision. The ..read more
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The Ideological Warfare Behind the Attack on Chevron Deference: Part 2
Center for Progressive Reform Blog
by James Goodwin
2M ago
In Part 1 of this three-part series, I introduced the rapidly boiling legal battle over a once-obscure administrative law doctrine known as Chevron deference. Much of the commentary to this point has focused on the political motivations behind the conservative attack on Chevron deference. In this second post, I will take a closer look at how conservatives have carefully crafted this battle (and their broader war on the administrative state) to promote their distinctive brand of ideological thought. The post The Ideological Warfare Behind the Attack on Chevron Deference: Part 2 appeared first o ..read more
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