Overnight Energy & Environment

Energy & Environment — Supreme Court rules in major climate case

The Supreme Court curbed what powers the Environmental Protection Agency has to regulate climate change. We’ll look at the ruling’s fallout and further implications. 

This is Overnight Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. For The Hill, we’re Rachel Frazin and Zack BudrykSubscribe here.

Court curbs EPA’s power to regulate power plants 

The Supreme Court on Thursday curbed the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) ability to regulate climate change, setting limits on how the agency can deal with power plants.

The legal weeds: At issue in the case was language in the Clean Air Act that enables the EPA to regulate power plants using a “best system of emissions reduction” and what specifically that system can entail.

In Thursday’s ruling, the court took a regulatory tool off the table for the Biden administration, which is currently working on its own power plant regulations. 


Legal experts recently told The Hill that preventing the EPA from using certain climate tools could result in regulations that allow more planet-warming emissions overall. 

The liberal justice disagreed: Justice Elena Kagan, writing a dissent for the three liberal justices on Thursday, said the majority was constraining the federal government’s ability to address carbon emissions during a time of crisis.

Read more about the decision here from Rachel and The Hill’s Harper Neidig.

BIDEN PLEDGES ACTION DESPITE ‘DEVASTATING’ RULING

President Biden on Thursday pledged to carry on with climate action despite the Supreme Court restricting how his administration can respond to global warming.

What about Regan? EPA Administrator Michael Regan similarly said in a statement Thursday that he was “committed to using the full scope of EPA’s authorities to protect communities and reduce the pollution that is driving climate change.”

Climate hawks call for change:  

Meanwhile, Republicans celebrated a limit to ‘overreaching’ regulations

Read more on Biden’s response and how the ruling angered Democrats.

Climate ruling puts other regs at risk

The Supreme Court’s Thursday decision curtailing the EPA’s authority could hamper regulations far beyond climate

The conservative majority in the 6-3 ruling found that an Obama-era power plant rule was not permissible since it didn’t have “clear congressional authorization.”

But legal experts say this principle could be applied elsewhere, restricting the Biden administration from imposing other regulations in areas including health and consumer protections.

The high court’s ruling invoked a legal philosophy called the “major questions doctrine,” which posits that regulations of substantial national significance need to have clear authorization from Congress.

This is not the first time the idea has popped up — it recently made an appearance in the court’s decision to block the Biden administration’s coronavirus vaccines-or-testing mandate for large employers.

But William Buzbee, a law professor at Georgetown, said the Supreme Court took a new approach with its ruling Thursday.

Read more about the potential regulatory implications here.

WHAT WE’RE READING

That’s it for today, thanks for reading. Check out The Hill’s Energy & Environment page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you tomorrow.

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