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Energy
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October 08, 2025
Trump Tariffs Unconstitutional, Watchdog Tells Justices
Either President Donald Trump doesn't have authority to impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or the law is unconstitutional, the nonprofit group Consumer Watchdog told the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday, urging the justices to affirm lower court rulings deeming those measures unlawful.
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October 08, 2025
Defunct Coke Co. To Pay $700K For Skipped Pollution Monitor
A defunct Pennsylvania coal processor will pay the federal government $700,000 in fines after its employees admitted to bypassing pollution controls at an Erie coke plant, according to court records.
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October 08, 2025
Amazon Can't Nix Counterclaims In Calif. Solar Projects Battle
Amazon can't dodge counterclaims in a dispute over the fallout from power purchase pacts tied to two California solar developments, a Washington state judge has said, finding the projects' backers have adequately alleged the tech giant spoiled the deals by abusing its dominance in the renewable energy market.
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October 08, 2025
Utah Tribe Appeals Denial To Fight $16M Ovintiv Air Deal
The Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation is appealing a federal district court decision that denied its intervention to challenge a $16 million Clean Air Act consent decree between the U.S. government and Ovintiv USA Inc.
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October 08, 2025
Exxon Retail Voting Program Green Light Inspires Other Cos.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent green light of Exxon Mobil Corp.'s program to enable automated proxy voting for retail investors has sparked interest among other firms exploring implementing their own such programs, as the oil and gas giant moves to counter activist groups.
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October 08, 2025
Welder Asks Fla. High Court To Revive Whistleblower Claims
A welder mechanic asked the Florida Supreme Court on Wednesday to revive his whistleblower retaliation claims against his former employer, Gulf Power Co., arguing that state law requires only that he reasonably believed a violation of law or regulation occurred, not that he have to prove an actual violation.
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October 08, 2025
Oil Terminal Sale May Tank Conn. Climate Suit, Judge Hints
A Connecticut federal judge appeared sympathetic Wednesday to Pike Fuels' argument that an environmental nonprofit is not suing the correct party over alleged permit violations at a bulk storage and fuel terminal in New Haven, since the defendant sold the facility at issue more than a year ago.
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October 08, 2025
FirstEnergy Investors Seek Clarity On 6th Circ. Privilege Order
FirstEnergy investors asked the Sixth Circuit Wednesday to clarify a recent ruling blocking them from accessing internal investigation documents in a lawsuit over a $1 billion bribery scandal, arguing that the company is holding up depositions due to its misreading of the court's opinion.
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October 08, 2025
Battery Maker Enovix Gets Investor Suit Trimmed Again
A California federal judge has pared an investor lawsuit against lithium battery maker Enovix to a single claim, after finding that two allegedly misleading statements by the company about its production equipment testing were significantly taken out of context.
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October 08, 2025
Pioneer Used Winter Storm To Dodge Obligations, Court Told
Pioneer Natural Resources USA Inc. failed to meet its end of a natural gas sale contract and cannot use Winter Storm Uri to dodge its obligations, an energy trading company told a Texas federal court during closing statements on Wednesday.
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October 08, 2025
Heritage Coal's Ch. 11 Plan Ignores Enviro Laws, States Say
Maryland, Pennsylvania and the creditors committee of Heritage Coal have objected to its Chapter 11 liquidation plan, telling a Delaware bankruptcy judge that legal releases should be pared down and the states saying it doesn't address their environmental laws.
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October 08, 2025
Power Cos. Want In On Challenge To W.Va. Regional Haze Plan
American Electric Power Co. Inc. and FirstEnergy Corp. subsidiaries are asking the Fourth Circuit to uphold a federally approved air quality plan for West Virginia that spared their facilities from some potentially expensive upgrades.
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October 08, 2025
Biz Groups Back Ariz. Land Swap Amid 9th Circ. Appeal
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and a slew of mining associations are backing the federal government's efforts to nix a Ninth Circuit appeal that looks to block the transfer of more than 2,500 acres within Arizona's Tonto National Forest to a copper mining company.
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October 08, 2025
Retirees Can't Show Losses From Pension Deal, Judge Says
An aerospace materials manufacturer shouldn't face a proposed class action alleging it violated federal benefits law when it converted $1.5 billion in pension obligations to risky insurance-backed annuities, a Pennsylvania federal judge recommended Tuesday, saying retirees hadn't demonstrated that the transaction diminished their benefits.
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October 08, 2025
Fla. Reactor Owner Sues Feds For Spent Fuel Storage Costs
The owner of a shuttered nuclear reactor north of Tampa, Florida, hit the federal government with a suit seeking damages for the cost of storing radioactive waste the U.S. Department of Energy allegedly promised to take years ago.
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October 07, 2025
In Latest PacifiCorp Trial, 8 Ore. Fire Victims Seek Damages
The latest PacifiCorp wildfire trial started Tuesday with opening statements describing the fear, displacement and trauma experienced by eight people, including a jewelry maker and a competitive horseback rider.
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October 07, 2025
5th Circ. Queries If ChampionX Covered In $40M Oil Spill Suit
A Fifth Circuit panel Tuesday pressed ChampionX Corp. to explain how it can pursue a lawsuit in Texas seeking to make multiple insurers pay for its defense in a $40 million oil spill lawsuit if the underlying policies don't name it.
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October 07, 2025
Feds Sue SoCal Edison Over 2019 Saddleridge Wildfire Costs
The U.S. government filed a lawsuit Tuesday in California federal court over damage caused to National Forest System land by the 2019 Saddleridge Fire in Los Angeles County, saying Southern California Edison was responsible for the blaze.
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October 07, 2025
Puerto Rico Utility Bondholders Pull Out Of Reorg Deal
A group of Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority bondholders Tuesday informed a bankruptcy judge that they were following through on a promise to exit a restructuring agreement and join other bondholders in supporting an alternative bankruptcy plan for PREPA.
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October 07, 2025
4 Oral Argument Sessions Benefits Attys Should Watch In Oct.
The Second Circuit will hear from Teamsters looking to revive a proposed class action alleging mismanagement of a multiemployer pension plan, while Alcoa will ask the Seventh Circuit to overturn a ruling requiring the aluminum maker to cover union retirees' healthcare for life. Here, Law360 looks at four arguments that benefits attorneys should have on their radar this month.
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October 07, 2025
3 Firms Guide Real Estate-Focused SPAC's $200M IPO
Blank-check company BOA Acquisition Corp. II filed plans Monday for a $200 million initial public offering guided by Paul Hastings LLP, Maples and Calder LLP and Proskauer Rose LLP, saying it is seeking to invest directly in real estate and infrastructure assets.
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October 07, 2025
Senate Confirms FERC Republican Nominees
The U.S. Senate on Tuesday confirmed President Donald Trump's picks to fill Republican slots on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, giving the GOP a 3-2 majority at the agency.
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October 07, 2025
Duke Gas Rate Increase Was Improper, Ohio High Court Hears
Duke Energy's Ohio utility shouldn't be allowed to collect $17 million from ratepayers to cover now-shuttered underground caverns used to store propane, the state's utility consumer advocate told the Ohio Supreme Court on Tuesday.
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October 07, 2025
NJ Justices Won't Disturb Locke Lord Win In Oil Co.'s Suit
The New Jersey Supreme Court has declined to review a lower appellate court decision handing a victory to Locke Lord LLP over malpractice claims from an oil processing company on the grounds that the firm does not have a significant connection to New Jersey and cannot be sued in the state's courts.
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October 07, 2025
Mich. Court Scraps Ruling That Affirmed Solar Farm Permit
A Michigan state appeals court tossed a ruling that upheld a township's permit for an Invenergy subsidiary's industrial-scale solar farm, concluding that its board of trustees failed to sufficiently explain or provide a basis for its decision.
Expert Analysis
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Federal Construction Considerations Amid Policy Overhaul
The rapid overhaul of federal procurement, heightened domestic sourcing rules and aggressive immigration enforcement are reshaping U.S. construction, but several pragmatic considerations can help federal contractors engaged in infrastructure and public construction avoid the legal, financial and operational fallout, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.
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How Political Divisions Are Stalling Pa. Energy Development
Despite possessing the nation's second-largest natural gas reserves and a legacy of energy infrastructure, Pennsylvania faces a fragmented and politically charged path to developing the energy resources it will need in the future, thanks to legislative gridlock, divided public opinion and competing energy interests, says Andrew Levine at Stradley Ronon.
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How Trump's Trade Policies Are Shaping Foreign Investment
Five months into the Trump administration, investors are beginning to see the concrete effects of the president’s America First Investment Policy as it presents new opportunities for clearing transactions more quickly, while sustaining risk aversion related to Chinese trade and potentially creating different political risks, say attorneys at Covington.
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Justices Rewrite Rules For Challenging Enviro Agency Actions
Three recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings — Nuclear Regulatory Commission v. Texas, Oklahoma v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and EPA v. Calumet Shreveport Refining — form a jurisprudential watershed in administrative and environmental law, affirming statutory standing and venue provisions as the backbone of coherent judicial review, say attorneys at GableGotwals.
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Series
My Opera And Baseball Careers Make Me A Better Lawyer
Though participating in opera and the world of professional baseball often pulls me away from the office, my avocations improve my legal career by helping me perform under scrutiny, prioritize team success, and maintain joy and perspective at work, says Adam Unger at Herrick Feinstein.
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8 Ways Lawyers Can Protect The Rule Of Law In Their Work
Whether they are concerned with judicial independence, regulatory predictability or client confidence, lawyers can take specific meaningful actions on their own when traditional structures are too slow or too compromised to respond, says Angeli Patel at the Berkeley Center of Law and Business.
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Despite Dark Clouds, Outlook For US Solar Has Bright Spots
While tariff, tax policy and bankruptcy news seemingly portends unending challenges for the U.S. solar energy industry, signs of continued growth in solar generating capacity and domestic solar manufacturing suggest that there is a path forward, say attorneys at Beveridge & Diamond.
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Assessing New Changes To Texas Officer Exculpation Law
Consistent with Texas' recent modernization of its corporate law, the recently passed S.B. 2411 allows officer exculpation, streamlines certificate of formation amendments, authorizes representatives to act on shareholders' behalf in mergers and makes other changes aimed toward companies seeking a more codified, statutory model of corporate governance, say attorneys at Bracewell.
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ICSID Annulment Proceedings Carry High Stakes For System
The annulment proceedings brought by Freeport-McMoRan before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, seeking to redress a glaring and prejudicial oversight in its arbitral award against Peru, are significant for delimiting the boundaries of procedural fairness within the ICSID's annulment framework, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Communicating With Clients
Law school curricula often overlook client communication procedures, and those who actively teach this crucial facet of the practice can create exceptional client satisfaction and success, says Patrick Hanson at Wiggam Law.
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Justices' NRC Ruling Raises New Regulatory Questions
In Nuclear Regulatory Commission v. Texas, the U.S. Supreme Court avoided ruling on the NRC's authority to license private, temporary nuclear waste storage facilities — and this failure to reach the merits question creates new regulatory uncertainty where none had existed for decades, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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3 Judicial Approaches To Applying Loper Bright, 1 Year Later
In the year since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Chevron deference in its Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo decision, a few patterns have emerged in lower courts’ application of the precedent to determine whether agency actions are lawful, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.
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Bill Leaves Renewable Cos. In Dark On Farmland Reporting
A U.S. Senate bill to update disclosure requirements for foreign control of U.S. farmland does not provide much-needed guidance on how to report renewable energy development on agricultural property, leaving significant compliance risks for project developers, say attorneys at Hodgson Russ.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From US Rep. To Boutique Firm
My transition from serving as a member of Congress to becoming a partner at a boutique firm has been remarkably smooth, in part because I never stopped exercising my legal muscles, maintained relationships with my former colleagues and set the right tone at the outset, says Mondaire Jones at Friedman Kaplan.
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Opinion
Senate's 41% Litigation Finance Tax Would Hurt Legal System
The Senate’s latest version of the Big Beautiful Bill Act would impose a 41% tax on the litigation finance industry, but the tax is totally disconnected from the concerns it purports to address, and it would set the country back to a time when small plaintiffs had little recourse against big defendants, says Anthony Sebok at Cardozo School of Law.