Energy

  • January 09, 2026

    Singapore Court Nixes Poland's Bid To Set Aside $330M Award

    A Singapore commercial court on Friday dismissed Poland's application to set aside a £252 million (about $330 million) arbitral award under the Energy Charter Treaty, upholding GreenX Metals Ltd.'s earlier announced right to compensation under the ECT.

  • January 09, 2026

    Up Next At High Court: Pollution Lawsuits & Trans Athletes

    The U.S. Supreme Court will kick off the new year by hearing disputes over the constitutionality of state laws banning transgender female athletes from female-only sports and whether state or federal courts are the proper forum for lawsuits seeking to hold major oil companies accountable for harm caused by their oil production activities along Louisiana's coast. 

  • January 09, 2026

    Cuban Co. Urges Justices To Affirm Property Seizure Ruling

    A Cuban state-owned entity is pressing the U.S. Supreme Court to find that a federal law allowing U.S. victims of property seizures by the Cuban government to seek damages does not automatically abrogate the sovereign immunity of state-owned agencies and instrumentalities targeted in such cases.

  • January 09, 2026

    Calif. Climate Laws Violate Free Speech Rights, 9th Circ. Told

    A coalition of business groups urged a Ninth Circuit panel Friday to preliminarily block new California laws requiring large companies to disclose financial risks tied to climate change, arguing the laws are unprecedented and violate the First Amendment, in part by being "completely untethered" to any product or transaction.

  • January 09, 2026

    NextEra Energy Settles Fight Over 401(k) Forfeitures, Fees

    NextEra Energy Inc. has agreed to resolve a class action from 20,000 former employees who alleged the company misspent forfeited 401(k) plan funds and allowed Fidelity, the plan's recordkeeper, to charge excessive fees, according to a joint report filed on Friday in Florida federal court. 

  • January 09, 2026

    Energy Co. Members Sue In Del. Over 'Musk-Like' Power Grab

    Principals of a Delaware-chartered solar energy venture serving developing areas, including in Africa, have sued for Delaware Court of Chancery rulings affirming control of the business, citing moves by a manager who allegedly "hijacked" it, likening himself to Elon Musk and enriching himself, his family and friends.

  • January 09, 2026

    Bolivia Can't Escape $253M Award Suit, DC Judge Rules

    A D.C. federal judge on Friday refused to toss litigation aimed at enforcing a $253.6 million arbitral award issued to a Glencore subsidiary, rejecting Bolivia's argument that service was improper because the Swiss commodities giant, in the judge's words, "failed a box-checking exercise."

  • January 09, 2026

    BP Rebuttal Survives In Suit Over Stalled Ga. Truck Stop Build

    An Ohio federal judge found that three related companies weren't owed distinct notice that TravelCenters of America considered them in breach of a contract to develop a Georgia truck stop after the BP affiliate terminated the deal in June 2023, prompting a lawsuit.

  • January 09, 2026

    Nano Nuclear Beats Investor Suit Over Biz Prospect Claims

    Nano Nuclear Energy Inc. has won dismissal of a shareholder class action accusing it of misleading investors about its progress toward regulatory approval and commercialization of its energy products, with the court finding the plaintiffs failed to show the company's statements were false or intentionally deceptive.

  • January 09, 2026

    Sanchez Energy Lenders Float Deal To End Ch. 11 Lien Fight

    The owners of the reorganized equity in oil driller Sanchez Energy proposed a deal Friday in Texas bankruptcy court that will end lien-related litigation with unsecured creditors by paying $8.5 million of legal fees incurred by representatives for those creditors in the fight over rights to equity recoveries in the Chapter 11 case.

  • January 09, 2026

    Engineer Claims Co. Fired Her Over Refusal To Falsify Docs

    A Colorado manufacturing company fired its chief engineer after she raised concerns about false information included in a request for a quote submitted to a U.S. Department of Energy contractor and failed to pay her wages, the worker claimed in a suit in Colorado federal court.

  • January 09, 2026

    Taxation With Representation: King & Spalding, Torys, Milbank

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, power generation company Vistra Corp. acquires Cogentrix Energy from Quantum Capital Group, real estate firm Minto Group partners with Crestpoint Real Estate Investments to take Minto's apartment-focused real estate investment trust private, and engineering services provider Jacobs acquires a remaining stake in PA Consulting.

  • January 09, 2026

    NC Biz Court Bulletin: Trade Secrets Row, A Patient Data Deal

    The North Carolina Business Court closed out the year by tossing a trade secrets fight brought by a corrugated packing manufacturer against its onetime star salesman and signing off on a $2.45 million settlement ending claims a healthcare system sold patients' data to Meta.

  • January 09, 2026

    Mining Giants Glencore, Rio Tinto Confirm Merger Talks

    Anglo-Swiss mining giant Glencore said Friday that it is in talks with British rival Rio Tinto for a possible megamerger that could create the world's largest company in the industry, in a deal worth more than $200 billion.

  • January 09, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen a collapsed investment firm revive a $15 million dispute with a hedge fund, major Hollywood studios bring an IP claim against the U.K.'s largest internet providers over illegal streaming, and the Department of Health and Social Care sue the law firm and barrister representing it in a pharma competition damages case.

  • January 08, 2026

    States Fight To Block EPA From Wiping Out $7B Solar Funding

    A coalition of states urged a Washington federal district judge Thursday to preliminarily block the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from cutting solar power grant programs, arguing that without an injunction the Trump administration could transfer $7 billion back to the Treasury and "we will be entirely out of luck."

  • January 08, 2026

    Olin Sales Tactics Key To $70M Contract Trial, Judge Told

    Plastics manufacturer Shintech Inc. argued Wednesday it should be able to tell a Texas federal jury about industrial giant Olin Corp.'s allegedly extortionist "activation" sales strategy in an upcoming $70 million contract trial over a critical interruption in a supply chemical for vinyl.

  • January 08, 2026

    Venezuela Says Citgo Auction Marred By Conflicts

    Venezuela pressed the Third Circuit Thursday to overturn an order greenlighting the nearly $6 billion sale of Citgo to satisfy billions of dollars of the country's debt, arguing that the underlying attachment orders are void and that the proceeding was marred by "obvious" conflicts of interest.

  • January 08, 2026

    Stoel Rives Picks Up Former K&L Gates Environmental Leader

    Environmental lawyer Ankur Tohan has joined Stoel Rives LLP as a partner in the Seattle office, where he'll focus on renewable energy, carbon capture, power infrastructure and compliance matters, the firm announced Thursday.

  • January 08, 2026

    Texas Court Mostly Reverses $27M Exxon Explosion Verdict

    A Texas appellate court on Thursday largely vacated a $27 million jury verdict against ExxonMobil related to a 2019 explosion at a Houston-area petrochemical plant, citing insufficient evidence to support the damages awarded to three injured workers.

  • January 08, 2026

    11th Circ. Asked To Undo 'Deeply Flawed' Securities Ruling

    Florida-based energy company NextEra Energy Inc. wants the full Eleventh Circuit to reconsider a panel decision to revive an investor lawsuit against the utility operator, asserting that unless undone, the decision would leave the circuit with "the nation's most permissive loss-causation standard."

  • January 08, 2026

    NY Judge Backs Windfarm Award Against Vietnam Bank

    A New York federal judge has granted an arbitral award petition favoring a Chinese company against a Vietnamese bank following a dispute over a crane lease for a windfarm project, rejecting arguments that the court lacked jurisdiction and the dispute belonged elsewhere.

  • January 08, 2026

    Alito Recuses From Chevron, Exxon Coastal Pollution Case

    U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito on Thursday recused himself from considering Chevron and ExxonMobil's effort to place Louisiana pollution lawsuits stemming from the companies' World War II-era production in federal court, just days before the justices hear oral arguments in the case.

  • January 08, 2026

    Wilderness Society Sues Feds Over Land Sale Records

    A nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting wilderness is suing the U.S. Department of the Interior and other federal agencies, saying they have violated the Freedom of Information Act by failing to share records about Trump administration efforts to sell public lands.

  • January 08, 2026

    Pipeline Co., Contractor Pull Plug On Fuel Terminal Fight

    A pipeline company and a contractor it hired to build a $22.4 million fuel terminal have agreed to end the company's suit alleging it was owed at least $600,000 because of missed deadlines and shoddy workmanship, according to a filing in Georgia federal court.

Expert Analysis

  • State AGs Are Turning Up The Antitrust Heat On ESG Actions

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    Recent antitrust developments from red state attorneys general continue a trend of environmental, social and governance scrutiny, and businesses exposed to these areas should conduct close examinations of strategy and potential material risk, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Top Takeaways From Trump's AI Action Plan

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    President Donald Trump's AI Action Plan represents some notable evolution in U.S. policy, including affirmation of the administration's trend toward prioritizing artificial intelligence innovation over guardrails and toward supporting greater U.S. private sector reach overseas, say attorneys at WilmerHale.

  • Ill. Toxic Tort Jurisdiction Law Raises Constitutional Concerns

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    Illinois' S.B. 328, purporting to broaden state courts' jurisdictional reach over out-of-state corporations, is presented as a measure aimed at facilitating recovery in toxic tort cases, but the legislation raises significant due process and dormant commerce clause issues, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Rebuttal

    BigLaw Settlements Should Not Spur Ethics Deregulation

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    A recent Law360 op-ed argued that loosening law firm funding restrictions would make BigLaw firms less inclined to settle with the Trump administration, but deregulating legal financing ethics may well prove to be not merely ineffective, but counterproductive, says Laurel Kilgour at the American Economic Liberties Project.

  • Environmental Justice Is Alive And Well At The State Level

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    Even as the Trump administration has rolled back federal environmental justice policies, many states continue to prioritize it, with new regulations, strengthened enforcement of existing rules and ongoing private litigation — so companies must stay alert to how state-level EJ enforcement may affect their operations, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • 5 Ways Lawyers Can Earn Back The Public's Trust

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    Amid salacious headlines about lawyers behaving badly and recent polls showing the public’s increasingly unfavorable view of attorneys, we must make meaningful changes to our culture to rebuild trust in the legal system, says Carl Taylor at Carl Taylor Law.

  • Legal Jeopardy Looms Over Trump's Trade Negotiation Plans

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    Even as the Trump administration announces one trade deal after another, the legal authority of the executive branch to impose tariffs under consensual arrangements with leading trading partners is just as debatable as the unilateral imposition of U.S. tariffs under the president's executive orders, says Jeffrey Bialos at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Series

    Hiking Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    On the trail, I have thought often about the parallels between hiking and high-stakes patent litigation, and why strategizing, preparation, perseverance and joy are important skills for success in both endeavors, says Barbara Fiacco at Foley Hoag.

  • ICJ Climate Opinion Raises Cos.' Legal, Compliance Risks

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    The International Court of Justice's recent advisory opinion on governments' climate change obligations could have important consequences for the regulated community — including a more complex compliance landscape, heightened legal risks for carbon-intensive activities, and renewed market and investor focus on climate issues, says J. Michael Showalter at ArentFox Schiff.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Negotiation Skills

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    I took one negotiation course in law school, but most of the techniques I rely on today I learned in practice, where I've discovered that the process is less about tricks or tactics, and more about clarity, preparation and communication, says Grant Schrantz at Haug Barron.

  • ESG-Focused Activism Persists Despite Proxy Curbs

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    Shareholder activism focused on environmental, social and governance factors appears poised to continue, despite the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent move toward exclusions in proxy voting proposals around ESG, say attorneys at Mintz.

  • Opinion

    Bar Exam Reform Must Expand Beyond A Single Updated Test

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    Recently released information about the National Conference of Bar Examiners’ new NextGen Uniform Bar Exam highlights why a single test is not ideal for measuring newly licensed lawyers’ competency, demonstrating the need for collaborative development, implementation and reform processes, says Gregory Bordelon at Suffolk University.

  • A Simple Way Courts Can Help Attys Avoid AI Hallucinations

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    As attorneys increasingly rely on generative artificial intelligence for legal research, courts should consider expanding online quality control programs to flag potential hallucinations — permitting counsel to correct mistakes and sparing judges the burden of imposing sanctions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl and Connors.

  • Opinion

    SEC Should Restore Its 2020 Proxy Adviser Rule

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    Due to concerns over proxy advisers' accuracy, reliability and transparency, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should reinstate its 2020 rule designed to suppress the influence that they wield in shareholder voting, says Kyle Isakower at the American Council for Capital Formation.

  • Opinion

    Closing The Chemical Safety Board Is A Mistake

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    The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, which investigates the root causes of major chemical incidents, provides an essential component of worker and community safety and should not be defunded, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.

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