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Environmental
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October 24, 2025
Admin Of $600M Derailment Deal Accused Of 'Alarming' Errors
Class counsel who inked a $600 million derailment settlement with Norfolk Southern called on an Ohio federal judge to revoke nearly $10 million in fees paid to the case's prior settlement administrator after an initial audit found "alarming, large-scale errors" in its claims management.
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October 24, 2025
DOE's Wright Urges FERC To Boost Data Center Grid Access
U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright is pressing the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to enact rules to speed up the connection of data centers to the grid, claiming the agency has the federal authority to do so.
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October 24, 2025
Minn. Court Backs Insurer In Hail Damage Coverage Dispute
A Hanover Insurance unit has no duty to cover a Minnesota school district for hail damage to the roofs of both its schools, a Minnesota federal court ruled, finding an exclusion barring coverage for "cosmetic damage" applied.
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October 24, 2025
Judge Backs DOI, Calif. Tribe In $21M Waste Lease Dispute
A federal judge has given a quick win to the U.S. Department of the Interior and a California tribe in a challenge by a waste management company over a decision to cancel its 25-year project lease, saying the determination was not arbitrary or capricious.
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October 24, 2025
Taxation With Representation: Latham, Wachtell, Gibson Dunn
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Meta announces a joint venture with Blue Owl Capital to fund the development of a data center campus in Louisiana, private equity giants acquire medical technology company Hologic Inc., and National Fuel Gas Co. buys CenterPoint Energy Inc.'s Ohio natural gas utility business.
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October 24, 2025
Talks On Shipping Carbon Price Continue Despite Plan's Delay
The United Nations' maritime agency continued talks on the details of a global carbon price plan for shipping this past week despite the recent postponement of the plan amid U.S. opposition, experts taking part in the process said Friday.
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October 24, 2025
Partnership Fights For $15M Easement Deduction In Tax Court
The Internal Revenue Service didn't explain its determinations and therefore violated administrative law when it denied an Alabama partnership a $14.8 million deduction for donating a conservation easement in 2020, the partnership told the U.S. Tax Court.
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October 24, 2025
Verite Capital Plugs $300M Into Used Cooking Oil Energy Co.
Buffalo Biodiesel Inc., a company that recycles used cooking oil and turns it into renewable green energy, on Friday unveiled a capital and growth partnership with private investment firm Verite Capital Partners that includes a $300 million funding program.
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October 23, 2025
EV-Maker Rivian Will Pay $250M To End Investors' Fraud Suit
Rivian Automotive Inc. investors asked a California federal judge Thursday to greenlight a $250 million settlement resolving their claims that the company underpriced its electric vehicles and misrepresented its profitability ahead of a blockbuster 2021 initial public offering, just one day before a summary judgment hearing.
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October 23, 2025
Energy Cos. Face Permit, Regulatory Delays Due To Shutdown
Energy companies are starting to feel the pinch of the federal government shutdown, as scaled-back operations and new furlough announcements at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency threaten the approval of needed permits and the issuance of highly anticipated regulations.
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October 23, 2025
11th Circ. Halts Fla. Detention Center Appeal Amid Shutdown
The Eleventh Circuit has stayed an appeal over the operation of a Florida Everglades immigrant detention center dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" after the government requested a halt to proceedings due to the federal government shutdown.
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October 23, 2025
Calif. Tribe Joins Suit Seeking To Halt Barred Owl Culling Plan
An Oregon federal judge has let the Yurok Tribe intervene in an animal advocacy group's lawsuit seeking to block the U.S. government from killing thousands of protected barred owls as a means to save the threatened northern spotted owl, saying the tribe has a specific interest in the action.
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October 23, 2025
4th Circ. Pushed To Retain Block On Chemours PFAS Dumping
A pair of environmental groups is urging the Fourth Circuit to leave in place an injunction blocking The Chemours Co. FC LLC from continuing to discharge so-called forever chemicals into the Ohio River, saying the company is using strawman arguments to get its way.
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October 23, 2025
US Oil Cos. Pay More Tax Abroad Than At Home, Report Says
American oil and gas companies with foreign extraction operations paid more than 80% of their total taxes abroad in recent years despite producing more oil and gas in the U.S. than everywhere else combined, a corporate transparency group said Thursday.
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October 23, 2025
Japan's Jera Paying $1.5B For Louisiana Shale Gas Assets
Japanese power company Jera Co. said Thursday it has agreed to acquire shale gas assets in Louisiana from Williams Cos. and GEP Haynesville II LLC for about $1.5 billion, with Baker Botts LLP steering Jera on the deal.
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October 23, 2025
Wash. Judge Halts Feds From Pulling $9M In Climate Funds
A Washington federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from scrapping more than $9 million of climate resiliency agreements with Washington state, finding state officials likely to prevail on claims the administration acted unlawfully when it abruptly ended them.
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October 23, 2025
One Nuclear Energy To Go Public Via $1B SPAC Merger
One Nuclear Energy LLC, led by Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, on Thursday unveiled plans to go public through a merger with Sidley Austin LLP-guided special purpose acquisition company Hennessy Capital Investment Corp. VII, in a deal that values the energy company at $1 billion in pre-money equity.
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October 23, 2025
Derailment Counsel Fee Provision 'Troubles' 6th Circ. Judge
A three-judge Sixth Circuit panel on Thursday seemed skeptical that counsel representing victims of the fiery 2023 train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, was blindsided by a "quick-pay" provision in the attorney fee agreement that saw class lawyers get paid before their clients.
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October 23, 2025
Shipbuilder Can't Ax Md. Bridge Collapse Suit, Court Told
The Singaporean owner and manager of the container ship that slammed into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge and triggered its collapse maintained that South Korean shipbuilder HD Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. Ltd. should be held accountable in Pennsylvania federal court for designing and building a "fatally flawed" ship.
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October 23, 2025
Greenberg Traurig Adds Energy Lawyers In NY, DC
Greenberg Traurig LLP has rehired a former attorney who left to work as general counsel of the New York Public Service Commission, who returns alongside a lawyer joining the firm from the U.S. Department of Energy, in the nation's capital.
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October 23, 2025
Judge OKs Heritage Coal's Ch. 11 Plan After Releases Nixed
A Delaware bankruptcy judge approved the Chapter 11 liquidation plan from Heritage Coal after the debtor removed releases and exculpations for insiders.
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October 22, 2025
Phillips 66 Can't Undo $805M Trade Secrets Trial Loss
Phillips 66 can't get a new trial after its $805 million loss on claims it stole startup Propel Fuels' intellectual property during due diligence for an acquisition, a California state judge has ruled, saying the jury's findings, including malicious misconduct, are well-supported.
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October 22, 2025
Monsanto's Roundup Blamed For Husband's Fatal Cancer
A widow alleged in a wrongful death suit against agro-chemical giant Monsanto that her late husband developed terminal cancer after he was exposed to glyphosate in the company's Roundup herbicide, telling a Washington federal court Monsanto had known for decades of the risk.
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October 22, 2025
Nixed $475M Wind Farm Vessel Deal Prompts Arbitration
Singapore-based shipbuilding and engineering company Seatrium said Wednesday it has been hit with an arbitration claim by an affiliate of Maersk Offshore Wind in connection with a terminated $475 million deal to provide a wind turbine installation vessel for an ongoing wind farm project off the coast of New York.
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October 22, 2025
Energy Secretary Urges EU To Rethink Sustainability Rules
U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright on Wednesday urged European leaders to scrap, or at least revise, proposed European Union corporate sustainability rules, claiming they will hamper exports of liquefied natural gas to the continent.
Expert Analysis
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ABA Opinion Makes It A Bit Easier To Drop A 'Hot Potato'
The American Bar Association's recent ethics opinion clarifies when attorneys may terminate clients without good cause, though courts may still disqualify a lawyer who drops a client like a hot potato, so sending a closeout letter is always a best practice, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.
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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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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.
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3 Juror Psychology Principles For Expert Witness Testimony
Expert witnesses can sometimes fall into traps when trying to teach juries complex topics by failing to consider the psychology of juror comprehension, but attorneys can help witnesses avoid these pitfalls with a deeper understanding of cognitive lag, chunking and learning styles, says Steve Wood at Courtroom Sciences.