Legal scholars clash over climate lawsuits against energy companies
A panel of legal scholars and lawyers argued Thursday over what a growing wave of climate lawsuits really represents: a legitimate use of courts to resolve alleged harms and costs tied to emissions, or an attempt to shift climate policymaking from elected branches to judges and juries.
The panel, hosted by the Civitas Institute at the University of Texas at Austin, focused on state and local lawsuits filed over the past decade – largely brought in state courts under state law – seeking to recover climate-related costs such as infrastructure adaptation and disaster response from fossil fuel companies.
Moderator John Yoo, of the Civitas Institute and UC Berkeley, said the cases raise a threshold governance question: “Which branch of government, which level of government, is the appropriate place to regulate these issues,” regardless of where people fall on the science.
Jonathan Adler, an environmental law professor at William & Mary, argued the cases fit within a long legal tradition of using nuisance and tort law to address pollution harms and that courts shouldn’t shut them down at the outset unless Congress clearly says they’re barred.
“Generally, when it comes to tort law, we let plaintiffs try and make their case,” Adler said, though he added he is “very skeptical” plaintiffs can meet the burden of proving specific, local damages traceable to specific defendants.
Adler’s core legal point centered on federal supremacy and preemption – whether federal environmental statutes crowd out state law claims. He said federal law can displace federal common-law nuisance claims, but it does not automatically preempt state tort claims unless Congress expressly does so.
“All it means is that there’s no legal basis at the front end to say these cases are preempted and have to go away now,” Adler said, describing that threshold issue as a major battleground in the litigation.
Todd Zywicki, a George Mason University law professor, argued the lawsuits invite courts to do something tort law was never designed to do: make nationwide energy and climate policy through scattered state-court rulings. He called that a difference “in kind,” not just degree, from traditional nuisance disputes.
“There is a pretty big difference… between some guy who wants to run a pigsty… and the ability to re-engineer the entire American economy and society,” Zywicki said, warning that if one jurisdiction can sue over global emissions, “basically anybody anywhere can bring one of these… lawsuits,” which he called “cockamamie.”
Michael Toth, a research director for Civitas Institute, argued many of the municipal cases are not simply local regulation but an effort to apply one state’s law to conduct and regulate emissions across the country, raising federalism and constitutional problems. If courts allow that approach, he said, companies could be stuck under a state’s rules even if they avoid the state entirely. “Like Hotel California, and you can never check out,” Toth said.
Adler, while doubtful the lawsuits are a good way to address climate change, said the fix should come from lawmakers rather than courts. “Congress could make all these cases go away,” Adler said. “Why isn’t that legislation been introduced? … why are they, instead, asking courts to play policymaker?”
Latest News Stories
Sen. Kelly sues Hegseth over effort to reduce retirement pay
Illinois interstate shootings decline
WATCH: State sues Trump admin over enforcement tactics; No tax on tips proposal filed
Will the Clintons testify on Epstein relationship this week?
Dems move to almost entirely block fed immigration enforcement in IL
Capital Imp Committee: Facilities Director Reports on VAC Progress and Critical Health Department Elevator Repairs
‘Good Food For All’ Initiative Proposes Local Agricultural Asset Mapping for Will County
Public Works Committee Advances $3.2 Million Engineering Contract for Mills Road Reconstruction
Theis abruptly retires from IL Supreme Court; Tailor to replace
Colorado expands lawsuit over alleged Trump retaliation
California leads suit to preserve U.S. Department of Education
WATCH: Arizona governor’s State of State stresses economy