Supreme Court declines to hear from oil and gas companies trying to
block climate change lawsuits
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[January 14, 2025]
By LINDSAY WHITEHURST
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said Monday it won’t hear an appeal
from oil and gas companies trying to block lawsuits seeking to hold the
industry liable for billions of dollars in damage linked to climate
change.
The order allows the city of Honolulu's lawsuit against oil and gas
companies to proceed. The city's chief resilience officer, Ben Sullivan,
said it's a significant decision that will protect "taxpayers and
communities from the immense costs and consequences of the climate
crisis caused by the defendants’ misconduct.”
The industry has faced a series of cases alleging it deceived the public
about how fossil fuels contribute to climate change. Governments in
states including California, Colorado and New Jersey are seeking
billions of dollars in damages from things like wildfires, rising sea
levels and severe storms. The lawsuits come during a wave of legal
actions in the U.S. and worldwide seeking to leverage action on climate
change through the courts.
The oil and gas companies appealed to the Supreme Court after Hawaii's
highest court allowed the lawsuit to proceed. The companies include
Sunoco, Shell, Chevron, Exxon Mobil and BP, many of which are
headquartered in Texas.
The companies argued emissions are a national issue that should instead
be fought over in federal court, where they've successfully had suits
tossed out.
“The stakes in this case could not be higher," attorneys wrote in court
documents. The lawsuits “present a serious threat to one of the nation’s
most vital industries.”
The American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, said
declining to hear the Honolulu case now means the companies could face
more lawsuits from activists trying to “make themselves the nation's
energy regulators.”
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The Supreme Court in Washington, June 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan
Walsh, File)
“I hope that the Court will hear the issue someday, for the sake of
constitutional accountability and the public interest,” said Adam
White, a senior fellow at the institute.
The Democratic Biden administration had weighed in at the justices'
request and urged them to reject the case, saying it's fair to keep
it in state court at this point — though the administration
acknowledged that the companies could eventually prevail.
The incoming Republican Trump administration is expected to take a
sharply different view of environmental law and energy production.
Honolulu argued it's made a strong case under state laws against
deceptive marketing and it should be allowed to play out there.
“Deceptive commercial practices fall squarely within the core
interests and historic powers of the states,” attorneings wrote.
Environmental regulations, meanwhile, have not always fared well
overall before the conservative-majority court. In 2022, the
justices limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to
regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. In June, the
court halted the agency’s air-pollution-fighting “good neighbor”
rule.
Justice Samuel Alito recused himself from consideration of the
appeal. He did not specify a reason, but he owns stock in companies
affected by the lawsuits, according to his most recent financial
disclosure.
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