‘Grave Threat’: Calls Mount For SCOTUS To Intervene In Key Climate Lawsuit Against Major Energy Companies

From The DAILY CALLER

Daily Caller News Foundation

Nick Pope

Contributor

A number of current and former government officials, ex-military personnel and legal scholars are pushing for the Supreme Court to pick up a key climate change liability lawsuit in Hawaii and take it out of the state’s jurisdiction.

An organization led by former U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr, former high-ranking military officials, a number of state attorneys general and two prominent legal experts have each filed amicus briefs with the Supreme Court this week, urging it to take on Honolulu’s lawsuit against oil corporations, which alleges that the companies deliberately misled the public about their role in global warming. In their amicus briefs, the petitioners effectively point out that the case should be in the Supreme Court’s domain given the implications it could have for the U.S. economy, national security and federalism more broadly.

The defendants in the case — which include Chevron, Exxon Mobil and Shell  — have asked the Supreme Court to hear their case; the nuisance lawsuit will proceed to trial in a lower court pending any substantial developments, according to Reuters.

In November 2023, the Hawaii Supreme Court rejected the corporations’ argument that the legal challenge effectively intends to regulate emissions and interstate commerce, subjects which are the domain of the federal government, according to Reuters. 

Notably, the state supreme court’s chief justice has previously worked with the Environmental Law Institute (ELI), a Washington, D.C.-based environmental organization that has close ties to Sher Edling, the law firm representing the plaintiffs, a May 2023 Daily Caller News Foundation investigation found. The Hawaii Supreme Court also tried to argue in February that the so-called “spirit of Aloha” overrides the second amendment. (RELATED: Hawaii Supreme Court Justice Handling Lawsuit Against Oil Companies Calls Climate Change An ‘Existential Threat’)

“The Environmental Law Institute is an internationally recognized, non-partisan research, publishing, and education organization that has been operating for over 50 years,” a spokesperson for ELI told the DCNF. “ELI does not have close ties to Sher Edling.”

However, ELI co-founded the Climate Judiciary Project, which crafted a climate and law curriculum for judges handling environmental litigation like the Hawaii case, and the organization has worked closely with people who have consulted for or been employed by Sher Edling, the DCNF reported in the May 2023 investigation. The two entities also have received funding from several of the same left-of-center nonprofit organizations, Republican Texas Sen. Ted Cruz wrote in a February letter to Jordan Diamond, the president of ELI.

The Climate Judiciary Project’s “funding and ties to plaintiffs in climate change cases further belie ELI’s claim of neutrality,” Cruz wrote in the letter. “ELI and climate litigation juggernaut, Sher Edling, share staff,” Cruz also pointed out.

The Hawaii suit — one of several similar cases working their way through lower courts in which Sher Edling is intimately involved — could present the Supreme Court with a clear opportunity to address the issue of whether oil companies can be held liable for their alleged deception if it decides to take up the case. An amicus brief filed by the state of Alabama and 19 other states outlines this potential explicitly.

“The time for this Court’s intervention is now. The question presented has percolated for years, albeit in a removal posture that complicated review. Such complexity is absent here, and there is now a clear split between courts that will entertain state lawsuits over interstate emissions and courts that will not,” the states’ filing reads. “The grave threat these suits pose to equal sovereignty and our Nation’s energy infrastructure are reason enough for this Court to grant review.”

SCOTUS

The filing also asserts that the plaintiff’s “theory used against energy companies can be expanded to allow targeting of any cross-border activity that purportedly ‘exacerbate[s] the impacts of climate change.’”

Two former chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, retired Air Force Gen. Richard Myers and retired Navy Adm. Michael Mullen, filed their own amicus brief echoing the states’ concerns about the potential for negative national security ramifications if the Supreme Court does not hear the case. Hawaii, Chicago, Massachusetts and numerous other jurisdictions pursuing nearly-identical lawsuits against the energy industry could impose an onerous and inconsistent legal environment for the companies in lower courts, undermining production and leaving the U.S. more vulnerable in the event of conflict, the former officials asserted.

“There is potential that the upshot of this litigation and the broad relief it seeks would negatively impact strong national interests in fuel security and military readiness,” the two former military officials wrote in their filing. “Fuel security is a crucial national interest and is especially critical to the U.S. military, in times of both war and peace, to power ships, tanks, and aircraft, provide energy to run bases, stations, and detachments, and enable numerous operations.”

John Yoo, a professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley, and Richard Epstein, a legal scholar at New York University, similarly highlighted potential national security ramifications, as well as concerns about the balance of the federalist system, in an amicus brief they filed in support of the corporations’ request for the Supreme Court to hear the case.

“The Hawaii Supreme Court’s misapplication of tort law is not a matter of state law, but instead represents the erroneous incorporation of a state tort standard into the federal common law of interstate pollution. Given the national importance of the energy industry, no further delay is prudent,” the scholars wrote in their brief. “Controlling energy has long constituted an important national security goal that not only supports economic independence and stability but also U.S. diplomacy and military capabilities. If this Court were to allow these tort cases to proceed, states and localities could handicap an interstate industry critical to the nation’s economy and security.”

The American Free Enterprise Chamber of Commerce, led by Barr, also threw its support behind the oil companies’ petition to the Supreme Court and emphasized the possible national security ramifications. Barr also took aim at the lawsuit’s central allegation that the fossil fuel companies engaged in a deliberately deceptive marketing campaign to obscure the damage their products purportedly cause, surmising that the Supreme Court should intervene to close off that avenue of legal attack against the American energy industry.

“Humans don’t use fossil fuels because of a ‘public relations campaign.’ They use fossil fuels because they are necessary to the technologies that underlay global human prosperity—from synthetic fertilizer, to cement, to plastics, to internal-combustion engines, to steel,” Barr and his colleagues wrote in their filing. “Given all this, how is a jury supposed to isolate the effect of a ‘public relations campaign’ on the additional use of fossil fuels, the effect of those additional fossil fuels on the climate, and the consequent effect of that in Honolulu or some other place?”

“The stakes could hardly be higher,” they added. “If Hawaii and like-minded states succeed in imposing an unwieldy patchwork of carbon penalties on private energy firms, the United States could soon become dependent on energy companies owned by foreign states to meet its energy needs, since foreign states alone can claim sovereign immunity. Many of those companies are controlled by countries hostile to the United States.”

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to include comment from the Environmental Law Institute

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Stephen Wilde
April 9, 2024 11:37 pm

Fossil fuels do infinitely more good than harm.
These claims are simply a means to destroy nations and kill their populations and are directed only at the free world.

Gregory Woods
Reply to  Stephen Wilde
April 10, 2024 3:21 am

What harm? Please elucidate.

MarkW
Reply to  Gregory Woods
April 10, 2024 10:39 am

Anything divided by zero is infinite.
When one states that the ratio of good to harm is infinite, that implicitly states that the harm is zero.

Reply to  Gregory Woods
April 10, 2024 4:46 pm

Particulates from car exhausts. Acid rain from coal power stations emissions. London can tell you all about their coal fires severe smog they used to have
just like lead in paints was a harm until it was removed

MarkW
Reply to  Duker
April 13, 2024 10:26 am

All cleaned up decades ago.

Scissor
Reply to  Stephen Wilde
April 10, 2024 4:36 am

You must be addicted to oil, food, shelter, clothing, etc.

https://www.theoilmachine.org/

Dave Yaussy
Reply to  Stephen Wilde
April 10, 2024 6:58 am

I believe that asking the SCOTUS to intervene, short of the normal appeal route, would be a mistake. The climate crowd would like nothing more than for SCOTUS to declare this is a matter that is pre-empted under the Commerce Clause (as it probably is) and then use it as a reason to stack the “far right” Supreme Court with additional woke justices, or otherwise de-legitimize one of the better Supreme Courts we have had in its history.

I believe the proper response to this is more lawsuits. All of these jurisdictions continued to use fossil fuels and products derived from fossil fuels after learning of their supposed dangers. They used petroleum to fuel their buses, police cars and ambulances, and natural gas to heat their buildings. They used electricity generated by gas and coal. They used plastics generated from hydrocarbons. As such they should be sued under similar theories of contributing to the ongoing climate disaster, despite their knowledge of the dangers it posed. Their lawsuits are admissions of wrongdoing, and of knowledge that they are engaged in harmful activity.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Dave Yaussy
April 10, 2024 9:32 am

The cost will be passed onto us, the consumers.

Coeur de Lion
April 9, 2024 11:46 pm

And CO.2 has negligible effect on the climate.

Reply to  Coeur de Lion
April 10, 2024 5:05 am

So negligible that its effects can’t be detected in the real world.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2024 4:48 pm

yes . The human fossil fuel CO2 loading is the margin of error range of the planets own natural carbon cycle

Reply to  Coeur de Lion
April 10, 2024 5:12 am

Well actually, it helps the biome by greening the planet which does have an effect on climate, just not the kind of effect the alarmists claim.

Janice Moore
Reply to  Barnes Moore
April 10, 2024 10:53 am

Natural sinks and sources of CO2 (at roughly 150 gtons) are essentially in balance. Thus, the net effect of additional CO2 by humans is, indeed, negligible and, as Tom Abbott pointed out, unmeasurable.

MarkW
Reply to  Janice Moore
April 13, 2024 10:31 am

If man emitted CO2 were to level off, biological sinks would catch up, and after a few years, CO2 levels in the atmosphere would stabilize again. It’s the fact that CO2 emissions keep growing that keeps the levels in the atmosphere growing.

April 10, 2024 12:03 am

These nuisance lawsuits invariably quote the IPCC as evidence for the harm they say will happen to our children, blah, blah, etc.
Would it be a viable legal tactic to show that the IPCC is biased and consequently have any reference to them disbarred.
The Clintel Report is fully referenced and proves this bias in a comprehensive way.

Reply to  Bob Irvine
April 10, 2024 5:10 am

Judges are supposed to be able to tell the difference between what is evidence and what is speculation, assumptions and unsubstantiated assertions. That’s part of their job.

If it was me, I would show the judges that what the IPCC calls evidence is anything but evidence. All the IPCC has, at best, are educated guesses. Educated guesses do not establish something as being factual.

I could guess about who committed a murder, but my guess would not stand up in court. Others can guess about the effects of CO2 on Earth’s atmosphere, but that shouldn’t stand up in court, either. A guess is a guess. Facts are facts. There’s a big difference. A good judge should be able to see this, even if they don’t have a clue about the actual science.

Drake
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2024 9:17 am

That sure worked for Mark Steyn.

MarkW
Reply to  Drake
April 10, 2024 10:41 am

DC judges and juries are well known for being adverse to facts and reality.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2024 4:22 pm

Ask Mr. Trump if facts matter in a court case.

Reply to  clougho
April 10, 2024 4:52 pm

Which ones ? hes been a litigant hundreds of time over the years- thats because it suited him to wage ‘lawfare’.

he was the first Presidential candidate to use ‘lock her up’ as a campaign tool against an opponent .

that sure came back to bite him hard

Reply to  Duker
April 11, 2024 7:17 am

She still deserves prison, alongside Fauci.

Reply to  pflashgordon
April 13, 2024 4:10 am

And about half of the members of the Obama-Biden administrations deserve prison, too.

Like the current FBI Director for one. He’s in charge while the FBI covers up for Joe and Hunter Biden’s crimes. He knew the charges against Trump were false, but he remained silent. He knew Hunter Biden’s laptop was NOT Russian disinformation, but he remained silent while these lies were circulated far and wide.

Reply to  Duker
April 13, 2024 4:16 am

Hillary committed a crime by mishandling classified information. She should have been locked up.

Hillary is also the creator of the Russia Collusion Hoax, which Obama and Biden ran with, and are still running with to this very day.

All these corrupt Democrats knowingly lied about the situation in order to try to destroy their political opponents. They are doing it to this very day, also.

The only way to stop this attack on Democracy by the radical Democrats is to put Trump back in office.

Then, it will be time to investigate all these Democrat lawbreakers. They think they are above the law. We should show them they are not. Them, and any future lawbreakers.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 13, 2024 10:34 am

If they are prosecuted in a DC courtroom, there’s no chance they will ever be convicted.

Chris Hanley
April 10, 2024 12:41 am

Humans don’t use fossil fuels because of a ‘public relations campaign.’ They use fossil fuels because they are necessary to the technologies that underlay global human prosperity

That statement in the Barr filing effectively rebuts any parallel with the successful lawsuits of the 1990s against tobacco companies.
In any case tobacco is still freely available and obviously lawfare is never going eliminate fossil fuel availability for the reasons stated by Barr et al. which invites the question: what is the ultimate purpose of these nuisance lawsuits?
Is it that there are too many lawyers in the US, ‘the one grand principle of English [and by extension US] law is to make business for itself at the laity’s expense’ (paraphrased from Dickens, Bleak House).

Dave Fair
April 10, 2024 12:46 am

UN IPCC scientific reports make it clear that extreme weather has not been worsening over the past 120+ years. The lack of a tropical tropospheric hot spot invalidates all climate models. What more do courts need to toss out those baseless lawsuits.

Gregory Woods
Reply to  Dave Fair
April 10, 2024 3:31 am

Common sense?

Reply to  Dave Fair
April 10, 2024 5:41 am

Yes, the people promoting the Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming (CAGW) scaremongering don’t have a leg to stand on when it comes to facts.

A good judge ought to be able to figure that out, if someone would point it out to them. “Judge, that’s hearsay!” “Judge, that’s pure speculation on the plantiff’s part!” “Judge, that’s an unsubstantiated assertion!”

Just take the judges, step by step, through the speculation, assumptions, and unsubstantiated assertions that make up modern-day alarmist climate science.

“Judge, the climate alarmist plantiffs have not established the basic premise underlyig all these complaints. They haven’t established that CO2 is anything other than a benign gas, essential for life on Earth.”

Unfortunately, the defendants don’t try to focus on debunking the basic premise that CO2 is harmful. Instead, they focus on how essential fossil fuels are to our economy and national security, but this won’t keep the climate fanatics off their backs if they still live under the impression that CO2 is harmful and dangerous. There is no evidence this is the case, but many people, including those in our institutions, carry on as though there is evidence. They are living in a false reality, whether they know it or not.

Eng_Ian
April 10, 2024 5:36 am

The answer seems obvious. Turn off the supply of fuels to Hawaii.

Let the people decide if the judges are acting in the public interest.

If you’ve got any messages for the judges, start now, you won’t find them in a few weeks

MarkW
Reply to  Eng_Ian
April 10, 2024 10:44 am

Hawaii is one of the places where shutting of the supply of fossil fuels would be the easiest.
It all arrives by ship. Even the fuel needed to re-fuel all those planes for the flights home, comes by ship.

Reply to  MarkW
April 10, 2024 4:54 pm

Hawaii wants money from the fuel companies , not shutting off its lifelines

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Duker
April 11, 2024 6:35 pm

Meaning they don’t really care about the environment.

Duane
April 10, 2024 7:02 am

Regardless of the merits of the plaintiff’s case, SCOTUS will dismiss/overturn the suit on the basis that the Federal government alone, and not individual states, may regulate air pollution, such as it is, unless EPA, under Clean Air Act Section 209b, explicitly writes a waiver into Federal law (as was done for California, regrettably). But there are limitations on the ability of EPA to issue a waiver:

According to the Clean Air Act Section 209(b) – State Standards, EPA shall grant a waiver unless the Administrator finds that California:

was arbitrary and capricious in its finding that its standards are, in the aggregate, at least as protective of public health and welfare as applicable federal standards;

​does not need such standards to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions; or

such standards and accompanying enforcement procedures are not consistent with Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act.

Since Congress has not seen fit to include greenhouse gases including CO2 for regulation, these conditions are not met and EPA cannot issue a waiver. Not that EPA could not decide to be scofflaws yet again, as they have on so many other CAA and CWA matters over the years. But if they did, EPA would be sued, and SCOTUS would strike down any such waivers unless and until the CAA is amended to regulate CO2.

Mr Ed
April 10, 2024 7:27 am

Having observed the enviro-greens in action with their forestry-endangered
species lawfare over the years, I’ve noticed a standard technique. They tend to “throw
a lot of mud” at the wall hoping to have some stick. It’s much about the procedure.

Now when I read something like this climate case I see a lot of mud flinging…
The mud really needs to scraped up and returned by the energy companys IMO

mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 10, 2024 8:06 am

Once the Marxists gained control of the strategic courts in the US they bombarded the system with these frivolous lawsuits hoping they can get one to stick and hang their hat on. SCOTUS could put a stop to it ……. or not, and make it worse. SCOTUS does have the last say on interstate commerce if you interpret the Constitution correctly.

MarkW
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 10, 2024 10:48 am

The EPA has been doing this for years.
When they can’t get congress to authorize an extension of their power, they work with an outside agency, helping that agency to bring a lawsuit against the EPA.
The EPA then proceeds to deliberately lose the lawsuit. They then work with the judge and plaintiffs to write a “court ordered” settlement, that requires the EPA to do everything they couldn’t get congress to authorize.

Reply to  MarkW
April 10, 2024 4:55 pm

Name one ?
Doesnt add up as a court cant authorise something for the EPA to regulate that is against a supreme court precedent.

michael hart
Reply to  Duker
April 10, 2024 11:47 pm

I think there about sixty or seventy identified in a reference in this Law review:
https://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2226&context=sulr

It’s not just the EPA that participates in these kind of actions.

Jake Cold
April 10, 2024 10:56 am

Stop all fossil fueled shipping and airplane flights to Hawaii.

Lamont Cranston
April 10, 2024 11:21 am

Simply stop selling fossil fuels in Hawaii. Then sit back and watch the chaos ensue.Then any state contemplating bringing suit may have second thoughts.

Christopher Chantrill
April 10, 2024 1:39 pm

The bigger question is when this activism lawfare ends.
Answer: when it rebounds on the activism community.

SteveZ56
April 11, 2024 10:53 am

Maybe we should give the Hawaiians their wish, and stop shipments of fossil fuels to Hawaii. A few months later, the hotels of Waikiki will no longer be air-conditioned, and there will be no gasoline for rental cars, or fuel for planes returning to the mainland. The tourism industry would take a serious hit, and they will have to go back to growing pineapples, and island-hopping using canoes and sailboats.