
Nick Pope
Contributor
President Donald Trump has plenty of targets to choose from to begin his war against blue state lawsuits and legislation designed to punish energy companies for their role in climate change.
On April 8, Trump signed an executive order titled “Protecting American Energy From State Overreach” instructing his administration to investigate state-level attempts to sue or otherwise extract massive payouts from energy companies in the name of climate change. Some of the states Trump is poised to target under the new executive order will likely include New York, California and other Democrat-dominated jurisdictions that have sought to extract billions of dollars from the energy sector to line government coffers.
“American energy dominance is threatened when State and local governments seek to regulate energy beyond their constitutional or statutory authorities,” the executive order states. “For example, when States target or discriminate against out-of-State energy producers by imposing significant barriers to interstate and international trade, American energy suffers, and the equality of each State enshrined by the Constitution is undermined. Similarly, when States subject energy producers to arbitrary or excessive fines through retroactive penalties or seek to control energy development, siting, or production activities on Federal land, American energy suffers.” (RELATED: Energy, Business Groups Ask Supreme Court To Stop California From Forcing EVs On The Rest Of America)
Attorney General Pam Bondi will have 60 days to provide a report to Trump outlining laws, lawsuits and other policies to target with legislation or other actions. The Justice Department declined to comment.
Trump specifically referenced California’s “cap and trade” emissions scheme and New York’s so-called “Climate Change Superfund Act” in his executive order as the types of policies he wants his administration to probe and fight back against. The “cap and trade” law limits greenhouse gas emissions statewide and allows polluters to trade emissions permits among themselves, while New York’s law requires energy companies to give the state $3 billion annually for 25 years so that the state can use the cash to advance green energy and climate-focused projects.
Some of the initiatives that figure to benefit from New York’s law include, but are not limited to, drainage system upgrades, renovating buildings to be more green, “preventive health care programs” and building “green spaces” in urban areas, according to the statute’s text.
Both laws have drawn scrutiny from critics who contend that they each impose needless restrictions and costs on energy producers, which are then more inclined to pass on costs to consumers or to leave the state altogether.
The state of California, in addition to several of its municipalities, has filed a lawsuit against several major oil corporations seeking massive settlements, alleging that the corporations internally knew that their products drive climate change while misleading the public. Democratic California Attorney General Rob Bonta also filed a lawsuit against ExxonMobil in September 2024 alleging that the company misled the public about the efficacy of its advanced recycling techniques, though Bonta struggled to defend the litigation during an interview on CNBC that same month.
It’s not just California and New York that have used the judiciary and the legislature to go after energy producers.
Connecticut, Minnesota, New Jersey and Rhode Island all have launched their own similar climate change lawsuits against oil and gas companies, and a number of Democrat-run cities and counties — including Chicago and Honolulu — have pursued similar litigation against energy producers. (RELATED: Trump Admin Moves To Purge ‘Climate Zealotry’ From Defense Department)
Notably, many of the public prosecutors pursuing the cases have agreed to contingency fee contracts with outside law firms like Sher Edling to assist with the proceedings. These specific contracts stipulate that the private firms will only reap a major payday in the event of the state recovering fees from the defendants, meaning that private attorneys could walk away with millions ostensibly owed to the taxpayers if they are able to land settlements.
Some of the climate change tort lawsuits, including those pursued by New Jersey and Baltimore, have been dismissed in recent months. In the New Jersey case, a state judge ruled that the lawsuit preempted the federal government, and Baltimore’s suit was dismissed by a Maryland judge who opined that the city’s complaint “goes beyond the limits of Maryland state law.”
Other than New York, Vermont has also passed its own version of a “superfund” law. Vermont’s legislation dictates that energy companies responsible for at least one billion tons of global emissions must make payments — likely billions of dollars — to the state’s coffers to fund various climate projects.
Democrats in numerous other states, including Maryland, Oregon, Massachusetts and California, were also considering their own similar laws as of March 2024, according to Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law.
Broadly, critics of the climate litigation and “polluters pay” laws argue that these actions will hamstring energy production at the expense of consumers, infringe on the federal government’s responsibility to regulate interstate commerce and result in a more restrictive and fragmented regulatory environment for energy. Trump mentioned these specific points in the body of the executive order.
“These State laws and policies try to dictate interstate and international disputes over air, water, and natural resources; unduly discriminate against out-of-State businesses; contravene the equality of States; and retroactively impose arbitrary and excessive fines without legitimate justification,” Trump wrote in the executive order. “These State laws and policies are fundamentally irreconcilable with my Administration’s objective to unleash American energy. They should not stand.”
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Internationally, America is now a joke.
A dangerous joke.
Headed by an imbecile.
You’re about 4 years too late.
Is that why millions of people would love to move here from all over the world- and every nation is desperate to trade with America? And that “imbecile” has done quite a job beating down greedy, leftist universities- Harvard will be next.
Especially when the US and Soros NGOs advertise oodles of goodies FOR FREE.
It really is funny the way socialists actually assume that everyone agrees with them.
Better live in a joke than under a yoke…plenty of “your” imbeciles ruling here in Europe, so if you’re considering moving…
You seen the “approval rating of the Dumbocrats… Off the bottom of the chart. !
Have you seen AOC, Jazzy, and the crazy white haired guy.. talk about imbeciles. !!
The US leftist, woke folks and the European leftist, woke folks loved the imbecile, open-borders, let-in-the-unvetted-criminals, Biden era, because the inane, leftist cabal that managed his teleprompter and operated the autopen to sign official documents, gave away hundreds of $BILLIONS for dubious purposes, causing US deficits to balloon to the sky.
.
DOGE’s finds of fraud, waste and abuse so far are only the tip of the iceberg.
.
Deportations so far are only the most egregious illegal criminals, rapists, murderers, traffickers.
.
Undoing all that damage and MAGA will take Herculean efforts for decades
Don’t sugar coat it. Tell us how you really feel.
/s
That’s why millions upon millions are trying to get in.
Got it.
/s
“That’s why millions upon millions are trying to get in.”
Mostly failing now. 🙂
The empire strikes back, it’s about time. The last 100 days has brought sanity and logic back to America. The only people complaining are the rent seekers, grifters, and Marxist …. but I repeat myself. It also seems many other countries are realizing the folly of NetZero/TheGreatReset/Bidenomics/whatever cutesy name it’s given and the damage being created.
Please don’t stop or slow down.
There is an easy solution, withdraw government subsidies, preferences and mandates for wind and solar and they will be out of business next week. EVs as well.
And reverse the endangerment finding and the “responsible for pollution“ argument vanishes.
Repeal all subsidies, accelerated write offs, deductions of loan interest, preferences, mandates, etc.
Let freedom reign
Let free enterprise rein
“For example, when States target or discriminate against out-of-State energy producers by imposing significant barriers to interstate and international trade, American energy suffers …”
Do Tariffs count as significant barriers to international trade? It sounds like Trump is ordering an investigation of his own Tariffs.
WOW, you still haven’t figured out that Trump is aiming to minimise trade barriers around the world by putting the USA on a level footing instead of being sucked dry by other countries..
Or do you think all trade barriers should be against US exports ?
[snip]
Ah, a Constitutional Expert speaks and like when E.F.Hutton speaks, we all must listen.
The Feds can impose tariffs.
Individual states cannot.
Clearly, you don’t understand the difference between interstate trade and international trade. Typical of folks who don’t understand our Federal system of government.
Slightly off topic…. still related to climate however…..has anyone seen the latest NSIDC graphic for Arctic sea ice? Really interesting, that after record breaking low for sea ice max, sea ice loss this Spring so far is flat lining. Most likely then we’ll see another record broken this month….. record slow ice loss for the month of April 🧐😉

If anything, there’s a very slight uptick on the graph towards the end of the blue line. Makes me wonder if we might even see some sea ice gain for at least part of the month?
Check sunspot activity trends
The big news is less sea ice in 2025 and 2012, a downward trend.
“Check sunspot activity trends
The big news is less sea ice in 2025 and 2012, a downward trend.”
Well, we know sea ice minimum was at record low in 2012. But earlier that year, it was actually very healthy. So, taken as a whole, 2012 wasn’t particularly extraordinary.
This year, so far the opposite is true. Sea ice max in March has been at a record breaking low. That’s of course if it’s actually reached max extent yet???? Strangely, it wouldn’t actually take much for the maximum extent still to occur in mid- April, such has been the extremely slow to almost zero net melt….or even slight gain!
If sun spots were realistically the cause in both years, I would expect a similar pattern. Instead, I’m seeing the complete opposite.
It’s sort of like claiming that since we do not get 6 foot snow storms every winter on January 11, that is proof of global warming aka catastrophic climate change.
I am still amazed that states are trying to extract payments for emissions outside of their boundaries. And if all of the emissions from these jurisdictions suddenly vanished, it would not make any detectable difference to worldwide emissions. (Please note I said emissions,” not “temperatures.”)
I think, as has been stated 100s of times, reducing emissions will always be a dead donkey, unless the really big emitters IE China, India and the rest of the developing world fully support the initiative. Currently, the world is a million miles away from any emission reductions making even the slightest difference. Even if the big emitters do start reducing, how long will it take for there to be any observable difference……if indeed there is a difference to be made?
Long past time to use lawfare against leftist enemies of America.