Tuesday, July 30, 2024

New Jersey Conservation Foundation, et al. v. FERC: Appeals court voids US agency's approval of mid-Atlantic gas project. (Reuters)

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approval of pipeline reversed for failure to consider greenhouse gas concerns and lack demonstrated market for the natural gas in question. Read the Court of Appeals decision here:  https://ferc.gov/media/new-jersey-conservation-foundation-et-al-v-ferc-2

A wise administrative law expert, the late USDOL Chief Administrative Law Judge Nahum Litt, my mentor, was from 1970-1977 an Administrative Law Judge with the Federal Power Commission (which was renamed in 1977 the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission).  Reading about this landmark natural gas pipeline case, I would love to have known Judge Litt's reaction to this Court of Appeals decision, overturning an "arbitrary and capricious  FERC decision as a result of FERC's flawed failure to consider greenhouse gas emissions adequately. 

It is wrong to "defer" to putative agency "expertise" above other evidence.  Yes, my friends, I never liked "Chevron deference" from the first day in Memphis, circa 1984-1985, when we read the case in Administrative Law (whose pro-government features led several of us to call it "Bad Law.")  The Chevron case was often used to rule against workers when federal agencies disdained protecting them.  From Reuters:



Appeals court voids US agency's approval of mid-Atlantic gas project

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