Professor Jonathan H. Adler provided analysis and insight on television, radio and in print after the Supreme Court curtailed the Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
Adler, the inaugural Johan Verheij Memorial Professor of Law and founding director of the Coleman P. Burke Center for Environmental Law was featured in national and local news reports and broadcasts in the wake of the Supreme Court鈥檚 June 30 decision in West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency.
Among the news outlets featuring Professor Adler鈥檚 analysis were the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Greenwire, Scientific American, Popular Science, The Dispatch and Reuters. Professor Adler also at the Volokh Conspiracy blog, a prominent legal blog to which Professor Adler regularly contributes.
In West Virginia v. EPA, a divided Court concluded that the EPA could not adopt regulations premised upon 鈥済eneration shifting鈥 (substituting fuel sources) as a means of reducing emissions under Section 111 of the Clean Air Act. Although the Court鈥檚 decision focused on a specific provision of the Clean Air Act, the Court鈥檚 rationale could have broad implications for the EPA鈥檚 ability to adopt aggressive climate change policies, Adler explained. According to Professor Adler, the Court鈥檚 embrace of the 鈥渕ajor questions doctrine鈥 could also limit the ability of federal agencies to address new and emerging environmental problems.
Professor Adler also commented on the ruling for national and local news programs, and was featured in National Public Radio鈥檚 coverage of the decision. He also discussed the case for the public radio program 鈥淟eft, Right & Center,鈥 a Law 360 podcast, and a Bloomberg radio segment, and he participated in a National Constitution Center 鈥淲e the People鈥 podcast, 鈥.鈥
Earlier this year, Professor Adler also moderated a webinar, 鈥Climate Change Returns to the Supreme Court: The Issues and Stakes in West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency,鈥 This webinar was sponsored by the Coleman P. Burke Center for Environmental Law.