There are three ongoing legal challenges to EPA’s proposed Clean Power Plan:
- On June 18, 2014, Murray Energy Corporation, an Ohio-based coal mining company, filed a novel lawsuit in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking an all Writs Act injunction that would halt EPA from continuing with the Clean Power Plan. (Case no. 14-1112)
- On August 1, 2014, thirteen States led by West Virginia AG Patrick Morrisey filed a petition in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking to overturn a non-judicial settlement agreement by which EPA committed itself to propose and finalize the Clean Power Plan. (Case no. 14-1146]
- On August 15, Murray Energy filed another petition in the D.C. Circuit seeking to overturn the regulation based on the judicial review provisions of the Clean Air Act. (Case no. 14-1151)
In late January, a D.C. Circuit panel established a parallel schedule for all three cases; oral arguments will take place on April 16.
Setting aside their respective jurisdictional hurdles, the challengers essentially share the same case on the merits. If you’ve read this far, then presumably you’re already acquainted with the inside-baseball legalese of these lawsuits; I’ve given the nitty-gritty details here. Very simply put, both the States & Murray Energy argue that the plain text of the Clean Air Act bars EPA from promulgating the Clean Power Plan.
In September, an NRDC lawyer called the lawsuits “laughable.” Nonetheless, NRDC felt it was necessary to intervene in all of them. Last week, NRDC and other environmental interveners submitted two briefs on behalf the EPA (one for the states’ case, and another for both the Murray cases). Notably, the two briefs adopt distinct arguments regarding the plaintiffs’ shared argument on the merits. In this short post, I will address the environmental interveners’ briefs. [click to continue…]






