SUPREME COURT
Big Oil brings another climate case to the justices
Oil and gas industry attorneys are giving the Supreme Court a new foothold to derail state and local lawsuits asking fossil fuel firms to pay up for climate impacts.
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Jennifer Hijazi, E&E News reporter
Oil and gas industry attorneys are giving the Supreme Court a new foothold to derail state and local lawsuits asking fossil fuel firms to pay up for climate impacts.
Texas' top electricity regulator resigned yesterday as the state's largest electric cooperative filed for bankruptcy, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm called for grid changes, companies reported losses in the billions of dollars, and lawsuits mounted after this month's historic blackouts.
By Miranda Willson and Edward Klump in Energywire
The world's biggest oil producers, faced with a new U.S. administration, say they're embracing the global energy transition, acknowledging it's underway whether they like it or not.
By Mike Lee, Lesley Clark and Carlos Anchondo in Energywire
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Texas' top electricity regulator resigned yesterday as the state's largest electric cooperative filed for bankruptcy, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm called for grid changes, companies reported losses in the billions of dollars, and lawsuits mounted after this month's historic blackouts.
By Miranda Willson and Edward Klump in Energywire
The world's biggest oil producers, faced with a new U.S. administration, say they're embracing the global energy transition, acknowledging it's underway whether they like it or not.
By Mike Lee, Lesley Clark and Carlos Anchondo in Energywire