Current:Home > ScamsCourt Orders New Climate Impact Analysis for 4 Gigantic Coal Leases -WealthSphere Pro
Court Orders New Climate Impact Analysis for 4 Gigantic Coal Leases
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:44:30
A federal appeals court in Denver told the Bureau of Land Management on Friday that its analysis of the climate impacts of four gigantic coal leases was economically “irrational” and needs to be done over.
When reviewing the environmental impacts of fossil fuel projects under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the judges said, the agency can’t assume the harmful effects away by claiming that dirty fuels left untouched in one location would automatically bubble up, greenhouse gas emissions and all, somewhere else.
That was the basic logic employed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in 2010 when it approved the new leases in the Powder River Basin that stretches across Wyoming and Montana, expanding projects that hold some 2 billion tons of coal, big enough to supply at least a fifth of the nation’s needs.
The leases were at Arch Coal’s Black Thunder mine and Peabody Energy’s North Antelope-Rochelle mine, among the biggest operations of two of the world’s biggest coal companies. If these would have no climate impact, as the BLM argued, then presumably no one could ever be told to leave coal in the ground to protect the climate.
But that much coal, when it is burned, adds billions of tons of carbon dioxide to an already overburdened atmosphere, worsening global warming’s harm. Increasingly, environmentalists have been pressing the federal leasing agency to consider those cumulative impacts, and increasingly judges have been ruling that the 1970 NEPA statute, the foundation of modern environmental law, requires it.
The appeals court ruling is significant, as it overturned a lower court that had ruled in favor of the agency and the coal mining interests. It comes as the Trump administration is moving to reverse actions taken at the end of the Obama administration to review the coal leasing program on climate and economic grounds.
“This is a major win for climate progress, for our public lands, and for our clean energy future,” said Jeremy Nichols of WildEarth Guardians, which filed the appeal along with the Sierra Club. “It also stands as a major reality check to President Trump and his attempts to use public lands and coal to prop up the dying coal industry at the expense of our climate.”
But the victory for the green plaintiffs may prove limited. The court did not throw out the lower court’s ruling, a remedy that would have brought mining operations to a halt. Nor, in sending the case back for further review, did it instruct the lower court how to proceed, beyond telling it not “to rely on an economic assumption, which contradicted basic economic principles.”
It was arbitrary and capricious, the appeals court said, for BLM to pretend that there was no “real world difference” between granting and denying coal leases, on the theory that the coal would simply be produced at a different mine.
The appeals court favorably quoted WildEarth’s argument that this was “at best a gross oversimplification.” The group argued that Powder River coal, which the government lets the companies have at rock-bottom prices, is extraordinarily cheap and abundant. If this supply were cut off, prices would rise, leading power plants to switch to other, cheaper fuels. The result would be lower emissions of carbon dioxide.
For the BLM to argue that coal markets, like a waterbed, would rise here if pushed down there, was “a long logical leap,” the court ruled.
veryGood! (94)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Busting 5 common myths about water and hydration
- King Charles III and Queen Camilla Officially Crowned at Coronation
- Trump’s EPA Skipped Ethics Reviews for Several New Advisers, Government Watchdog Finds
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Polar Bears Wearing Cameras and Fitbits Reveal an Arctic Struggle for Survival
- Astrud Gilberto, The Girl from Ipanema singer who helped popularize bossa nova, dead at 83
- Remember that looming recession? Not happening, some economists say
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- See the Royal Family Unite on the Buckingham Palace Balcony After King Charles III's Coronation
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Kate Middleton Has a Royally Relatable Response to If Prince Louis Will Behave at Coronation Question
- Lawsuits Accuse Fracking Companies of Triggering Oklahoma’s Earthquake Surge
- House Judiciary chair Jim Jordan seeks unredacted DOJ memo on special counsel's Trump probes
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Maps, satellite images show Canadian wildfire smoke enveloping parts of U.S. with unhealthy air
- The economics behind 'quiet quitting' — and what we should call it instead
- TransCanada Launches Two Legal Challenges to Obama’s Rejection of Keystone
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Why Cities Suing Over Climate Change Want the Fight in State Court, Not Federal
Today’s Climate: June 19-20, 2010
Why your bad boss will probably lose the remote-work wars
Average rate on 30
Scientists debate how lethal COVID is. Some say it's now less risky than flu
This city is the most appealing among aspiring Gen Z homeowners
Prince Louis Yawning at King Charles III's Coronation Is a Total Mood