Congressional Research Service Report Released: Climate Change and Existing Law: A Survey of Legal Issues Past, Present, and Future
by Taryn Rucinski
The Congressional Research Service (CRS), the public policy research arm of Congress, just issued the report Climate Change and Existing Law: A Survey of Legal Issues Past, Present, and Future (Oct. 25, 2012). The 26-page report authored by Robert Meltz discusses the following:
Summary
This
report surveys existing law for legal issues that have arisen, or may
arise in the future, on account of climate change and government
responses thereto.
At
the threshold of many climate-change-related lawsuits are two
barriers—whether the plaintiff has standing to sue and whether the claim
being made presents a political question. Both barriers have forced
courts to apply amorphous standards in a new and complex context.
Efforts
to mitigate climate change—that is, reduce greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions—have spawned a host of legal issues. The Supreme Court
resolved a big one in 2007—the Clean Air Act (CAA), it said, does
authorize EPA to regulate GHG emissions. Quite recently, a host of
issues raised by EPA’s efforts to carry out that authority were resolved
in the agency’s favor by the D.C. Circuit. Another issue is whether
EPA’s “endangerment finding” for GHG emissions from new motor vehicles
will compel EPA to move against GHG emissions under other CAA
authorities. Still other mitigation issues are (1) the role of the
Endangered Species Act in addressing climate change; (2) how climate
change must be considered under the National Environmental Policy Act;
(3) liability and other questions raised by carbon capture and
sequestration; (4) constitutional constraints on land use regulation and
state actions against climate change; and (5) whether the public trust
doctrine applies to the atmosphere.
Liability
for harms allegedly caused by climate change has raised another crop of
legal issues. The Supreme Court decision that the CAA bars federal
judges from imposing their own limits on GHG emissions from power plants
has led observers to ask: Can plaintiffs alleging climate change harms
still seek monetary damages, and are state law claims still allowed? The
two rulings so far say no to the former, but split on the latter.
Questions of insurance policy coverage are also likely to be litigated.
Finally, the applicability of international law principles to climate
change has yet to be resolved.
Water
shortages thought to be induced by climate change likely will lead to
litigation over the nature of water rights. Shortages have already
prompted several lawsuits over whether cutbacks in water delivered from
federal projects effect Fifth Amendment takings or breaches of contract.
Sea
level rise and extreme precipitation linked to climate change raise
questions as to (1) the effect of sea level rise on the beachfront
owner’s property line; (2) whether public beach access easements migrate
with the landward movement of beaches; (3) design and operation of
federal levees; and (4) government failure to take preventive measures
against climate change harms.
Other
adaptation responses to climate change raising legal issues, often
property rights related, are beach armoring (seawalls, bulkheads, etc.),
beach renourishment, and “retreat” measures. Retreat measures seek to
move existing development away from areas likely to be affected by
floods and sea level rise, and to discourage new development there.
Natural
disasters to which climate change contributes may prompt questions as
to whether response actions taken in an emergency are subject to relaxed
requirements and, similarly, as to the rebuilding of structures
destroyed by such disasters just as they were before.
Finally,
immigration and refugee law appear not to cover persons forced to
relocate because of climate change impacts such as drought or sea level
rise.
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