The Polluters’ Lawyers

Legislation to strengthen the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act and other environmental concerns in the 1970s did not only create new government agencies, it also spawned entire fields of law. While some lawyers work for nonprofits that use lawsuits to challenge pollution and others work as government regulators, the “best of the best” work for large corporations wielding both litigation and lobbying on behalf of polluting industries, according to Chambers and Partners, a group that publishes directories indexing and ranking law firms globally.

The three top U.S. firms in environmental law – Sidley Austin, Latham & Watkins and Hunton & Williams – represent companies notorious for violating the Clean Water and Clean Air Acts and lobbying to weaken laws meant to protect the environment and public health.


Sidley Austin is considered a top tier firm on environmental issues. Chambers states, “the lawyers are renowned for their expertise in air, water and waste pollution litigation,” and list clients such as BP, General Electric and Duke Energy. But perhaps their most significant client when it comes to international pollution is the XL-Pipeline project in Canada. They represent Canadian energy companies attempting to develop a controversial cross-border oil and gas pipeline.

“We represent Alliance Pipeline, Enbridge, TransCanada and other Canadian energy businesses which have sponsored major cross-border oil and gas pipeline projects. We have advised a number of these projects on the permitting and environmental review process under both US federal and state laws. We also counsel clients involved in proceedings initiated by the Office of Enforcement at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,” states Sidley Austin on their website. Continue reading The Polluters’ Lawyers

Nuclear Accident in France

A nuclear accident at the sprawling and historic Marcoule site, twelve miles north of scenic Avignon, France, killed one worker and injured four others, according to the French Nuclear Authority.

The workers were operating a high temperature industrial oven that burns low-level nuclear waste in a sealed building when the unit blew up. The worker who was killed was burned so badly his body was carbonized, according to officials. Another worker was seriously injured and three others received less serious injuries.

French authorities say no radiation was released outside the Marcoule site and all radiation is contained in the building. It should be noted that the French government and their government-controlled nuclear companies have a long history of poor transparency when it comes to reporting radiation-related accidents and leaks. Much of the French national economy is dependent on these companies providing electricity and exporting nuclear technology and fuel.

The explosion took place at the Centraco nuclear waste treatment facility run by EDF, the large French-government-owned nuclear utility through a subsidiary called Socodei.

The Marcoule facility has played a huge roll in the history of the French nuclear weapons program.

Since the mid-1990s, the Marcoule site has combined fissile uranium and plutonium into MOX fuel. EDF uses MOX in its civilian nuclear power stations. It sells nuclear fuel and technology worldwide through another French-government-owned company called Areva. EDF also produces weapons grade plutonium and tritium gas at the facility for the French government.

The  Marcoule site is to French nuclear weapons production what the Savannah River Site (SRS) in Aiken, South Carolina, is to the U.S. Department of Energy. Both SRS and Marcoule have deep connections to the French nuclear fuel and reactor company Areva. The U.S. government is investing more than $5 billion in a MOX fuel fabrication plant at SRS paying Areva to provide the technology and manage the construction. The American plant is behind schedule and over budget.

DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), which runs the U.S. nuclear weapons program, touts MOX as the solution for arms control by claiming the new SRS MOX plant will be able to take old weapons grade plutonium from around the world and convert it into civilian reactor fuel to produce electricity. One State Department official told National Security News Service “that MOX is the United States’ answer to nonproliferation.” So far there are no paying customers for the reactor fuel. A less powerful version of that fuel that was loaded into Fukushima Reactor Number Three a year ago was dispersed into the Japanese environment after the March 2011 explosions and reactor meltdowns following the earthquake and tsunami.

The Marcoule site is involved in a massive and expensive radioactive clean up effort that so far, like the one at SRS, has been largely unsuccessful. Like the United States, the French have no final nuclear waste storage facility. Exacerbating the problem at Marcoule is the site also houses an experimental breeder reactor program that features a technology that produces more plutonium than it consumes.

Many critics say the French Nuclear Safety Authority, like the American and Japanese authorities, administers weak oversight of the French nuclear industry, which is in serious financial trouble.

EDF company share values are under pressure. In addition to the accident, the company has been criticized for the design of the European Pressurized Water Reactors (EPRs) that, according to government policy, are to provide next generation nuclear electricity. Some opponents call the reactor designs dangerous.

Last July, then French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde suggested the French government urge closer cooperation between utility EDF and reactor maker Areva to increase France’s chances of winning more reactor contracts abroad. “There must be a strategic partnership between Areva and EDF each time that it’s necessary for exports,” Lagarde told French radio station RTL. “Our two big nuclear champions must imperatively get along.”

Shortly after Legarde’s comments, French President Nicolas Sarkozy issued a statement that his government would look into the possibility of EDF buying a stake in Areva, a move opposed by then Areva Chief Executive Officer “Atomic Annie” Anne Lauvergeon.

Taking It to the Streets

At a time when science itself is under assault and the Environmental Protection Agency’s future is challenged, NASA scientist and global climate change awareness activist James Hansen spoke at the National Press Club on Monday in opposition to the proposed Keystone XL – a 1700-mile, $7 billion pipeline which would carry heavy crude oil from “tar sand” mines in Alberta, Canada, to refineries along the Texas and Louisiana coasts.

Environmental protesters have been picketing in front of the White House in opposition to the pipeline. On Friday, the State Department’s Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs issued its final environmental analysis that said TransCanada’s proposed pipeline will have “limited adverse environmental impacts.” The Obama administration is expected to approve or reject Keystone XL by the end of the year.

One of the Bureau’s responsibilities is representing the country on global climate change issues. Its website says:

The United States is taking a leading role in addressing climate change by advancing an ever-expanding suite of measures. We have initiated a number of polices and partnerships that span a wide range of initiatives from reducing our emissions at home to developing transformational low-carbon technologies to improving observations systems that will help us better understand and address the possible impacts of climate change. Our efforts emphasize the importance of results-driven action both internationally and domestically.

Hansen says the oil produced through this unconventional fossil fuel process is “extremely dirty stuff.” In its place, he supports instituting a $10 a ton tax on carbon for 10 years and giving these monies ($600 billion by his estimation) to American families to offset the costs of alternative energy sources. “Tax carbon and give the money to the people. That would stimulate the economy,” he says in response to a question about the jobs the pipeline project would create. He believes that giving money directly to families (he says between $6000 to $9000 per year) is better than previously pursued “cap and trade” policies that would be overtaken by big bank trading instruments.

He is joining several religious leaders today in Washington protesting the Keystone XL pipeline project. Their efforts are to draw attention to “the moral duty to preserve creation.”

He says in his meeting with Senator John Kerry about these issues, the senator called his ideas “unrealistic.” With the Obama administration’s support for the pipeline and leading Republican presidential candidates who do not believe global warning exists or, if it does, humans do not contribute to it, he is turning his attention away from politics and to grassroots advocacy to educate the public on climate change issues.

Hansen says the country is falling behind on alternative energy research and countries like China are investing in future technologies like solar, wind and nuclear. As a physicist, he supports pursuing “fourth generation” nuclear reactors as one of the few on-demand power sources that could meet the world’s energy needs. He believes new reactor designs will produce less waste that is dangerous only for decades rather than the waste current reactors generate that is dangerous for centuries and for which there is no permanent storage facility.

Read more at The Washington Post and The New York Times.

 

New York: Home Rule vs. Marcellus Gas

Natural Gas Industry Spokesman Scott Cline Speaks at Keuka College (Peter Mantius)
Natural Gas Industry Spokesman Scott Cline Speaks at Keuka College (Peter Mantius)
In New York State, the tension between the state’s authority to grant drilling permits for high-volume hydrofracking without notifying affected communities and the communities’ right to ban unwanted industrial activity is shaping up as the key legal battle over the gas-rich Marcellus Shale.

At stake is whether the gas industry will get relatively free reign to drill statewide or be hemmed in by a patchwork of local ordinances that confine new gas wells to industrial zones.

On July 1, the state Department of Environmental Conservation issued a major portion of its revised draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS) for high-volume hydrofracking. The agency plans to begin issuing permits to frack the Marcellus shortly after it finalizes the GEIS later this year or in 2012.

Meanwhile, towns all over upstate New York are busy passing local bans on drilling. They cite municipal home rule law that vests towns with the police power to enact laws to protect and enhance their visual and physical environment.

The city of Buffalo and at least 11 other New York towns have enacted fracking bans, and seven counties ban fracking on county land. Another 20 towns either have bans under formal consideration or have strong movements pushing for a ban or a moratorium on drilling.

Buffalo, New York, Skyline
Buffalo, New York, Skyline
The gas industry says they’re all wasting their time because the bans won’t hold up in court. It points to the law that gives the DEC exclusive authority to issue drilling permits. That law “supersedes all local laws related to regulation of oil and gas development except for local government jurisdiction over local roads and the right to collect real property taxes.”

At first, the DEC ignored the obvious legal conflict. In its first draft GEIS issued in 2009, it never addressed local bans. There weren’t many to address. But in its July 1 revised draft GEIS, the agency acknowledged home rule’s growing significance by requiring applicants for Marcellus drilling permits to “compare the proposed well pad location to local land use laws …” Any conflict “would trigger additional DEC review before a permit could be issued,” the agency said.

Asked whether he thought a local fracking ban would stand, DEC Commissioner Joe Martens has said, “The law is not perfectly clear….I think we’ll see some legal challenges along the way that will make that clearer.”

The DEC could hardly continue to ignore “home rule” issues after the state General Assembly passed a bill this year (A3245) that would have given the increasingly popular local bans more weight than the DEC’s authority to permit gas wells.

Its passage triggered alarms in the gas industry. “We have been warned that this bill may have a chance to make it through the Senate!” one pro-gas industry website declared in June. “This (S3427) is a dangerous bill.”

While the Senate never took up the bill before adjourning in June, anti-drilling advocates say reviving the home rule legislation is a top priority. Roger Downs, a lobbyist in Albany for the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter, told a panel audience in Ithaca July 25 that the bill is likely to come up if and when the state legislature meets in special session later this year.

A new law allowing communities to opt out of gas drilling would continue a pattern the DEC has established since Gov. Andrew Cuomo appointed Martens as the agency’s commissioner shortly after his own  inauguration in January.

While the DEC under Martens has laid out a path to drilling the Marcellus in New York, it has also banned it sensitive areas, reversing stances the agency had taken before this year. And it has pledged to codify those positions in state law. For example, the DEC is now proposing to ban high-volume fracking:

– In the New York City and Syracuse watersheds. While the DEC has acknowledged the special sensitivity of those unfiltered water systems since April 2010, it had previously stopped short of a ban because it feared the legal repercussions of denying property owners in those watersheds the chance to cash in on gas royalties.

– On the surface of state-owned lands, including state forests. The DEC had been defending the industry’s right to drill in the forests despite lawsuits alleging conflicts with the legislative intent behind the establishment of those protected areas.

– Within 500 feet of the boundaries of primary aquifers.

Downs of the Sierra Club speculated that the DEC’s new stances may fit with Cuomo’s presidential aspirations. He noted that the governor was highly successful during his first legislative session, winning on-time approval of a state budget and signing a law permitting gay marriage in New York State. The rise of his approval rating above 70 percent has fueled talk of a Cuomo presidential run in 2016. Downs said that as a presidential hopeful, he will need to have shown national leadership on fracking, and pressing for a statewide ban would hurt his chances of appealing to moderates nationwide. He’s chosen more targeted bans instead.  Only time will tell if that strategy extends to the issue of home rule.

Map of New York Fingerlakes
Map of New York Fingerlakes
Sentiment in favor of a local ban or moratorium on fracking tends to be strongest in and around the Finger Lakes, especially in communities dependent on wineries or lakeside vacationers who want to prevent the noise, air pollution and heavy truck traffic that come with intense drilling. But most of the communities that have enacted bans fall outside the prime target area for Marcellus drilling, according to industry spokesman Scott Cline. The prime territory is just north of New York’s border with Pennsylvania around Binghamton, and most communities in that area aren’t keen on bans, Cline noted.

Speaking July 27 at Keuka College, which is near several communities that have passed drilling bans, Cline said, “It’s unlikely you’ll see Marcellus drilling in the Finger Lakes.” A possible exception to Cline’s generalization is the Cooperstown area near Lake Otsego, which has a tourism-dependent economy and does fall in prime Marcellus drilling territory. Four towns in Otsego County have already banned fracking and at least a half dozen others are considering that path. That means Otsego County is a likely flash point for the coming legal battle over the enforceability of local drilling bans. Those who argue pro and con are already forming battle lines.

Attorney Helen Slottje (shaleshockmedia.org)
Attorney Helen Slottje (shaleshockmedia.org)
Helen Slottje, an attorney in Ithaca, has been researching case law and developing legal strategies for fracking bans for at least two years. The team opposing bans includes Tom Shepstone, campaign manager for EnergyInDepth’s Northeast Marcellus Initiative. He called the bans “Potemkin Laws” in references to the fake villages meant to impress the Empress Catherine II in the 18th century Russia. Shepstone described the bans as “artificial constructs designed to fool others into thinking local officials have taken meaningful actions when, in fact, they’ve done nothing but create a temporary obstacle at great risk to the taxpayers who will have to pay the bill for their foolishness.” And Michael P. Joy, an energy attorney with Biltekoff & Joy in Amherst, N.Y., predicted that town drilling bans will prove to be “costly to manage and impossible to win.”

Tom Shepstone, EnergyInDepth’s Northeast Marcellus Initiative (The Times-Tribune)
Tom Shepstone, EnergyInDepth’s Northeast Marcellus Initiative (The Times-Tribune)
But Slottje points to a 1996 court decision that held that a municipality isn’t obligated to permit the exploitation of its natural resources if limiting that activity is a “reasonable use of its police powers to prevent damage to the rights of others…” Speaking as a panelist in Ithaca July 25, she said courts have shown  “incredible deference to local governments” in similar cases. That pattern of deference suggests that fracking opponents have reason to be optimistic about the bans’ chances in court challenges, she added. Slottje said her optimism does not extend to another hot-button legal issue dear to some anti-drilling activists: equal protection. They have suggested challenging the fracking bans in the New York City and Syracuse watersheds as a violation of the equal protection rights of citizens with private water wells who are left exposed to drilling. They shouldn’t get their hopes up, Slottje added.

Equal protection arguments are difficult to make stick in court, unless they are brought by an easily identifiable class of victims, such as a particular race or religious group. When the affected class is a good portion of the general population, the courts tend to defer to the state’s agenda if they have reasonable justification, she said. So while equal protection challenges are still likely, they face more of an uphill legal battle than home rule cases, Slottje concluded.

Joy of Biltekoff & Joy strongly disagrees that home rule will prevail over state authority. He stresses the provision in New York Environmental Conservation Law that states that the DEC’s rights to issue drilling permits “shall supersede all local laws and ordinances.”