By Michael Gerrard
For several years the proponents of climate regulation have pinned their hopes on Congress. Now that those hopes have been dashed for at least two more years, the principal action is shifting to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the courts and the states, though important questions will still be faced by Congress. This column surveys what is likely to happen over the next two years. Published in Volume 244 of New York Law Journal.
Read the article Climate Regulation Without Congressional Action in Columbia Law School's Scholarship Archive.