Supreme Court considers Chevron v. Plaquemines Parish case
The Supreme Court's decision could overturn a $745 million state jury verdict and impact 11 of 42 similar coastal damage cases involving oil companies, officials said.
7 Articles
7 Articles
High court weighs fight to make oil companies pay for coastal damages
The Supreme Court heard arguments Monday on the fate of a lawsuit filed by a Louisiana parish against multiple oil producers over damage to the state’s coastline, marking the high court’s first oral arguments of 2026. The matter before the justices is over whether to move the case to federal court, but the ruling in Chevron USA v. Plaquemines Parish will have wider ramifications for efforts to sue oil producers over damage to state coastlines. I…
Supreme Court Presses Oil Giants on Bid to Shift Louisiana Pollution Suits to Federal Court
U.S. Supreme Court justices on Monday expressed skepticism toward efforts by ExxonMobil and Chevron to move Louisiana coastal pollution lawsuits out of state court, questioning whether the companies’ World War II era oil production activities were sufficiently federal in nature to justify removal. The oil companies, backed by the U.S. Department of Justice and industry groups, argue that lower courts relied on an outdated legal standard when ref…
Attorney General Liz Murrill appears in front of U.S. Supreme Court in coastal restoration case
BATON ROUGE - In a fight over Louisiana's coast, Attorney General Liz Murrill headed to Washington, D.C, to argue the state's case in front of the United States Supreme Court. Murrill said a lawsuit involving Chevron and Plaquemines Parish should remain in state court.The case isn't about whether oil and gas companies damaged the state's coast. Instead, it's about whether such cases should be decided in local state courts or in federal court.Wor…
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