Vermont defends its landmark climate superfund law against Trump administration lawsuit
Vermont defends its first-in-nation 2024 climate superfund law to hold fossil fuel companies financially responsible for climate damage and fund adaptation projects.
- On Monday, Vermont lawyers argued in federal court to dismiss two lawsuits challenging its 2024 climate superfund law, asserting the state's sovereign authority to raise revenue for climate adaptation projects.
- President Donald Trump ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to challenge the law, while the American Petroleum Institute and Chamber of Commerce sued separately, calling it "burdensome and ideologically motivated."
- Jennifer Rushlow, interim vice president for CLF Vermont, said the litigation could influence other states; New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed similar legislation, and a Dartmouth College study estimated 10 major companies caused $28 trillion in climate damage.
27 Articles
27 Articles
Vermont defends its landmark climate superfund law against Trump administration lawsuit - The Morning Sun
Vermont’s effort to make fossil fuel companies pay for damage caused by climate change was tested Monday in a federal courtroom, where the state argued that two lawsuits challenging its groundbreaking 2024 law should be thrown out. Vermont became the first state to enact a climate superfund law, modeled on the federal superfund law that taxed petroleum and chemical companies to pay to clean up sites polluted by toxic waste. It took action after …
Vermont defends its landmark climate superfund law against Trump administration lawsuit
Vermont is defending its first-in-the-nation law that aims to make fossil fuel companies help pay for damage caused by climate change. Both the U.S.
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