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SCOTUS Can Stop Blue Cities From Forcing Energy Diktats On The Rest Of The Country
The Federalist ^ | 12/9/2025 | Christopher Mills

Posted on 12/09/2025 11:40:01 AM PST by Signalman

This week, the U.S. Supreme Court should consider a basic constitutional reality: county officials from Boulder, Colorado, cannot force their preferred climate policies on the rest of the nation. Obvious as it seems, that is what’s at stake in Suncor Energy Inc. v. Boulder County, a climate change case the court will weigh for review on Dec. 12.

Like the other thirty-odd copycat climate lawsuits filed by states and localities from Honolulu to my hometown of Charleston, Boulder’s suit weaponizes tort law to try to transform state courts into vehicles for deploying sweeping climate mandates. If Boulder gets its way, the casualties won’t be confined to the energy companies it endeavors to bankrupt; American consumers and the U.S. economy writ large will be caught in the crossfire.

Boulder’s lawsuit follows the now-familiar script crafted by climate trial lawyers: sue a handful of oil and gas companies for the worldwide effects of greenhouse-gas emissions generated over decades by billions of people and entities, then demand billions of dollars to “abate” alleged local climate-related costs. The plaintiffs inventively spin a narrative of the companies’ alleged contributions to global climate change and how those contributions purportedly create a “public nuisance” in their local jurisdictions.

But nothing about the suit is local — not the causes it identifies, not the harms it alleges, not the remedies it seeks, and not the implications of the Colorado Supreme Court’s decision allowing it to advance. Like the interstate carbon emissions central to its complaint, Boulder’s case is inherently national in scope. And the consequence of a judgment in its favor will be felt far beyond the borders of Boulder, Colorado.

The Founders warned of the peril in allowing one state to impose its policies on another and thus created constitutional safeguards to prevent such encroachments on state sovereignty. In Federalist No. 80, Alexander Hamilton explained that issues of concern to the nation belong in federal court, not parceled out to local tribunals with potentially competing interests. And the Founders entrusted Congress with the authority to make policy decisions of national consequence. Courtrooms, particularly state courts, are simply not equipped to address a complex, global phenomenon like climate change.

That is exactly why the Supreme Court should grant review: so that one locality’s attempt to subvert the democratic process does not metastasize into a nationwide regulatory free-for-all driven by ideologically motivated state and local governments. Should the court decline to intervene, the now-dozens of climate lawsuits could multiply into hundreds, each with overlapping and conflicting rulings resulting in tens of billions of dollars siphoned from America’s energy economy and ultimately its consumers.

Fortunately, some state courts have recognized this crisis. In South Carolina, Judge Roger M. Young warned in his dismissal of the City of Charleston’s suit that “[t]hese lawsuits promise to create a chaotic web of conflicting legal obligations for [the energy companies] as each state and municipality imposes its own de facto regulations” on fossil fuels. Judge Young rightly concluded that any answer to global climate change “must rest with the federal political branches that are legally and substantively equipped to address them.”

It is the duty of Congress, not local judges, to contend with subjects that affect the entire nation. Lawmakers in our nation’s capital have reasonably declined to adopt the kinds of extreme policies that climate plaintiffs like Boulder seek to usher in through litigation. That is because bankrupting the energy industry, as one of Boulder’s attorneys has confessed is the endgame, is not in the best interest of the American public or the overall economic security of the United States.

Should Boulder and its climate allies prevail, it will be the American people that pay the price. Recognizing the threat of this lawsuit and so many others to the Constitution’s design, the Supreme Court should grant review in Suncor Energy and restore common sense by putting an end to this runaway climate lawfare scheme


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: energy; lawfare; scotus; thefederalist; tyranny
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1 posted on 12/09/2025 11:40:01 AM PST by Signalman
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To: Signalman

Well, these companies could just not due business in this county. Sorry, no oil or gas for you guys!


2 posted on 12/09/2025 11:47:46 AM PST by proxy_user
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To: Signalman

Think of the worst of the DemocRAT party, multiply by a thousand, and you’ve got the People’s Republic of Boulder. Real science (National Institute for Standards and Technology, CSU STEM) is surrounded by a crowd of functional stupidity so great that even Pedo Joe Biden would look down on them. They’re the folks that couldn’t figure out who “kidnapped” a child from a house surrounded by snow...and no footprints.


3 posted on 12/09/2025 11:52:22 AM PST by Da Coyote
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To: proxy_user
Well, these companies could just not due business in this county. Sorry, no oil or gas for you guys!

I agree. I wonder if there are federal regulations/incentives/fines that force/incentivize energy providers to be available in all states interested in their services.

4 posted on 12/09/2025 11:55:00 AM PST by Tell It Right (1 Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: Signalman

The only thing climate change might do to Boulder is to shorten its skiing season.

That would have to be offset by the ease of getting to Boulder by hydrocarbon fuel vehicles.


5 posted on 12/09/2025 12:17:33 PM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: Signalman

Should I be able to sue the DNC and its contributors because they helped elect Joe Biden who let in millions of invaders who generated CO2?


6 posted on 12/09/2025 12:21:32 PM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: Signalman

“Courtrooms, particularly state courts, are simply not equipped to address a complex, global phenomenon like climate change.”

The author misspelled “a heinous, global hoax”.


7 posted on 12/09/2025 12:39:29 PM PST by one guy in new jersey
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To: Signalman

I think there are 12 States that currently follow the lunacy of California enviro whacko policies and dictates.


8 posted on 12/09/2025 2:58:55 PM PST by eyeamok
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To: Brian Griffin

Boulder has no downhill skiing....


9 posted on 12/09/2025 6:14:02 PM PST by Paladin2 (YMMV)
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