Event Title
Panel I: Regulation under Massachusetts v. EPA
Location
Duke Law School
Start Date
16-11-2007 9:00 AM
End Date
16-11-2007 10:00 AM
Description
In Massachusetts v. EPA (April 2007), the U.S. Supreme Court held that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act (CAA). However, what regulatory approach should the EPA take under the CAA? Our expert panelists will discuss various regulatory options and associated implications.
Moderator: Jim Salzman, JD, MSc, Samuel F. Mordecai Professor of Law and Nicholas Institute Professor of Environmental Policy, Duke University
Frank Princoitta, Director, Air Pollution Prevention and Control Division U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Global Climate Change: The Technology Challenge"
Ryke Longest, JD, Director, Environmental Law & Policy Clinic and Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University, "State Perspective on Federal Regulation of CO2"
Related Paper
Frank Princiotta, The Role of Power Generation Technology in Mitigating Global Climate Change, 18 Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum 251-276 (Spring 2008)
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/delpf/vol18/iss2/1
Related Paper II
Ryke Longest, Massachusetts Versus EPA: Parens Patriae Vindicated, 18 Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum 277-288 (Spring 2008)
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/delpf/vol18/iss2/2
Panel I: Regulation under Massachusetts v. EPA
Duke Law School
In Massachusetts v. EPA (April 2007), the U.S. Supreme Court held that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act (CAA). However, what regulatory approach should the EPA take under the CAA? Our expert panelists will discuss various regulatory options and associated implications.
Moderator: Jim Salzman, JD, MSc, Samuel F. Mordecai Professor of Law and Nicholas Institute Professor of Environmental Policy, Duke University
Frank Princoitta, Director, Air Pollution Prevention and Control Division U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Global Climate Change: The Technology Challenge"
Ryke Longest, JD, Director, Environmental Law & Policy Clinic and Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University, "State Perspective on Federal Regulation of CO2"