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B.Y.O.B. (Bring Your Own Bag): A Comprehensive Assessment Of China’S Plastic Bag Policy, Mary Beckwith O'Loughlin Dec 2010

B.Y.O.B. (Bring Your Own Bag): A Comprehensive Assessment Of China’S Plastic Bag Policy, Mary Beckwith O'Loughlin

Mary Beckwith O'Loughlin

On June 1, 2008, the Chinese government enacted a nationwide policy prohibiting all stores from freely distributing plastic bags to customers. This new policy requires that, henceforth, all retailers must charge a nominal fee for plastic bags and that those purchasable bags must meet certain quality requirements to improve their potential reusability. These retailers, which include everything from grocery and clothing stores to farmer’s markets and food stalls, individually determine how much to charge for their bags and get to keep all related proceeds. The policy is an effort to mitigate the “white pollution” that is choking China’s landscape, as …


The Clean Water Act’S Final Frontier: Taking On Nonpoint Source Pollution Using Mandatory Tmdl Rules, Jason M. Stoffel Dec 2010

The Clean Water Act’S Final Frontier: Taking On Nonpoint Source Pollution Using Mandatory Tmdl Rules, Jason M. Stoffel

Jason M Stoffel

While the Clean Water Act, as it is currently structured, has few provisions that directly regulate nonpoint source pollution, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, in the case Friends of Pinto Creek v. United States EPA, 504 F.3d 1007 (9th Cir. 2007), has recognized the Total Maximum Daily Load ("TMDL") program as a tool that can be used by the EPA to indirectly compel states to regulate nonpoint source pollution in the nation’s impaired waters. In the context of the Ninth Circuit’s ruling, in 2010, the EPA made national headlines by pushing states to regulate nonpoint source pollution in the …


China’S Gigantic Appetite For Natural Resources Spurs Multilateral Concerns, Yuliya Kostelova Nov 2010

China’S Gigantic Appetite For Natural Resources Spurs Multilateral Concerns, Yuliya Kostelova

Yuliya Kostelova

China is the second largest economy in the world today. Its economic growth is unbridled and expansion is rampant. A rapidly growing communistic state with an attempt for capitalistic market is alarming in the international economic community. China’s insatiable oil appetite creates various concerns among major sovereign partners. Notwithstanding, China is fully committed to its economic development in the future regardless of widely expressed multilateral concerns.


A Quantitative Assessment Of The Development Of Renewable Energy In Taiwan, 1980 To The Present: A Political-Economic Perspective, Kuang-Cheng Chen Oct 2010

A Quantitative Assessment Of The Development Of Renewable Energy In Taiwan, 1980 To The Present: A Political-Economic Perspective, Kuang-Cheng Chen

Kuang-Cheng Chen

This article attempts to use quantitative analysis (regression analyses) to analyze renewable energy development in Taiwan from 1980 to the present using the political-economic perspective. This research found that the “Renewable Energy Supply” and the “Renewable Energy Supply/Total Energy Supply” were impacted by political factors (e.g., “Which party wins half of the seats for county magistrates and city mayors in a given year?”) between 1980 and 1999, but were influenced by economic factors (GDP (PPP) from 2000 to 2007. As regards the “Ratio of CO2 Emissions to the Population,” it was impacted by economic factors (GDP (PPP)) from 1980 to …


Banking On Allowances: The Epa’S Mixed Record In Managing Emissions-Market Transitions, Nathan D. Richardson, Arthur G. Fraas Oct 2010

Banking On Allowances: The Epa’S Mixed Record In Managing Emissions-Market Transitions, Nathan D. Richardson, Arthur G. Fraas

Nathan D Richardson

The history of emissions-trading markets in the United States is marked by change. Since cap-and-trade programs were first implemented on a large scale after the 1990 Amendments to the Clean Air Act, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has repeatedly revised and replaced emissionstrading markets for nitrous oxides and sulfur dioxide. In each transition, the agency has had to decide what to do with emissions allowances banked in the earlier program. These banked allowances represent early reductions in emissions, with corresponding environmental benefits, but also the expectation on the part of regulated entities that they will continue to hold value …


The 2009 Eu Regulation On Trade In Seal Products, Mohamed Coulibaly Oct 2010

The 2009 Eu Regulation On Trade In Seal Products, Mohamed Coulibaly

Mohamed Coulibaly

This paper assesses the justifiability of trade-related measure for the purpose of protecting the environment. It analyzes a new regulation adopted by the European Communities to ban trade in seal products derived from commercial hunting. The measure has been challenged under the WTO rules by two major sealing countries -Norway and Canada, on the ground that it violates the EC obligations under those rules. After analyzing relevant WTO jurisprudence, the paper concludes that the EC regulation violates the EC obligations but, is justifiable under the General exceptions of the GATT 1994, and does not constitutes a technical regulation under the …


The Year Of The Tiger, The Thrill Of The Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb To Commerce, Tricia S. Patel Sep 2010

The Year Of The Tiger, The Thrill Of The Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb To Commerce, Tricia S. Patel

Tricia S Patel

The Year of the Tiger, The Thrill of the Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb to Commerce This paper discusses the international and domestic regulation of tigers and recent conservation methods adopted under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES). With the illicit wildlife trade being the third largest form of trafficking, the author focuses on the role of China and its domestic policies, with a discussion on the use of tiger parts in the practice of Traditional Chinese Medicine. Additionally, the author discusses China's adoption of tiger farms as the predominant method …


The Boundaries Of Public Nuisance, Richard O. Faulk, John S. Gray Sep 2010

The Boundaries Of Public Nuisance, Richard O. Faulk, John S. Gray

Richard Faulk

Over the past 20 years, government entities have sought to use the vagueness of generic public nuisance statutes to address complex public health issues, including tobacco use, gun violence, childhood lead poisoning, global warming and the fallout from the subprime mortgage meltdown. Because the tort of public nuisance is so amorphous, many of these entities have sought to is so amorphous, many of these entities have sought to blam industry for societal problems even when the actual harm is often caused by third and fourth parties who misuse or abuse industry's products. Some sympathetic judges have issued abatement orders that …


Protecting Pocahontas's World: The Mattaponi Tribe's Struggle Against Virginia's King William Reservoir Project, Allison M. Dussias Sep 2010

Protecting Pocahontas's World: The Mattaponi Tribe's Struggle Against Virginia's King William Reservoir Project, Allison M. Dussias

Allison M Dussias

This article examines the efforts of the Mattaponi Tribe of Virginia to combat an environmentally destructive reservoir project that threatened sacred and archaeological sites and implicated tribal treaty rights, including fishing rights. The Tribe opposed the project through both the federal and state administrative approval process and litigation. The dispute over the reservoir highlights the difficulties that tribes have faced historically, and continue to face today, as they try to protect their rights to land, water, and subsistence resources.


Deferring To The Assertion Of National Security: The Creation Of A National Security Exemption Under The National Environmental Policy Act Of 1969, Emily Donovan Sep 2010

Deferring To The Assertion Of National Security: The Creation Of A National Security Exemption Under The National Environmental Policy Act Of 1969, Emily Donovan

Emily Donovan

The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) aims to ensure that agencies consider the potential environmental impacts of their actions before engaging in them. In contrast to other major environmental legislation, Congress did not include a national security exemption under NEPA, meaning that, in theory, agencies in the business of national security must comply with NEPA just as any other agency, by considering mitigation measures and alternatives, and preparing environmental impact statements when necessary. The courts, however, in deciding NEPA noncompliance cases, have created a national security exemption that the legislature never intended. They have done so by failing …


The Property Problem: A Survey Of Federal Options For Facilitating Acquisition Of Carbon Sequestration Repositories, Thomas Brugato Sep 2010

The Property Problem: A Survey Of Federal Options For Facilitating Acquisition Of Carbon Sequestration Repositories, Thomas Brugato

Thomas Brugato

This paper surveys federal options for facilitating carbon capture and sequestration (CCS). A variety of legal impediments must be addressed before CCS will become commercially viable. This paper examines one of those impediments: the need of sequestration entities to acquire large amounts of suitable subsurface property (pore space) for use as a repository. Currently, uncertainty over the ownership of the pore space as well as high transaction costs for acquiring property rights from numerous landowners present substantial obstacles for sequestration entities. The presence of other conflicting uses of pore space further complicates the acquisition of the necessary property rights. As …


Was Selden Right? The Expansion Of Closed Seas And Its Consequences, Scott Shackelford Aug 2010

Was Selden Right? The Expansion Of Closed Seas And Its Consequences, Scott Shackelford

Scott Shackelford

This Article focuses on the relationship between the legal regimes governing offshore resources in the continental shelves and the deep seabed, particularly in reference to the extent to which continental shelf claims are encroaching on the deep seabed. The question of how well these respective legal regimes regulate resource exploitation will also be considered, along with an analysis of the underlying reasons driving change in these governance structures. I argue that the primary issue is one of whether vague rules, particularly UNCLOS Article 76, are working in terms of incentivizing sustainable, peaceful development of offshore resources.


The Florida Beach Case And The Road To Judicial Takings, Michael Blumm Aug 2010

The Florida Beach Case And The Road To Judicial Takings, Michael Blumm

Michael Blumm

In Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld a state beach restoration project against landowner claims of an unconstitutional taking of the property. This result was not nearly as surprising as the fact that the Court granted certiorari on a case that turned on an obscure aspect of Florida property law: whether landowners adjacent to a beach had the right to maintain contact with the water and the right to future accretions of sand.

The Court’s curious interest in the case was piqued by the landowners’ recasting the case from the …


Property Rights On The New Frontier: Climate Change, Natural Resources Development, And Renewable Energy, Alexandra B. Klass Aug 2010

Property Rights On The New Frontier: Climate Change, Natural Resources Development, And Renewable Energy, Alexandra B. Klass

Alexandra B. Klass

This Article explores the history of natural resources law and pollution control law to provide insights into current efforts by states to create wind easements, solar easements, and other property rights in the use of or access to renewable resources. Development of these resources is critical to current efforts to address climate change, which has a foot in both natural resources law and pollution control law. This creates challenges for developing theoretical and policy frameworks in this area, particularly surrounding the role of property rights. Property rights have played an important role in both natural resources law and pollution control …


Relational Integrity Regulation: Nudging Consumers Toward Products Bearing Valid Environmental Marketing Claims, Jeffrey J. Minneti Aug 2010

Relational Integrity Regulation: Nudging Consumers Toward Products Bearing Valid Environmental Marketing Claims, Jeffrey J. Minneti

Jeffrey J Minneti

Over the last two decades scholars have addressed attributes of effective environmental regulation and advocated a wide spectrum of regulatory approaches, from the traditional command-and-control model to a libertarian-paternalism approach. Some writers have used those approaches to advocate for modifications to the Green Guides. This article joins that conversation and accomplishes two goals. First, it harmonizes environmental regulation scholarship, resulting in the creation of a new form of regulation that it terms “Relational Integrity” regulation. Second, in light of the Relational Integrity approach to regulation, the article examines public and private environmental claim regulatory schemes and suggests how those schemes …


Trout Of Bounds: The Effects Of The Federal Circuit Court Of Appeals’ Incorrect Fifth Amendment Takings Analysis In Casitas Municipal Water District V. United States, Raymond Dake Aug 2010

Trout Of Bounds: The Effects Of The Federal Circuit Court Of Appeals’ Incorrect Fifth Amendment Takings Analysis In Casitas Municipal Water District V. United States, Raymond Dake

Raymond Dake

Abstract: The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Castias Municipal Water District v. United States to apply a physical takings analysis to the partial interference of the water district’s water rights by the government in order to protect the steelhead trout through enforcement of the Endanger Species Act (“ESA”) is incorrect, plain and simple. Instead, I argue for the use of a regulatory takings analysis for partial takings of rights to use water under the Penn Central Test. The Casitas Court’s ruling misapplies California water law, disregards U.S. Supreme Court precedent from Tahoe-Sierra, ignores underlying theory and policy to …


Two Cheers For Feasible Regulation: A Modest Response To Masur And Posner, David M. Driesen Aug 2010

Two Cheers For Feasible Regulation: A Modest Response To Masur And Posner, David M. Driesen

David M Driesen

This response to Masur and Posner's "Against Feasibility" argues that the feasibility principle has normative and practical advantages over cost-benefit analysis. Normatively, it shows that the happiness literature's suggestion that jobs may be much more important than consumption to welfare supports the feasibility principle's emphasis on maximizing pollution reduction without producing widespread plant shutdowns. It shows that the practical problems Masur and Posner associate with feasibility analysis arise under cost-benefit analysis as well.


Avoiding The "Big Black Hole" Of Development Aid: The Legal Promise And Inherent Challenges Of Community-Directed Development, Allison Wells Aug 2010

Avoiding The "Big Black Hole" Of Development Aid: The Legal Promise And Inherent Challenges Of Community-Directed Development, Allison Wells

Allison Wells

In the face of recent natural disasters in places such as Haiti and Pakistan, as well as the chronic underdevelopment in many regions of the world, development aid funnels billions of dollars around the globe every year in an effort to improve the lives of suffering populations. However, the distribution of those funds is constantly controversial, and much is said about the potential for mismanagement in international development, as well as the risk of political paternalism in dictating what needy communities are lacking. Community-Directed Development (CDD) is a growing trend in international aid that improves upon many of these pitfalls …


How Powerful Is The Ioc? – Let’S Talk About The Environment, Marc A. R. Zemel Aug 2010

How Powerful Is The Ioc? – Let’S Talk About The Environment, Marc A. R. Zemel

Marc A. R. Zemel

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is in a unique position as the supreme administrator of an immensely popular international mega-event and a self-proclaimed champion of environmental issues and sustainable development. Every two years, cities from all over the world spend millions of dollars for the mere privilege of competing to host the Olympic Games, and those cities must play by the IOC’s rules. In addition, Article 2 of the Olympic Charter, the constitution-like instrument governing the IOC and the Olympic Movement, requires the IOC to ensure that the Olympics are held to promote sustainable development and show concern for the …


Rescuing The Strong Precautionary Principle From Its Critics, Noah Sachs Aug 2010

Rescuing The Strong Precautionary Principle From Its Critics, Noah Sachs

Noah Sachs

The Strong Precautionary Principle, a theory of risk regulation that shifts the burden of proof on safety, provides a valuable framework for preventing harm to human health and the environment. Yet Cass Sunstein and other scholars have consistently attacked it as paralyzing, inflexible, and extreme.

This Article undertakes a reassessment of the Strong Precautionary Principle, providing a counterweight to the mountain of critical scholarship. The Principle sends a clear message that firms must research the health and environmental risks of their products, before harm occurs. It does not call for the elimination of all risk, but through burden shifting, the …


Why Intellectual Property Rights In Traditional Knowledge Cannot Contribute To Sustainable Development, Dennis S. Karjala Aug 2010

Why Intellectual Property Rights In Traditional Knowledge Cannot Contribute To Sustainable Development, Dennis S. Karjala

Dennis S Karjala

This paper makes a simple point: If sustainability (however defined) is the goal, intellectual property rights in traditional knowledge do not move us toward the achievement of that goal. The reason is that the only social policy justification for recognizing intellectual property rights at all is that they supposedly serve as an incentive to create socially desirable works of authorship and inventions. They are not and should serve as a reward for past achievements. In other words, outside of their usual incentive function of promoting new technology, intellectual property rights in traditional knowledge have no role to play in the …


Property As Capture And Care, Keith H. Hirokawa Aug 2010

Property As Capture And Care, Keith H. Hirokawa

Keith H. Hirokawa

Capture (as a doctrine and a conceptual scheme) has long provided law with a basis for allocating rights between competing claims to property. Capture, however, has always offered only a partial picture of property. This article considers opportunities to view property law from the perspectives of care, collaboration, and community, principles offered by ecofeminists to describe the relationships that humans can (and do) have with land. This article argues that property is ultimately a negotiation between capture and care, and that by recognizing care as a property principle, property appears to provide a more comprehensive and consistent understanding of how …


A Review Of The 2011 And 2013 Digital Television Energy Efficiency Regulations Developed And Adopted By The California Energy Commission, Christopher P. Wazzan Aug 2010

A Review Of The 2011 And 2013 Digital Television Energy Efficiency Regulations Developed And Adopted By The California Energy Commission, Christopher P. Wazzan

Christopher P Wazzan

In December 2009, the California Energy Commission (“CEC”) adopted on-mode standards for power consumption of televisions, (e.g., watts used) which will go into effect in 2011. Proposed standards are subject to Section 25402(c) of the California Public Resources Code (“CPRC”) which requires that proposed regulations must “not result in any added total costs to the consumer over the designed life of the appliances concerned.” In order to comply with the CPRC, in September 2009, the CEC issued a report alleging consumers would save $8.1 billion from reduced energy consumption. We find that the CEC study is critically flawed and that …


A Few Inconvenient Truths About Michael Crichton's State Of Fear: Lawyers, Causes And Science, Lea B. Vaughn Aug 2010

A Few Inconvenient Truths About Michael Crichton's State Of Fear: Lawyers, Causes And Science, Lea B. Vaughn

Lea B Vaughn

Abstract: Although Crichton has lost the battle regarding global warming, his characterization of lawyers and law practice remains unchallenged. This article challenges his damning portrait of lawyers as know-nothing, self aggrandizing manipulators of various social and environmental causes. A more nuanced examination of “cause lawyering” reveals that lawyers are not part of a vast conspiracy to grab power through the causes for which many work; in fact, the rules of professional responsibility as well as the structure of “cause lawyering” limit their power and influence. Regardless, lawyers are nonetheless vital, and generally principled, participants in the debates and causes that …


Practical Guide To Environmental Law And Regulatory Compliance In Texas, Richard Faulk, John S. Gray Jul 2010

Practical Guide To Environmental Law And Regulatory Compliance In Texas, Richard Faulk, John S. Gray

Richard Faulk

History teaches us that the natural development of our land and resources has been a contentious undertaking. Until recently, the issues that today make up the corpus of “environmental law” were not to be found in environmental cases, legislative journals or in environmental law treatises. Instead, they were found under the rubrics of property, constitutional law, contract and the common law. Today, environmental law consists of a complex and interlocking body of treaties, conventions, statutes, regulations, and common law that attempt to work together in unison to regulate how we (individuals, governmental entities and businesses) interact with the rest of …


How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance Jul 2010

How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance

Global Alliance

since 1945 more environmental planet destruction has been fuelled and financed with ever more leveraged debt than in the previous 60 million years - it's applied terrorism against the global life support system under the protection racket of a corrupt law profession


Cleaning Up Bankruptcy: Limiting The Dischargeability Of Environmental Cleanup Costs, Sonali P. Chitre Jul 2010

Cleaning Up Bankruptcy: Limiting The Dischargeability Of Environmental Cleanup Costs, Sonali P. Chitre

Sonali P Chitre

This article reconciles the joint aims of environmental and bankruptcy law after Judge Posner’s myopic opinion in the Seventh Circuit’s resolution of U.S. v. Apex Oil. These two areas of law represent alternative means to the same end—the equitable distribution of limited resources—and share equity’s traditional emphasis of function over form. Ignoring these principles, Judge Posner ruled in Apex that a cleanup order constitutes a dischargeable “claim” when styled as a legal judgment but not when styled as an equitable injunction. This despite the fact that in either case the liability amounts to the same thing-payment must be made for …


The Invading Waters: Climate Change Dispossession, State Extinction, And International Law, Jared D. Hestetune Jul 2010

The Invading Waters: Climate Change Dispossession, State Extinction, And International Law, Jared D. Hestetune

Jared D Hestetune

The level of the sea is inevitably rising. Even the conservative estimates of the IPCC portray a dire future for low-lying island nations such as the Republic of Maldives. The future of an inundated state bodes ill for Maldives's continued participation in international relations. This essay analyzes the possibility of the persistence of a state after its territory has been submerged and destroyed, and it comes to the unfortunate conclusion that a submerged state will de facto become extinct in international law. Thus, entire nationalities will disappear, which likely consequence is strong motivation to protect the human right of national …


Cleaning Up Bankruptcy: Limiting The Dischargeability Of Environmental Cleanup Costs, Sonali P. Chitre Jul 2010

Cleaning Up Bankruptcy: Limiting The Dischargeability Of Environmental Cleanup Costs, Sonali P. Chitre

Sonali P Chitre

This article reconciles the joint aims of environmental and bankruptcy law after Judge Posner’s myopic opinion in the Seventh Circuit’s resolution of U.S. v. Apex Oil. These two areas of law represent alternative means to the same end—the equitable distribution of limited resources—and share equity’s traditional emphasis of function over form. Ignoring these principles, Judge Posner ruled in Apex that a cleanup order constitutes a dischargeable “claim” when styled as a legal judgment but not when styled as an equitable injunction. This despite the fact that in either case the liability amounts to the same thing-payment must be made for …


Food Sovereignty Is A Gendered Issue, Margaret Ellinger-Locke Jul 2010

Food Sovereignty Is A Gendered Issue, Margaret Ellinger-Locke

Margaret Ellinger-Locke

No abstract provided.