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- Green Bonds; Climate Change; Paris Agreement; Banking Regulation; Green Bond Principles; Icliate Bond Standard; Greenwashing; Green Bond Regulation (1)
- Offshore; offshore drilling; drilling; oil; oil and gas; gas; offshore lease; lease; breach of contract; lease breach; america first; ANWR; drilling ban; energy; energy law; exploration; regulation; deregulation; interference; interfere; breach; contract law; Winstar; Century; Century Exploration; Deepwater Horizon; OCS; Mobil Oil; Amber Resources; 1334; 1337; lease plan; BOEM; BSEE; Secretary of the Interior; CZMA; 68 Fed. Cl. 535; expectation; reliance; repudiation; damages; EP; NTL-06; Lessee; Lessor; DOI; Century; Sovereign Acts; drilling rig; gateway; sunk expenditures; survey cost; exploratory drilling; Cardiosom; risk; regulatory change; regulations (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Energy and Utilities Law
Offshore Drilling: Combating Regulatory Uncertainty With Contract Law Protection, Jordan M. Steele
Offshore Drilling: Combating Regulatory Uncertainty With Contract Law Protection, Jordan M. Steele
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Offshore drilling accounts for billions of dollars in tax revenue every year. It is a pillar of the energy industry and is crucial to the economy. A recent flurry of deregulation, accelerating with the arrival of the Trump administration, highlights the tremendous impact politics has upon the profitability of this sector. The Secretary of the Interior, under the direction of the President, wields the power to regulate and make determinations into where, when, and how private companies can drill offshore. These private companies have contracts with the government for the opportunity to produce and develop oil or gas on the …
Financing Green: Reforming Green Bond Regulation In The United States, Echo Kaixi Wang
Financing Green: Reforming Green Bond Regulation In The United States, Echo Kaixi Wang
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
In recent years, green bonds have emerged as a way for the financial industry to contribute to environmentally friendly projects, combat climate change, and provide funds for green infrastructures across the world. While the green bond market has expanded drastically across large nations in Europe and Asia, market growth has stalled in the United States, in part due to a lack of promising regulations in the United States. Existing regulations on green bond issuance in the United States only exists in the form of non-binding international guidelines. This Note reviews the benefits and potentials of green bonds both as an …