Is A Delay In The Cards For California's Climate Accountability Laws?


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Complaint. Of course, earlier this year, the U.S. and California Chambers of Commerce, the American Farm Bureau Federation and others filed a complaint against the California Air Resources Board challenging these two California laws. The lawsuit seeks declaratory relief that the two laws are void because they violate the First Amendment, are precluded by federal law, and are invalid under the Constitution's limitations on extraterritorial regulation, particularly under the dormant Commerce Clause. The litigation also seeks injunctive relief to prevent CARB from taking any action to enforce these two laws.

In the complaint, Plaintiffs maintained that they were in favor of policies that would reduce GHG emissions“as much and as quickly as reasonably possible, consistent with the pace of innovation and the feasibility of implementing large-scale technical change,” and that they supported the disclosure of material information, including climate-related information, as necessary to protect investors, but those policies“must be informed by the best science, a careful analysis of available alternatives, and attention to legal rights and requirements.” In addition,“a patchwork of inconsistent state-by-state regulatory regimes, under which multiple states attempt to regulate emissions nationally through conflicting means” didn't help either business or consumers.

These laws, they professed, will impose massive costs on businesses, with the burden of compliance falling disproportionately on small and medium businesses. They argued that both laws apply to any company exceeding a certain revenue threshold that does any business in California and that estimating GHG emissions is“enormously burdensome”; reporting Scope 3 emissions alone, they contended, will cost many companies more than $1 million per year and, in many instances, may be inaccurate. According to the complaint, the“burden of estimating Scope 3 emissions flows up and down the supply chain. Small businesses nationwide will incur significant costs monitoring and reporting emissions to suppliers and customers swept within the law's reach. For example, scores of family farm members of AFBF will need to report emissions to business partners that do business with entities covered by S.B. 253.” Plaintiffs also cited the reservations California's Governor expressed at the time of his signing of these bills regarding financial impact. (See this PubCo post .)

CARB has moved to dismiss the second and third claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. Plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment on the first claim, and CARB has indicated that it may file a cross-motion.

Motion to dismiss. According to CARB's motion to dismiss, the two laws were intended“to increase transparency and improve access to information about the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate-related financial risks of the largest companies doing business in California. Both laws reference existing climate change reporting protocols that provide metrics for determining the required information. And both laws are complementary additions to an expanding suite of climate reporting regimes. The disclosures required by these two laws are intended to help California residents, consumers, companies, and investors make decisions informed by greater understanding of the sources and volumes of GHG emissions produced by major companies doing business in California and the climate-related financial risks those companies face.”

The motion contended that Plaintiffs'“claims arising under the Supremacy Clause and the limits on extraterritorial regulation are not justiciable,” because CARB had“not yet proposed regulations governing their enforcement, and Plaintiffs have not pled an injury-in-fact.” Accordingly, with regard to SB 253, the motion contended that, in the absence of these implementing regulations, Plaintiffs' Supremacy Clause and extraterritoriality claims are“not ripe for adjudication.” Further, CARB took issue with the claims related to extraterritoriality and the Supremacy clause regarding provisions of both laws because, without having established the danger of a direct injury under the laws, Plaintiffs had no standing.

In addition, CARB contended that the claim under the Supremacy Clause“relies on an erroneous factual premise and...lacks a cognizable legal theory.” CARB asserted that Plaintiffs had“failed to identify any federal law that preempts these state disclosure laws.” As a result, CARB maintained, Plaintiffs had not stated a claim under the Supremacy Clause. Nor, CARB asserted, had Plaintiffs identified“any provision of the Constitution-or any specific 'principle of federalism'-that conflicts with the challenged state statutes.”

CARB also argued that there was no violation of the dormant Commerce Clause or claim for“extraterritorial regulation” because neither of the California laws was“driven by economic protectionism” (see Nat'l Pork Producers Council v. Ross ), or“imposes a cognizably significant burden on interstate commerce” under Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc . Citing Pork Producers, CARB asserted that“the 'very core of ... dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence' is its 'antidiscrimination principle'-the prohibition against 'state laws driven [] by economic protectionism.'” (See this PubCo post (SideBar ).) But, CARB contended,“Plaintiffs cannot state a claim under this actual dormant Commerce Clause principle because they cannot allege any facts that, if proven, could establish that either Senate Bill 253 or 261 is 'designed to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state competitors.'” The laws will apply to all companies in any state that satisfy the conditions and meet the thresholds. Nor did Plaintiffs state a claim under Pike, which would require that“the application of these state statutes imposes a 'substantial burden on interstate commerce'”; in this instance, CARB contended, there was no discriminatory purpose or interference with the flow of goods interstate. According to CARB, the“courts have consistently rejected mere compliance costs as substantial burdens on interstate commerce, even when the compliance costs are purportedly sizable.” (See this PubCo post .)

Motion for summary judgment. In their motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs contended that S.B. 253 and 261“compel the content of companies' speech,” and, as a result,“are 'presumptively invalid' and subject to strict scrutiny.” Both laws, they argued,“compel a substantial amount of speech at significant expense, without a permissible compelling governmental interest.” For example, they maintained that SB 261 requires a company to“publicly state its opinion regarding various 'climate-related financial risk[s]' and to post that opinion to the entity's website.” And under SB 253, they claimed, the Scope 3 requirement means that a company must“misleadingly represent that the emissions of other entities are its own.” What's more, the proper calculation of emissions is open to debate, they said, as well as enormously burdensome. According to Plaintiffs,“S.B. 253 and 261 forces thousands of companies, including Plaintiffs' members, to engage in controversial speech that they do not wish to make, untethered to any commercial purpose or transaction....And they do all this for the explicit purpose of placing political and economic pressure on companies to 'encourage' them to conform their behavior to the policy goals of the State. This violates the First Amendment, as well as the Supremacy Clause and the Constitution's prohibition on extraterritorial regulation by the States.”

Plaintiffs asked the court to“permanently enjoin Defendants from enforcing or implementing S.B. 253 and 261, because they unconstitutionally compel speech. The laws serve no compelling government interest, concern a controversial matter of vehement public debate that is not purely factual, and are nothing like the government-required disclosures regarding health, safety, or other matters that courts have upheld in other contexts.” Strict scrutiny was triggered, they professed, because the laws require companies“to wade into a contentious political debate,” and“infringe on companies' freedom 'to remain silent.'” But they fail the strict scrutiny test because, among other things, there is“no compelling government interest 'simply' in providing 'information.'” Moreover, neither of the exceptions to strict scrutiny applies, they maintained: Central Hudson does not apply because the speech is compelled and is not commercial speech; Zauderer does not apply because the speech“has no nexus to commercial advertising, nor is it purely factual and uncontroversial.” (See, e.g., this PubCo post and this PubCo post .)

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