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The Climate Litigation Database

350 Seattle v. Puget Sound Clean Air Agency

About this case

Filing year
2021
Status
Summary judgment for the agencies affirmed.
Docket number
84139-4-I
Court/admin entity
United StatesState CourtsWashington Court of Appeals (Wash. Ct. App.)
Case category
State Law Claims (US)Environmentalist Lawsuits (US)
Principal law
United StatesWashington State Clean Air Act
At issue
Lawsuit alleging that local clean air agencies in Washington were unlawfully shifting decision-making authority for new source approval to technical staff and undermining the State's ability to achieve greenhouse gas reduction targets.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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Search results
01/30/2023
Summary judgment for the agencies affirmed.
The Washington Court of Appeals ruled that environmental groups did not have standing to challenge clean air agencies’ delegations of authority to approve new sources of air pollution from the agencies’ boards of directors to professional staff. The groups contended that emissions of greenhouse gases and other pollutants would decrease if directors rather than staff reviewed applications because directors would be more responsive to constituents’ concerns. The appellate court found that the groups did not establish the three-part standing test for procedural harm and did not have taxpayer standing. The court also found that although climate change was “unquestionably of serious importance and great public interest,” the case did not meet “the high standard for allowing judicial review absent standing.”
Decision

Summary

Lawsuit alleging that local clean air agencies in Washington were unlawfully shifting decision-making authority for new source approval to technical staff and undermining the State's ability to achieve greenhouse gas reduction targets.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Just transition
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Finance