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The Climate Litigation Database

Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers v. Weiser

About this case

Filing year
2025
Status
Motion for preliminary injunction granted.
Docket number
1:25-cv-02417
Court/admin entity
United StatesUnited States Federal CourtsUnited States District of Colorado (D. Colo.)
Case category
Constitutional ClaimsFirst Amendment
Principal law
United StatesFirst Amendment
At issue
Trade association's challenge to a Colorado law requiring dissemination of certain information regarding health impacts of gas stoves.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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12/19/2025
Motion for preliminary injunction granted.
The federal district court for the District of Colorado granted trade associations’ motion for a preliminary injunction barring the Colorado Attorney General from implementing or enforcing a Colorado law that established requirements for disseminating certain information about air quality and health impacts of indoor gas stoves on stove labels and on internet sites where gas-fueled stoves are sold. The court concluded that the plaintiffs had a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of their First Amendment claim. The court first concluded that the labeling requirement regulated commercial speech. (The court rejected intervenor defendant Physicians for Social Responsibility Colorado’s argument that the labeling requirement was government speech not subject to the First Amendment.) The court further found that the labeling requirement was “objectively controversial because there is robust disagreement by scientific sources concerning the validity of the statements” about health outcomes contained on the Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment webpage to which the labels were required to refer people. Because the court found the requirement to be objectively controversial, the court applied strict scrutiny rather than the “less exacting scrutiny” of Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel of the Supreme Court of Ohio. Although the court was not persuaded by the trade associations’ contention that the Colorado law’s public health rationale was pretextual and that the true rationale for the rule was to discourage people from using gas-fueled stoves for climate change reasons, the court found that the Attorney General “does not present any conclusive evidence regarding the potential health effects of using gas-fueled stoves” and therefore did not identify “an actual concrete problem” that would establish a compelling government interest. In addition, the court found that the labeling requirement was not narrowly tailored. Because the labeling requirement failed the strict scrutiny test and the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their First Amendment claim, the court also found that the trade associations satisfied the irreparable harm and public interest factors of the preliminary injunction test.
Decision
11/25/2025
CDPHE defendants' motion to dismiss granted.
Decision
10/06/2025
Response filed by defendant-intervenor to motion for preliminary injunction.
Response
10/01/2025
Reply filed in support of motion to dismiss CDPHE defendants.
Reply
09/30/2025
Opposition filed by defendants to motion for preliminary injunction.
Opposition
09/24/2025
Unopposed motion to intervene filed by Physicians for Social Responsibility Colorado.
Motion To Intervene
09/17/2025
Opposition filed by plaintiff to motion to dismiss CDPHE defendants.
Opposition
08/19/2025
Motion
08/13/2025
Joint motion filed to set briefing schedule and hearing, and also stipulation filed to temporarily stay enforcement.
On August 13, 2025, the parties filed a stipulation in which the Colorado Attorney General agreed not to initiate enforcement actions under the Colorado Consumer Protection Act for alleged violations of the labeling law until at least 14 days after the court issues a ruling on the plaintiff’s forthcoming renewed motion for a preliminary injunction.
Stipulation
08/06/2025
Complaint filed.
On August 6, 2025, Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers—a trade association with members that manufacture gas and electric cooking products and other appliances—filed a lawsuit in the federal district court for the District of Colorado challenging a Colorado law requiring dissemination of what the plaintiff alleged was “a non-consensus, scientifically controversial, and factually misleading government-mandated message about the purported ‘health impacts’ of gas stoves that is contrary to the view of the World Health Organization, the U.S. Government Accountability Office, and federal agencies responsible for ensuring the health and safety of American consumers.” The plaintiff alleged that the law’s disclosure requirements violate the First Amendment because they are content- and viewpoint-based. The plaintiff also alleged that the law violated its members’ First Amendment rights because the legislative record showed that the legislation was not driven by purported health impacts “but instead by the unrelated policy debate on climate change and decarbonization.”
Complaint

Summary

Trade association's challenge to a Colorado law requiring dissemination of certain information regarding health impacts of gas stoves.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance