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The Climate Litigation Database

Center for Sustainable Economy v. Washington State Department of Natural Resources

About this case

Filing year
2024
Status
Superior court order reversed in part and affirmed in part.
Docket number
86667-2-I
Court/admin entity
United StatesState CourtsWashington Court of Appeals (Wash. Ct. App.)
Case category
State Law Claims (US)State Impact Assessment Laws (US)
Principal law
United StatesWashington State Environmental Policy Act
At issue
Challenge to the Determination of Nonsignificance for a timber sale on lands managed by the Department of Natural Resources.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
Beta
02/17/2026
Superior court order reversed in part and affirmed in part.
The Washington Court of Appeals reversed a Washington Superior Court order requiring the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to assess the site-specific climate impacts of the proposed harvesting of 100 acres of forest land held in trust by the State. The Court of Appeals found that the petitioners did not meet their burden to show that DNR’s reliance on a “landscape level” analysis of climate change impacts and carbon emissions of the timber harvest was clearly erroneous. In addition, the Court of Appeals found that the petitioners did not meet their burden to show that DNR erred by relying on a 2019 final environmental impact statement rather than on a 2020 carbon inventory or a 2019 letter that developed a modified and expanded life-cycle assessment of forest sector emissions and sequestration from plots in Washington, Oregon, and California. The court indicated that DNR considered those studies but found them to be distinguishable. The Court of Appeals also rejected the petitioner’s contentions that DNR failed to take a hard look at greenhouse gas emissions, the loss of carbon sequestration capacity, or increased vulnerability to climate change. The Court of Appeals concluded, however, that DNR was required to conduct an alternatives analysis under the State Environmental Policy Act because the timber sale “presents a situation involving a choice between uses,” e.g., cutting down trees versus setting aside mature forest components as carbon reserves.
Decision

Summary

Challenge to the Determination of Nonsignificance for a timber sale on lands managed by the Department of Natural Resources.

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Group
Topics
Just transition
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance