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The Climate Litigation Database

Pembroke Environmental Justice Coalition v. Illinois Commerce Commission

About this case

Filing year
2022
Status
Appellate court affirmed Commission's decision.
Docket number
No. 3-22-__
Court/admin entity
United StatesState CourtsIllinois Appellate Court (Ill. App. Ct.)
Case category
State Law Claims (US)Utility Regulation (US)
Principal law
United States
At issue
Challenge to certificate of public convenience and necessity for a natural gas pipeline in a rural area of Illinois.
Topics
, ,

Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
Beta
02/09/2024
Appellate court affirmed Commission's decision.
The court rejected arguments that broader public utility regulations should apply, emphasizing that the law was designed to streamline service expansion in low-income areas. It found that Nicor adequately considered public input, had the capacity to manage the project safely, and could finance it without harming customers. Concerns about environmental impact, safety violations, and conversion costs for residents were deemed outside the scope of the court’s review. The court also denied a rehearing request, finding no new, controlling evidence to justify reconsideration.
Decision
03/23/2022
Petition for review filed.
Community and environmental groups filed a petition for review in the Illinois Appellate Court challenging the Illinois Commerce Commission’s (ICC’s) approval of a certificate of public convenience and necessity for a natural gas pipeline in Pembroke Township, which the groups <a href="https://www.edf.org/media/community-groups-edf-ask-state-appeals-court-stop-pipeline-slated-go-through-historic-black">described</a> as “an historic Black farming community whose concerns were not considered in the approval process and who could be severely harmed by the pipeline.” Before the ICC, the petitioners <a href="https://www.icc.illinois.gov/docket/P2021-0698/documents/320217">argued</a> that the project was “out of step” with State policy priorities of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and fossil fuel use. They contended that even though the pipeline company claimed to be fulfilling “decades-long” efforts to bring natural gas to the area, the prior perception of natural gas as “a cost-effective and cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels was based on unknown or unacknowledged climate impacts, and before emissions reductions needed to avoid dangerous levels of warming were fully understood.” The petitioners stated: “Those perceptions have been disproven. Today, the policy of the State of Illinois is decarbonization and equitable acceleration of clean energy adoption.”
Petition

Summary

Challenge to certificate of public convenience and necessity for a natural gas pipeline in a rural area of Illinois.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Economic sector
Finance