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- Township of Marple v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission
Township of Marple v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission
Geography
Year
2024
Document Type
Litigation
Part of
About this case
Filing year
2024
Status
Public Utility Commission's opinion and order affirmed.
Geography
Docket number
1385 C.D. 2024, 1423 C.D. 2024
Court/admin entity
United States → State Courts → Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court (Pa. Commw. Ct.)
Case category
State Law Claims (US) → Utility Regulation (US)
Principal law
United States → Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning CodeUnited States → State Constitutions → Pennsylvania Constitution
At issue
Challenges to the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission’s determinations that a natural gas “reliability station” should be exempt from the Township of Marple's zoning ordinance.
Topics
, ,
Documents
Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics
Beta
02/02/2026
Public Utility Commission's opinion and order affirmed.
The Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court affirmed the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission’s opinion and order concluding that a natural gas “reliability station” in the Township of Marple would not pose an unusual safety risk, produce unreasonable noise levels, include air pollution sources with emissions exceeding federal and state standards, or violate any climate standards under the Commission’s jurisdiction and should be exempt from the Township's zoning ordinance. The court described the proposed project’s purpose as “to ensure adequate natural gas service in the event of extreme weather events and ‘other parameters.’” The court rejected the Township’s contentions that the Commission failed to conduct a “constitutionally sound environmental review” under the Pennsylvania Constitution’s Environmental Rights Amendment. The court stated that “[o]ur General Assembly has not chosen to enact an environmental policy statute”—i.e., a “little NEPA”—“and we may not impose one by judicial fiat.” The Commonwealth Court noted intervenors’ “greenhouse gas concerns with respect to leaks, downstream combustion, and alternatives” but said that “whether the use of natural gas ‘is wise or whether it is the best means to achieve the desired result are matters left to the legislature, and not the courts.’”
Decision
Summary
Challenges to the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission’s determinations that a natural gas “reliability station” should be exempt from the Township of Marple's zoning ordinance.
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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Finance