Federal Court Tosses Shell Oil Company’s Preemptive Suit Against Environmental Groups
Federal Court Tosses Shell Oil Companys Preemptive Suit Against Environmental Groups
Court Says Suit Violated U.S. Constitution
SAN FRANCISCO (November 12, 2014) The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected today a Shell Gulf of Mexico Inc. and Shell Offshore Inc. lawsuit that attempted to prevent environmental groups from challenging its oil drilling plans in the Arctic. The appeals court dismissed the case on the grounds that it violated the U.S. Constitution.
Shells suit against NRDC and other groups asked the court to preemptively validate the federal Bureau of Environmental Safety and Enforcements approval of the companys Arctic oil spill plans against any future legal challenge. However, the court held that Shell does not have legal standing to block legal complaints against the plan, in part because it is not a federal agency. Any lawsuit challenging the plan would have to be filed against the agency, and not against Shell.
Following is a statement from Chuck Clusen, NRDC Director of National Parks and Alaska Projects:
Shell was attempting to quash dissent and circumvent due process. It didnt work our legal system prevailed.
As multiple accidents have already shown, Shells drilling plans in the Arctic are severely flawed. Shell is not equipped to handle offshore drilling in some of the worlds most treacherous waters, and well continue to do all we can to stop them from endangering the precious wildlife and local fishing economies that theyre putting at risk.
Background:
The court rejected Shells novel litigation strategy, whereby the beneficiary of agency action seeks to confirm its lawfulness by suing those who it believes are likely to challenge it. The court held that it would be odd to adjudicate the validity of the oil spill plans without the federal agency present, because the judgment would not be binding on the agency, and the agency would not have a chance to give its own justifications for its actions. Shells practical interest in the validity of the spill plans did not give the company the legal right to sue NRDC and other citizen groups to preempt hypothetical future lawsuits against the federal agency.
More:
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