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US Federal court finds that Energy Dept Climate group violated the law

A U.S. Federal Court ruled on Friday that the Department of Energy violated the law by forming a climate science advisory group. This could put its upcoming final proposal to?repeal an important climate regulation in danger.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts has issued a judgement that the Trump administration's creation of a Climate Working Group comprised of five climate skeptics violates the law?that governs the way federal advisory committees operate.

Key Context

Last year, the Environmental Defense Fund and the Union of Concerned Scientists filed a lawsuit against the Department of Energy for convening a working group without public meetings or notice.

Ben Dietderich, spokesperson for the Energy Department, said that on Friday the groups had "sought silence scientists who have simply pointed out in their report - like the Climate Working Group -?that climate science was far from settled" and added that the report is still public record.

Environmental groups called for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to withdraw its upcoming final rule that would repeal the "endangerment findings," which is the legal basis for its climate-change regulations. They argued?that EPA used the DOE Working Group's report as a guide to its rulemaking process.

The existence of the group was not made public?when, on July 29, the Department of Energy published the report that it drafted. On the same day, the EPA proposed a formal rule to rescind its endangerment findings.

KEY QUOTE

Erin Murphy is the senior attorney at EDF. She said, "The federal court’s ruling is absolutely clear. The Trump Administration violated federal law by secretly convening an expert group to develop a dangerously biased report that would be used as the basis for attacking the Endangerment Finding."

White House is currently reviewing the endangerment findings repeal. It was originally supposed to be released in late last year. (Reporting and editing by Edward Tobin; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)