Environmental -- 2012



Wilderness Society v. U.S. Dep't of the Interior   (N.D.Cal.)

Defending expedited siting of transmission lines in the west

The NAM and other major energy and business trade associations sought to intervene on the side of the Department of Interior, defending a lawsuit brought by 15 environmental groups against the agency’s expedited siting of transmission lines under the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Led by the Wilderness Society, the environmentalists sued in U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, to stop the designation of energy corridors in the western United States, specifically the West-wide Energy Corridors (WWEC). The groups had previously challenged the Department of Energy’s designation of corridors through the administrative process.

On Dec. 17, 2009, the NAM filed a motion to intervene as an intervenor/defendant in the litigation, joined by the Edison Electric Institute, American Public Power Association, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, American Gas Association, and U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Environmental Protection Act includes many provisions necessary to expedite development of a modernized electricity grid to meet increased demand, and the NAM endorses policies that will expedite development of a "smart grid," which will save manufacturers money. The NAM supports the identification and designation of corridors across federal lands, and this lawsuit threatened to block or impose additional delays or regulatory constraints on the WWEC.

Our motion to intervene was granted on March 9, 2011. A settlement was reached in this case, and a joint motion to dismiss was granted on 7/11/12. It called for periodic interagency reviews, agency guidance, training and a corridor study to assess whether the corridors are efficient and environmentally sensitive.


Related Documents:
NAM Motion to Intervene  (December 17, 2009)