Guest commentary: Part 2, A Case for Military Proportionality: Disabling Nuclear Plants

By Henry Sokolski Only a handful of cases exist in which US officials have applied US criminal law against soldiers who have harmed noncombatants. As a result, mining national case law for guidance is unlikely to produce many useful insights. That said, the US military has discouraged inflicting unnecessary harm on noncombatants.13 But what of … More Guest commentary: Part 2, A Case for Military Proportionality: Disabling Nuclear Plants

Guest commentary: Part 1, A Case for Military Proportionality: Disabling Nuclear Plants

By Henry Sokolski For nearly a decade, protecting civilians and civil objects from disproportionate military assaults has been a top priority of the Pentagon. Two Department of Defense secretaries from the first Donald Trump administration championed quantifying and reducing harm to civilians and civil objects. Under the Joe Biden administration, the Pentagon further focused on … More Guest commentary: Part 1, A Case for Military Proportionality: Disabling Nuclear Plants

California legislative package aims at state’s energy-environment conundrum

By Kennedy Maize California is beginning a major redesign of statewide energy and climate policy. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed a package of bills designed to deal with the state’s soaring electricity and gasoline prices and beefing up wildfire response, while preserving the Golden State’s aggressive stance on trying to contain climate change. As … More California legislative package aims at state’s energy-environment conundrum

FERC focuses on security, reliability, and forecasting large loads

By Kennedy Maize The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission yesterday (Sept. 18) approved a quartet of actions aimed at boosting the security and reliability of the U.S. electric grid as it faces challenges related to increasing load and operational complexity. FERC Chairman David Rosner said, “The reliability and security of our country’s electric system is essential … More FERC focuses on security, reliability, and forecasting large loads

Obese idol with the big orange head talks energy

By Kennedy Maize On August 26, President Trump assembled his administration’s leaders: cabinet secretaries, executive branch agency heads, and the like at the White House. It was billed as a “cabinet meeting,” implying a serious give-and-take among the top brass, focused on thorny issues. It was none of that. It was a cabinet meeting in … More Obese idol with the big orange head talks energy

Wright fires Hanford cleanup boss, waffles on big changes

By Kennedy Maize Are major changes ahead for the Department of Energy’s decades-long cleanup of the World War II Hanford weapons plant in Washington state? In a surprise move, on Monday (Sept. 8) the Energy Department fired the top official in charge of the massive, multi-billion-dollar environmental restoration project. Lawyer Roger Jarrell was serving as … More Wright fires Hanford cleanup boss, waffles on big changes

DOE desires to dump solar data

By Kennedy Maize As the solar power industry is recording booming business, now the fastest growing source of new electricity supply in the U.S., the hostile Trump administration is proposing to stop collecting data on the solar industry’s performance by the Department of Energy for its seminal Electric Power Monthly. The Department of Energy’s supposedly … More DOE desires to dump solar data

EPA roundup: Coal ash reversal, meaty retreat, ambiguous court wins

By Kennedy Maize In a continuing reversal of long-standing policy, the Environmental Protection Agency has proposed giving Wyoming the full authority to regulate dangerous and toxic coal ash disposal ponds and landfills in the Cowboy State. It’s the second state where EPA has told a state it can oversee how utilities handle coal ash, following … More EPA roundup: Coal ash reversal, meaty retreat, ambiguous court wins