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Integrating Vehicles and the Electricity Grid to Store and Use Renewable Energy
In: Delivering Energy Policy in the EU and US: A Multi-Disciplinary Reader, (Heffron and Little, eds.) (Edinburgh University Press, 2016)
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Appliance Efficiency
In: UNEP Guide for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Laws (UN Environment Programme, 2016)
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The Laws of Science, Constitutional Law, and the Rule of Law
In: Widener Law Review, Band 22
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State Initiatives
In: Global Climate Change and U.S. Law, Ch. 10, p. 303, 2014
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Deepwater Drilling and Least-Cost Energy Decision Making
In: Natural Resources and Environment, Band 25
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Environmental Law in a Climate Change Age
In: Natural Resources and Environment, Band 22
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Appliance Energy Efficiency Labels and Standards
In: UNEP HANDBOOK FOR DRAFTING LAW ON ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENEGY, Richard Ottinger, Adrian J. Bradbrook, eds., 2007
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Sustainable Development and the Marrakech Accords
In: THE LAW OF ENERGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, Adrian J. Bradbrook, Rosemary Lyster, Richard L. Ottinger, Wang Xi, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2005
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Standing and Climate Change: Can Anyone Complain About the Weather?
In: Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law, Band 15
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The Role of Law in Defining Sustainable Development: NEPA Reconsidered
In: Widener Law Symposium Journal, Band 3
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Enforcement of Environmental Law in a Triangular Federal System: Can Three Not Be a Crowd When Enforcement Authority is Shared by the United States, the States, and Their Citizens?
In: Maryland Law Review, Band 54
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The Climate Change Convention and Evolving Legal Models of Sustainable Development
In: Pace Environmental Law Review, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 1995
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Private Actions for Public Nuisance: Common Law Citizen Suits for Relief from Environmental Harm
In: Ecology Law Quarterly, Band 16
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Law, the Laws of Nature and Ecosystem Energy Services: A Case of wilful Blindness
Ecosystems services include the collection, concentration, and storage of solar energy as fossil fuels (e.g., coal, petroleum, and natural gas). These concentrated forms of energy were produced by ancient ecosystem services. However, our legal and economic systems fail to recognise the value of the ecosystem service subsidies embedded in fossil fuels. This ecosystem services price subsidy causes overuse and waste of fossil fuels in the free market: fossil fuels are consumed more quickly than they can be replaced by ecosystem services and in far larger quantities than they would be if the price of fossil fuels included the cost of solar energy collection, concentration and manufacturing of raw fossil fuels. Moreover, burning fossil fuels produces enormous environmental, human health and welfare costs and damage. Virtually no legal literature on ecosystem services, sustainable development, or sustainable energy, considers fossil fuels in this context. Without understanding stored energy as an ecosystem service, we cannot reasonably expect to manage our fossil fuel energy resources sustainably. International and domestic energy law and policy systems generally ignore this feature of fossil fuel energy, a blind spot that explains why reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels is fundamentally a political challenge. This paper will use new understandings emerging from the field of complex systems to critique existing legal decision-making models that do not adequately account for energy ecosystem services in policy design, resource allocation and project approvals. The paper proposes a new "least-social-cost" decision-making legal structure that includes ecosystem energy services.
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