HARRISBURG, Pa. — A new executive order from President Donald Trump that's part of his effort to invigorate energy production raises the possibility that his Department of Justice will go to court against state climate change laws aimed at slashing planet-warming greenhouse gas pollution from fossil fuels.
Trump's order, signed Tuesday, comes as U.S. electricity demand ramps up to meet the growth of artificial intelligence and cloud computing applications, as well as federal efforts to expand high-tech manufacturing. It also coincides with ''climate superfund'' legislation gaining traction in various states.
Trump has declared a '' national energy emergency " and ordered his attorney general to take action against states that may be illegally overreaching their authority in how they regulate energy development.
''American energy dominance is threatened when State and local governments seek to regulate energy beyond their constitutional or statutory authorities,'' Trump said in the order.
He said the attorney general should focus on state laws targeting climate change, a broad order that unmistakably puts liberal states in the crosshairs of Trump's Department of Justice.
Michael Gerrard, director of the Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, said it would be an ''extraordinarily bold move'' for the federal government to go to court to try to overturn a state climate law.
Gerrard said the quickest path for Trump's Department of Justice is to try to join ongoing lawsuits where courts are deciding whether states or cities are exceeding their authority by trying to force the fossil fuel industry to pay for the cost of damages from climate change.
Democrats say they won't back down