
Vibrant Environment
Governance And Rule Of Law
All | Biodiversity | Climate Change and Sustainability | Environmental Justice | Governance and Rule of Law | Land Use and Natural Resources | Oceans and Coasts | Pollution Control

Global sea levels rose more than expected in 2024, according to a recent scientific review conducted by researchers from the California Institute of Technology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, and the Spain and International Space Science Institute.

The iris is the part of the eye that controls how much light enters into it. In doing so, and through working with the other parts of the eye, it helps us to see and navigate the world around us.

In a series of separate Executive Orders, administrative memoranda, and Federal Register notices, the Trump Administration has substantially curtailed the role of public comment in federal governmental decisions. Public notice and comment have improved government decisions—not treating government agencies as smarter than the public. Exclusion of public comment from both environmental reviews and rulemaking will undermine this important value.
Governmental Actions and Project Decisions

Land Air Water, a student group at the University of Oregon School of Law, hosted the 43rd annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference (PIELC) in Eugene, Oregon, from Friday, February 28 through Sunday, March 2, 2025. PIELC draws activists, advocates, attorneys, scientists, government officials, and concerned citizens together for the oldest and largest public interest environmental law conference in the world.

On January 21, President Trump signed an Executive Order revoking all prior executive orders that had served as the foundations for environmental justice (EJ) initiatives by the federal government.

Given the doubts raised by recent federal court decisions on the scope of the Council of Environmental Quality’s (CEQ's) authority and the issuance of that agency’s recent “interim final rule” on Removal of National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Implementing Regulations, it is unsurprising that NEPA’s fate feels uncertain.

Section 401 of the Clean Water Act provides that federal licenses and permits authorizing activities that include a point source discharge to the waters of the United States may only be granted after affected states have had an opportunity to review the activity and to certify that it will not cause a violation of state water quality standards. States (and some tribes with “treatment as a state”) have authority to grant or waive certification, to deny it, or to grant it subject to conditions.

On February 3, President Trump signed an Executive Order entitled A Plan for Establishing a United States Sovereign Wealth Fund. The Order directs the Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of Commerce to develop a plan within 90 days addressing the creation of such a fund, including funding mechanisms, investment strategies, fund structure, and a governance model.

On January 20, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order entitled Unleashing American Energy. Section 5(a) of the new order revokes President Jimmy Carter’s 1977 Executive Order 11991, which directed and empowered the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) to adopt regulations implementing the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

The upcoming change in the U.S. presidential administration, with its threat of tariffs and mass deportation of immigrant communities, has put more attention on the country’s southern border. Despite these and other tensions concerning the U.S.-Mexico border, Mexico and the United States continue to work together to negotiate new approaches and compromises to manage shared water resources sustainably, even as climate change and drought have reduced those supplies.