KEY POINTS
  • Thursday's ruling by the Supreme Court declared that it was beyond the scope of the EPA's authority to dictate that power generation be shifted from one source to another. But the EPA and state governments still have many tools in their arsenal.
  • The ruling opens the door to more litigation, however, which could help the fossil fuel industry delay moves to decarbonize the economy.
  • In the end, cheaper and more efficient clean energy may end up shifting the market faster than any government agency could.
Steam rises from the cooling towers of the coal-fired power plant at Duke Energy's Crystal River Energy Complex in Crystal River, Florida, U.S., March 26, 2021.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court changed the rules of the game in the race to limit global warming by constricting the Environmental Protection Agency's authority to mandate carbon emissions.

Specifically, the court ruled in West Virginia v. EPA that it was an overreach for the EPA to dictate that power generation be shifted from one source, say, from coal to wind or solar, declaring such a mandate should only come from Congress.