Events

Students and alumni mentioned in this article received support through one or more of the following scholarships: the Dean’s Scholarship and Harpole Memorial Scholarship.

Green Energy Institute Webinars Address Fossil Gas, Climate Change Liabilities

As part of U.S. Climate Action Week, the Green Energy Institute (GEI) presented a webinar, Clean Energy Transition: Quitting Fossil Gas, that addressed our use of fossil gas (more commonly, but inaccurately, termed “natural gas”). Faculty Scholar and Professor Melissa Powers ’01, Jeffrey Bain Faculty Scholar and director of GEI, joined Sierra Club Staff Attorney Alison Seel and energy consultant Tarika Powell in a discussion of the risks of fossil gas, the importance of preventing new gas infrastructure, and how addressing gas in the buildings sector is part of achieving a successful clean energy transition. The presentation was moderated by Akriti Bhargava ’22.

Another webinar, Accountability for Climate Change Harms in the Pacific Northwest, focused on the growing trend of climate damages and fraud litigation in the United States. After opening remarks from Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum and Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, Powers moderated a panel featuring Karen Shell, associate professor and Climate Science Program head of the College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University; Deborah Kafoury, Multnomah County commissioner; and Daniel Mensher, attorney at Keller Rohrback.

Students and alumni mentioned in this article received support through one or more of the following scholarships: the Dean’s Scholarship and Harpole Memorial Scholarship.

Professor Lisa Benjamin Presents at ABA Webinars

Professor Lisa Benjamin participated in a series of webinars for the Civil Rights and Social Justice section of the ABA during Black History Month. She served as a panelist on Climate Effects on Communities of Color and The Challenges African Americans Face in the 20th Century. “Addressing legacy issues of environmental injustice will be difficult, but is critical to addressing other systemic issues facing BIPOC communities such as health, economic, and racial injustices,” said Benjamin. “Climate and energy transitions should not entrench existing vulnerabilities, or further marginalize communities.”

Reflecting on Trump Administration Policies

Professor Alexandra B. Klass of the University of Minnesota, the 32nd annual Environmental Law Distinguished Visitor, presented a webinar on U.S. Energy Transitions in the Trump Administration: A Law and Policy Perspective.

Food Choices and Climate

A national virtual symposium, Food for Thought: The Impact of Food Choices in a Changing Climate, addressed a variety of cutting-edge and important law and policy issues relating to the connection between food production and climate impacts.

Training Climate Change Leaders

Fall-2021, Training Climate Change Leaders

#1 in Environmental Law—Again

U.S. News & World Report ranks the law school’s Environmental Law Program the best* in the country for 2022, continuing Lewis & Clark’s record of taking the first or second spot in the rankings for the last 25 years.
Fall-2021, Training Climate Change Leaders
Clockwise from the top left: Kelsey Furman '21, Lizzy Pennock '21, Hillary Fidler '21, and Bridgett Buss '20.

Student Recognition

The students mentioned received support through one or more of the following scholarships: the Dean’s Scholarship, Steven Manas Memorial Scholarship, Trillium Grant, and the Rose E. Tucker Charitable Trust Annual Scholarship - Law.
Fall-2021, Training Climate Change Leaders

Clinics

Earthrise, Green Energy Institute, and Global Law Alliance news.