Big business groups including the US Chamber of Commerce and the American Farm Bureau Federation have filed a lawsuit against California seeking to cancel the state’s new climate disclosure laws.
These laws require companies to publicly share information about their greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related financial risks.
The groups argue that these first-of-its-kind laws will bring huge costs to businesses and it goes against free speech protections in the US Constitution by forcing them to disclose this information.
Tom Quaadman, an executive director at the US Chamber of Commerce, in a statement to Reuters, said, “California’s laws usurp the role of federal regulators, opening the door for other states to take an opposite approach to disclosure, leaving businesses and their investors caught in the middle of a political scrap between states.”
The groups argue that the laws are not valid because they essentially become national emissions regulations.
According to the lawsuit, only federal regulators have the authority to control emissions according to the US Clean Air Act, and they are better equipped to create regulations that apply consistently throughout the entire country.