The Supreme Court said on Feb. 23 that it will consider a complaint from oil and gas companies over lawsuits trying to blame them for climate change.

On Feb. 23, members of the Supreme Court added one new case to their docket: Suncor Energy Inc. v. County Commissioners of Boulder County, according to areportfrom SCOTUSblog.

At issue is “whether federal law precludes state-law claims seeking relief for injuries allegedly caused by the effects of interstate and international greenhouse-gas emissions on the global climate,”accordingto the website.

The case also has implications for “whether this court has statutory and Article III jurisdiction to hear this case,” referring to the part of the U.S. Constitution that establishes the federal judicial branch.

The Colorado Supreme Court previously ruled that the oil and gas firms’ efforts to get the case dismissed relied on the argument “that a vague federal interest over interstate pollution, climate change, and energy policy must preempt Boulder’s claims.”

This morning, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Suncor Energy v. Boulder.

The city’s lawsuit is trying to sidestep the democratic process and dictate the entire country’s national energy policy through state courts. Other locales have filed dozens of copycat lawsuits…pic.twitter.com/rcjQmlnrJd

— Carrie Severino (@JCNSeverino)February 23, 2026

In August, the companies asked the federal Supreme Court to intervene, contending that the lawsuit “provides the Court with its best opportunity yet to resolve one of the most important questions currently pending in the lower courts.”

“Energy companies that produce and sell fossil fuels,” the petition from the firms said, “are facing numerous lawsuits in state courts across the Nation seeking billions of dollars in damages for injuries allegedly caused by the contribution of greenhouse-gas emissions to global climate change.”

Source: VidNews » Feed