a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
The dissent attacks all three prongs of standing.
1)Harm - Roberts thinks that the harm is not particularized. Global warming is a national concern and best handled through legislation and the democratic process.
2)Causation - The burden of proof weighs slightly against the petitioners. They must show that their harm is "fairly tracable" to the agency action or inaction.
3)Remedy - There is no guarantee that regulations will affect global warming. See pg. 28 of the opinion:
A recent judgement in Australia on a new coal mine has just made the same weasel judgement. If one small part of CO2 creation is not wholly responsible for AGW, why pick on just it?
http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2007/s1849776.htm
Is this a limitation of the legal process? By only considering each case in isolation, we end up with no action being taken globally.
The dissent also attacks Mass's right to petition the EPA as a state. Roberts claims that they are not allowed. I am unfamiliar with this part of law.
Long story short: "Leave the EPA alone. They are the experts. We hired them to make these kinds of determinations."
Which makes you wonder, is the EPA being left alone? If they are the experts, why have they not even made a ruling on CO2 and global warming, yes or no?