Several Greenberg Traurig, LLP offices are celebrating Earth Month and Earth Day by participating in events around the world.
Continue Reading Greenberg Traurig Celebrates Earth Day

Insights and Commentary on Global Environmental and Energy Issues
Several Greenberg Traurig, LLP offices are celebrating Earth Month and Earth Day by participating in events around the world. …
Continue Reading Greenberg Traurig Celebrates Earth Day
Jeffrey Chester, global co-chair of Greenberg Traurig’s Energy Project Finance & Development Practice, is co-hosting a webinar with Marathon Capital and Crux Dec. 17, 2024, at 1 p.m.
Continue Reading Dec. 17 WEBINAR | Renewables Year-End Sneak Preview—Credit Transfers, Tax Equity, M&A and Finance MarketsGreenberg Traurig Tampa office Shareholder David Weinstein, Associate Jennifer M. Faggion, and attorney Madeleine Voigt, along with SEER committee members, co-authored the chapter titled “Enforcement and Litigation”…
Continue Reading Environment, Energy, and Resources Law: The Year in Review 2023On June 18, 2020, the Seventh Circuit handed down a decision in a case involving historical environmental contamination that eases the path to federal court for defendants who are haled into state court for acts that occurred while defendants were assisting the federal government. In Sherrie Baker et al. v. Atlantic Richfield Company, E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, et al., No. 19-3160, 2020 WL 3287024, — F.3d — (7th Cir. 2020), the court adopted a new standard for federal officer removal, holding that defendants act under color of federal office and are entitled to a federal forum when sued for conduct relating to acts for the federal government, even if the conduct at issue in a particular case only partially implicates the federally directed acts. This decision has consequences that reach beyond defendants facing environmental liability, as did the defendants in Baker, as it could provide an additional avenue to a federal forum for companies that have either been awarded federal contracts, or that supply customers who hold federal contracts.
Continue Reading 7th Circuit Lowers Removal Hurdle for Defendants That Assisted the Feds