Multiple legal challenges have already been launched against the SEC’s new climate change disclosure rules. Plaintiffs include Attorneys General from several states, a large business trade organization and a private energy company. To date, these suits span across six different federal courts, and the array of these challenges is expected to trigger a lottery process in which one court would handle a consolidated case addressing all the claims.

Two interesting developments last week include a temporary stay of the rules by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in response to a petition by an energy company, and a lawsuit by environmental group Sierra Club seeking to broaden rather than invalidate the new rules.

In March 2022, the SEC published proposed climate change disclosure rules that would require, among other things, the disclosure of certain emissions-related information, categorized in three tiers: Scope 1, Scope 2 and Scope 3 emissions. Scope 1 emissions are direct emissions from sources owned or controlled by a reporting company; Scope 2 emissions are indirect emissions from electricity, steam, heat and cooling purchased by the reporting company and Scope 3 emissions are upstream and downstream emissions by the reporting company’s third-party vendors, customers and the like. The rules as adopted in 2024 retained Scope 1 and 2 disclosure requirements for some of the covered public companies, but dropped requirements for Scope 3 disclosures.

The Sierra Club in its challenge seeks to broaden the scope of the new rules, rather than invalidate them. Filing in the D.C. Circuit, the Sierra Club has asked for a review of the rules to determine whether the Scope 3 emissions reporting requirements were improperly excluded from the final rule.

On March 15th, 2024, the Fifth Circuit granted a temporary stay of the rules pending its consideration of the energy company’s request for a permanent stay that would last for the course of the litigation. Inasmuch as the rules are not effective yet and will not require additional disclosure until reporting companies’ 2026 fiscal years, when companies file annual reports for their 2025 fiscal years, the court’s grant of the temporary stay could signal its disposition toward granting a longer stay, but of course the ultimate outcome remains uncertain.

While more challenges to the new rules are anticipated, companies should continue to focus on their internal procedures and related operational adjustments necessary to comply with the new rules’ mandate. It is at this stage far from clear that any of the challenges will result in either a long-term stay of effectiveness of the new rules or outright invalidation before they take effect. We will continue to monitor current and future challenges to keep public companies, investors and the public at large apprised as to developments.

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Photo of Wilderness Castillo-Dobson Wilderness Castillo-Dobson

Wilderness Castillo-Dobson is an associate in the Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group.

Wilderness earned his J.D. at the George Washington University Law School, where he was the recipient of the Pro Bono Service Award for outstanding work in…

Wilderness Castillo-Dobson is an associate in the Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group.

Wilderness earned his J.D. at the George Washington University Law School, where he was the recipient of the Pro Bono Service Award for outstanding work in the public interest. While in law school, Wilderness served as a student attorney at Rising for Justice’s Housing Advocacy and Litigation Clinic in Washington D.C., and worked as a law clerk at both the U.S. Office of Special Counsel’s Hatch Act Division and the Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Protection Bureau. Wilderness received his B.A. from New Mexico State University.

Wilderness maintains an active pro bono practice focusing primarily on housing justice and court reform. Wilderness currently serves as a Co-Chair to the Implementation Committee of the Pandemic Practice’s Working Group, a sub-section of the Chief Judge’s Commission to Re-Imagine the Future of NY Courts, where he assists in efforts to modernize and improve access to justice throughout the New York state court system.

Photo of Marina Edwards Marina Edwards

Marina Edwards is a law clerk in the Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group.

Photo of Louis Rambo Louis Rambo

Louis Rambo is a partner in the Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group. He focuses his practice on counseling public companies and their boards of directors on corporate governance, capital markets transactions, mergers and acquisitions, securities regulation, disclosure and…

Louis Rambo is a partner in the Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group. He focuses his practice on counseling public companies and their boards of directors on corporate governance, capital markets transactions, mergers and acquisitions, securities regulation, disclosure and shareholder activism. Drawing on his previous tenure with the Securities and Exchange Commission in the Division of Corporation Finance, Louis partners with clients on capital raising, including underwritten equity transactions, at-the-market offerings and high-yield and investment grade debt offerings, as well as on structuring M&A transactions, spin-offs, tender offers and going private transactions. He advises public companies on developing governance and disclosure matters, including director independence, compensation, insider trading issues, shareholder proposals and stockholder meetings, and advises on shareholder activism and takeover defense.

Louis also regularly advises hedge funds, private equity funds, family offices, private companies and other financial institutions on a wide range of transactional and securities regulatory compliance matters, including capital raising, PIPEs and secondary transactions, novel and complex beneficial ownership issues arising under the federal securities laws, derivative transactions, insider trading issues and policies and compliance programs.

Louis previously served as an attorney with the SEC in the Division of Corporation Finance. While at the SEC, Louis worked on a number of transactional and securities compliance matters.

Photo of Frank Zarb Frank Zarb

Frank Zarb is a partner in our Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group, where he concentrates his practice on equity finance and a wide range of regulatory matters under U.S. federal securities laws.

He counsels public and private companies…

Frank Zarb is a partner in our Corporate Department and a member of the Capital Markets Group, where he concentrates his practice on equity finance and a wide range of regulatory matters under U.S. federal securities laws.

He counsels public and private companies, hedge funds and family offices, and market intermediaries and other financial institutions on a wide range of transactional and securities regulatory compliance matters including:

  • Equity investments and dispositions in public and private companies
  • Public company registration, disclosures and preparation of periodic reports
  • Tender offers, equity lines, proxy contests, SPACs, and other highly regulated transactions
  • Regulation M, Regulation SHO, Forms 13F and 13H, insider trading and other trading issues
  • Corporate governance and stock exchange listing standards
  • Federal and state proxy requirements as well as shareholder proposals and communications
  • Regulation of financial intermediaries, including trading of public and private equity, and complex and novel trading structures
  • Advocating with the SEC on behalf of a market intermediary related to back-office processing matters.

Frank’s practice is both domestic and international, beginning with his experience in senior positions with the Securities and Exchange Commission. As a member of the staff of the SEC’s Office of International Corporate Finance, Frank advised U.S. companies seeking to do business in the EU, Asia and the Middle East, as well as companies from those regions doing business in the U.S., or otherwise seeking to comply with the U.S. securities laws.  In the Office of Chief Counsel, he focused on federal proxy rules, and supervised a team of staff members that provided guidance in the course of proxy season.

Prior to joining the Firm, Frank was deputy general counsel/chief securities counsel for Bristol Myers Squibb Co. in a new position required by the SEC. Prior to joining Bristol-Myers, Frank was a corporate partner with Morgan, Lewis & Brockius.

Social Responsibility

Frank is a Trustee of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation, and he provides significant pro bono assistance to non-profit social service institutions in the Washington, D.C. area.