Supreme Court takes up Guam munitions case

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal from the U.S. Air Force over open detonation of obsolete munitions on Tarague Beach in Guam. The site holds cultural importance for the CHamoru people and sits above the island's main drinking water aquifer. A federal appeals court had ruled in favor of requiring environmental analysis under NEPA.

Tarague Beach, part of Andersen Air Force Base in northern Guam, is the focus of a legal battle. The Air Force seeks to continue open detonations of legacy munitions there, a practice for which it has applied for permits since 1982. The beach overlies Guam's sole-source aquifer, supplying 80 percent of the island's drinking water, and supports endangered sea turtles and migratory seabirds. CHamoru activist Moneaka Flores, whose family once owned land there for coconut cultivation, pig raising, and fishing, views the Supreme Court appeal as a delay. “This is actually a delay for justice for us,” Flores said. “We were moving forward in the District Court, and I consider this move by the Department of War to challenge it at the Supreme Court as a strategy to delay justice for our people and to answer to the law.” In 2022, Flores and her group Prutehi Litekyan sued, arguing the Air Force must analyze alternatives under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). A 2018 National Academies report confirmed less-polluting options exist. Last year, a federal appeals court sided with them, but the Air Force appealed, claiming compliance with the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) suffices, without needing NEPA's broader review. The case carries broader implications. Neil Weare of Right to Democracy noted it fits a trend of Supreme Court deference to federal power in territories. David Henkin of Earthjustice, representing the plaintiffs, said a ruling could take another year and emphasized NEPA's requirement for holistic reviews, including cultural impacts. Flores linked it to historical land seizures post-World War II, when the military took nearly two-thirds of Guam, and ongoing environmental concerns.

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Symbolic photorealistic depiction of U.S. Supreme Court 6-3 ruling invalidating Trump's IEEPA tariffs, with gavel smashing documents.
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Supreme Court 6-3 Rules Trump's IEEPA Tariffs Unlawful, Applying Major-Questions Doctrine

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The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on February 20, 2026, in Learning Resources v. Trump that President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) exceeded his authority. Chief Justice John Roberts' majority opinion invoked the major-questions doctrine to limit executive power over taxation, while concurring liberal justices emphasized statutory text and legislative history. The decision, expedited due to ongoing tariff revenue collection, spares some targeted duties but introduces uncertainty amid Trump's vows for alternatives.

A team of international researchers has accused the US government of hastening the collapse of coral reefs around Guam through military expansions and proposed rollbacks to the Endangered Species Act. In a letter published in Science this month, they highlight how national security priorities are overriding conservation efforts. Without changes, these reefs face functional extinction similar to those in Florida.

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The US Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that a lawsuit by Plaquemines Parish against Chevron must be transferred from state to federal court, effectively voiding a $745 million judgment against the oil company. The decision stems from Chevron's activities during World War II as a military contractor off Louisiana's coast. Legal experts describe the move as frustrating but not a final win for the oil industry.

Kenya's High Court has cleared a class action lawsuit by 299 residents against a multinational British oil company accused of toxic waste dumping in the 1980s. Petitioners link over 500 deaths to contaminated drinking water in the Chalbi Desert. The suit also names Kenyan government ministries for failing to act.

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In the latest development of the Anthropic supply chain risk controversy, a U.S. federal appeals court on April 9 denied Anthropic's emergency motion to block the Trump administration's blacklisting of its AI technology. The court expedited oral arguments for May 19 but ruled the balance of equities favors the government, marking a setback following a prior district court injunction.

On February 12, 2026, the Trump administration repealed the Environmental Protection Agency's 2009 Endangerment Finding, which had established greenhouse gases as threats to public health and welfare. President Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the move at the White House, describing it as the largest deregulatory action in U.S. history. The repeal undermines the legal foundation for numerous federal climate regulations.

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Gżira United FC is constructing at least six padel courts at Nicholl Ground on Manoel Island without a planning permit, prompting outrage from environmental campaigners and Momentum. The works on leased government land conflict with plans to turn the site—within Valletta's UNESCO buffer zone—into a national park, with critics demanding a halt and enforcement action.

 

 

 

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