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State AGs Sue Trump Administration Over Energy Emergency Order

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Filed February 2nd, 2026
Detected February 7th, 2026
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Summary

Multiple State Attorneys General have joined a lawsuit challenging President Trump's executive order declaring an "energy emergency." The lawsuit argues that federal agencies are using this order to bypass environmental reviews and fast-track fossil fuel projects, posing risks to water resources.

What changed

Seventeen State Attorneys General, led by Colorado AG Phil Weiser, have joined an ongoing multistate lawsuit challenging President Trump's "energy emergency" executive order. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, names President Trump, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and other federal officials as defendants. The states seek a declaration that the directive is illegal and an injunction to prevent federal agencies from issuing emergency permits under the order, arguing that it circumvents critical environmental reviews for fossil fuel projects, such as the Wildcat Loadout Facility expansion in Utah, which would significantly increase oil train traffic along the Colorado River.

This action requires regulated entities involved in fossil fuel projects that might seek expedited review under the "energy emergency" order to be aware of the ongoing legal challenge. While the lawsuit seeks to halt the use of emergency permits, companies should anticipate potential delays or increased scrutiny for projects relying on this executive order. The plaintiffs are asking the court to declare the directive illegal and stop agencies from issuing permits under it, potentially impacting the timeline and feasibility of such projects. Non-compliance with environmental regulations, even under emergency declarations, could lead to further legal action and penalties if the states' challenge is successful.

Source document (simplified)

Attorney General Phil Weiser sues President Trump, Interior Secretary Burgum over made-up “energy emergency”

Feb. 2, 2026 (DENVER) – Attorney General Phil Weiser has joined an ongoing multistate lawsuit challenging President Trump’s “energy emergency” executive order signed on Inauguration Day invoking the National Emergencies Act. In implementing the executive order, federal agencies are bypassing or shortening critical environmental reviews to fast-track approval of fossil fuel projects, including a facility that will significantly increase oil traffic along the Colorado River and other critical waterways in the state.

“Congress passed the National Emergencies Act to prevent presidents from declaring national emergencies for pointless or partisan purposes — exactly what the president has done with this executive order. Energy production is at an all-time high. The only energy emergency is the one that is the president’s head,” Attorney General Weiser said. “Derailments, spills, or other accidents from oil trains traveling on rail lines next to our rivers pose a serious risk to the millions of people, businesses, and farms that depend on these critical sources of water. We are challenging this made-up emergency to protect our communities and our land, air, and water in Colorado.”

Typically, federal agencies have only used emergency procedures during actual emergencies such as hurricanes and catastrophic oil spills where lives were at risk, the lawsuit explains. Now agencies are acting under emergency procedures only due to the president’s unlawful order.

The U.S. Department of the Interior, for example, is currently implementing these procedures for several projects, such as the Wildcat Loadout Facility, on Bureau of Land Management land located in Price, Utah. At this facility, oil extracted from the Uinta Basin is loaded from tanker trucks to rail cars for export to refineries along the Gulf Coast. During this journey, rail cars travel from the Wildcat Facility over 100 miles along the Colorado River through Colorado.

The operator of the Wildcat Facility proposed an expansion of the loadout in 2023 but ultimately failed to provide BLM with information needed to conduct a proper environmental analysis. As a result, BLM terminated its review of the proposal. The expansion proposal, however, was revived in May 2025 just days after the Interior Department published its procedures for complying with the energy emergency executive order. BLM approved the operator’s request for right-of-way expansion in July 2025 without any public comment period.

According to BLM’s environmental assessment of the project, expansion of the Wildcat Facility will result in a substantial increase in oil train traffic—from 20,000 barrels of crude per day to approximately 100,000 barrels. The lifespan of the expanded project is estimated to be 20 years. Yet BLM found that the project would not significantly impact the environment.

The updated lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, names as defendants President Donald Trump, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, the head of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. These agencies have taken illegal action to implement the president’s directive.

The states ask the court to declare the president’s directive illegal and to stop federal government agencies from issuing emergency permits under the executive order.

Joining in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.

Read a copy of the updated complaint State of Washington v. Trump et al (PDF).

Media Contact:
Lawrence Pacheco
Chief Communications Officer
(720) 508-6553 office
lawrence.pacheco@coag.gov

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Attorneys General (10 States)
Filed
February 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Energy companies
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Energy Policy Administrative Law

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