View by Topic
Recent Articles
-
Rollback of Federal Appliance Efficiency Standards Happening – What Businesses Need to KnowSaturday, July 11th, 2026
-
California Extended Producer Responsibility Law Challenged in Federal CourtSaturday, June 27th, 2026
-
Clean Water Act Citizen Suits Face Higher Burden After Fourth Circuit PFAS RulingSaturday, June 20th, 2026
-
Potassium Bromate Is Banned Abroad. Will it continue to be in American Pizza and Bagels?Saturday, June 13th, 2026
View by Month/Year
“Green Building Law Update” Headlines
Recent Articles & News from
Stuart Kaplow’s blog
at GreenBuildingLawUpdate.com
Subscribe to the Green Building Law Update!
Stuart Kaplow brings his expertise and extensive experience to the table with his unique digital publication, "Green Building Law Update". Subscribers receive regular updates to keep them informed about important issues surrounding Environmental Law, Green Building & Real Estate Law, as well as the emerging demand for Environmental Social Governance (ESG).
Get fresh content through the lense of Stuart Kaplow's cutting-edge expertise, innovative commentary and insider perspective. Don't miss another issue! Subscribe below.
Recent Environmental Law Articles
Maryland Reverting to Certifiable In Lieu of Certified Green Building
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:11-05:00Sunday, June 9th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
In response to an act of the Maryland legislature in 2018, the state is proposing a watershed revamp of its current mandatory green building requirements for new public school buildings. The public is being invited to comment on the proposal. Existing State Finance and Procurement ...
EPA Cancels Pesticide Registrations to Save the Bees
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:09-05:00Sunday, June 2nd, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
In a rare move, the EPA issued product cancellation orders for certain pesticides effective May 20, 2019. The pesticides contain neonicotinoids that, despite their widespread use have become controversial when laboratory studies reported a link between neonicotinoids and declining bee populations, although a link has ...
GSA Reviews more than 100 Green Building Systems and Recommends 5
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:08-05:00Sunday, May 26th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
Section 436(h) of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 requires the General Services Administration’s Office of Federal High-Performance Buildings to complete a review of high performance building certification systems every 5 years. After the review, GSA recommends to the Secretary of Energy the ...
Recycled Restaurant Waste Cooking Oil Can Trigger Insurance Pollution Exclusion
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:07-05:00Sunday, May 12th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
In a case having broad implications given the wide mandatory recycling of restaurant waste cooking oil across the country, in a decision filed on April 29, 2019, a federal appeals court held that contaminated recycled fat could trigger the “pollution exclusion” in an insurance policy. ...
Maryland Appellate Court Upholds Local Government Pesticide Ban
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:06-05:00Sunday, May 5th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
Last week the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, the state’s intermediate appellate court, overturned an earlier circuit court decision, reinstating a Montgomery County ordinance significantly restricting pesticide use throughout the County. In October 2015, the Montgomery County Council enacted Bill No. 52-14 becoming the first ...
Maryland Bans Polystyrene and Enacts 31 other New Environmental Laws
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:05-05:00Sunday, April 28th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
The Maryland General Assembly, the state’s legislative body meets in regular session for 90 days each year beginning the second Wednesday in January to act on more than 2,500 pieces of legislation. On sine die, when the legislature adjourned at ...
Nurdles are the Environmental Calamity of 2019
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:04-05:00Sunday, April 21st, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
A year ago, I thought a nurdle was a cricket term for a score by deflecting the ball rather than striking it. But in the last twelve months I learned that a nurdle is also a term for a small, lentil size, pellet of plastic ...
LEED Credit is Designed to Eliminate Illegal Wood in Buildings
By Stuart Kaplow|2022-01-22T15:25:03-05:00Sunday, March 24th, 2019|Categories: Environmental Law|
The U.S. Green Building Council is being applauded for the release last week of the new pilot credit intended “to reduce the risk that illegally sourced, harvested or traded wood products are used in building.” The LEED BD+C: New Construction v4 MRpc127 – Timber Traceability ...












