Green Patents: International Trade Commission terminates investigation into allegations of infringement of wind turbine technology patents

Co-authored with Cyrus Frelinghuysen.

On January 8, 2010, the US International Trade Commission (ITC) issued a notice of its decision to terminate a Section 337 investigation into whether Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. and two of its subsidiaries had infringed three General Electric (GE) patents related to wind turbine technology. GE plans to appeal the ITC’s decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. The investigation stemmed from a February 2008 GE complaint with the ITC. GE claimed that wind turbines imported by Mitsubishi infringed GE’s U.S. Patent Nos. 5,083,039; 7,321,221; and 6,921,985.

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SEC Issues Climate Change Disclosure Guidance - Not a Statement Regarding Climate Change "Facts"

On January 27, 2010 the Security Exchange Commission (SEC) announced it had voted approval to issue “interpretative guidance” on the existing disclosure requirements as they apply to business and legal developments relating to climate change. The SEC stressed in its announcement that: 1) the interpretive guidance is meant to provide clarity and enhance disclosure consistency; 2) the commission is not making any statement regarding the facts relating to climate change, global warming, pace of warming, or causes; and that 3) it is not changing reporting, and materiality rules. That said, the Commission’s vote was split along “party lines” among the agency's republican and democratic commissioners. Kathleen Casey reportedly criticized the SEC vote as "transparently political and such a breathtaking waste of the commission's resources."

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