On January 5, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the cities of Morgan Hill (Santa Clara County) and Petaluma (Sonoma County), California, challenging local ordinances that effectively ban natural gas infrastructure and gas powered appliances in new buildings. The complaint, docketed as Case 5:26-cv-00056 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, frames the dispute as a clash between local climate policy initiatives and longstanding federal energy law.
This case concerns the prevailing national consensus that the country’s long term prosperity should be advanced through ever our increasing sustainable technology and amazing economic abundance, rather than by prohibiting the use of lawful energy sources by banning fossil fuels.
That the plaintiff is the United States government should be considered as of import.
What the Lawsuit Is About
Both cities adopted their respective all electric building rules, Morgan Hill in 2019 and Petaluma in 2021, as part of broader efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and transition building energy systems away from fossil fuels. These ordinances limit or prohibit the installation of natural gas piping and appliances like gas stoves, furnaces, and water heaters in most new construction.
The DOJ’s complaint asserts that these local bans violate the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, a federal statute that empowers the U.S. government to establish national energy conservation and efficiency standards for covered products and expressly preempts state and local regulations “concerning the energy use” of those products. EPCA’s preemption provision was interpreted by the Ninth Circuit in California Restaurant Association v. City of Berkeley, 89 F.4th 1094 (9th Cir. 2024), to apply to local restrictions that ban or effectively eliminate the use of natural gas for covered appliances by prohibiting the necessary infrastructure. We have blogged about that case and the Broad Failure in Attempts to Ban Natural Gas.
According to the DOJ complaint, the Morgan Hill and Petaluma ordinances fall squarely within this preemptive scope because they “concern the .. energy use” of covered products by preventing natural gas from serving as an energy source, a result the Ninth Circuit found preempted when Berkeley’s ordinance was challenged.
The complaint also alleges that the bans impose what it describes as “crushing costs” on residents and businesses, framing the local rules as detrimental to consumer choice and inconsistent with a unified federal approach to energy regulation, not to mention flying in the face of increasing electricity demand that will only be made more dire with mandates for more electricity usage.
DOJ’s Legal and Policy Argument
The Department of Justice contends that Morgan Hill’s and Petaluma’s prohibitions create a patchwork of inconsistent regulation in an area where federal law mandates uniform national standards for energy related products. Under the EPCA’s express preemption clause, once a federal standard covering an energy using product becomes effective, no state or local regulation “concerning the energy use” of that product may remain effective unless it falls within specified exceptions, none of which the DOJ argues applies here.
The DOJ’s legal strategy in this case explicitly draws on the Berkeley precedent, where the Ninth Circuit held that EPCA preempts a local ban on natural gas piping to new buildings because the ordinance, regardless of form, regulated the energy use of natural gas appliances.
Beyond legal doctrine, the lawsuit reflects the federal energy policy emphasis articulated by the current Attorney General, Pamela Bondi, who in press statements, characterized the bans as unlawful and harmful to the nation and to consumers. DOJ officials have tied the action to broader federal objectives articulated in two Executive Orders Unleashing American Energy (EO 14154) and Protecting American Energy from State Overreach (EO 14260), which prioritize American energy dominance and seek to challenge state and local actions deemed to undermine that priority.
DOJ’s complaint seeks a judgment declaring the ordinances preempted, invalidating them, and securing permanent relief preventing their enforcement.
Context and Background
Both Morgan Hill and Petaluma adopted their all electric codes in a bygone era when many local governments in California were exploring aggressive policies to reduce building emissions (.. how a Presidential election changes national energy policy). These ordinances were joined by similar actions in cities such as Berkeley, which became the first jurisdiction to enact a strict natural gas ban, later struck down by the Ninth Circuit and repealed.)
Following the Berkeley decision, numerous governments across the country, including Los Angeles and other California cities, recognizing the legal challenge posed by EPCA, have repealed or suspended similar ordinances.
Morgan Hill and Petaluma reportedly have not actively enforced their bans since the Berkeley ruling, and the DOJ’s lawsuit signals a proactive federal approach to asserting EPCA preemption and deterring future local ordinances of similar character.
Today the emphasis nationwide is reliability of the electric power grid and the generation of enough electricity to meet growing needs (.. nearly the opposite emphasis of these climate concerned laws).
Potential Impact
For business leaders and policymakers outside California, particularly in jurisdictions like Maryland, the implications of this litigation are significant. Governments nationwide, including Maryland and Montgomery County, Maryland, have adopted laws aimed at phasing out fossil fuels in favor of all electric buildings. Unlike the ordinances at issue here that impact new construction, the Maryland laws extend to retrofitting existing buildings, a much broader regulatory scope that arguably raises even more complex preemption issues and has prompted litigation asserting similar conflicts with federal law.
If the federal court in Northern California follows the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning and grants the DOJ’s requested relief, the decision could deter other governments from adopting or enforcing bans on natural gas infrastructure and appliances. Legal analysts and environmental attorneys widely expect that the federal government’s position, supported by Berkeley precedent, will prevail, reinforcing the principle that energy conservation and energy use standards for covered products are matters of national, not local, regulatory authority.
This case may thus become a legal bellwether for future disputes over the balance between local climate objectives and federal statutory preemption.
It will also be a predictor of the national will for maximizing a great future for civilization through sustainable technology and amazing abundance addressing the reality of electricity demand of data centers and affordability of electricity, not being anti innovation and banning fossil fuels.
Business executives with interests in construction, real estate development, utility infrastructure, and energy policy should closely monitor developments, as similar legal frameworks are being considered nationwide, including, by way of example, the Department of Justice intervening in the cases challenging the Maryland all electric building laws. Watch future posts on this blog for updates as the litigation unfolds.
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