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What Does a Resources Attorney Do for Corporate Clients?

Practice Area:Corporate

A resources attorney advises corporations on legal matters involving natural resource extraction, management, and regulatory compliance across federal, state, and local jurisdictions.



These practitioners handle statutory obligations under environmental laws, permitting frameworks, and land-use restrictions that shape operational feasibility. Procedural missteps in permitting or environmental disclosure can result in project delays, permit revocation, or costly remediation mandates. This article covers the core functions resources attorneys perform, the regulatory landscape they navigate, and how they protect corporate interests through documentation and compliance strategy.


1. Core Responsibilities in Resource Law Practice


Resources attorneys work across multiple legal domains. They coordinate with environmental compliance teams, land acquisition specialists, and regulatory affairs departments to ensure corporate projects align with applicable statutes and agency rules. In my experience advising mid-market energy companies, the most frequent task involves translating regulatory requirements into operational timelines and cost estimates before capital deployment.

A resources attorney's core duties include permit application preparation, environmental impact assessment review, regulatory agency correspondence, and litigation defense when enforcement actions arise. They also manage lease negotiations with landowners, government entities, and tribal authorities where resource rights are at stake. The attorney serves as a bridge between the corporation's business objectives and the intricate web of federal and state regulatory oversight.



2. Regulatory Frameworks and Compliance Posture


Federal law establishes baseline standards through statutes such as the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and National Environmental Policy Act. State law, including New York's Environmental Conservation Law, often imposes stricter thresholds and procedural requirements. Corporations operating across multiple states face a patchwork of differing notice periods, public comment windows, and agency approval timelines.

Resources attorneys monitor compliance calendars closely. Missing a statutory filing deadline or failing to provide required notice can invalidate permits, trigger enforcement proceedings, or expose the corporation to civil penalties. Regulatory agencies may impose corrective action orders, which demand costly remediation or operational suspension until compliance is achieved. The attorney's role includes flagging these deadlines in advance and ensuring documentation is complete before submission.



New York Environmental Review and Agency Procedure


In New York, the Department of Environmental Conservation and local planning boards conduct environmental reviews under the State Environmental Quality Review Act. Corporations proposing resource extraction or energy infrastructure projects must submit detailed environmental assessments. Procedural defects, such as incomplete disclosure or inadequate response to agency comments, can delay permits or invite legal challenges from third parties.

Resources attorneys manage the technical and procedural aspects of these reviews. They coordinate with environmental consultants to prepare impact statements, respond to agency requests for additional information, and defend the environmental record if litigation ensues. The stakes are substantial: a project that loses environmental approval may face years of delay or permanent abandonment.



3. Energy and Natural Resources Law Compliance


Corporations in the energy sector face specialized regulatory demands. Energy and natural resources law encompasses oil and gas leasing, renewable energy siting, mining operations, and utility infrastructure development. Each sector carries distinct permitting pathways, environmental review standards, and public participation requirements.

Resources attorneys advise on lease structures that protect the corporation's long-term access to resource reserves while complying with surface-use restrictions and environmental covenants. They negotiate with state and federal agencies over drilling plans, reclamation obligations, and decommissioning timelines. In contested situations, the attorney may represent the corporation in administrative hearings or federal court challenges to permit denials.



Permitting Strategy and Timeline Management


Permit applications trigger overlapping state and federal reviews. A single energy project may require permits from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Environmental Protection Agency, state environmental agencies, and local planning boards. Each agency operates on its own schedule and has distinct information requirements.

Resources attorneys create integrated permitting timelines that account for these parallel processes. They identify critical path items, such as environmental baseline studies or tribal consultation, that must be completed before other approvals can proceed. Strategic sequencing of applications and proactive engagement with agencies can compress timelines and reduce uncertainty. Conversely, procedural delays in one agency can cascade across the entire project schedule.



4. Litigation and Enforcement Defense


When regulatory agencies initiate enforcement actions, resources attorneys defend corporate interests. Common triggers include alleged permit violations, unpermitted operations, or environmental contamination discovered during inspections. The attorney evaluates the agency's legal theory, challenges procedural irregularities in the enforcement notice, and negotiates settlement or penalty reduction.

Third parties, including environmental organizations and neighboring landowners, may also sue to challenge permits or halt operations. Resources attorneys focus on the underlying permit validity and environmental compliance posture. Discovery in these cases often centers on agency records, environmental monitoring data, and corporate communications regarding risk assessment and mitigation measures.



Settlement and Remediation Negotiations


Resources attorneys negotiate consent orders with regulatory agencies. These agreements typically require the corporation to undertake corrective actions, pay penalties, and implement enhanced monitoring or operational controls. The attorney's goal is to structure remediation obligations in a way that minimizes operational disruption and long-term liability exposure. Clear documentation of compliance efforts and timely reporting to the agency reduce the risk of escalated enforcement or permit revocation.



5. Practical Considerations for Corporate Resource Operations


The following checklist outlines key areas resources attorneys address to protect corporate interests:

  • Permit application completeness and agency submission timing
  • Environmental baseline studies and baseline data documentation
  • Public notice and comment period compliance
  • Tribal consultation and stakeholder engagement protocols
  • Environmental monitoring and reporting requirements
  • Lease compliance and surface-use restriction adherence
  • Decommissioning and reclamation plan development
  • Enforcement notice response and penalty negotiation

Resources attorneys work to ensure the corporation maintains current and defensible permits, completes required environmental monitoring on schedule, and documents good-faith compliance efforts. When disputes arise, contemporaneous records of compliance actions strengthen the corporation's litigation posture and settlement negotiating leverage. Proactive legal strategy in the permitting phase often prevents costlier disputes downstream.


22 Apr, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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