Attorney General Ken Paxton secured a legal victory after a federal court struck down a Biden-era rule that threatened to reduce the availability of affordable housing by imposing costly green energy requirements for new home construction. The lawsuit was brought by a coalition of 15 states and the National Association of Home Builders, which relied on Attorney General Paxton to argue the case in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
In 2024, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) issued a rule requiring that new homes be built with certain federal housing financing to comply with significantly stricter energy- efficiency building codes. The rule would have applied to housing financed through programs such as FHA-insured mortgages, USDA rural housing loans, and various federally assisted housing initiatives.
These mandates required builders to install stronger insulation, higher-efficiency windows, tighter building envelopes, upgraded heating and cooling systems, and other costly requirements that would have increased construction costs and made affordable housing harder to build.
Paxton argued that the rule violated federal law because it would reduce the availability of affordable housing. Federal law allows adoption of new energy standards only if they do not negatively affect the availability or affordability of housing. The court also ruled that HUD and USDA lacked the statutory authority to impose the updated standards in 2024. As a result of the ruling, the 2024 energy standard has been vacated and is no longer in effect.