EPA, climate change
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The US Environmental Protection Agency is considering scrapping a landmark almost two-decade old legal opinion that greenhouse gas emissions are harmful to human health, the Washington Post reported.
Experts say the EPA's move to reverse the endangerment finding is dangerous for the nation. But California may have tools to weather the storm.
The Trump administration is releasing its proposal to undo the “endangerment finding,” the long-standing rationale and legal imperative for regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act
On Tuesday the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released its proposal to undo its long-standing rationale and legal mandate to regulate greenhouse gases under the decades-old Clean Air Act—part of the Trump administration’s wide-ranging campaign to dismantle federal efforts to combat climate change.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin said the rule had been used to justify over $1 trillion in regulations, including the Biden-Harris administration’s EV mandates.
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In one of its most significant reversals on climate policy to-date, the Trump administration on Tuesday proposed to repeal a 2009 scientific finding that human-caused climate change endangers human health and safety,
7hon MSN
The Trump administration’s EPA is set to propose reversing the 2009 endangerment finding that classified carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases as pollutants threatening human health, a move that could gut US climate regulations.
20hon MSN
EPA's Lee Zeldin will repeal of Obama-era endangerment finding that classified carbon dioxide as a pollutant, projecting job growth and more affordable vehicles.
The agency’s administrator said in a podcast that the move would be “the largest deregulatory action in the history of America.”