The Trump
administration has revoked the bedrock scientific determination that
gives the government the ability to regulate climate-heating pollution. The
move was described as a gift to “billionaire polluters” at the expense of
Americans’ health.
The endangerment finding, which states that the buildup
of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere endangers public health and welfare, has
since 2009 allowed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to limit
heat-trapping pollution from vehicles, power plants and other industrial
sources.
Donald Trump called the move “the single largest
deregulatory action in American history”. “This is a big one if you’re into
environment,” he told reporters on Thursday. “This is about as big as it gets.”
The move comes as part of Trump’s bigger anti-environment push, which has seen
him roll back pollution rules and boost oil and gas.
On social media, Barack Obama said the
repeal will leave Americans “less safe, less healthy and less able to fight
climate change – all so the fossil fuel industry can make even more money”. The
former secretary of state John Kerry called the new rule “un-American”.
“Repealing the Endangerment Finding takes Orwellian
governance to new heights and invites enormous damage to people and property
around the world,” said Kerry, who also served as Joe Biden’s climate envoy.
“Ignoring warning signs will not stop the storm. It puts more Americans
directly in its path.”
The final rule removes the government’s ability to impose requirements to track, report and limit climate-heating pollution from cars and trucks. Transportation is the largest source of climate pollution in the US. It does not apply to regulations on stationary sources of emissions such as power plants and fossil fuel infrastructure, which are regulated under a separate section of the Clean Air Act, but it will open the door to end those standards, too.
Trump’s EPA has separately
proposed to find that emissions from power plants “do not contribute
significantly to dangerous air pollution” and therefore should not be
regulated. Joseph Goffman, who served as EPA air chief under Joe Biden, expects
the agency will apply their vehicles-focused arguments to stationary polluters
in order to kill the endangerment finding for all sources of greenhouse gas
emissions.
“Instead of the entire house of cards of all EPA climate
regulation collapsing all at once today, it’s going to be like a row of
dominoes falling,” said Goffman, who helped write and implement the Clean Air
Act and worked directly on the endangerment finding.
Environmental advocates have condemned the move as
illegal. A slew of green groups have promised to take the EPA to court over the
rollback, as has the state
of California. “If this reckless decision survives legal challenges, it
will lead to more deadly wildfires, more extreme heat deaths, more
climate-driven floods and droughts, and greater threats to communities
nationwide – all while the EPA dismisses the overwhelming science that has
protected public health for decades,” Gavin Newsom, the California governor,
said in a statement.
The move marks “the most aggressive, ruthless act of
dismantling public health protections in the agency’s 55-year history”, said
Dominique Browning, director and co-founder of environmental advocacy group
Moms Clean Air Force.
In a press
release, the EPA said the move will
save the US $1.3tn, while Trump said Thursday that the move “will save
American consumers trillions of dollars”. The EPA administrator, Lee Zeldin,
said the Obama and Biden administrations used the endangerment finding “to
steamroll into existence a leftwing wish list of costly climate policies”.
“Who paid the biggest price? Hardworking families, small
businesses, millions of Americans who just want a reliable, affordable car to
get to work or take their kids to school or go to church on Sunday,” he said. But
though the rollback could save some corporations money, experts note it could
take a massive toll on ordinary Americans’ wellbeing and pocketbooks.
One analysis from
green group Environmental Defense Fund found the full repeal of the
endangerment finding combined with Trump’s proposal to roll back motor vehicle
standards would result in as much as 18bn more tons of planet-warming pollution
by 2055 – the same as the annual emissions of China, the world’s top polluter –
and would impose
up to $4.7tn in additional expenses tied to harmful climate and air
pollution by that time.
Zeldin submitted the repeal of the legal determination
for White
House review last month. In July, he officially announced plans to repeal
the finding, justifying the proposal with a widely criticized energy
department report questioning climate science. The agency received half a
million comments on the proposal. Last month, a federal judge said
the July energy department report was created unlawfully.
In the repeal of the endangerment finding, the EPA is
claiming that the Clean Air Act is only meant to regulate pollution “that harms
health or the environment through local and regional exposure”. But there is
scientific consensus that by trapping heat in the atmosphere, greenhouse gas
emissions are intensifying dangerous extreme weather events, allowing diseases
to spread faster, and worsening illnesses from allergies to lung
disease.
Trump described the finding as “the legal foundation for
the green new scam”, which he claimed “the Obama and Biden administration used
to destroy countless jobs”. But the new rule will have ruinous consequences for
working-class Americans, said Jason Walsh, executive director of BlueGreen
Alliance, a coalition of labor unions and environmental groups. “Billionaires
like Donald Trump don’t suffer the devastation of climate change,” he said.
“Working people do.”
The rollback comes one month after the Trump
administration announced it will pull the US from the foundational UN
agreement to address the climate crisis, as well as the world’s leading body of
climate scientists. Over the past year, Zeldin has also launched an all-out
assault on climate, air, water and chemical protections. The EPA has also
removed crucial climate-focused science and data from its webpages.
“This is all part of the Trump administration’s
authoritarian playbook to replace facts with propaganda, to enrich a few while
harming the rest of us,” said Rachel Cleetus, senior policy director for the
climate and energy program at the science advocacy group the Union of Concerned
Scientists. “Administrator Zeldin has fully abdicated EPA’s responsibility to
protect our health and the environment.”
The EPA has said that it determined the US would save
billions annually by revoking the endangerment determination. But the agency’s
analysis did not account for the money and lives saved by the environmental and
public-health protections that the change would eliminate, experts say.
Alex Witt, senior adviser at green advocacy group Climate
Power, said: “Zeldin and Trump are telling our families: we’ll let you get
sicker and watch your healthcare costs skyrocket as long as oil and gas CEOs
can profit.” “This decision makes it abundantly clear that Trump is willing to
make our families sicker and less safe, all to benefit a few billionaire
polluters,” said Witt.
Some industry groups have been reluctant to support the
full rollback of the endangerment finding. The American
Petroleum Institute, the top US oil lobby group, last month said it backed
a repeal of the endangerment finding for vehicles, but not for stationary
sources of pollution like power plants.
-Dharna Noor, The Guardian

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.