EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announces sweeping rollbacks of environmental regulations, calling it the 'most consequential day of deregulation in American history.' (AP File)

- EPA chief announces rollback of 31 environmental rules, including climate change regulations and power plant emissions.
- Environmentalists and scientists criticize the move, calling it a form of climate denial that won't stand up in court.
- EPA also terminates diversity and environmental justice programs, sparking concerns about increased pollution in vulnerable communities.
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WASHINGTON — In what he called the “most consequential day of deregulation in American history,” the head of the Environmental Protection Agency announced a series of actions Wednesday to roll back landmark environmental regulations, including rules on pollution from coal-fired power plants, climate change and electric vehicles.
“We are driving a dagger through the heart of climate-change religion and ushering in America’s Golden Age,” EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in an essay in The Wall Street Journal.
The Trump administration’s actions will eliminate trillions of dollars in regulatory costs and “hidden taxes,” Zeldin said, lowering the cost of living for American families and reducing prices for such essentials such as buying a car, heating your home and operating a business.
“Our actions will also reignite American manufacturing, spreading economic benefits to communities,” he wrote.
Rollback of 31 Environmental Rules
In all, Zeldin said he is rolling back 31 environmental rules, including a scientific finding that has long been the central basis for U.S. action against climate change.
Zeldin said he and President Donald Trump support rewriting the agency’s 2009 finding that planet-warming greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare. The Obama-era determination under the Clean Air Act is the legal underpinning of a host of climate regulations for motor vehicles, power plants and other pollution sources.
Environmentalists and climate scientists call the endangerment finding a bedrock of U.S. law and say any attempt to undo it will have little chance of success.
“In the face of overwhelming science, it’s impossible to think that the EPA could develop a contradictory finding that would stand up in court,” said David Doniger, a climate expert at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group.
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Rewriting Power Plant and Vehicle Emission Rules
In a related action, Zeldin said EPA will rewrite a rule restricting air pollution from fossil-fuel fired power plants and a separate measure r estricting emissions from cars and trucks. Zeldin and the Republican president incorrectly label the car rule as an electric vehicle “mandate.”
President Joe Biden’s Democratic administration had said the power plant rules would reduce pollution and improve public health while supporting the reliable, long-term supply of electricity that America needs.
Biden, who made fighting climate change a hallmark of his presidency, cited the car rule as a key factor in what he called the “historic progress” on his pledge that half of all new cars and trucks sold in the U.S. will be zero-emission by 2030.
Targeting Additional Environmental Protections
The EPA also will take aim at rules restricting industrial pollution of mercury and other air toxins, as well as separate rules on soot pollution and federal protections for significant areas of wetlands, Zeldin said Wednesday. The EPA has also terminated its diversity, equity and inclusion programs and will shutter parts of the agency focused on environmental justice. The three-decade effort strived to improve conditions in areas heavily burdened by industrial pollution, including in low-income and majority-Black or Hispanic communities.
“This isn’t about abandoning environmental protection — it’s about achieving it through innovation and not strangulation,” Zeldin wrote. “By reconsidering rules that throttled oil and gas production and unfairly targeted coal-fired power plants, we are ensuring that American energy remains clean, affordable and reliable.”
University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann called the EPA’s action “just the latest form of Republican climate denial. They can no longer deny climate change is happening, so instead they’re pretending it’s not a threat, despite the overwhelming scientific evidence that it is, perhaps, the greatest threat that we face today.”
“The Trump administration’s ignorance is trumped only by its malice toward the planet,” said Jason Rylander, legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute. “Come hell and high water, raging fires and deadly heatwaves, Trump and his cronies are bent on putting polluter profits ahead of people’s lives.”
The move to reconsider the endangerment finding and other actions “won’t stand up in court,” Rylander said. “We’re going to fight it every step of the way.”
The United States is the second largest carbon polluter in the world, after China, and the largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases.
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The moves to terminated environmental justice staff follows an action last week to drop a case against a Louisiana petrochemical plant accused of increasing cancer risk in a majority-Black community.
Zeldin called environmental justice a term that “has been used primarily as an excuse to fund left-wing activists instead of actually spending those dollars to directly remediate environmental issues for those communities.”
Matthew Tejada, who once led the EPA’s environmental justice office and is now at an environmental nonprofit, slammed the move.
“Trump’s EPA is taking us back to a time of unfettered pollution across the nation, leaving every American exposed to toxic chemicals, dirty air and contaminated water,” said Tejada, who now works at the Natural Resources Defense Council.
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