Trump Administration Repeals Landmark Climate Rules: EPA's Historic Deregulation Sparks Legal Battles and Environmental Backlash Podcast Por  arte de portada

Trump Administration Repeals Landmark Climate Rules: EPA's Historic Deregulation Sparks Legal Battles and Environmental Backlash

Trump Administration Repeals Landmark Climate Rules: EPA's Historic Deregulation Sparks Legal Battles and Environmental Backlash

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In the past week, the United States has seen major shifts in climate policy under President Donald Trump. During his State of the Union address on February 27, Trump doubled down on his drill baby drill agenda, touting support for the fossil fuel industry and attacking the green new scam, according to Carbon Briefs DeBriefed report. He renewed focus on electricity affordability amid rising costs. Earlier that week, the Trump administration watered down limits on mercury pollution from aging coal fired power plants, as reported by the Financial Times, though experts note coal continues to decline against cheaper natural gas and renewables.

The Environmental Protection Agency took its boldest step yet. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the single largest deregulatory action in US history, repealing the Obama era 2009 greenhouse gas endangerment finding and all related federal emission standards for vehicles and engines from model years 2012 through 2027 and beyond, saving taxpayers over 1.3 trillion dollars, per the EPAs official release. The agency argued that even eliminating all US vehicle emissions would have no material impact on global climate through 2100, dismantling what it called legal fictions from prior administrations.

This repeal, finalized around February 12 but highlighted this week, sparked immediate backlash. Seventeen environmental groups, including the Environmental Defense Fund, Natural Resources Defense Council, American Lung Association, and Center for Biological Diversity, sued the EPA over removing this landmark finding that enabled federal greenhouse gas limits, as detailed by The Guardian and the Clean Air Task Force. Critics like attorney Frank Sturges called it unlawful, citing reinforced scientific evidence from the nonpartisan National Academies.

The US Supreme Court also agreed to hear a major lawsuit from the oil industry aiming to block dozens of state level climate suits blaming firms for global warming, reported the New York Times. Meanwhile, the administration seeks to permanently kill a global carbon levy on shipping at the United Nations, with Panama reversing support after US pressure, per Politico and The Guardian.

Worldwide, floods killed at least 53 in Brazils Minas Gerais state after 170 millimeters of rain in hours, per CNN Brasil, highlighting extreme weather patterns. Emerging insights show US policy rolling back federal climate guardrails while states and groups fight back, potentially deepening divides as renewables grow despite rhetoric. These moves signal a fossil fuel push amid ongoing global emission challenges.[349 words]

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