Trump Administration Rolls Back Climate Protections While States Fight Back With Bold Green Energy Initiatives Podcast Por  arte de portada

Trump Administration Rolls Back Climate Protections While States Fight Back With Bold Green Energy Initiatives

Trump Administration Rolls Back Climate Protections While States Fight Back With Bold Green Energy Initiatives

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo
In the past week, the United States has seen intense battles over climate policies under the Trump administration. The League of Conservation Voters reports that the administration plans to revoke the Bureau of Land Management's conservation rule, which protected 245 million acres from development, framing the repeal as removing barriers to mining and timber extraction. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum targets these lands for resource extraction, alarming conservationists who warn of environmental damage.

In Utah, MAGA Republicans introduced a Congressional Review Act resolution to overturn protections for Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, the first such attempt against a monument and potentially opening it to oil, gas, and mining, despite opposition from tribes and local groups. The Environmental Protection Agency also intends to remove eight Superfund sites from its National Priorities List, deleting six fully and two partially, amid efforts to redefine cleanup standards and speed data center construction on polluted lands.

States are pushing back forcefully. Washington's Conservation Action sued over a Trump Energy Department order keeping the TransAlta coal plant open beyond its closure date, citing air pollution risks and cost hikes from abusing emergency powers. In Massachusetts, the House passed energy bill H.5151 with clean energy goals and grid upgrades but slashed one billion dollars from the Mass Save efficiency program, which has saved residents 40 billion dollars in bills; advocates urge the Senate to restore funding to meet net zero targets.

New York gained from a federal judge ruling Trump's halt on congestion pricing illegal, preserving the program that cuts traffic and pollution while funding transit since January 2025. California's Air Resources Board approved rules for corporate climate disclosures, mandating emissions and risk reports from firms over one billion dollars in revenue by August 2026, filling gaps left by federal retreat. Montana faces a lawsuit against Interior's approval of a Bull Mountains coal mine expansion for 57 million tons, skipping required environmental reviews and threatening ecology and tribes.

These actions reveal a pattern of federal rollbacks clashing with state innovations, highlighting tensions in America's climate fight as protections erode amid extraction pushes.(378 words)

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Todavía no hay opiniones