Extreme Weather Intensifies as Trump Administration Revokes Key Climate Protections Amid Global Warming Crisis
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Political actions are reshaping federal responses. The Trump administration revoked the 2009 endangerment finding, a cornerstone scientific determination by the Environmental Protection Agency that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide threaten public health and welfare, as announced by White House officials and covered by the Associated Press and Phys.org in February. This move eliminates the legal basis for nationwide vehicle emissions standards and opens the door to broader deregulation of fossil fuels, drawing sharp criticism from environmental groups who call it the biggest assault on climate efforts in US history, per ESG News and Earth.Org. Meanwhile, a lawsuit filed by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research accuses the administration of dismantling the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, as retaliation against Democratic Governor Jared Polis, shuttering a key lab that tracks air quality, wildfires, droughts, and cyclones, Earth.Org reports.
In Michigan, debates rage over energy policy. Republicans in the state House proposed repealing new green energy laws and erasing past utility rate hikes blamed on corporate greed from DTE Energy and Consumers Energy, according to Michigan Advance, while foes of Enbridge's Line 5 oil tunnel project argued before the state Supreme Court that environmental reviews were inadequate, Bridge Magazine notes.
Worldwide, the United Nations weather agency warned on March 23 of a record climate imbalance with planetary warming speeding up, UN News states. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasts El Niño's return this summer, likely persisting through 2026 with a one-in-three chance of strong intensity, disrupting global weather and amplifying US heat domes made more likely by climate change, as Euronews explains.
These developments reveal emerging patterns: policy reversals clashing with undeniable extreme weather, underscoring urgent tensions in the fight against rising temperatures.
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