Trump’s EPA Plans to Stop Regulating Greenhouse Gases
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Dicamba is associated with some cancers in humans and can drift from its intended target to kill other plants and affect ecosystems.
Known as the “endangerment finding,” the 2009 declaration has served as the basis for federal rules limiting greenhouse gas pollution from power plants, cars and trucks, and the oil and gas industry.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announces US-Mexico deal to resolve the Tijuana River sewage crisis, calling it a massive environmental win for San Diego-area residents.
Officials with a small but mighty California agency known as the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment said they remain committed to rigorous science.
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EPA set to strike down legal foundation that underpins all major climate regulations - reports
The Environmental Protection Agency is just days away from proposing the US reverse the scientific determination that greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health.
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Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin discusses how President Donald Trump is kicking into action on environmental issues on ‘Fox Report.’
Citing the concerns of Navy Seals in ocean training and Southern Californians generally, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said he and President Trump are accelerating the cleanup of serious pollution that has long plagued the Tijuana River.
The proposed rule rescinds a 2009 declaration known as the “endangerment finding,” which scientifically established that greenhouse gases endanger human lives.
The US Environmental Protection Agency is considering scrapping a landmark almost two-decade old legal opinion that greenhouse gas emissions are harmful to human health, the Washington Post reported.
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EPA considering rollback of key climate change tools that regulate greenhouse gas emissions: report
"This is a five-alarm fire." According to The New York Times, the Trump administration has drafted a proposal to rescind the EPA's 2009 "endangerment finding," a scientific determination that greenhouse gas emissions pose a risk to human health and well-being.
Experts have warned that if the EPA were to bring back dicamba, the results would be devastating—as they have been in the past when the chemical was used.