EPA, Trump and climate change
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The Trump administration is releasing its proposal to undo the “endangerment finding,” the long-standing rationale and legal imperative for regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act
EPA chief Zeldin announced plans to rescind the country's biggest tool to fight climate change. Environmental advocates call it a direct assault.
The Trump administration’s U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed on Tuesday revoking a science-based determination that pollution fueling climate change harms public health. The
The long-expected move comes after Republicans recently disarmed fuel economy standards and canceled influential state-level emissions rules.
EPA rollback of climate rules could weaken California’s clean air authority and trigger legal battles over greenhouse gas protections.
President Donald Trump's administration on Tuesday proposed revoking a scientific finding that has long been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.
The Trump administration's EPA has proposed undoing the 2009 "endangerment finding" that enables the US climate regulations.
Current and former employees at NSF, NASA, NIH, and the EPA have signed onto letters enumerating their concerns.
When President Donald Trump rolled out a plan to boost artificial intelligence and data centers, a key goal was wiping away barriers to rapid growth.
The agency says it wants to get rid of the 'endangerment finding' that greenhouse gas pollution threatens public health and welfare.