The 2009 finding established that carbon dioxide and methane emissions pose a direct threat to public health. By stripping away this scientific determination, the administration has effectively gutted the basis for nearly every climate-related regulation under the 1970 Clean Air Act. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin described the repeal as the most significant deregulatory action in American history, a change expected to immediately undermine fuel-efficiency standards and electric vehicle requirements.
While the White House claims these cuts will save $1.3 trillion in regulatory costs, researchers at the University of Chicago and the University of Pennsylvania project a far grimmer outcome: $87 trillion in economic disruption over the next quarter-century due to climate-driven disasters. Last year alone, extreme weather events in the United States resulted in $115 billion in damages.

Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!