Dissecting the Attacks on the Endangerment Finding

EPA has identified four different arguments against the endangerment finding. None have merit.

In late 2009, EPA made a formal finding — often called the Endangerment Finding —that greenhouse gases may endanger human health and welfare.  Undaunted by the overwhelming scientific evidence in favor of that finding, the Trump EPA plans to reconsider it.  Few independent observers believe EPA will succeed, but the issues are important enough to warrant a close look. In this post, I’ll explain the 2009 finding, its significance,  the specific arguments EPA i...

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Disappointed in National Leadership? Look to States

With nations lagging behind on climate, states and provinces are coming up with investment opportunities to protect forests and ecosystems internationally.

Only 13 of the 195 signatory countries to the Paris Agreement submitted new national plans for tackling climate change by the recent deadline. Meanwhile President Trump has begun the process of the U.S. withdrawing from that agreement — again. This US withdrawal from global leadership is a perfect time to refocus attention and support at the subnational level.  Whereas some U.S. cities are struggling to navigate Trump 2.0, states and provinces run by governors can mo...

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Left-Wing NIMBYism Strikes Out – Again

The Current Overheated Housing Market in Los Angeles Demonstrates That Market-Rate Housing Can Reduce Rents

One of the most pernicious aspects of the land use and housing debate over the last few years has been the rise of what we mean might call “left-wing NIMBYs.” It is essentially traditional NIMBYism but on allegedly progressive grounds. The principal argument of this group is that building more market-rate units will do nothing to reduce housing costs. Market-rate housing, they argue, is just “luxury” housing, and so it won’t make anything more affordable. It...

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What is Life Like Inside Trump’s EPA?

EPA plaque

Three EPA employees talk about DOGE, work anxiety, regulatory rollbacks, and the impact on protecting health and the environment.

The new head of the U.S. the Environmental Protection Agency — whose mission is to protect human health and the environment by developing and enforcing regulations — this week made what he proudly called the “largest deregulatory announcement in history” in the form of nearly three dozen policy reversals and “reconsiderations.”   EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin’s video announcement confirmed many of the sweeping changes that were reportedly in the pip...

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Why Stand Up for Science? Ask Kim Stanley Robinson

A protest sign that says You Cannot Kill the Future

The acclaimed science fiction author says at a UCLA talk that Trump’s attack on science is “a murder suicide” that won’t work because “you cannot kill the future.”

One day before thousands of Americans took to the streets to protest cuts to scientific research, Kim Stanley Robinson gave a barn burner of a defense of science in the “Optimist Room” of a UCLA conference center. The author of “The Ministry for the Future,” “The Mars Trilogy,” and other books with scientists and climate diplomats as heroes, is himself a calm, deliberate speaker — the very image of equanimity. But the Trump administration’s attacks on...

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State-Level Actions To Decarbonize Aviation

New CLEE report explores the risks of federal preemption.

Aviation is a significant and growing source of greenhouse gas emissions. But the federal government in the United States has failed to address it so far. In response, some state policy makers and advocates are now considering legal avenues to effectively require the use of sustainable aviation fuels, which emit less carbon than traditional jet fuel when burned — and in some cases can eliminate these emissions altogether. Opponents will undoubtedly argue that such s...

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Legal Safeguards Against Deregulation

Congress was aware that there could be a backlash against environmental standards. It took precautions.

While Trump finds “tariff” one of the most beautiful words in the English language, I myself prefer “anti-backsliding.” Back in January, Trump told EPA to roll back efficiency standards on everything from lightbulbs to shower heads. Some news outlets viewed this as an accomplished task, with headlines like “Trump Rolls Back Energy Standard.”  But, as it  turned out, not only was it not a done deal, it was also legally impossible. The reason: an anti-backsli...

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EPA Jumps the Shark

Just as a past dictator rejected modern genetics, Trump rejects climate science. For both, evidence was no match for ideology and ego.

“We are driving a dagger through the heart of climate-change religion and ushering in America’s Golden Age,” or so said EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, who used to be considered a fairly rational person.  This is known as drinking the  Kool-Aid, and it's something that usually ends badly. Specifically, Zeldin said EPA would reconsider (and presumably revoke) its finding that greenhouse gases "may endanger human health or welfare."  This is actually a position t...

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Make America’s Environment Filthy Again

Lee Zeldin

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has launched a full-scale attack on climate, air and water pollution.

In what is one of the most mind-boggling press releases ever to come out of the Environmental Protection Agency, Administrator Lee Zeldin today declared that he wants to make America's air and water dirty again and to make the planet still warmer. He announced 31 actions that will obliterate protections for cleaner air, cleaner water, and a more stable climate. Each of the regulations Zeldin is seeking to roll back is worthy of a separate blog post. Each tackles a...

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U.S. Resistance to Trump is Alive and Well

Protest scenes

Thousands of people rallied at more than 100 Stand Up for Science events from Missouri to France. Where will the movement go from here?

Several thousands of people took to the streets this past weekend in more than 100 cities to protest the Trump administration’s wide-ranging attacks on vital scientific research, including its attempts to slash funding to the National Institutes of Health and hence local universities and research labs across the country. The result was small but potent demonstrations in red states like Missouri, Montana, and Ohio as well as big crowds in Boston, New York, Philad...

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