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This week, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced his plans to overturn the “endangerment finding” for greenhouse gases, which would strip the agency of its power to regulate climate change pollution.
The decision to retract the foundational “endangerment finding” is by no means final, and will likely face a litany of legal ...
The Block Island Inshore Fishing Tournament ended with a winning school bluefin tuna measuring 42.5 inches, caught by Evan ...
New Mexico climate groups struck a defiant tone in the wake of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s plan to dismantle ...
Air pollution is less dramatic than floods or storms, less inconvenient, and much harder to politicize. It’s also much more ...
Americans are used to whiplash in their climate policy. The US has been in and out and in and out again of the key Paris ...
To his credit, Zeldin understands that future administrations will continue to bounce back and forth on climate issues unless the EPA finally reverses the “endangerment finding.” There are plenty of ...
At an auto dealership in Indiana, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin today released the agency’s proposal to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, which is the legal ...
I read your article on Lee Zeldin of the EPA attempting to undo the “endangerment finding” that greenhouse gases threaten humans by driving a warming climate. I can remember when ...
EPA administrator Lee Zeldin announced a proposal to get rid of regulations that limit the amount of greenhouse gas emissions trucks and cars can produce in the US.
Rescinding endangerment finding leaves U.S. defenseless against growing climate change threat.
The EPA's proposal to rescind a 2009 emissions policy could impact New York's climate action plan, potentially affecting electric vehicle mandates.