Unnatural Instincts: The Trump effort to rollback critical climate regulations is bad science and bad business Home / News Center / Blog Posts / Unnatural Instincts: The Trump effort to rollback criti...
October 25, 2018 Ryan Martel Climate Crisis In a recent Associated Press interview, President Trump claimed to be “an environmentalist” and offered that he has “a natural instinct for science.”
The goals of his administration suggest otherwise.
In fact, this week we are in the middle of the public comment period on the Trump-directed rollback of four climate-related rules administered by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — rules which make up the centerpiece of U.S. efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) and fight climate change.
The Trump Administration has been building up to this regulatory purge from the moment the President was elected, so it is no surprise that he is attempting to fulfill campaign promises on these issues. Still, it is remarkable that these major rules are all under consideration at the same time. It reflects the breadth and depth of this administration’s efforts to effectively erase the previous eight years of progress on addressing climate change — progress that was still only a stepping stone towards meeting the U.S. goals under the Paris Agreement.
The scale of these rollbacks — measured in GHG emissions, in economic costs to be paid and benefits to be lost, and in human lives — is breathtaking. These rollbacks not only reveal a bad “instinct” for science, they also show a bad sense for business.
All four rollbacks represent a seismic shift in regulations across huge sectors of the economy: oil and gas, electric power, transportation, and industry. In all cases these rollbacks will weaken our ability to transition to a low-carbon economy. They could split the U.S. auto market, put the nation out of step (and make us
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