Everyone Pollute Again

The new EPA.

Via the AP: EPA head says he’ll roll back dozens of environmental regulations, including rules on climate change.

“We are driving a dagger through the heart of climate-change religion and ushering in America’s Golden Age,’’ EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in an essay in The Wall Street Journal.

A grand irony here is that what we know about climate change is based in scientific inquiry, while the whole
“Golden Age” stuff is as fantastically faith-based as it gets.

None of the changes take effect immediately, and nearly all will require a long rulemaking process. Environmental groups vowed to oppose the actions, which one said would result in “the greatest increase in pollution in decades’’ in the U.S.

Part of me thinks it is quaint that the reporter thinks this will be be done through a deliberate process, and part of me hopes that is true.

I will agree that regulatory reform, properly pursued, it a reasonable goal. Likewise, I am not surprised that a Republican administration would be less in favor of environmental regulation. However, this is blatantly irresponsible and clearly undercuts the EPA’s mission.

Note the following contrast from the NYT write-up.

The E.P.A. has “no obligation to promote agriculture or commerce; only the critical obligation to protect and enhance the environment,” the first administrator, William D. Ruckelshaus, said as he explained its mission to the country weeks after the E.P.A. was created by President Richard M. Nixon. He said the agency would be focused on research, standards and enforcement in five areas: air pollution, water pollution, waste disposal, radiation and pesticides.

Mr. Zeldin said the E.P.A. would unwind more than two dozen protections against air and water pollution. It would overturn limits on soot from smokestacks that have been linked to respiratory problems in humans and premature deaths as well as restrictions on emissions of mercury, a neurotoxin. It would get rid of the “good neighbor rule” that requires states to address their own pollution when it’s carried by winds into neighboring states. And it would eliminate enforcement efforts that prioritize the protection of poor and minority communities.

In addition, when the agency creates environmental policy, it would no longer consider the costs to society from wildfires, droughts, storms and other disasters that might be made worse by pollution connected to that policy, Mr. Zeldin said.

In perhaps its most consequential act, the agency said it would work to erase the E.P.A.’s legal authority to regulate carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by reconsidering decades of science that show global warming is endangering humanity. In his video, Mr. Zeldin derisively referred to that legal underpinning as “the holy grail of the climate change religion.”

Mr. Zeldin called Wednesday’s actions “the largest deregulatory announcement in U.S. history.” He added, “today the green new scam ends, as the E.P.A. does its part to usher in a golden age of American success.”

It is also another example of how tearing things down is far easier than building them back up will be. And, worse, this is another situation in which there will be long-term consequences that will take years and years to repair.

Not to get too simplisitc, but I have lived in two places in my life wherein emissions visibly created substantial air pollution: Southern California and Bogotá, Colombia. In both cases, I also witnessed how environmental regulations substantially improved air quality. In both cases, it took years and a lot of deliberate action by government. All the economic incentives were to continue to pollute. As such, I am always a bit skeptical when told that there is a cost-free way to roll back such regulations.

But, hey, I am sure more mercury, soot, and greenhouse gases in the atmosphere will be fine and dandy!

FILED UNDER: Climate Change, Environment, Health, US Politics, , , , ,
Steven L. Taylor
About Steven L. Taylor
Steven L. Taylor is a retired Professor of Political Science and former College of Arts and Sciences Dean. His main areas of expertise include parties, elections, and the institutional design of democracies. His most recent book is the co-authored A Different Democracy: American Government in a 31-Country Perspective. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Texas and his BA from the University of California, Irvine. He has been blogging since 2003 (originally at the now defunct Poliblog). Follow Steven on Twitter and/or BlueSky.

Comments

  1. Mikey says:

    Hey, every American should be able to witness the glory of the Cuyahoga River in flames.

    3
  2. ,just nutha says:

    Somehow, it seems fitting that a Trump agency would commit to having more smog, dirtier water and bigger wildfires. MAGAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!

    4
  3. just nutha says:

    @Mikey: Indeed! That, too.

  4. Joe says:

    Bringing back acid rain!

    1
  5. gVOR10 says:

    It’s impossible to sort out when Republicans deliberately lie and when they actually believe what they’re saying, or usually some confused mishmash in between. Zeldin said,

    climate-change religion

    Reynolds likes to argue religion is a root cause for our current situation. I agree, but only with a broadened definition of religion reflecting Enchanted America‘s division into intuitionists and rationalists. For the intuitionists, belief in AGW must be religion, because what other foundation is there for belief except intuition/religion? As they see it they have high priests in white robes and we have high priests in white lab coats. And I think the prevalence of lawyers in government exacerbates this. They spent years learning the law handed down by priests in black robes. It becomes a habit of mind.

  6. becca says:

    They’re trying to criminalize climate action. They are going after Habitat For Humanity, ffs.
    This chest thumping belligerence is gonna be the end of us all. Sickening.

    1
  7. gVOR10 says:

    Having said @gVOR10: that many people rely on quasi religious intuitive beliefs, I just stumbled across an example. World War II Today is a Substack that each day publishes an event or personal vignette taking place on the corresponding date in the war. Eighty years ago a German NCO wrote in a letter home.

    We must firmly believe in Germany’s future — believe and ever more believe. A people that has so courageously lost so much blood for its greatness cannot perish. … Only our faith makes us strong, and I rely on the words of the Fuhrer that at the end of all the fighting there will be German victory.

    That was, quite literally, insane. Allied forces were in Germany on both sides and the bomber forces were running out of targets. But there are many examples of Germans believing it.

    Excepting relatively minor actions internal to the ex-USSR, we have not since had war between European nations until Ukraine. And Trump wants to dismantle or weaken the arrangements that have maintained the peace. Do you still have the Picard facepalm pic?

  8. reid says:

    It doesn’t matter if the liberal tears are caused by sulfuric acid in the air, they’re still delicious and priceless. /snark

    2
  9. Daryl says:

    @Joe:
    Acid rain, and the Ozone Layer. Two huge success stories due to environmental regulations.
    Trump would have labeled each a hoax.
    I cannot imagine the cesspools that red states will become, when left to their own devices.
    Same applies to the Department of Education.
    Imagine how red states that already have shitty education are going to do now? I pity the kids in those states who will now grow up dumb af.

    2
  10. Mister Bluster says:

    I think that there should be a pipeline network to deliver all emissions from fossil fuel electric generating stations and other industries to Mar A Lago.
    Whatever spill over remains can be directed to the home of Lee Zeldin.

    3
  11. Daryl says:

    @Mister Bluster:
    I imagine the stench of soiled diapers and pancake makeup and hairspray is more toxic than anything that can be piped in.

    1
  12. Kathy says:

    You don’t think the combination of polluted water and lower vaccine uptake will generate massive profits for healthcare companies?

    2
  13. steve says:

    Awesome! We can set our lakes on fire once more. Make America Flammable Again!!

    Steve

  14. Ken_L says:

    On December 7, 2009, the Administrator signed two distinct findings regarding greenhouse gases under section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act:

    Endangerment Finding: The Administrator finds that the current and projected concentrations of the six key well-mixed greenhouse gases—carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)—in the atmosphere threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations.
    Cause or Contribute Finding: The Administrator finds that the combined emissions of these well-mixed greenhouse gases from new motor vehicles and new motor vehicle engines contribute to the greenhouse gas pollution that threatens public health and welfare.
    These findings do not themselves impose any requirements on industry or other entities. However, this action was a prerequisite for implementing greenhouse gas emissions standards for vehicles and other sectors.
    https://www.epa.gov/climate-change/endangerment-and-cause-or-contribute-findings-greenhouse-gases-under-section-202a

    In his own contemporary version of Lysenkoism, Zeldin aims to have these findings reversed, thus presumably rendering many subsequent regulations invalid.

  15. Hal_10000 says:

    One of the most important goals to every generation is to make sure their kids have it better than they did. MAGA is the first political movement I’ve seen devoted to the idea that their kids should have it worse.