US EPA Wants to Erase Greenhouse Gas Limits on Power Plants, NYT Reports
- The Environmental Protection Agency is drafting a proposed regulation that would end all federal limits on planet-warming pollution generated by coal and gas-fired power plants, according to documents cited by the New York Times.
- The proposed rule would undo decades of progress on limiting US climate pollution and could drive up energy prices if expensive coal plants remain on the grid longer as a result.
- The documents the New York Times acquired argue the US share of global power plant pollution has fallen, and that even if US power plants cut all of their emissions and pollution, it would not meaningfully improve public health in the US.
73 Articles
73 Articles
EPA moves to erase power plant emissions rules, claiming climate impact is too small
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is preparing to strike down greenhouse gas limits for fossil-fueled power plants, arguing their emissions aren’t a significant threat despite overwhelming scientific consensus to the contrary.Lisa Friedman reports for The New York Times.In short:Internal EPA documents reveal a plan to repeal all federal limits on greenhouse gas emissions from coal and gas plants, reversing Biden-era rules that required ca…
Direct Air Capture’s Epic Flop: Green Hype Crashes Against Physics and Costs
...with CO2 mitigation policies and technologies failing, it is time to reverse course on the whole climate crusade, redirecting resources toward adaptation to extreme weather (from any cause). Thirty-five years of misdirection and waste is enough.
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- 46% of the sources are Center
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