The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is seeking to repeal the basis for its ability to regulate the U.S. economy in the name of fighting climate change, Administrator Lee Zeldin confirmed on July 23.
“These findings do not themselves impose any requirements on industry or other entities,” the EPA stated. ”However, this action was a prerequisite for implementing greenhouse gas emissions standards for vehicles and other sectors.”
Zeldin said that since the finding, there had been “trillions” of dollars’ worth of regulations, from tailpipe emissions to electric vehicle mandates. He criticized the left for not talking about many reasons why carbon dioxide is essential to life on earth.
“The left might say, and in many cases they do, that there’s a choice, a binary choice: You can either protect the environment or grow the economy,” he said. “The Trump EPA rejects that. We choose both. We believe that you can protect the environment and grow the economy. That’s very important. That’s what the American public voted for, and that’s what they demanded when they went to the polls last fall.”
“In 2023 and 2024,” he said on June 11, “rules were enacted seeking to suffocate our economy in order to protect the environment, seeking to make all sorts of industries, including coal and more, disappear, regulate them out of existence.”
However, he clarified that no power plant would be able to go beyond its current emissions.
The move has already faced vocal opposition from environmental groups.
The organization went on to argue that the Trump EPA’s actions would lead to more pollution, stronger hurricanes, more powerful floods, and more frequent fires. It also argued that it would cause higher insurance and fuel costs for Americans.
John Haughey contributed to this report.






