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By Maurice Carter, Co-Founder & President Surprisingly, the federal website for the United States Environmental Protection Agency still says "The mission of EPA is to protect human health and the environment." (My apologies if reading that caused you to spew coffee, a soft drink, or something stronger through your nose. If we couldn't laugh, we would cry.) But, after over a year of bad news, things got much worse last week for anyone not spending their days in the boardroom of a major oil company. On February 12, President Trump and US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the Trump administration was officially rescinding the 2009 "Endangerment Finding," which had given US agencies authority for over 16 years to regulate six greenhouse gases (including CO2) as harmful pollutants that endanger American health and wellbeing. This action removes the legal basis by which the EPA has regulated fuel efficiency and tailpipe emissions standards. It also paves the way for repealing rules that restrict pollution from power plants and oil and gas operations. In announcing the change, President Trump claimed "this has nothing to do with public health," adding "This was all a scam, a giant scam." Neither of those statements could be farther from the truth.
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By Dana Nuccitelli, Yale Climate Connections Editor's Note: This week's headlines have been dominated by reaction to US Environmental Projection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin's announcement that the EPA intends to rollback the 2009 "Endangerment Finding" declaring greenhouse gases like CO2 are air pollutants that harm public health and welfare. That finding has served as the basis for EPA regulation of greenhouse gas emissions, which would end if Zeldin is successful in rescinding the finding.
By Sara Vinson, Sustainable Newton Co-Founder & Secretary
By Maurice Carter, Sustainable Newton President
“It ought to be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things. Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well under the new."
Niccolò Machiavelli's words from his 1532 work, The Prince, have never rang more true than now. Just ask President Joe Biden, whose climate agenda and proposed clean energy policies are the largest "new order of things" we've seen in America in our lifetimes. For the world, decarbonizing economies to respond to the climate crisis -- as agreed via the Paris Climate Agreement -- is likely the largest single undertaking in human history.
Stop in the Name of Love (of Money) By opposing President Biden's Clean Electricity Performance Program (CEPP), Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) casts himself as the visible face of the enemies Machiavelli noted. Manchin is doing very well under the current order of things through the backing of the coal, oil, and gas interests who have done extremely well themselves for decades.
By Maurice Carter, Sustainable Newton President
On June 1, 2021, President Joe Biden issued an executive order temporarily suspending oil and gas drilling leases for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in Alaska. The controversial leasing program was finalized in August 2020 during President Donald Trump's final year in office.
President Biden's order cited "legal deficiencies" with the current program and "inadequacy" of the previous review process. As a result, the US Department of the Interior is initiating a "comprehensive environmental analysis to review the potential impacts of the Program and to address legal deficiencies in the current leasing program’s environmental review." That review will include public comments and testimony, starting with six sessions this week. On September 14, at the invitation of Environment America and representing Sustainable Newton, I delivered virtual testimony before the Federal Bureau of Land Management Alaska Field Office. You can read the text of my verbal testimony here. You can also view the presentation from the bureau and listen to all of yesterday's testimony in the Facebook Live video below. (My testimony begins at the 28:04 mark.)
By Maurice Carter, Sustainable Newton President
Extreme weather and widespread power outages in Texas are headline news everywhere this week. As of today, nearly three million customers remain without power, after record-breaking low temperatures and heavy snowfall struck the state. It's a dangerous situation, and many of us have friends and/or family directly impacted.
Emotions are frayed and lives remain at risk. As with any crisis, priority one is restoring power and tending to those in need. Lessons learned can wait until safety is restored. But it's a sad reality we must also contend with disinformation about root causes and contributing factors to the energy portion of this crisis. Specifically, some clean energy naysayers see an opportunity to push a false narrative that these power outages were primarily caused by a wind power failure. This simply is not true.
By Maurice Carter, Sustainable Newton President
Wednesday in Washington brought a flurry of environmental executive orders and policy statements from President Biden that delighted environmentalists and climate activists -- while also drawing fire from Republicans seeking to use climate as a wedge issue. Among the most significant actions the President announced, he:
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