Trump EPA will propose repealing finding that climate change endangers public health
'EPA has sent to the Office of Management and Budget a proposed rule to repeal the 2009 endangerment finding from the Obama EPA,' Zeldin told Newsmax.
'Through the endangerment finding, there has been into the trillions worth of regulations, including tailpipe emissions and including electric vehicle mandates,' he added.
In 2009, then-President Obama's administration made a formal determination that greenhouse gases including carbon dioxide and methane posed a threat to public health. It found emissions from vehicles contributed to the problem.
The finding provided a legal basis for EPA regulations on these planet-heating gases, including for its rules requiring automakers' to cut emissions from their vehicle fleets.
While these rules did not explicitly mandate a pivot to electric vehicles, standards issued by the Biden administration were expected to push the vehicle market toward more electric cars in the years ahead.
The EPA's plans to propose a rule to repeal the finding were first reported by The New York Times.
The Trump administration's move comes despite a consensus from the scientific community that human activity, especially its use of fossil fuels, is heating up the planet. This heating in turn exacerbates extreme weather.
During President Trump's first term, his administration weakened limits on planet-warming emissions, including from vehicles, but it did not repeal the endangerment finding.
The proposal to repeal it signals an escalation that could prevent the agency from having climate regulations on the books at all.
Zealan Hoover, who served as a senior EPA advisor during the Biden administration said it is 'insane' to say that climate change doesn't impact U.S. health and welfare.
'We are right back to full-throated climate denialism of the early 2000s,' Hoover said.
'Climate change impacts public health because it changes the Earth's climate patterns in ways that are beyond both what the human body and our built systems, evolved to have been designed to adapt [to], so that looks like extreme heat, which can cause heat stress and death…. it leads to sea level rise, which you know is makes for more damaging storm surges and even flooding on, non-storm days,' he added.
President Trump has repeatedly denied the existence of climate change, sought to downplay its impacts, repeal regulations meant to combat the problem and defund efforts to research and mitigate it.
The EPA's 2009 endangerment finding came after a 2007 Supreme Court case which said that the agency can regulate greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act and that the agency should decide whether they imperil public health.
The Trump administration had previously signaled that it could repeal the finding.
During his confirmation hearing, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin declined to say whether he believed the EPA had a responsibility to regulate climate change.
In March, the agency said it would reconsider the finding without saying what the outcome of that reconsideration would be.
The move also echoes a similar proposal from the agency to determine that powerplants' planet-warming emissions 'do not contribute significantly to dangerous air pollution' and therefore should not be regulated.
The EPA appears to be preparing a proposal rather than a final decision, meaning the formal revocation of the endangerment finding could be months or even years away.
Updated at 6:36 p.m. EDT
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump says he 'had to' move nuclear submarines after 'threat'
STORY: :: Trump says he 'had to' move nuclear submarines after a 'threat' from Russian ex-leader Dmitry Medvedev :: August 1, 2025 :: Washington, D.C. Security analysts called Trump's move a rhetorical escalation with Moscow, but not necessarily a military one, given that the United States already has nuclear-powered submarines that are deployed and capable of striking Russia. Medvedev on Thursday said Trump should remember that Moscow possessed Soviet-era nuclear strike capabilities of last resort, after Trump had told Medvedev to "watch his words." He did not specify what he meant by "nuclear submarines." Submarines may be nuclear-powered, or armed with nuclear missiles. It is extremely rare for the U.S. military to discuss the deployment and location of U.S. submarines given their sensitive mission in nuclear deterrence. The U.S. Navy declined comment. The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Wall Street Journal
5 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Trump's Warm Embrace of India Turns Cold
WASHINGTON—In just a matter of months, President Trump has gone from praising India as a major strategic partner to saying he wouldn't care if its economy implodes. The Trump administration still values the U.S.-India partnership, officials say. But ties between Washington and New Delhi have steadily soured over disputes about trade, Russia and whether Trump deserves credit for brokering a cease-fire following a four-day conflict in May between India and its rival Pakistan.


Fox News
5 minutes ago
- Fox News
From Washington: Why The White House Believes in Its Tariff Strategy
Many products and produce shipped into the U.S. will face higher tariffs next week, as President Trump meets his self-imposed August 1st deadline to reach new trade deals or implement reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trading partners. While the President secured some major deals before Friday, most nations received letters detailing the tax rates on their imports into the U.S. The White House claims that tariffs will generate trillions and benefit American workers, but some businesses are warning consumers that prices will rise. White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai joins the podcast to discuss the President's tariff strategy, the deals they hope to make with major trading partners, and the concerns some Americans have over the policy. Then, FOX Business White House Correspondent Edward Lawrence analyzes the July jobs report and discusses how a slowing labor market, concerns over tariffs, and other factors could influence the Fed's decision to lower interest rates and the White House's economic plans. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit