As I wrote back in August when the EPA released its draft proposal, the agency has now – over a decade and a half later – reinterpreted the Clean Air Act to only apply to direct health impacts from local pollution, and not to indirect health effects, like those associated with global climate pollutants.
The agency finalized the decision six months later. And the EPA has already been rolling back all of its climate regulations.
It’s worth bearing in mind that while EPA regulations could be effective at reducing climate pollution, in practice, they haven’t done a whole lot. That’s because EPA regulations tend to swing back and forth every time a new political party takes control of the White House.
Vehicle tailpipe standards are the only significant climate-related regulation that’s gone into effect, and even those overlapped with separate vehicle fuel efficiency standards – which are also now being rolled back. Overall, nearly all of the United States’ emissions reductions have come from the power sector, but that’s because cleaner sources of electricity became cheaper than coal, not because of EPA regulations.
What’s next?
So what happens next is that various groups will sue the EPA, and the case will ultimately be appealed up to the Supreme Court in a process that will likely take several years. At that point, there will be three possible outcomes.
In a best-case scenario, the Supreme Court could rule that the EPA is wrong and must regulate climate pollution under the Clean Air Act. That would require the agency to reissue a broad swath of climate pollutant regulations in the ensuing years.
In a middle scenario, they could narrowly rule in favor of the EPA, giving the agency the discretion to decide whether to regulate climate pollutants. That would maintain the status quo of regulatory swings whenever a new party wins control of the White House.
In the worst-case scenario, the Supreme Court could rule that the EPA is correct in its interpretation that the agency doesn’t have the authority to regulate climate pollutants under the Clean Air Act. That would tie future administrations’ hands on climate regulations. That could also leave fossil fuel companies liable to state-level lawsuits. They were shielded from those by the existence of federal climate regulations.
In that case, or at least in the meantime, that leaves American climate policy almost exclusively in the hands of Congress and individual states.
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“The real conspiracy is that the rich think that they don't have to live in the same world as the rest of us, so they can let it burn and profit on the way down… These guys believe that they are above the rules. ”
The elites just don't care about what is good or even legal. Roll back the climate regs to grift in petro bucks, genocide a nation for those enriched by the industrial military complex, invite other privileged persons to illegal immoral activities and no accountability because your corrupt lackies are in the admin. Justice, health, politics, media and others.
The rollbacks occuring during this right-wing populous propaganda worldwide is money and power for all elites.
That quote at the start is from a discussion by 2 of my favourite people talking about the big picture of why the system must change. The EPA roll-back gets a little mention, inequality breeds powerful people who will ruin the world-but only for us. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu1k_mzzwnU
[BL] Please try to dial back the tone a little bit.
There is a fourth option: repeal or modify the Clean Air Act and/or the act that created the EPA (assuming it is different).
...but that would require putting their true intent front and centre, where voters can see it. And they'd need enough votes in both the House and the Senate, where the politicians need to think if that will affect getting re-elected. Better to do it by stealth, where you leave the laws intact and just try to choke the $%^# out of it. By the time the courts intervene, you'll need a nuclear power plant to power the AED that you'd need to resuscitate action.
Recommended supplenmetal reading:
The reckless repeal of the Endangerment Finding, Opinion by John Holdren*, Union of Concerned Scientists, Feb 19, 2026
*Dr. Holdren is Teresa and John Heinz Research Professor of Environmental Policy at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and Faculty Co-Chair of the Science, Technology, and Public Policy program in the School’s Belfer Cener for Science and International Affairs. From 2009 to 2017, he was the Science Advisor to President Obama and Senate-confirmed Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
Excerpt:
"The 2009 finding by the EPA that emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases endanger the public health and welfare—the Endangerment Finding—is the legal basis for the EPA to regulate those emissions; last week, the Trump administration rescinded the finding. If the recission survives the inevitable legal challenges, it will lead to the EPA dismantling essentially all of its regulation of greenhouse-gas emissions, most notably those from cars and trucks as well as from power plants and other stationary sources."
Holden pulls no punches in this article To access the entire opinion piece, go to:
https://thebulletin.org/2026/02/the-reckless-repeal-of-the-endangerment-finding/
Thanks for that link JH,it descibes the dire,existential situation this wretched leader and his morally compromised party,enablers and administration are willing to put society into.
You have to ask why? They have kids, grandkids-immediate close family and friends too. The lifestyle of so many of us is over in its current form as more planetary boundaries collapse under the shadow of the human polluting green house gases ever increasing.
You have to think the powerful elites feel distanced and immune from the worlds common folks issues but greed and power must also blind.
pwas: "Thanks for that link JH, it descibes the dire,existential situation this wretched leader and his morally compromised party,enablers and administration are willing to put society into.You have to ask why? They have kids, grandkids-immediate close family and friends too."
You almost answered your own question in your first post: “The real conspiracy is that the rich think that they don't have to live in the same world as the rest of us....." Its not just that the rich may think they are above the law.The rich probably think they can buy their way out of the consequences of climate change and other environmental problems. And they will leave plenty of money to the grand kids. And to a large extent they can.
I think its a corruption of wealth thing. I am financially rather secure so climate change wont hurt me too much, but I dont like that it will hurt large parts of the world and the low income people. But if I was super rich I can imagine I might become so confident climate change can't affect me at all, and I might become so self entitled and detached from the real world, I stop caring about the ordinary folks. None of us are completely immune to the effects of huge wealth and power.
But remember not all powerful elites dont care. Plenty of billionaires accept the climate science and do some things to help improve the situation. I'm not sure scapegoating them for the problem helps very much.
The conclusion is basically backwards. The best case is for states to experiment with solutions and have Congress write laws to set numeric standards for CO2 just like they did for CO. The worse case is to go to the Supreme Court and watch them rule 6-3 against the same thing they ruled 5-4 for in 2007. It's pretty simple: decisions based on policy, or even worse, science, do not create strong legal precedent. Please read the Roberts 2007 dissent that I will again link here: Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497 (2007)
If the USSC decides a similar case, a 6-3 decision will hinge on Roberts 2007 logic both in deference to the legal issues and to Roberts himself. The three liberal justices will maintain the Stevens argument and argue it's even more crucial today. The other six may secretly harbor Scalia's merchandizing of doubt, but won't put that in writing.
How will Congress pass those laws? Good question, a simple majority in the House is inevitable thanks to my state of Virginia gerrymandering and anti-Trump sentiment. 60 votes can be purchased in the Senate by sending enough money to farmers regardless of party control.
Just a reminder, just 1 billion is a 1000 million. The global billionaire population has continued to grow, reaching around 3,030 individuals in 2026, representing a 5% increase from the previous year.
Billionaires emit more carbon pollution in 90 minutes than the average person does in a lifetime. www.oxfam.org/en/press-releases/billionaires-emit-more-carbon-pollution-90-minutes-average-person-does-lifetime?utm_source=copilot.com .
From 5 "But remember not all powerful elites dont care. Plenty of billionaires accept the climate science and do some things to help improve the situation. I'm not sure scapegoating them for the problem helps very much." Here is a start to help fix the problem of billionairs www.youtube.com/shorts/EybsPFDSWyU
Eric @ 6:
I'm not sure exactly which "conclusion is basically backwards". I'm not even sure if you're responding to someone else's comment, or the OP itself. Can you be more specific?
You link to the 2007 decision. I've had a quick look. It is rather long. Is there a specific part that you think is particularly important?
One thing that Roberts says in his dissent is that CO2 is basically a global issue. In the early part of that decision, it says "Roberts pointed out that much of the impetus behind global warming comes from foreign nations that have no environmental regulations." That seems to represent an opinion that the tragedy of the commons is fine with him.
prove @ 7:
I would generally be of the opinion that not all billionaires are sociopaths, but clearly some are. It is an open question as to whether the proportion of sociopaths in the billionaires' club is more than, equal to, or less than the proportion in the general population. But only a few is enough to be a problem in a political system running on billionaires' dollars.
There is a strong sense that many in that club think they are there because they deserve it. (The billionaires' club, not the sociopaths' club.) Nothing to do with luck, birthright, unethical behaviour, or anything like that.
Meyer's Dark Money, and Piketty's Capital in the 21st Century make for interesting reading. Meyer for a look into how billionaires are getting their hooks into the political system. Piketty for a look into how income and wealth inequality have changed over the past century or so, and the direction it is taking today.