Albany Times Union

Trump plans regulation overhaul

Announceme­nt to come Tuesday at W. Virginia rally

- By Lisa Friedman

The Trump administra­tion next week plans to formally propose a vast overhaul of climate change regulation­s that would allow individual states to decide how, or even whether, to curb carbon dioxide emissions from coal plants, according to a summary of the plan and details provided by three people who have seen the full proposal.

The plan would also relax pollution rules for power plants that need upgrades. That, combined with allowing states to set their own rules, creates a serious risk that emissions could start to rise again, according to environmen­talists.

The proposal, which President Donald Trump is expected to highlight Tuesday at a rally in West Virginia, amounts to the administra­tion’s strongest and broadest effort yet to address what the president has long described as a regulatory “war on coal.” It would considerab­ly weaken what is known as the Clean Power Plan, former President Barack Obama’s signature regulation for cutting planet-warming emissions at coal-fired plants.

That rule, crafted as the United States prepared to enter into the 2015 Paris Agreement on global warming, was the first federal carbon-pollution restrictio­n for power plants. In 2016, the Supreme Court temporaril­y blocked the regulation from taking effect while a federal court heard arguments from a coalition of coal states that sued to block the rule. It remains suspended.

Now, the Trump administra­tion wants to defang the Obama-era rule. The move follows a separate decision this month to freeze Obama-era fuel efficiency standards that were also aimed at reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.

“These are the two biggest sectors of the economy that contribute to greenhouse gases in the country and are just hugely significan­t in terms of emissions,” said Janet Mccabe, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency air chief under Obama. Together the transporta­tion sector and the power sector account for more than half of the country’s emissions, according to the agency.

“The science is just getting clearer and clearer every day,” Mccabe said. “I don’t know how many times people need to hear that we’re having the warmest summer on record or how many storms people need to see. This is no fooling.”

Officials at the White House and the EPA did not respond to requests for comment.

The plan is the latest move in a string of efforts to end what Trump has called his predecesso­r’s war on coal and a sure sign to the industry that the Trump administra­tion still has its back, even as coal production continues to decline.

The proposal could help Trump rally his base in coal regions heading into the midterm elections.

 ?? Tom Brenner / The New York Times ?? President Donald Trump arrives at the airport in Morristown, N.J. Friday to spend the weekend at his nearby golf resort. Earlier, Trump attended a closed-door luncheon and fundraiser in the Hamptons.
Tom Brenner / The New York Times President Donald Trump arrives at the airport in Morristown, N.J. Friday to spend the weekend at his nearby golf resort. Earlier, Trump attended a closed-door luncheon and fundraiser in the Hamptons.

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