Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EPA lifts Trump-era rule on emission laws

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is revoking a Trump-era rule that overhauled how the agency evaluates air pollutants, a move the Biden administra­tion says will make it easier to enact limits on dangerous and climate-changing emissions.

EPA said Thursday it reviewed a rule issued by the Trump administra­tion last year and found that it imposed procedural restrictio­ns and other requiremen­ts that limited EPA’s ability to use the best available science in developing regulation­s under the Clean Air Act.

“EPA has critical authority under the Clean Air Act to protect the public from harmful air pollution, among other threats to our health. Revoking this unnecessar­y and misguided rule” by the Trump administra­tion is “proof positive” of the Biden administra­tion’s commitment to science, EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a statement.

Officials “will continue to fix the wrongs of the past and move forward aggressive­ly” to deliver on President Joe Biden’s commitment to protect public health and the environmen­t, Regan said.

The action on the so-called benefit-cost rule follows an executive order Biden signed on his first day in office, directing EPA to review all regulation­s and policies undertaken by the previous administra­tion. The review concluded that the Trump-era rule, finalized in December, should be rescinded in its entirety.

EPA said the previous rule imposed broad restrictio­ns and requiremen­ts on when and how the agency conducts cost-benefit analyses, without explaining why the requiremen­ts were needed. The rule was unnecessar­y to carry out provisions of the Clean Air Act, because EPA already conducts cost-benefits analyses for clean air rules, the agency said.

The previous rule was part of a wave of deregulato­ry actions under former President Donald Trump, who rolled back dozens of environmen­tal rules he considered overly burdensome on businesses. Many of the regulation­s were designed to protect the environmen­t and public health, but were viewed by the Trump administra­tion as costly and unnecessar­y.

Trump EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the rule increased transparen­cy on how the agency analyzed the impacts of its rule-making, but environmen­tal groups argued that the Trump administra­tion was gaming cost-benefit calculatio­ns to loosen environmen­tal and public health protection­s. The Trumpera rules would have justified rollbacks on emissions requiremen­ts for power plants, motor vehicles and other pollution sources, environmen­talists said.

The rule change “is good news, because steps the nation takes to clean up toxic air pollutants — including mercury and acid gases — have saved thousands of lives,” said Harold Wimmer, president and CEO of the American Lung Associatio­n.

Cost-benefit analyses involve projection­s that weigh likely costs of implementi­ng a cleanair regulation against potential public health benefits, including fewer asthma attacks, hospital visits or deaths.

The Trump rule discounted or undervalue­d the public health benefits of regulatory action, compared with compliance costs for business, said Hayden Hashimoto, an attorney for the Clean Air Task Force, an advocacy group.

But Rich Nolan, president and CEO of the National Mining Associatio­n, said the Trump-era rule corrected a previous EPA bias that often was “improperly used to target the coal industry through unjustifia­ble regulation­s that imposed tremendous compliance costs that significan­tly outweighed the environmen­tal benefits.”

He urged a more transparen­t regulatory process and fair accounting practices for the future.

The interim rule proposed by Regan will become effective 30 days after publicatio­n in the Federal Register. EPA said it invites public comments and intends to issue a final rule later this year.

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