The Maui News

EPA eases coal emission rule

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency acted again Thursday to ease rules on the sagging U.S. coal industry, this time scaling back what would have been a tough control on climate-changing emissions from any new coal plants.

The latest Trump administra­tion targeting of legacy Obama administra­tion efforts to slow climate change comes in the wake of warnings from the agency’s scientists and others about the accelerati­ng pace of global warming.

In a ceremony Thursday at the agency, acting EPA administra­tor Andrew Wheeler signed a proposal to dismantle a 2015 rule that any new coal power plants include cuttingedg­e techniques to capture the carbon dioxide from their smokestack­s.

Wheeler called the Obama rules “excessive burdens” for the coal industry.

“This administra­tion cares about action and results, not talks and wishful thinking,” Wheeler said.

Asked about the harm that coal plant emission do people and the environmen­t, Wheeler responded, “Having cheap electricit­y helps human health.”

Janet McCabe, an EPA air official under the Obama administra­tion, and others challenged that. MaCabe in a statement cited the conclusion of the EPA’s own staff earlier this year that pending rollbacks on existing coal plants would cause thousands of early deaths from the fine soot and dangerous particles and gases.

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