Environmental Protection Agency

Biden’s Climate Rule: A Tricky Target for Trump

The Environmental Protection Agency has finalized a rule aimed at reducing methane emissions from oil and gas production, a crucial step in addressing climate change. This rule, mandated by the Inflation Reduction Act, imposes fees on companies exceeding methane emission thresholds, incentivizing them to repair leaks and capture the potent greenhouse gas. The fee structure, coupled with financial incentives for leak repairs, is designed to reduce methane emissions by 1.2 million metric tons annually, equivalent to taking millions of cars off the road. This rule’s inclusion in a major climate law makes it more difficult for future administrations to dismantle, ensuring its long-term impact on reducing methane pollution and mitigating climate change.

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Supreme Court puts EPA’s “Good Neighbor plan” on hold.

The Supreme Court’s recent decision to put the Environmental Protection Agency’s “Good Neighbor plan” on hold is yet another blow to environmental protections in our country. It seems that every time we turn around, there’s another regulation being dismantled, and it leaves me wondering why these decisions are happening so rapidly. Is it because big money corporations are pulling the strings, prioritizing profits over people and the planet?

Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s reasoning for granting the challengers’ request to put the EPA’s plan on hold is flawed. The EPA had a valid explanation for their actions, aiming to reduce pollution from power plants and industrial sources in upwind states that were not meeting the “Good Neighbor” provision of the Clean Air Act.… Continue reading