Current:Home > ContactNew EPA Rule Change Saves Industry Money but Exacts a Climate Cost -ThriveEdge Finance
New EPA Rule Change Saves Industry Money but Exacts a Climate Cost
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:57:06
For the latest Trump Administration rollback of Environmental Protection Agency rules, the math goes something like this: The change will save businesses and industries $24 million a year. Earth’s atmosphere, on the other hand, will receive emissions of pollutants equivalent to at least 625,000 new cars being added to the road.
This week, EPA Administrator Andrew R. Wheeler signed a new rule that relaxes the requirements that owners and operators of refrigeration equipment have leak detection and maintenance programs for hydrofluorocarbons, a set of refrigerants often referred to as “climate super-pollutants.”
The rule change—the latest reversal of an Obama-era regulation—was part of the administration’s agenda to ease burdens on industry.
“We just think it’s a baffling and wrong-headed move,” said David Doniger, a senior strategic director with the Natural Resources Defense Council, which opposed the rollback. “Considering there are thousands of facilities subject to these rules, [$24 million] is pocket change savings.”
The rule applies to a large segment of the nation’s commercial sector, from agriculture and crop production to the manufacturing of food and beverage products, petrochemicals, plastics, electronics, medical equipment and even the operation of ice skating rinks.
The NRDC said the agency used old data to underestimate the additional greenhouse gas emissions that would result from the rule change. In fact, Doniger said, the rule change will release into the atmosphere pollutants equivalent to the carbon dioxide emissions of 1 million cars.
An EPA spokeswoman defended Wheeler’s decision, saying that the agency determined that in 2016 it had exceeded its statutory authority by extending leak-detection and maintenance requirements to equipment using refrigerants like hydrofluorocarbons or HFCs.
HFCs replaced earlier refrigerants that severely damaged Earth’s protective ozone layer, and their use has been growing. In its new rule, the EPA echoed an industry assertion that the agency lacked the legal authority to retain the Obama-era requirements for HFCs.
One of the industry groups backing the Trump administration’s rule change is the National Environmental Development Association’s Clean Air Project, representing major companies such as Boeing, BP, Procter & Gamble, Lilly and Koch Industries. The law firm representing the association did not respond to a request by InsideClimate News for comment. But in written comments to the EPA, a lawyer representing the association called the Obama-era rule “arbitrary” and “punitive.”
HFCs are among a group of chemicals known as “short-lived climate pollutants,” which don’t last very long in the atmosphere compared to carbon dioxide, which in some cases can remain in circulation for thousands of years.
Once released into the atmosphere, however, HFCs remain for only about 15 to 30 years, and their impact on global warming can be hundreds to thousands of times greater than that of carbon dioxide, according to the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, a global partnership working to curb short-lived climate pollutants.
Fifteen states and Washington, D.C., tried to persuade the EPA to retain the Obama administration’s leak detection and maintenance rules for HFCs. Led by Massachusetts and California, they argued that the Clean Air Act gave the EPA broad authority to stop leaks from ozone-depleting chemicals and their replacements.
“Stratospheric ozone depletion and climate change are among the most severe environmental threats faced by modern human civilization,” the states argued. “The states strongly oppose any EPA action that unlawfully licenses industry to emit more ozone- and climate-damaging chemicals at the expense of human and environmental health and in contravention of the Clean Air Act and its core purposes.”
Last year an amendment to the Montreal Protocol—the 1987 treaty that put in check ozone-depleting chemicals—went into force, requiring the phase-out of HFCs by 2030. Ninety-three countries and the European Union have signed the treaty, although the Trump administration has not yet sent it to the Senate for ratification.
Congress is also weighing bipartisan legislation to phase out HFCs. In November, Sens. Tom Carper (D-Del.), and John Kennedy (R-La.) introduced the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act (AIM), a bill that would authorize a 15-year phasedown of HFCs and has 31 cosponsors, including both Republicans and Democrats.
Rep. Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.), has introduced a similar bill, with 21 co-sponsors, also including a mix of Republicans and Democrats.
Doniger said the strong bipartisan support to tackle HFCs is a sharp contrast to the EPA’s decision to relax the rule on leak detection and maintenance in refrigeration.
One provision of the bill, he said, “makes clear EPA has the authority to require refrigerant leak management.”
veryGood! (817)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Morning sickness? Prenatal check-ups? What to know about new rights for pregnant workers
- FAA launches investigation after MLB coach posts video from cockpit during flight
- Trump set to gain national delegates as the only choice for Wyoming Republicans
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- NBA playoffs 2024: Six players under pressure to perform this postseason
- What is a cicada? What to know about the loud insects set to take over parts of the US
- WADA says 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive before Tokyo Olympics but it accepted contamination finding
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Cold case playing cards in Mississippi jails aim to solve murders, disappearances
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Record numbers in the US are homeless. Can cities fine them for sleeping in parks and on sidewalks?
- Man who won primary election while charged with murder convicted on lesser charge
- Taylor Swift's 'Tortured Poets Department' and when lyrics about dying, grief, heartbreak trigger you
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Key players: Who’s who at Donald Trump’s hush money criminal trial
- Phone lines are open for Cardinals and Chargers, who have options at top of 2024 NFL draft
- California man goes missing after hiking in El Salvador, family pleads for help finding him
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Boston Dynamics' robot Atlas being billed as 'fully-electric humanoid': Watch it in action
Phone lines are open for Cardinals and Chargers, who have options at top of 2024 NFL draft
NHL power rankings entering playoffs: Who has best chance at winning Stanley Cup?
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Culver's burger chain planning to open as many as 51 new locations in 2024: Here's where
10-year-old boy confesses to fatally shooting a man in his sleep 2 years ago, Texas authorities say
Can you use hyaluronic acid with retinol? A dermatologist breaks it down.