Tijuana River, Mexico and EPA
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EPA, Trump and climate change
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Carbon dioxide is essential for life, but despite what the EPA chief said, too much carbon dioxide does enormous damage. It’s not complicated.
Following a grueling 30-minute security check at the EPA headquarters that involved multiple metal detectors and being patted down, the Long Island party of 21, representing about 30 organizations and stakeholders, met with the former four-term CD1 representative from Shirley in a conference room.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin is not doing his job, and we will all suffer the consequences of this administration’s war on the natural world.
7don MSNOpinion
The global race to harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) has begun. President Donald Trump got it right from the start when he issued an executive order in January to strengthen America’s AI – the next great technological forefront.
The agency proposes to overturn the 2009 “endangerment finding,” which underpins nationwide greenhouse gas emission limits on vehicles and power plants.
With the One Big Beautiful Bill now signed into law, all eyes are on the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Administrator Lee Zeldin’s efforts to further advance President Trump’s agenda of energy abundance.
On July 18, The New York Times reported on the EPA’s decision to eliminate the Office of Research and Development and “begin firing hundreds of chemists, biologists, toxicologists and other scientists, after denying for months that it intended to do so.”
The Trump administration wants to reverse a 2009 EPA finding that greenhouse gases endanger people. The finding is the basis for much of the United States' climate change regulations.
The longtime grants attorney criticized EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin for making "false statements" about the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.