Wednesday, January 22, 2025

The New York Times - January 21,2025 by Lisa Friedman - 3 of Trump's most important executive orders on climate

 

All NewslettersRead online
New York Times logo
Climate Forward
For subscribersJanuary 21, 2025
A solitary wind turbine stands in dark waters, silhouetted against a partly cloudy sky.
A wind turbine off the coast near Montauk, N.Y. Joe Buglewicz for The New York Times

3 of Trump’s most important executive orders on climate

On the heels of the hottest year in recorded history, one that brought the planet to a dangerous temperature threshold, President Trump effectively told the world on Monday that the United States is out of the climate fight.

Hours after his inauguration, Trump signed a barrage of executive orders to dismantle Joe Biden’s agenda on climate and clean energy. The orders propel dozens of actions, including eliminating programs aimed at protecting communities disproportionately affected by pollution and demanding an end to protections for a tiny fish in California that Trump blames for water shortages in the state.

Trump also announced a national energy “emergency” that could unlock authority to suspend environmental regulations and speed permits for mining, drilling, pipelines and natural gas export terminals.

Collectively, the executive orders put the United States on a path to increasing production of coal, oil and gas at a time when scientists say governments must rapidly pivot away from fossil fuels, the burning of which is dangerously heating the planet.

But there is little Trump can do simply with the stroke of a pen. Most of his orders will require that federal agencies repeal regulations, a time-consuming process. Environmental groups also are expected to file lawsuits, which could slow or stop some of Trump’s agenda.

Still, here are three major orders that could have far-reaching consequences.

Withdrawing from the Paris Agreement

Trump announced yesterday that the U.S. would withdraw from the Paris Agreement, the pact among almost all nations to fight climate change. His move solidifies what most of the world already knew: America is an unreliable partner on climate change.

Under the Paris Agreement rules, it will take one year from the day Trump transmits a letter to the United Nations, which he signed Monday, until the U.S. is formally out of the accord. But it signals an immediate shift in which, for at least the next four years, America will disregard global efforts to curb carbon emissions.

America’s fickleness on climate is not unexpected. After all, the U.S. pulled out of the pact during the last Trump administration. Before that, George W. Bush left a different climate treaty, the Kyoto Protocol, which had been negotiated by his predecessor, Bill Clinton.

But climate advocates said this latest reversal could not come at a worse time.

“The reality remains that unless the world collectively steps up its efforts,” said Kaveh Guilanpour, vice president of international strategies at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, an environmental group, “the impacts of climate change will become increasingly severe and frequent, and will be felt by an increasing number of people in all countries, including in the United States.”

Targeting wind power

“We aren’t going to do the wind thing,” Trump said Monday. Minutes later he signed a sweeping order that seeks not only to stop new offshore wind lease sales but also to potentially “terminate or amend” existing leases.

The Biden administration pushed the expansion of wind energy and approved 11 commercial-scale wind farms in the Atlantic Ocean. Industry leaders said terminating those projects or even threatening them could risk billions of dollars. It also throws into question the renewable energy targets that several Eastern states had set.

The executive order calls on the interior secretary to review wind leasing and permitting practices for federal waters and lands, and to consider the economic impact of wind on wildlife.

Regulating emissions

Buried deep inside Trump’s order on “unleashing American energy” is a directive that would not just end climate regulations, but would also make sure no future administration could ever curb dangerous emissions from fossil fuels.

The order calls on the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to make a recommendation within 30 days on the “legality and continuing applicability” of what has come to be known as the endangerment finding.

It stems from a 2007 Supreme Court case, Massachusetts vs. E.P.A., in which the court found the agency can regulate greenhouse gas emissions because they qualify as air pollutants.

Two years later, under former President Barack Obama, the E.P.A. concluded that six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide and methane, are a threat to human health and welfare, and must be regulated under the Clean Air Act.

That 2009 legal decision, known as the endangerment finding, is the legal backbone for almost all federal climate policy, and as long as it stands the E.P.A. will be obligated to address climate change in some manner. Revoking it has been the holy grail of climate denial groups. Project 2025, a set of conservative policy proposals spearheaded by the Heritage Foundation, a think tank, also called for revisiting that finding.

Read more:

The burned chassis of a vehicle surrounded by more burned debris.
A destroyed vehicle in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles on Saturday. Loren Elliott for The New York Times

Airborne lead and chlorine levels soared as L.A. wildfires raged

At the height of the Los Angeles County wildfires, atmospheric concentrations of lead, a neurotoxin, reached 100 times average levels even miles from the flames, according to early detailed measurements obtained by The New York Times. Levels of chlorine, which is also toxic at low concentrations, reached 40 times the average.

The spiking levels underscore the added danger from wildfires when cars, homes and other structures burn, researchers said. Lead is often present in paint and pipes used in older homes, while chlorine and other chemicals are generated when plastic melts or combusts.  Hiroko Tabuchi and Mira Rojanasakul

More on the L.A. fires and pollution risks:

OTHER CLIMATE NEWS

Article Image

Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

Letter to Los AngeleS

To Be From L.A. Is to Know Its Twin Temptations: Beauty and Danger

A Times climate reporter reflects on a city, its mythology and a reckoning with disaster.

By Somini Sengupta and Bryan Anselm

The charred remnants of a house sit in a blackened lot against a sky that is sepia-toned from smoke.

Philip Cheung for The New York Times

Hit by Wildfire? Here’s How to Deal With Insurers and FEMA.

You don’t need to settle for what your insurance company or the government first offers. And you don’t have to fight alone.

By Christopher Flavelle

A Chevron gas station, damaged by fire, stands in darkness under a night sky with police tape draped near the pumps.

Philip Cheung for The New York Times

L.A. Fires Revive Calls for a ‘Climate Superfund’ Law in California

New York and Vermont recently passed laws like these, which require energy companies to pay climate damages and will likely face fierce challenges.

By Karen Zraick

Article Image

Kieran Dodds for The New York Times

Big Banks Quit Climate Change Groups Ahead of Trump’s Term

Several large U.S. financial institutions, including the Federal Reserve, have withdrawn from the networks after years of growing political and legal pressure.

By Eshe Nelson

Article Image

Michael A. McCoy for The New York Times

Trump Targeted Scientists in His First Term. This Time, They’re Prepared.

Agencies and unions have put in place new guardrails designed to limit political interference in government research.

By Coral Davenport

Large flames in the night sky are seen coming from a set of buildings surrounded by power lines.

KSBW, via Associated Press

Fire Breaks Out at a Huge Battery Site in California

The fire at the Moss Landing plant, which stores electricity for the power grid, was unrelated to wildfires in Los Angeles.

By Brad Plumer

A helicopter flies above a hill silhouetted by a red, smoky sky.

Loren Elliott for The New York Times

As the World Warms, Davos Braces for Political Drama

A new U.S. president’s promise to expand fossil fuels that is at odds with global ambitions to combat climate change will be a topic of discussion at the World Economic Forum.

By David Gelles

More climate news:

  • The Washington Post explains what Trump’s newly declared “energy emergency” means.
  • Bloomberg explores whether Los Angeles should start a “managed retreat” from areas of the city that are vulnerable to wildfires.
  • China’s record-breaking deployment of renewable energy continued last year, Reuters reports. Installed solar capacity grew 45 percent last year, and wind jumped 18 percent.

Thanks for being a subscriber.

Read past editions of the newsletter here.

If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to others. They can sign up here. Browse all of our subscriber-only newsletters here. And follow The New York Times on InstagramThreadsFacebook and TikTok at @nytimes.

Reach us at climateforward@nytimes.com. We read every message, and reply to many!

An illustration of wavy bands, as if on a chart. The ones at the bottom are cooler blues. Moving up, the colors shift from greens to warmer oranges and, finally, to reds.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for Climate Forward from The New York Times.

To stop receiving Climate Forward, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Explore more subscriber-only newsletters.

Connect with us on:

xwhatsapp

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018


No comments:

Post a Comment