E.P.A. administrator Lee Zeldin has claimed that
previous administrations used the endangerment finding to justify “trillions of
dollars” in regulations on polluting industries and its reversal will help the
economy.
What to
Know About the E.P.A.’s Big Attack on Climate Regulation
The Trump
administration has repealed the scientific determination that underpins the
government’s legal authority to combat climate change.
Lisa
FriedmanMaxine Joselow
By Lisa
Friedman and Maxine Joselow
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/12/climate/what-to-know-epa-endangerment-finding.html
Feb. 12,
2026
The
Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday made a critical announcement. It
repealed the scientific determination that gives the government the authority
to combat climate change.
That 2009
determination is called the endangerment finding, and most people have never
heard of it. But it has played an enormous role in environmental regulations
affecting cars, power plants and more.
By
scrapping the finding, the Trump administration is essentially disputing the
overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change. The vast majority of
scientists say the Earth is rapidly and dangerously warming, which is fueling
more powerful storms, killing coral reefs, melting glaciers and causing
countless other destructive impacts.
Here’s
what you should know about the endangerment finding and why it matters.
What is
the endangerment finding?
The
finding simply states that carbon dioxide, methane and four other greenhouse
gases threaten human health, both now and in the future. These gases are
released by the combustion of fossil fuels, such as when a car engine burns
gasoline or a power plant burns coal.
The Clean
Air Act of 1970 required the E.P.A. to regulate air pollutants that harm human
health. For example, it directed the agency to limit smog and soot, which are
linked to asthma and other health problems.
But the
landmark environmental law didn’t explicitly say whether the agency should
regulate greenhouse gases. The endangerment finding said that it should, since
these gases trap heat in the Earth’s atmosphere, resulting in a range of risks
to people’s health.
For
example, the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is creating warmer
and wetter conditions that accelerate the spread of Lyme disease and other
vector-borne illnesses. It is also fueling stronger hurricanes, more intense
heat waves and other extreme weather events that cause injuries and death.
Why does
the Trump administration want to repeal the finding?
President
Trump has repeatedly called climate change a “hoax” and has joked that rising
seas would create “a little more beachfront property.”
Since Mr.
Trump took office, the administration has maintained that climate change is not
a problem that the government should solve. To the contrary, the president and
his cabinet have argued that the United States should produce and burn more
fossil fuels.
They also
have sought to relieve the coal, oil and gas industries of pollution limits
that cost them money. Lee Zeldin, the E.P.A. administrator, has claimed that
Democratic administrations used the endangerment finding to justify “trillions
of dollars” in regulations on polluting industries, and argued reversing those
will aid the U.S. economy.
The
E.P.A. already is erasing dozens of Biden-era regulations that sought to limit
the pollution spewing from automobile tailpipes, power plant smokestacks, oil
and gas wells and other sources.
But
repealing the endangerment finding goes a step further. By dismantling the
justification for addressing greenhouse gas emissions, the repeal could prevent
future presidents from reinstating any climate rules in the future.
What are
the administration’s scientific arguments?
Mr.
Zeldin has argued that the endangerment finding is based on flawed climate
models that overestimated how much the planet would warm in the coming decades.
“To reach
the 2009 endangerment finding, they relied on the most pessimistic views of the
science,” Mr. Zeldin said on CNN’s “State of Union” last year. “The great news
is that a lot of the pessimistic views of the science in 2009 that was being
assumed ended up not panning out.”
Mr.
Zeldin is partly right; some predictions made in 2009 are less likely to happen
because many countries have taken action to reduce greenhouse gases and because
of the rise in renewable energy.
But the
Earth is still expected to warm by an average of 2.6 degrees Celsius, or 4.7
degrees Fahrenheit, by the end of the century. That level of warming could
still have disastrous consequences, such as the loss of nearly all coral reefs
and significant sea level rise that would overwhelm coastal communities.
What do
scientists say?
Scientists
are unequivocal: The dangers of unchecked greenhouse gas emissions were clear
in 2009, and they have only grown more evident since.
Moreover,
the scientific understanding of how the Earth’s warming affects individual
weather disasters and the spread of infectious diseases has advanced
dramatically over the past decade.
“The
basic science on greenhouse gases from fossil fuels as a driver of climate
change has been clear for well over a century,” Robert Howarth, a professor of
ecology and environmental biology at Cornell University, said in a statement.
Since the
endangerment finding was issued, Dr. Howarth said, “the science has gotten even
stronger, particularly regarding attributing harm to the changing climate: we
can now say with certainty that rising CO2 and methane is altering the climate,
and that this is leading to longer and more severe droughts, floods, hurricanes
and larger and more intense fires.”
Abigail
Swann, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Washington, said the
evidence since 2009 “supports the opposite view” of Mr. Zeldin’s perspective.
That includes more sustained drought, more extreme rainfall and flooding and
fiercer wildfires like the ones that tore through Los Angeles last year.
“We
continue to see that there will be major impacts, and many of those are
starting already,” Dr. Swann said.
What are
the administration’s legal arguments?
The
administration has a two-pronged legal rationale.
First, it
said the Clean Air Act applies only to “local” pollutants like soot and smog
that cause more direct harm when people are exposed. It said the law does not
apply to gases like carbon dioxide and methane that linger in the atmosphere
and disperse across the globe.
The
George W. Bush administration made a similar argument two decades ago, but it
suffered a crushing defeat at the Supreme Court. In a landmark 2007 case,
Massachusetts v. E.P.A., the court ruled that the agency could regulate
greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, as long as these gases were a threat
to public health and welfare.
And
second, the E.P.A. said that it cannot restrict greenhouse gas emissions from
automobiles because of a recent Supreme Court ruling that found the E.P.A.
cannot write regulations with far-reaching economic consequences without
explicit authorization from Congress. Strict limits on tailpipe emissions would
fall into that category, the agency argued, because they would force automakers
to switch from building combustion engine vehicles to electric versions.
What do
legal experts say?
Some
environmental lawyers said it was risky for the Trump administration to reprise
a legal argument made by the Bush administration that already failed at the
Supreme Court.
But they
said the justices could still chip away at the E.P.A.’s power to tackle global
warming without overturning Massachusetts v. E.P.A., such as by deferring to
the Trump administration’s narrower interpretation of the Clean Air Act.
“The
court wouldn’t have to overrule the Massachusetts case to do a lot of damage,”
said Michael Gerrard, an environmental law expert at Columbia University.
Other
legal experts said the conservative majority on the Supreme Court could be
sympathetic to the E.P.A.’s claims about the lack of congressional
authorization.
Jeffrey
Holmstead, an energy attorney with the law firm Bracewell and a former E.P.A.
official under President George W. Bush, called that an argument that “could
win over a majority of justices.”
What
could this mean for me?
The Trump
administration has claimed that ending limits on greenhouse gases from cars
would lower the price of new vehicles, but experts aren’t so sure.
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, told reporters on Tuesday that the
administration predicted “average, per-vehicle savings of more than $2,400 for
popular light-duty cars, S.U.V.s and trucks.”
The
administration has declined to explain how it arrived at those numbers. But
Taylor Rogers, a White House spokeswoman, said in an email that consumers would
see “huge relief.” Brigit Hirsch, the E.P.A. press secretary, said in an email
that “it’s just common sense that restoring consumer choice and repealing
costly government mandates leads to more affordable vehicles.”
Yet Alan
Jenn, an associate professor at the Institute of Transportation Studies at the
University of California, Davis, said the Trump administration assumed that gas
prices in the future would drop, without explaining why. He said the
administration also used outdated figures that failed to reflect the rapidly
declining cost of batteries that is bringing down the cost of electric
vehicles.
“It’s
hard to find any math in their assessment that doesn’t seem, frankly, a little
bit ridiculous,” Dr. Jenn said, adding that Mr. Trump’s tariffs on imported
cars and car parts could also cause prices to rise.
Lisa
Friedman is a Times reporter who writes about how governments are addressing
climate change and the effects of those policies on communities.
Maxine
Joselow covers climate change and the environment for The Times from
Washington.


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