Published by Todd Bush on May 27, 2025
Regulatory reversal: The EPA plans to scrap federal limits on GHG emissions from coal and gas-fired power plants, marking a significant rollback of climate-related regulations.
Contradicts global consensus: The agency’s draft claims GHG emissions from fossil plants have minimal climate and health impacts—opposing data from the UN and scientific bodies.
Policy shift under Trump: The move aligns with broader efforts to dismantle green-energy subsidies and climate protections instituted under the Biden administration.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is preparing a sweeping regulatory rollback that would eliminate all federal greenhouse gas (GHG) limits on coal and gas-fired power plants, according to a draft proposal first reported by The New York Times. The document is currently under interagency review and expected to be published in the coming weeks.
>> In Other News: Scientists Find Massive Hydrogen Reserves Deep Beneath Earth’s Mountains
In its draft, the EPA argues that emissions from these plants “do not contribute significantly to dangerous pollution” or climate change because they represent a “small and declining share” of global emissions. The agency further asserts that eliminating such emissions would have “no meaningful effect on public health and welfare.”
These claims sharply diverge from global scientific consensus. The United Nations has stated unequivocally that fossil fuels account for more than 75% of global GHG emissions and nearly 90% of carbon dioxide emissions, making them the primary driver of climate change.
An EPA spokesperson confirmed the draft rule in a statement:
“Many have voiced concerns that the last administration’s replacement for that rule is similarly overreaching and an attempt to shut down affordable and reliable electricity generation in the United States, raising prices for American families, and increasing the country’s reliance on foreign forms of energy. As part of this reconsideration, EPA is developing a proposed rule.”
This regulatory retreat aligns with a broader policy agenda under President Donald Trump. His administration has moved to unwind nearly all federal climate action efforts, including key components of President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.
Last week, the U.S. House of Representatives advanced Trump’s extensive tax and spending package. The bill proposes rescinding grants aimed at reducing carbon emissions, ending incentives for renewable energy projects, and halting funding for electric heavy-duty vehicle procurement.
Trump has praised the bill, calling it
“One big beautiful bill.”
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, appointed by Trump, added:
“We continue to build on that progress now.”
The EPA submitted its draft to the White House for review on May 2. A public comment period is expected to follow the formal release, likely in June.
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 💰 DOE Restores $1.2B for DAC Hubs and 5 Hydrogen Projects 🌏 CCUS Hub Study Identifies Five Asia-Pacific Hub Sites and Welcomes New Consortium Partners 🧪 Petronor and H2SITE Partn...
Inside This Issue 🧪 Trump List Of Saved Projects Spares $5 Billion Hydrogen Hubs ✈️ eFuels SEA Brings Infinium eSAF Technology To Southeast Asia 💰 XCF Global, Inc. Announces Receipt Of $10 Million...
Inside This Issue ⏸️ Microsoft's Carbon Removal Pause Puts A One-Buyer Market To The Test 🧱 Verde Developing Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) For Its Engineered Biochar In Road Materials 🌲 ...
Greenlyzer And Royal Group Sign Deal To Expand Green Hydrogen In ASEAN
The system uses AI to manage clean hydrogen power. Singapore-based Greenlyzer and Cambodia’s Royal Group have signed a memorandum of agreement to accelerate green hydrogen energy development in Ca...
WILMINGTON, DE / ACCESS Newswire / April 21, 2026 / — Delrin, a global leader in high-performance acetal homopolymer, today announced a significant expansion of its Sustainable Solutions portfolio ...
Nonprofit reports major milestones in 2025-26, including expanded wildlife refuge restoration, emergency response efforts, and continued methane reduction across 15 states BOZEMAN, MT / ACCESS New...
Rivan Raises £25m to Scale Synthetic Fuel Production
Today, we’re announcing our new £25m fundraise led by IQ Capital with support from Plural, to scale domestic synthetic fuel production in Europe. This funding will dramatically accelerate our deplo...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.