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EPA chief Pruitt is killing the centerpiece of Obama's climate change arsenal

Rebecca Harrington   

EPA chief Pruitt is killing the centerpiece of Obama's climate change arsenal

Scott Pruitt, Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, answers a question during the Concordia Summit in Manhattan, New York, U.S., September 19, 2017. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon - RC1A105CB430

Thomson Reuters

Scott Pruitt, Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, answers a question during the Concordia Summit in Manhattan

President Donald Trump's administration will kill the centerpiece of President Barack Obama's climate change action.

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt said Monday that he will sign a proposed rule Tuesday rescinding Obama's Clean Power Plan, established in 2015 to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

Pruitt spoke at an event with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

On the campaign trail, Trump vowed to bring back coal mining jobs and dismantle Obama's environmental policy, declaring climate change a "hoax." Back in March, Trump signed an executive order ordering the EPA to review the Clean Power Plan.

Obama enacted the plan to cap pollution from power plants. It targeted power plants in 47 states (Hawaii, Alaska, and Vermont don't have power plants covered by the regulation and were exempt), aiming to cut their carbon emissions to 32% below 2005 levels by 2030.

The plan was supposed to be instrumental in helping the US reach its goals for the Paris climate agreement, which Obama signed with 195 nations in 2015 and Trump canceled in June.

On Monday, a link that formerly went to an EPA webpage describing what the Clean Power Plan was now redirects to a page titled "Energy Independence."

"The EPA and no federal agency should ever use its authority to say to you we are going to declare war on any sector of our economy," Pruitt said Monday.

As administrator, Pruitt has refocused the EPA to get "back to basics," homing in on the agency's "core mission" of protecting the nation's air, land, and water. While attorney general for Oklahoma, Pruitt sued the EPA 14 times for what he described as "overreach."

Documerica

Marc St. Gil/Documerica

The Atlas Chemical Company Belches Smoke in 1972, before the EPA started regulating pollution.

Many of Obama's actions were remarkably complex, however, so it may take Trump a while to reverse them.

While coal jobs are unlikely to come back in droves with this or other actions the administration is taking, the move would make good on Trump's promise to rescind any existing regulations that "unduly burden the development of domestic energy resources."

Democrats, environmentalists, and other protesters demonstrated outside the White House after Trump signed the executive order in March, declaring it would lead to runaway climate change, while many Republican congressmen applauded the action for promoting energy independence. The same played out after Pruitt's comments on Monday.

The Natural Resources Defense Council threatened to sue the EPA if Pruitt rescinds the plan.

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