US environment agency could end reporting of greenhouse gas emissions
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US environment agency could end reporting of greenhouse gas emissions
"The US Environmental Protection Agency proposed on Friday a rule to end a mandatory program requiring 8,000 facilities to report their greenhouse gas emissions an effort the agency said was burdensome to business, but which leaves the public without transparency around the environmental impact of those sources. The agency said mandatory collection of GHG emissions data was unnecessary because it is not directly related to a potential regulation and has no material impact on improving human health and the environment."
"The Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program is nothing more than bureaucratic red tape that does nothing to improve air quality, said Lee Zeldin, the EPA administrator. The rule responds to a day-one executive order issued by Donald Trump aimed at removing barriers to unleashing more US energy, particularly fossil fuels. It is the latest in a series of major regulatory rollbacks undoing previous US efforts to combat climate crisis."
"Earlier this summer, the EPA announced plans to repeal the endangerment finding that enabled the agency to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles and stationary sources. If finalized, the proposal would remove reporting obligations for most large facilities, all fuel and industrial gas suppliers and CO2 injection sites. The Trump administration has also said it will withdraw the US from the Paris climate agreement, which requires countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and report their progress."
The US Environmental Protection Agency proposed ending the mandatory Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program that requires roughly 8,000 facilities and suppliers to submit annual emissions data. The agency characterized the reporting program as burdensome to business and unnecessary because it is not directly tied to potential regulation and allegedly has no material impact on human health or the environment. The proposal would remove reporting obligations for most large facilities, fuel and industrial gas suppliers, and CO2 injection sites while retaining methane reporting for large oil and gas operations. The move follows other actions to repeal the endangerment finding, withdraw from the Paris Agreement, and end key environmental monitoring efforts.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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