The Project 2025 of former President Trump’s allies would downsize the EPA, weaken the influence of career employees and scientists, downplay agency focus on climate change and give more authority to the states for carrying out environmental laws, reports Washington Post
By Joseph A. Davis
With the presidential polls so close, the question looms: What would happen on environmental policy in a possible second Trump term? Our guess is that it would be a lot like his first term — but more radical.
We got a hint back this spring when The Washington Post
reported on a Trump Mar-a-Lago dinner with oil executives in April: “You all
are wealthy enough, he said, that you should raise $1 billion to return me to
the White House. At the dinner, he vowed to immediately reverse dozens of
President Biden’s environmental rules and policies and stop new ones from being
enacted.” Trump told them they would be getting a “deal.”
Congressional Dems are now investigating. Meanwhile, Trump
ally Harold Hamm and a billionaire oil investor himself, is working the phones
(may require subscription), asking the execs for money.
The incident recalled one back in 2017, when Trump decided
not to ban chlorpyrifos, a widely used pesticide that harms farmworkers and
children’s neurological health. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under
President Obama had been set to ban chlorpyrifos when Andrew Liveris, then CEO
of Dow Chemical, its manufacturer, wrote a $1 million company check to Trump's
inaugural fund.
A few months later, the EPA decided not to ban chlorpyrifos
(the agency eventually banned it under President Biden).
Another case, that of Robert Murray, CEO of Murray Energy,
as the nation’s largest coal company was then named. Murray gave $300,000 to
Trump’s inaugural fund, but did fundraising for Trump as well.
Just weeks after the inauguration, Murray presented the
Trump administration with a 3½-page “Action Plan” of things the coal industry
wanted, including rollback of power plant pollution regulations and withdrawal
from the Paris climate accord. Murray later bragged that Trump had “wiped out
most of page one.”
The record of Trump’s time in office during 2017-21 tells a lot of the story.
While the GOP presidential candidate has tried to
disassociate himself from the infamous Project 2025 agenda, many still take it
as a to-do list for a second term.
The 920-page document was written by many who held office in
his first administration. Trump had once praised the effort, although he more
recently claimed to know nothing about it.
The Project 2025 chapter on the EPA was principally written
by Mandy Gunasekara, the agency’s chief of staff under Trump-era Administrator
Andrew Wheeler.
The text does not propose eliminating the EPA, though it
does propose downsizing it by a nonspecific amount (notwithstanding that many
of the EPA’s functions are mandated by current laws).
What the Project 2025 plan would do
What the Project 2025 plan would do, however, is strengthen the control of political appointees over the agency and weaken the influence of career employees and scientists. You can get a general idea of its flavor from this nugget: “The EPA has been a breeding ground for expansion of the federal government’s influence and control across the economy.”
And in general, it would downplay agency focus on climate
change, which it views as “a favored tool that the Left uses to scare the
American public into accepting their ineffective, liberty-crushing regulations,
diminished private property rights, and exorbitant costs.”
Another overarching emphasis is to give even more authority
to the states for carrying out environmental laws.
Adding overseers, eliminating offices
Anyway, the Project 2025 chapter on the EPA is a long one
(31 pages). We offer some bullet points as a quick way to give you a feel. They
are far from complete.
It looks
like senior executive service employees would be driven into exile. These are
the top career employees in key positions just below the top presidential
appointees. The mandate: “Identify relocation opportunities” for SES staff.
• Install a
suite of politically vetted overseers on Day 1. These would be identified and
vetted ahead of time and would work in “acting” capacity before any
congressional confirmation.
• Defang
the Office of Science Integrity by eliminating its enforcement authority.
• Eliminate
the Office of Environmental Justice and put the remnants in the Office of
Administrator.
• Eliminate
the Office of Enforcement and put remnants into the program offices.
• Reset the
various science advisory boards.
• Return
the standard-setting role to Congress (currently, most environmental laws
passed by Congress explicitly delegate standard-setting to the EPA).
• Update
the 2009 endangerment finding — the legal basis for climate regulations under
the Clean Air Act.
• Weaken
“new source performance standards” under the Clean Air Act.
• Put
policy on auto greenhouse gas emission limits under the Transportation
Department.
• Withdraw
and replace the EPA’s “waters of the United States” rules protecting wetlands.
• Notify
Congress that the EPA will not conduct any ongoing or planned science activity
“for which there is not clear and current congressional authorization.”
Trump and climate
Trump has never really acknowledged the reality that
human-caused climate heating has begun and that human emissions are causing it.
There is no reason to expect a change. During his first term, he worked to
promote U.S. production and burning of fossil fuels, which is the largest of
many causes of greenhouse gas emissions.
Trump’s campaign has said he would
withdraw again from the 2015 Paris
Agreement if he wins another term.
Trump also announced in June 2017 that he would pull the
U.S. out of the 2015 Paris Agreement (although the formal process would take
years). President Biden rejoined the treaty. Trump’s campaign has said he would
withdraw again if he wins another term.
Trump is famous as well for calling climate change a “hoax.”
While he has slightly altered his rhetoric, he has still, during 2024 rallies,
enjoyed using the line, “Drill, baby, drill” — to the applause of MAGA crowds.
There’s more. Trump is actively hostile to wind energy. The
United States made very little progress on offshore wind during his term in
office. Perhaps it all goes back to a legal conflict in which Trump tried to
stop a wind farm that he said spoiled the view from the fairway of one of his
Scottish golf courses near Aberdeen. He lost that case.
The economic reality is that the transition to green energy
will be going forward anyway, inevitably, driven by economic forces, whether
fast or slow. Trump claims his “Drill, baby, drill” policy would end U.S.
inflation (which is now below 3%). But that makes little sense, since the U.S.
now already produces more crude oil than any nation in the world (and exports
more liquid natural gas than any country as well).
Then there is the ostrich syndrome. A training video by
Project 2025 urges potential Trump officials to “eradicate climate change
references from absolutely everywhere.”
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