Appeals court rejects Trump EPA bid to abandon rule restricting deadly soot pollution

The Guardian Business ·

Appeals court rejects Trump EPA bid to abandon rule restricting deadly soot pollution

A federal appeals court has rejected the Trump administration's attempt to overturn a stricter soot pollution standard set by the Biden administration. …

A federal appeals court on Friday rejected the Environmental Protection Agency ’s attempt to abandon a Biden -era rule that sets tough standards for deadly soot pollution. The unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel is a setback for the Trump administration ’s deregulatory agenda and its repeated efforts to boost coal, a reliable but polluting energy source. The decision by the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit leaves intact, for now, a tighter standard set in 2024 on pollution from coal-fired power plants, factories and other industrial sources. The EPA under Donald Trump asked the appeals court last year to invalidate the Biden-era rule, arguing that the agency under previous leaders had exceeded its statutory authority and acted unreasonably by failing to consider costs to businesses affected by the rule. The court denied the Trump administration’s request, saying in a decision written by Judge Douglas Ginsburg that the agency’s arguments “lack merit”. The ruling leaves in place an annual ⁠limit of 9 micrograms of fine particle pollution – often called soot – per cubic meter of air, down from 12 micrograms established more than a decade ago. The EPA rule sets an air quality level that states and counties must achieve in the coming years to reduce particle pollution from power plants, vehicles, industrial sites and wildfires. …

Original source: The Guardian Business

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