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Thursday, March 12, 2026

EPA’s ‘Endangerment Finding’ Revocation Likely to Have Far-Reaching Repercussions for Rhode Island

While the scientific evidence about climate change has not changed, the legal obligation to act on it has

By Bonnie Phillips / ecoRI News staff

The Environmental Protection Agency on Feb. 12 revoked its own 2009 “endangerment finding,” a scientific conclusion that for 16 years had been the central basis for regulating planet-warming emissions from power plants, vehicles, and other sources.

The finding itself is straightforward: carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases — caused by burning fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and gas — endanger public health and welfare. The finding relied on evidence from multiple scientific authorities, including the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, and was adopted after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2007 that greenhouse gases are air pollutants that can be regulated under the Clean Air Act.

The Trump administration has claimed the endangerment finding hurts industry and the economy and that the Obama and Biden administrations twisted science to determine that greenhouse gases are a public health risk. While other air pollutants will still be regulated, the decision specifically removes the main legal foundation for federal greenhouse gas limits tied to fossil fuel use.

In practical terms, this means federal regulators are no longer required to set nationwide limits on these emissions. The scientific evidence about climate change hasn’t changed, but the legal obligation to act on it has.

“Despite overwhelming opposition from state and local leaders nationwide, the Trump administration’s actions depart from well-established scientific consensus and substantially weaken the federal government’s authority to regulate harmful emissions, rolling back longstanding public health safeguards and vehicle emissions standards,” said Terry Gray, director of the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. “Allowing greenhouse gas emissions to go unchecked exacerbates the climate and public health challenges communities are already experiencing. Rhode Island remains committed to protecting the health, safety, and well-being of its residents.”

How the endangerment finding has been used

Since taking effect in 2010, during President Obama’s first term, the endangerment finding has been the legal basis for new regulations targeting emissions from vehicles, oil and gas facilities, and large industries, including power plants.

Under Trump, the Department of Energy has suggested that climate models used by scientists to predict warming have overreached, that long-term trends for disasters generally don’t show much change, and that climate has little impact on the economy.

But climate scientists warn that overturning the endangerment finding undermines decades of scientific progress and damages the credibility of U.S. institutions charged with protecting the environment.

In a letter to EPA administrator Lee Zeldin, Rhode Island’s congressional delegation reiterated that climate change is indeed affecting state residents.

“Allowing polluters to pump our atmosphere full of planet-warming greenhouse gases will not only make Rhode Islanders’ lives shorter and sicker; it will cost them billions,” according to the letter signed by Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Jack Reed and Congressmen Gabe Amo and Seth Magaziner.

In the past five years alone, extreme weather disasters have cost Rhode Island up to $500 million, according to the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration.

In 2017, NOAA increased its sea level rise projections to up to 8 feet by 2100. The Northeast is projected to experience an additional 1-3 feet on top of NOAA modeling.

In a state with more than 400 miles of coastline and 247 miles of seawall, the effects of sea level rise could be catastrophic.

“In the next 15 years, defending Rhode Island’s infrastructure, homes, businesses, and communities from more frequent and intense storms and flooding could cost the state $2.9 billion.”
— Rhode Island congressional letter to the EPA

That $2.9 billion figure refers to an estimate by the Center for Climate Integrity, which partnered with Resilient Analytics, an engineering firm specializing in climate adaptation, and the University of Colorado, of the cost of building seawalls and safeguarding Rhode Island from chronic flooding by 2040 under a moderate sea-level-rise scenario.

Why the change matters

Climate change is already impacting daily life, and researchers expect that to intensify without strong emissions controls. Some possible results include:

Higher food prices. Droughts and extreme weather can reduce crop yields and livestock herds.

Health risks. Heat waves and poorer air quality can increase emergency room visits and medical costs.

2022 study found that within the Northeast, intense heat was focused in areas with lower incomes, more vulnerable populations, and higher proportions of racial and ethnic minorities.

The South Providence and Washington Park neighborhoods in Providence host about a dozen polluters routinely listed in the Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxics Release Inventory. This section of Providence contains a greater number of polluting facilities than any other zip code in Providence County.

Air pollution from the Port of Providence and Interstate 95 has caused the neighborhoods to endure some of the highest rates of asthma in southern New England. Rhode Island as a whole has the fourth-highest rate of asthma in the country, with 11.2% of the population suffering from the respiratory condition, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The national average is 7.8%.

The revocation of the endangerment finding “is yet another giveaway to corporate polluters on the backs of Rhode Islanders’ health and wellbeing,” Amos, Magaziner, Whitehouse, and Reed said in the letter.

Rising insurance and housing costs. More frequent disasters can drive up premiums or make coverage harder to obtain.

In 2021 the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) incorporated climate risk into the cost of flood insurance, resulting in a dramatic increase in policy costs. Many Rhode Island policyholders saw their premiums go up, and they could continue to increase by as much as 18% annually for the next 20 years.

At that rate, a flood policy that costs $1,000 now could cost $5,230 in 10 years and $27,400 in two decades.

Infrastructure strain. Flooding, wildfires, and drought can damage roads, water systems, and power grids.

2020 white paper found that some 2,000 Superfund sites along the East Coast and Gulf Coast are at risk of flooding because of sea level rise.

“Millions of people live near these sites, and flooding could bring them into contact with hazardous chemicals,” according to the Union of Concerned Scientists paper. “The areas near Superfund sites are disproportionately populated by communities of color and low-income communities.”

Rhode Island, the smallest state, has the seventh-most Superfund sites of any state along the two coasts. In fact, southern New England is part of a Superfund hot spot that stretches from Washington, D.C., to Boston.

Higher operating costs. Companies could face higher operating costs from rising energy prices and climate-related damages. Some may also face new legal risks. In the past, courts have sometimes dismissed climate lawsuits partly because federal regulations already existed. Without that regulatory framework, companies could be more exposed to litigation.

The EPA action also repeals all greenhouse gas emissions standards for cars and trucks, but experts say it could trigger a broader undoing of climate regulations for power plants and oil and gas facilities. It also could prevent future administrations from proposing rules to address global warming because they would have to restart the scientific and legal process to establish a new endangerment finding, which could take years, according to David Doniger, a climate expert at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“The threat of climate change is not science fiction, it is here,” the Rhode Island lawmakers conclude in their letter to the EPA.

“We will continue to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the state and prepare for the impacts of climate change that we are already seeing in the form of sea level rise, storm surge, and more frequent and intense weather events,” DEM’s Gray said.