Remember the cancer-causing "Ozone Hole?" Trump wants to bring it back.
Brett Wilkins for Common Dreams
In a reversal of his past position and what critics are calling yet another betrayal of his “Make America Healthy Again” campaign pledge, US President Donald Trump announced Thursday that his administration is loosening limits on so-called “super pollutant” hydrofluorocarbons used in air conditioners and refrigerators at the expense of the environment and climate.
Trump and Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin spun the move as a measure that will “save American
families and businesses more than $2.4 billion” by revising “costly
overreaching restrictions” imposed during the Biden
administration “limiting the type of refrigerants American businesses
and families can use.”
“Today, the Trump EPA is fulfilling President Trump’s
promise to lower costs and is fixing every problem we can under the authority
Congress gave us,” Zeldin said. “Our actions allow businesses to choose the
refrigeration systems that work best for them, saving them billions of dollars.
This will be felt directly by American families in lower grocery prices.”
Grocery prices have continued
to rise during Trump’s second term, driven by the administration’s
erratic trade wars
and actual war on Iran. Critics of Thursday’s move argue that it will do little
to reduce consumer costs, while increasing pollution and health
risks for American families.
“It’s nice that they are paying attention to affordability, but if they want to make a difference, it’s tariffs and the Iran War,” Ryan Young, a senior economist at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a libertarian think tank, told NOTUS, estimating that the move would save consumers about $2 per year.
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) are called “super pollutants”
because they trap far more heat in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide, even
though they are emitted in much smaller quantities. They were originally
introduced to replace ozone-depleting chemicals like chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
that ravaged the ozone layer.
However, scientists soon realized that HFCs are extremely
powerful greenhouse gases in their own right. As air conditioning use and
demand grows worldwide, so has HFC use.
As the EPA’s own website acknowledges on its “Operation:
Disrupt HFCs” webpage:
HFCs are potent greenhouse gases... with high global warming potential.
HFCs are commonly utilized as refrigerants, aerosol propellants, foam blowing
agents, solvents, and fire retardants across residential, commercial, and
industrial applications. The major source of HFC emissions is their use as
refrigerants—for example, in air conditioning systems in both vehicles and
buildings. Emissions occur during manufacturing, as well as through leaks,
servicing, and disposal of equipment containing HFCs.
Former EPA Assistant Administrator Joseph Goffman said in
a statement Thursday that “families are already
stretched thin by high grocery bills and everyday expenses, and weakening
safeguards on these super-polluting refrigerant chemicals isn’t going to change
that.”
“Even manufacturers are saying this delay likely won’t lower
prices for consumers because supplies of these chemicals are already being
phased down in favor of cleaner, innovative replacements,” he added.
Stephen Yurek, president and CEO of the Air-Conditioning,
Heating, and Refrigeration Institute (AHRI)—an industry lobby—warned that the “reckless” new policy could actually
cause refrigerant prices to increase.
“This rule works against basic supply and demand,” Yurek
said. “By extending the compliance deadline, the EPA is maintaining and even
increasing demand in the market for existing refrigerants while supply
continues to fall under the AIM Act.”
The American Innovation and Manufacturing (AIM) Act of
2020, bipartisan legislation signed by Trump during his first term, directed
the EPA to “phase down the production and consumption of listed HFCs in
the United States by
85% by 2036” and “facilitate the transition to next-generation technologies
that do not rely on HFCs.”
As of this year, more than 170 countries—including the United States—plus the European Union have
ratified the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol, the main global
agreement to phase down HFCs.
Yurek explained that “instead of falling, refrigerant prices
are likely to rise, resulting in higher service costs, and higher costs for
consumers.”
Addressing the EPA’s reversal on HFCs, Goffman said, “All
this action does is slow the shift to cleaner technologies while risking
continued releases of climate super pollutants and leaving families to face the
much greater costs and health threats of dangerous climate change.”
“EPA owes it to Americans to put people’s health first—not
give hidebound corporations more time to keep using outdated chemicals,” he
added. “Americans deserve affordable groceries that don’t come at the expense
of the strong safeguards they count on to keep our families safer, not sicker.”
The EPA move comes amid mounting
calls by over 160 civil
rights, environmental, faith, health, and labor groups to fire Zeldin over
his agency’s deregulation spree.
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