Ua hoʻopau ka hoʻokele Trump i kēia lā i ka EPA 2009 "ʻike ʻana i ka pōʻino,” which had declared greenhouse gases a threat to public health and welfare—serving as the legal foundation for the EPA to regulate carbon emissions under the Clean Air Act.
(Nā kiʻi kiʻi kiʻi)
I kēia manawa, the rule change applies only to tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks, but it is expected to be the first step in a broader rollback of federal air pollution regulations. Full repeal will require a lengthy process; the original finding took two years to establish.

According to Axios, the move will slow U.S. emissions reductions by about 10%—a significant impact, but not enough to reverse the overall trend, as low-cost renewables now dominate new power generation capacity. The Environmental Defense Fund warned that the rollback will increase pollution and impose real costs and harms on American families.
If left unchecked, climate change is projected to raise U.S. mortality rates by roughly 2% and reduce global GDP by 17% (pili ana $38 trillion) na 2050.
wahi a Roger Luo:A symbolic rollback with limited immediate impact, yet it reshapes the legal terrain for future climate action and signals federal regulatory retreat.
ʻO nā ʻatikala a me nā kiʻi a pau mai ka Pūnaewele. Inā loaʻa kekahi pilikia kope, e ʻoluʻolu e kelepona mai iā mākou i ka manawa e holoi ai.
E nīnau iā mākou



















































































