financetom
Business
financetom
/
Business
/
Analysis-US reversal on key climate finding spells uncertainty for business
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Analysis-US reversal on key climate finding spells uncertainty for business
Jul 30, 2025 11:41 AM

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Trump administration has billed its plan to undo U.S. climate regulation as a way to cut costs for industry, but it may backfire by forcing automakers, utilities, and manufacturers into a future of regulatory uncertainty and litigation risk, according to lawyers and trade groups.

Republican President Donald Trump's administration announced on Tuesday a plan to rescind the long-standing finding that greenhouse gas emissions endanger human health, removing the legal foundation for U.S. greenhouse gas regulations.

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin said the move, which would end limits on greenhouse gas pollution from vehicle tailpipes, power plants, smokestacks and other sources, would save companies $52 billion in environmental compliance costs.

But companies that have already invested heavily in reducing emissions to meet government limits, a move also demanded by many shareholders, are worried the proposal will lead into the regulatory and judicial unknown, lawyers said.

"Industries that have GHG standards set by EPA have long been complying with them and don't want them to be stripped away," said Meghan Greenfield, partner with law firm Jenner & Block and former EPA counsel, who represents auto sector clients. "The stability of the regulatory regime is extremely important for industry as a baseline."

Repealing the endangerment finding could mean that companies would need to comply with a patchwork of different state laws on climate change rather than one federal standard, said Zach Pilchen, senior counsel at Holland & Knight.

"I think what the administration has missed is that most of industry has already retrofitted for regulations," said Camille Pannu, associate law professor at Columbia University. "Industry did want deregulation, but maybe not through this vehicle."

One former Trump administration source said during Trump's first term, the EPA had declined to take on the endangerment finding because of strong resistance from industry and the legal risk associated with undermining federal authority on the matter.

Three sources in the automaker industry told Reuters privately that the EPA's proposed repeal of vehicle efficiency standards is much broader than anticipated. In addition to tailpipe standards, the proposal would eliminate air conditioning efficiency testing and remove requirements for battery monitoring and battery durability.

Albert Gore, executive director of the Zero Emission Transportation Association, said the EPA action to reverse long-settled law comes as "clean" car sales are growing steadily and powering a U.S. battery and vehicle manufacturing boom.

Over the last decade, manufacturers announced $197.6 billion in investments in U.S. EV and battery manufacturing facilities, according to the Environmental Defense Fund.

"Taking backward steps and adding new regulatory uncertainty harms consumers, unsettles markets, and will complicate ongoing business decisions for auto manufacturers," Gore said.

LUKEWARM REACTION

Industry groups have been guarded in their reactions to the EPA announcement, mostly saying they will review the proposal and offer comments in coming weeks.

Edison Electric Institute, the electric utility industry's main lobby group, said it supported the EPA establishing clear and consistent regulatory policies to drive infrastructure and investment.

"It is essential that EPA use its authority to craft flexible regulations that account for impacts to reliability and customer bills," said EEI spokesman Jeremy Ortiz.

The power industry is responsible for around a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and has steadily reduced its carbon output over more than a decade by replacing older coal-fired generators with natural gas, solar and wind.

EEI had sided with the EPA, then part of former President Joe Biden's administration, in a 2022 Supreme Court case in which West Virginia challenged the agency's authority to regulate power plants.

"Voiding that authority could upend that predictability and uniformity and potentially subject individual GHG emitters to the idiosyncratic whims of individual district court judges," it said in its brief at the time.

Auto industry group, the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, welcomed the tailpipe deregulation and said it was digesting the broader proposal to repeal the endangerment finding. The American Petroleum Institute and the American Trucking Associations both cheered the planned repeal of vehicle tailpipe rules.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce had also previously opposed the repeal because of its destabilizing effect on members.

"While we did not call for this proposal, we are reviewing it and will consult with members so we can provide constructive feedback to the agency," Marty Durbin, president of the Chamber's energy institute, said on Tuesday.

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
Landmark-ADIA JV Announces Sale of Eight-Property Student Housing Portfolio to Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing and GSA
Landmark-ADIA JV Announces Sale of Eight-Property Student Housing Portfolio to Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing and GSA
Nov 12, 2025
ATHENS, Ga.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- The long-standing Joint Venture (“JV”) between Landmark Properties (“Landmark”), a fully-integrated real estate firm specializing in the development, construction, acquisition, investment management, and operation of high-quality residential communities, and a wholly owned subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (“ADIA”), today announced the sale of an eight-property student housing portfolio to a partnership between Morgan Stanley Investment...
Nvidia denies $1 billion investment in northern Mexico
Nvidia denies $1 billion investment in northern Mexico
Nov 12, 2025
MEXICO CITY, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Nvidia ( NVDA ) on Wednesday denied plans to invest $1 billion in the northern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, hours after the state governor touted the firm's plans to build a data center there. Nvidia ( NVDA ) does not have financial investment plans in Nuevo Leon, the firm said in a statement...
Opendoor Stock Gains Ground: What's Behind The Recent Momentum?
Opendoor Stock Gains Ground: What's Behind The Recent Momentum?
Nov 12, 2025
Opendoor Technologies Inc ( OPEN ) shares are trading higher on Wednesday. The CEO of the real estate iBuying platform said he fully supports President Donald Trump’s 50-year mortgage plan, which aims to ease the housing affordability crisis in America. OPEN is trading at elevated levels. See what is driving the movement here. What To Know: During a Tuesday appearance on...
ClickUp Acquires $25.4M-Funded Qatalog to Accelerate AI Convergence
ClickUp Acquires $25.4M-Funded Qatalog to Accelerate AI Convergence
Nov 12, 2025
Qatalog's AI Technology and Enterprise Search Capabilities Join ClickUp's Revolutionary Converged AI Workspace SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- ClickUp, the world's first Converged AI Workspace, today announced the acquisition of Qatalog, the AI-powered work hub with enterprise search and AI agents that attracted investments from some of technology's most successful firms and founders. This strategic acquisition marks another acceleration of ClickUp's AI...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved