EPA’s ‘Polluters’ Portal’? No—Just a Return to Pre-Zealotry Sanity

The Associated Press is sounding the alarm—again. This time, the horror is that the EPA, under the Trump administration and Administrator Lee Zeldin, is daring to invoke a long-standing clause in the Clean Air Act to allow temporary exemptions from newly minted Biden-era regulations on industrial emissions. The AP characterizes this as a betrayal of public health and an assault on the environment. In reality, it’s nothing more than a restoration of sanity.

What Actually Happened?

According to the AP, the EPA created an email inbox to allow companies to request exemptions from nine Biden-era regulations, including rules targeting emissions of mercury, ethylene oxide, and other chemicals. These exemptions are not automatic. They require presidential approval under the Clean Air Act, and only if two conditions are met: (1) the control technology is not widely available, and (2) continuing operations serve national security interests.

In short, the administration is using the Clean Air Act exactly as written. This is not deregulation by fiat—it’s a legal process spelled out in black-letter law. And it’s not even new. As the EPA itself pointed out, the Biden administration used the same exemption mechanism when issuing stricter rules on ethylene oxide last year​.

But facts, as usual, are optional for the climate narrative industry.

“Polluters’ Portal” or Lifeline to Reality?

Margie Alt, campaign director of the Climate Action Campaign, derided the move as a “gift to the fossil fuel industry” and claimed it represents a “polluters-first agenda.” Jason Rylander from the Center for Biological Diversity went further, calling the EPA’s legal mechanism “ridiculous” and “an invitation to pollute”​.

Let’s be honest: these activists would object if industries were granted even a five-minute reprieve from regulatory overreach. Their logic is theological, not scientific. In their view, any emission—no matter how minor, no matter how economically vital the source—is sacrilege. If it takes bankrupting communities to reduce hypothetical future risks derived from models with high uncertainty margins, so be it.

We are told repeatedly that mercury causes brain damage and ethylene oxide causes cancer, but these statements are made without the crucial context: exposure thresholds. Modern industrial controls already reduce these substances to extremely low levels. The question is not whether these chemicals are harmful at some level, but whether the incremental gains from ever-stricter standards justify the staggering costs—both financial and societal.

This is not “denial.” It’s cost-benefit analysis.

Weaponized Regulations, Not Public Health Protections

Much of the Biden administration’s climate agenda was never about measured improvements in air quality. It was about using the administrative state to crush politically disfavored industries. If that sounds extreme, consider this: the new rules targeted coal-fired power plants and over 200 chemical facilities—mostly in red-state America—despite little evidence that the existing controls were failing or that their emissions posed current, measurable risks​.

These rules were passed not to protect children, but to strangle American energy and manufacturing. Administrator Zeldin simply opened a lawful exit ramp for companies facing arbitrary new constraints that threaten their viability.

This is governance, not environmental nihilism.

“Abuse of Power” or Due Process?

Critics like Vickie Patton of the Environmental Defense Fund claim the exemption option is an “abuse of power.” Yet they never raised these objections when the Biden administration did the same thing. The selective outrage reveals what this is really about: power, not pollution​.

The Clean Air Act’s exemption clause exists for a reason. It recognizes that environmental idealism must sometimes give way to economic and strategic reality. Declaring that industrial capacity must shut down overnight to comply with sudden new mandates is not policy—it’s sabotage.

And let’s not forget: many of these plants serve critical national functions, from energy to materials supply. The exemption process offers a pathway to keep them online temporarily, while technological feasibility catches up. That’s not deregulation. That’s common sense.

The Bigger Picture: Bureaucratic Overreach vs. National Interest

The AP is also aghast that Administrator Zeldin is considering deep staffing cuts at the EPA and may eliminate its scientific research office. The horror! How will we survive without 1,000 federal employees reinforcing the same “scientific consensus” that props up every climate policy from here to Brussels?

The truth is, the EPA has become a political actor. Its “science” increasingly functions as a cloak for ideological policymaking. Reducing its budget and trimming its bureaucratic excesses is not anti-science—it’s anti-tyranny.

If the research office exists primarily to churn out justifications for more regulation, then yes, it should be shut down. Real science thrives under scrutiny. It doesn’t require 1,000 salaried activists and a billion-dollar budget to be persuasive.

Conclusion: Let’s Stop Pretending This is About “Health”

Every regulation has costs, and those costs matter. When new rules threaten jobs, increase consumer prices, or kneecap strategic industries, we must ask: is the benefit real? Is the risk immediate and quantifiable? Or is it another round of climate theatrics aimed at pleasing donor bases and ideologically motivated NGOs?

The EPA’s exemption portal isn’t a “get-out-of-jail-free card.” It’s a return to lawful, deliberate governance—a rare thing in the age of emergency mandates and bureaucratic crusades. If the Biden administration had pushed through these rules under normal democratic scrutiny, maybe there’d be less resistance.

Instead, what we have is a zealous regulatory machine colliding with the real-world limits of energy, economics, and common sense.

And for once, sanity is winning.

H/T Steve Milloy

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Tom Halla
March 28, 2025 6:40 pm

The Green NGOs believe in the L-NT (linear-no threshold) model as an act of faith, that any exposure to those evil chemicals causes disease, no matter the dose. Of course, the risk was estimated by feeding or injecting rodents a sublethal dose of the tested chemical, and seeing which got cancer.

oeman50
Reply to  Tom Halla
March 29, 2025 7:43 am

LNT also justifies “BAT” standards, Best Available Technology. BAT is often determined by using analyses from a cherry-picked select few processes, determining it is “available” for every place in the country, and then pooting out new limits. Two examples: the ELGs (effluent guidelines) and the CO2 regulations from the last gasp of the Biden administration.

Tom Halla
Reply to  oeman50
March 29, 2025 7:59 am

Which is why I blame Nixon, for establishing EPA as an independent body. There is no clear end point for “clean”.
Tricky Dick was either the poster boy for unintended consequences, or in league with the devil.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Halla
March 31, 2025 12:16 pm

Nixon in that time frame was faced with massive fog issues. EPA was founded to deal with that.

They got the job done. Now, like any federal bureaucracy, they had to invent work to stay in place.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Halla
March 29, 2025 1:56 pm

When testing for cancer, most of these studies use LD50. That is, 50% of the test animals die from the direct toxicity of the chemical being tested. The survivors are then tested for cancer. (And that’s using animals that have been bred to be susceptible to cancer.)

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Halla
March 31, 2025 12:14 pm

They need, then, to apply L-NT to water.

Tom Halla
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 31, 2025 12:24 pm

Have you ever seen Penn and Teller’s classic mock petition to ban DHMO (DiHydrogenMonOxide)?

Rud Istvan
March 28, 2025 6:59 pm

Good post. Three things.

  1. We know LNT is nonsense.
  2. The CAA is clear about ‘available commercial technology’. If it doesn’t exist, there is no obligation. CCS is the example used in essay Clean Coal in ebook Blowing Smoke. The EPA tried via massive subsidies to show that it did, and failed all three times.
  3. Firing thousands of ‘scientists’ working on a supposedly ‘settled’ climate consensus is just good DOGE.
Bob
March 28, 2025 7:07 pm

EPA’s grant making authority and funding should be withdrawn. It’s research has been found biased therefore it’s research funding should be withdrawn.

Reply to  Bob
March 29, 2025 4:59 am

Excellent point! It never should have had grant-making authority to begin with, for that matter.

March 28, 2025 7:44 pm

I have been around long enough to have witnessed the fall in nil detection limits from 10,000,000,000,000 ppt to 100 ppt. And would you believe there has been no mercury contamination until recently when detection levels have reached as low as 10,000 ppt.

EmilyDaniels
Reply to  Ian MacCulloch
March 29, 2025 8:05 pm

10 trillion parts per trillion? That would be more than 100% of a substance, so I suspect you have too many zeros in that number

March 28, 2025 9:02 pm

Anyone championing climate “action” demonstrates a zealous preference for dogma over reality. They should never be in positions to decide government policies. Nothing they have to say about them is worth listening to. Maybe they have some useful thoughts on kombucha and soy lattes… I dunno.

sherro01
March 29, 2025 1:58 am

This corruption of Science by adoption of the Linear No Threshold theory of the dose/harm relationship has been well documented for some years. The Rockefeller Foundation has been in it, up to its ears.
https://www.geoffstuff.com/corrupjuly2023.docx

The problem is not documenting the credible facts. That simply takes a few months of dedicated research time. The problem is that too many in the public are reluctant to face truth when ther is a different story, showing “conventional accepted wisdom” that is not much more than a large gathering of propaganda and deception.
Here is a detailed article about Rockefeller and LNT., followed by a short piece of research that questions whether trace lead, the metal Pb, is a dangerous as almost everyone tells us.
I researched the lead story because it is one of the dominant themes in the field of toxins in the environment. It is a tough nut to crack because it is as much believed as the goodness of the original Disney movie Snow White. The movie remake has been a woke disaster, so I hope that you have the time and patience to read the linked neutral scientific research remake about Pb lead as a toxin.
Geoff S

https://www.geoffstuff.com/after_finallead.docx

Reply to  sherro01
March 29, 2025 5:03 am

A serious scientist like you, saw the remake of Snow White, Geoff?

You must have grandchildren. 😉

I hear this latest woke version of Snow White is a box office flop.

March 29, 2025 2:48 am

Congratulations to Lee Zeldin. He has proven to be a tremendous pick by POTUS as Administrator of the EPA. Mr. Zeldin has been amongst the most aggressive, if not the most proactive of Trump’s department heads in delivering on America First & MAGA.

His uncompromising approach to eliminating the globalist climate blob’s dictates, rules and regulations is excellent. No doubt working closely with DOGE, Chris Wright (Energy) & Doug Burgum (Interior) to eliminate policies, procedures and entire teams created under the rubric of ‘climate justice’, net-zero & the fantasy of de-carbonization.

Keep up the good work!

2hotel9
March 29, 2025 8:00 am

Once again AP is flat out lying.

Bob
March 29, 2025 4:50 pm

The EPA and all outfits like them should be put on notice that all rules and regulations are subject to review. They have 30 days to present all of their findings that justify the regulation or rule in question. If proper scientific justification isn’t handed over within 30 days the rule or regulation will be nullified. Outfits like the EPA that also have enforcement authority will be held to a higher standard.