Skeptics Win, Endangerment Finding Axed – Truth Finally Prevails in The Climate Wars

Today is a monumental win for climate skeptics

Today’s decision by the Environmental Protection Agency to remove the Carbon Dioxide Endangerment Finding represents a pivotal shift in America’s approach to climate policy—one rooted in evidence, not ideology. For years, this “finding” has served as the legal justification for an array of costly, far-reaching regulations targeting everything from our nation’s power plants to the cars we drive and the energy bills we pay. Its removal is a direct response to mounting evidence that the basis for this rule was always more about speculative modeling and political maneuvering than sound science. Watch the announcement here:

The Carbon Dioxide Endangerment Finding, first enacted in 2009, rested on claims that rising levels of CO2 posed a dire threat to public health and welfare. These claims, trumpeted by alarmist voices in the media and bureaucracy, relied heavily on computer models that have since proven to be chronically inaccurate, consistently forecasting more warming than actually observed. In the years since, we’ve witnessed a remarkable gap between dire projections and reality: global temperatures have not followed the “runaway” path predicted, and extreme weather events—despite breathless coverage—remain well within the range of historical variability.

Yet while the U.S. was tying itself in regulatory knots, China and other major emitters continued to expand their coal-fired power generation, wiping out any hypothetical benefit of America’s self-imposed restrictions. According to multiple independent sources, China has increased its annual CO2 emissions by over 70% since 2005 and now burns more coal than the rest of the world combined. The idea that the U.S. could “lead by example” and coax the rest of the world into similar sacrifices has been thoroughly debunked by the facts on the ground.

The real-world effects of the Endangerment Finding were felt not in the climate, but in American households and businesses. Energy prices rose, manufacturing jobs fled overseas, and everyday citizens bore the burden of expensive, symbolic gestures that did nothing to alter the climate trajectory. The American people deserve policies that produce measurable results, not more of the same costly theater.

By removing the Endangerment Finding, the EPA is signaling a long-overdue return to rational, evidence-based policy. This action acknowledges that CO2 is not a pollutant in any meaningful scientific sense but a fundamental component of life on Earth—one that, at current atmospheric concentrations, has proven benefits for plant growth and agriculture. The change is not about neglecting environmental stewardship; rather, it’s about discarding unproductive policies and focusing on real solutions grounded in evidence, innovation, and economic reality.

The Role of WUWT and Climate Skeptics Over the Past 25 Years to Reach This Point

Today’s announcement did not happen in a vacuum. It is, in many respects, a testament to the perseverance and integrity of climate skeptics who have spent decades challenging the so-called “consensus.” For over 25 years, voices from outside the mainstream—scientists, meteorologists, engineers, and informed citizens—have raised legitimate questions about the certainty and direction of climate science and the wisdom of policies derived from it.

Watts Up With That (WUWT), which I founded in 2006, has played a key role in this effort. WUWT has provided a public platform for data-driven scrutiny, extended quotes from source material, and open debate on climate claims that were often presented as “settled science.” Over the years, millions of readers have turned to WUWT as a resource for honest analysis and transparent discussion, rather than alarmist dogma and political posturing. Through its detailed posts and vigorous comment sections, WUWT has empowered a generation of climate realists to ask tough questions, demand accountability, and resist the intimidation tactics of those invested in the status quo.

Perhaps nothing better illustrates the necessity of this skepticism than the Climategate scandal of 2009, where a trove of emails from prominent climate scientists exposed a charade disguised as science. The communications revealed attempts to manipulate data, suppress dissenting views, and stonewall requests for transparency—all in the service of defending a narrative rather than advancing understanding. Climategate confirmed what many skeptics had long suspected: that the so-called consensus was enforced through politics, not evidence, and that open inquiry was often treated as a threat rather than a requirement of science.

From the outset, climate skeptics were dismissed as “deniers” and painted as outliers, even as they brought forth data and analysis that contradicted the doomsday narratives dominating headlines. They questioned the overreliance on models with poor track records, the manipulation and cherry-picking of temperature datasets, the politicization of research funding, and the relentless conflation of weather with climate. These challenges were often met not with scientific debate but with ad hominem attacks and attempts to silence dissent.

Yet it is precisely this skepticism—this refusal to bow to groupthink—that has preserved scientific integrity and prevented far worse policy mistakes. The tireless work of independent analysts, bloggers, and organizations like The Heartland Institute has revealed errors in climate data handling, exposed conflicts of interest, and demanded transparency in the review and publication of climate research. Skeptics have consistently pointed out that climate is an immensely complex, poorly understood system, not a simple machine governed by one trace gas.

Over time, many of the arguments made by skeptics have proven prescient. The failure of climate models to accurately predict temperature trends, the non-materialization of the “hockey stick” catastrophe, the persistent downward adjustments to estimates of climate sensitivity to CO2—these have all vindicated a more cautious, critical approach to climate science. Importantly, the skeptical community’s insistence on open data and reproducibility has forced a grudging shift toward greater transparency in mainstream climate research.

Today, as the EPA walks back one of the foundational rules of American climate policy, the importance of these skeptical voices can no longer be ignored. Policymakers are beginning to realize that real progress requires confronting inconvenient facts, not suppressing them. The narrative has shifted from unquestioning acceptance of alarmist predictions to a more mature, data-driven conversation about climate and energy. The very arguments once ridiculed as “fringe” are now being echoed in the halls of government and public policy.

None of this would have been possible without those who dared to speak up and challenge the narrative, often at great personal and professional cost. I am proud to be one of the many who stood up and actively worked against it. I am thankful for the words of encouragement and the pledges of support to WUWT through donations and subscriptions, plus the support of generous private donors (you know who you are) that allowed us to continue the fight. The removal of the Endangerment Finding is, in many ways, a victory for those who believe in scientific rigor, open debate, and policies that serve the public interest—not just political expediency.

As we move forward, it’s crucial to remember that skepticism is not the enemy of science; it is its engine. Only through open inquiry, constant questioning, and a willingness to confront dogma can we ensure that climate policy remains grounded in reality and truly serves the nation’s needs.

I will have a follow-up post for tomorrow. For now, Charles and I are taking the rest of the day off. We’ve earned it – Anthony

Oh, one last thing; a personal message to Dr. Michael Mann:

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JulesFL
July 31, 2025 1:22 am

OK so great news of course, but this is only item 1 of the critical to-do list.
2 Nail secret science
3 Red-team review

Without these further steps, the next blue president just resets to square one.

Richard Saumarez
July 31, 2025 1:58 am

Congratulations Anthony. Your perseverance, together with many others, is now paying off.

Neo
July 31, 2025 6:26 am

An email sent to participants from the deputy director of services of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, a federal office that organizes the publication of the National Climate Assessment read, “Thank you for your participation in the 6th National Climate Assessment … we are now releasing all current assessment participants from their roles.”

Bruce Cobb
July 31, 2025 8:27 am

To celebrate, I think a little showboating is in order, a la Peter Griffin:


Pravda Pundit
July 31, 2025 11:13 am

In chapter 8.4, page 92, we read:
“In summary, the decline in planetary albedo and the concurrent decline in cloudiness have emphasized
the importance of clouds and their variations to global climate variability and change. A change of 1- 2
percent in global cloud cover has a greater radiative impact on the climate than the direct radiative effect
of doubling CO2. ”
Nevertheless, the authors have not tried to relate reduced albedo, detected by CERES, to global temperatures, e.g. Spencer’s UAH. This is like a “sin of omission”. Dr. Nikolov and Dr. Zeller have done so, and found that all warming since year 2000 is due to reduced albedo. GHG have had no influence. See:
https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7418/4/3/17
Maybe all warming since 1980, when satellites began to measure global cloud cover, is due to reduced cloud cover, see Nelson & Nelson https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation?paperid=131993
Since CO2 seems to have no measurable influence, it is time to look for an alternative climate paradigm, see:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/386573736_Toward_a_New_Theoretical_Paradigm_of_Climate_Science

Phillip Teitlebaum
July 31, 2025 11:41 am

Are the American Geophysical Union and the World Meteorological Organization also merely “alarmist voices”?
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2025AV001808
https://wmo.int/topics/extreme-weather

Michael Flynn
Reply to  Phillip Teitlebaum
July 31, 2025 5:02 pm

Yes, of course. Why would anyone think otherwise?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Phillip Teitlebaum
August 4, 2025 1:23 pm

The AGU is a major disappointment.
The WMO was created for that purpose.

ResourceGuy
July 31, 2025 12:48 pm

Hey, I don’t see news coverage of this like the very heavy dose of ad placement news leading up to Obama’s ascent to the Paris Climate Agreement throne. That was the tidal wave of coverage that went all the way down to very small town newspapers.

cosmicwxdude
July 31, 2025 1:59 pm

Whoo hoo!!

July 31, 2025 6:57 pm

Just like Google/AI has recently provided rapid notice of a pending Earth Quake by monitoring billions of Cellphones. a similar process could monitor billions of cell phones temperature and/or the weather stations Apps on those cellphones as to the real “Global” temperature.

Michael Flynn
Reply to  usurbrain
July 31, 2025 8:33 pm

. . . as to the real “Global” temperature.”

Which will be somewhere between 90 C and -90 C, I’m sure.

Will it make any difference? An average is just an average, signifying not much at all.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  usurbrain
August 4, 2025 1:25 pm

70% of the planet is water. Give or take a few gallons.
So how many of the 8 billion cell phones are floating in the Indian Ocean?

Crisp
July 31, 2025 10:11 pm

Standing her in Australia, I do not understand how the EPA, which is merely an agency, can issue forth rules, regulations, and “findings” that are tantamount to actual laws passed by legislatures and are treated as such by the courts. All this is done without reference back to the democratically representatives for their consent.
It seems to be the antithesis of democratic and accountable governance. I see it creeping into Australia as well. We now have a Federal Energy Commissioner with seemingly ill-defined but limitless powers over the whole energy system.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Crisp
August 4, 2025 1:27 pm

Until the Supreme Court overturned the Chevron Doctrine, it was more than permitted, it was encouraged.

August 1, 2025 4:38 am

A couple of questions – what is the real risk that this decision will be overturned by the courts? How long does the comment period last and how will what we can expect to be an avalanche of opposing comments influence the outcome or can the EPA basically dismiss opposing comments and move forward?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Barnes Moore
August 4, 2025 1:29 pm

Not sure if it has been entered into the Federal Registry yet. Once entered, there are 45 days for public comment, then adjudication of those comments. Perhaps a reasonable expectation is the 1st of the year for it going into effect.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 4, 2025 1:36 pm

Thanks! 1st of the year would be great, but I am sure there will be a lot of opposition. I hope the authors have a lot of stamina.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Barnes Moore
August 5, 2025 6:31 am

They have lots of support.
Of course it will be tax payer dollars paying all the legal fees defending it.
Fortunately, the US Treasury has more money than Soros & company.

stevo
August 2, 2025 11:58 am

Congrats to all involved…. the madness may one day finally end and the truth be admitted?

IAMPCBOB
August 2, 2025 1:48 pm

Wouldn’t it be WONDERFUL, if we could just ignore all the noise from the climate changers? We have MUCH bigger problems to worry about, and SOLVE, and all this BS about the climate changing is just keeping us from IMPORTANT work! The climate et al, has ALWAYS changed! There is nothing stable or guaranteed about it! As for humans causing it, that’s just so much BS! As I have said before, if you could put ALL the humans on earth in one big crowd, and observed that crowd from space, I highly doubt you could even SEE them, much like a a huge swarm of ants! The earths ecosphere is quite able to absorb anything we humans can belch out, including our cows! We can minimize the smog, etc. and still be successful! Compare our atmosphere, especially around the larger cities, today, compared to say 100 or 200 years ago. We have truly made tremendous progress! The seas are NOT rising, the polar icecaps are NOT melting and the world is NOT dying anytime soon. Only the fear mongers think so. Relax, do your best work and ENJOY the best planet in the Solar system! It’s the ONLY one we have, so far, and we haven’t finished making it the best place to live! As one pundit once said, ‘Don’t worry, be happy’!

dmullock
August 2, 2025 5:38 pm

Congratulations on your stunning achievement in making actual climate science triumph in the US federal government. Standing firm in a gale wind for decades and unbowed. Well done. And Lee Zeldin for president 2028! We need integrity, intelligence, maturity and effectiveness in our leadership.

Greg Goodman
August 3, 2025 5:09 am

No cigar yet. It’s not over till the fat lady sings.

Firstly, they foolishly go for a “public consultations” after two generations of the public have been indoctrinated with the climate booolsheeet.

Second , this only seems to relate to vehicle emissions. So the ” carbon-free ” insanity prevails for power generation.

The endangerment finding was BASELESS to start with so rescind it without question, without deley and without appeal.

Let them start again and go through DUE PROCESS this time.

son of mulder
August 4, 2025 2:26 am

It won’t stop the lies. In the UK the Supreme Court has decreed men are men and women are women but the crapology continues.

alas babylon
August 4, 2025 7:43 am

Watts Up With That (WUWT), which I founded in 2006, has played a key role in this effort. WUWT has provided a public platform for data-driven scrutiny, extended quotes from source material, and open debate on climate claims that were often presented as “settled science.” A testament to the perseverance and integrity of climate skeptics who have spent decades challenging the so-called “consensus.” 

Yes! Well done!

Sparta Nova 4
August 4, 2025 9:00 am

Just something to mull over.

Isn’t is fascinating that CO2 is now defined in terms o NN Gtons.
Well bigger is more impressive and often scarier.

After all, 14 Gton (or whatever it is) is a lot more alarming than 430 ppm or 0.043%.

August 5, 2025 5:19 am

So Watts — who couldn’t get his paper on earths temperature published because it was incompetent — is still supporting science deniers and conspiracy theorists. Maybe it’s time to return to reading the weather on a local tv station

Reply to  Warren Beeton
August 5, 2025 5:33 am

From someone that thinks making a forecast of 50% chance of rain tomorrow is a good forecast.

Michael Flynn
Reply to  Jim Gorman
August 6, 2025 12:08 am

Jim, well, it will either rain tomorrow or it won’t. How helpful is that, I ask you?

/sarc off

Michael Flynn
Reply to  Warren Beeton
August 6, 2025 12:04 am

still supporting science deniers and conspiracy theorists

While you believe in a GHE, I presume. You can’t even provide a consistent and unambiguous description of this mythical creature, but you believe in it anyway – the mark of a conspiracy theorist. Like you, they don’t need no stinkin’ scientific method!

If people want to believe your fantasies, they are perfectly free to do so.

Jon-Anders Grannes
August 5, 2025 5:44 am

Reality is catching up with policy based dogmas?

Sparta Nova 4
August 5, 2025 6:53 am

A comment was posted that the Mann hockey stick was a reconstruction and not a prediction or projection. I will not name the poster to protect the guilty.

Ignore how badly it was done, the corruption involved in creating it, the bad proxies used, and shifting the historical record to connect to the satellite era data. This is not about that.

Ignore how is was used as a prediction of doom (A. Gore, IPCC). This is not about that.

The point to chew on is, given the hockey stick was merely a reconstruction, then does not that also apply to the numerous climate models? After all, their accuracy is assessed after “hind casting” which is nothing more than curve fitting.

The climate models cannot project or predict anything. They are only useful as reconstruction of past weather.

Perhaps one of the WUWT authors would care to write this up, perhaps consider it as a story tip?

willhaas
August 5, 2025 8:35 pm

The reality is that there is no real evidence that CO2 has any effect on our global climate system. There is plenty of scientific rational to conclude that the climate seneivity of CO2 is effectively zero.. The AGW hupothesis has been falsified by science.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  willhaas
August 6, 2025 8:43 am

By science, yes. By Consensus, no.

Note: Consensus is not science.

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