美国环保局局长李·泽尔丁在相关法案废除后呼吁气候怀疑论者“庆祝正义得到伸张”


2026年4月8日 美国东部时间下午2:27 / 美联社

美国环境保护署署长周三为其废除作为联邦减缓气候变化规则基础的法律认定的决定辩护,并向一群气候怀疑论者表示,他们应该“庆祝正义得到伸张”。

美国环保局局长李·泽尔丁是在由哈特兰研究所主办的会议上发表主旨演讲时作出上述表态的。该保守派智库拒绝主流气候科学,并将其所谓的“气候恐慌主义”斥为无稽之谈。泽尔丁向与会者表示,废除2009年的“有害排放认定”,扭转了数十年来盲目追随自由派政客和环保团体关于气候变化危险论调的局面。

“今天是值得庆祝的时刻。这是庆祝正义得到伸张的日子,”泽尔丁说道。他曾是纽约州的共和党国会议员,外界普遍认为,在帕姆·邦迪上周被迫离职后,他正考虑被提拔为司法部长。

美国环保局今年早些时候撤销了这一有害排放认定。16年来,这一科学结论一直是监管发电厂、车辆及其他来源温室气体排放的核心依据。特朗普政府辩称,该认定损害了工业和经济,并声称奥巴马和拜登政府扭曲了科学结论,将温室气体定性为公共健康风险。

泽尔丁在一个公然质疑既定气候科学的团体会议上发表高调讲话,反映出唐纳德·特朗普总统的政府对传统环境保护政策的彻底颠覆。美国环保局已经撤销了数十项空气和水保护规定,并表示其没有监管气候变化的法律权限。

“2009年有害排放认定出台时,你们就站在反对它的第一线,”泽尔丁在哈特兰研究所的会议上说道。

环保人士谴责泽尔丁在这个保守团体面前发表讲话,指责他在气候变化正加剧极端天气风险——包括更强的飓风、更严重的洪涝和更猛烈的野火——之际“召集气候否认者”。

美国环保协会美国主任乔·邦菲利奥表示,泽尔丁的演讲是在“传播虚假信息”,本质上是在按照哈特兰研究所隐秘捐赠者的旨意行事。

“哈特兰研究所不是一个严肃的科学组织。它是一个虚假信息工厂,”邦菲利奥说道。让美国环保局局长为他们开场不仅令人尴尬——这更是一个信号,表明特朗普政府已经完全放弃了保护公众免受污染的责任。

美国环保局一名女发言人对批评不予理会,称“美国环保局作为激进意识形态工具的时代已经结束”。

该局发言人卡罗琳·霍尔兰表示,泽尔丁会在“各种各样意识形态不同的团体和个人面前发表讲话,以推进特朗普政府时期美国环保局的政策议程”。

她在一封电子邮件中称,泽尔丁让该局回归了履行保护人类健康和环境的法定职责的轨道,“其依据是顶级科学,而非旨在恐吓公众以使其顺从的末日模型”。

总部位于伊利诺伊州的哈特兰研究所自称是“自由市场智库”,称其核心目标之一是“挑战‘世界正面临由化石燃料燃烧引发的气候危机’的叙事”。该组织不披露捐赠者名单,但曾获得石油和天然气利益集团的财政支持。

该组织主席詹姆斯·泰勒对泽尔丁的演讲表示赞赏,并称泽尔丁是“有史以来最出色的美国环保局局长”。

2009年的有害排放认定认定,二氧化碳和其他温室气体威胁公众健康和福祉。这一奥巴马时期的认定是《清洁空气法》下几乎所有针对汽车、发电厂及其他造成全球变暖的污染源的气候监管措施的法律基础。

专家表示,废除该认定将取消所有汽车和卡车的温室气体排放标准,并可能引发对发电厂、油气设施等固定源气候监管规定的全面推翻。已有近24个州以及多个城市、公共卫生和环保团体提起了法律诉讼。

美国环保协会的邦菲利奥称,美国环保局局长在“极右翼边缘团体”面前露面并“邀功”,是“超现实的”。考虑到汽油和其他能源成本不断上涨,以及上月席卷美国西南部、打破14个州3月高温纪录的巨型热穹顶等极端天气事件愈发频繁,他称这场演讲不仅不识时务,甚至是对美国民众的侮辱。

哈特兰研究所及其支持者“不想让你看向窗外”,邦菲利奥在采访中说道。“他们实际上需要你不去看窗外,才能为他们的立场辩护。他们的核心信念是,气候变化不是一种威胁。”

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/what-to-know-about-the-epa-decision-to-revoke-the-endangerment-finding-on-greenhouse-gases/

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin tells climate skeptics to “celebrate vindication” after law repealed

April 8, 2026 2:27 PM EDT / AP

The head of the Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday defended his decision to repeal the legal determination that serves as the basis for federal rules to slow climate change, telling a gathering of climate change skeptics they should “celebrate vindication.”

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin made the remarks in the keynote address at a conference hosted by the Heartland Institute, a conservative think tank that rejects mainstream climate science and what it calls “climate alarmism.” Zeldin told the gathering that repeal of the 2009 “endangerment finding” reversed decades of unthinking adherence to liberal politicians and environmental groups about the dangers of climate change.

“Today is a moment to celebrate. It is a day to celebrate vindication,” said Zeldin, a former Republican congressman from New York who is widely believed to be under consideration for a possible promotion to attorney general, following Pam Bondi’s forced departure last week.

The EPA earlier this year revoked the endangerment finding, a scientific conclusion that for 16 years was the central basis for regulating planet-warming emissions from power plants, vehicles and other sources. The Trump administration argued the finding hurts industry and the economy and claimed the Obama and Biden administrations twisted science to determine that greenhouse gases are a public health risk.

Zeldin’s prominent appearance at a conference hosted by a group deeply skeptical of the established science around climate change reflected the vast reversal that President Donald Trump’s administration has carried out of traditional policies meant to protect the environment. The EPA has rolled back dozens of air and water protections and has said it does not have legal authority to regulate climate change.

“You were right there on the front lines against there being an endangerment finding in 2009,” Zeldin told the Heartland conference.

Environmentalists denounced Zeldin’s appearance before the conservative group, accusing him of “rallying climate deniers” at a time when climate change is creating greater risks of extreme weather, including stronger hurricanes, more dangerous floods and more intense wildfires.

Zeldin’s speech “promotes disinformation” and amounts to doing the bidding of Heartland’s secretive donors, said Joe Bonfiglio, U.S. director of the Environmental Defense Fund.

“The Heartland Institute is not a serious scientific organization. It’s a disinformation factory,” Bonfiglio said. Having the EPA administrator serve as their opening act isn’t just embarrassing — it’s a signal of how completely the Trump administration has abandoned its obligation to protect the public from pollution.

An EPA spokeswoman brushed off the criticism, saying “the era of EPA as a vehicle for radical ideology is over.”

Zeldin speaks before a “wide variety of ideologically different groups and individuals to promote the agenda of the Trump EPA,” spokesman Carolyn Holran said.

Zeldin has returned the agency’s focus to fulfill its statutory obligations to protect human health and the environment, “backed by gold standard science, not doomsday models designed to scare the public into compliance,” she said in an email.

Heartland, based in Illinois, describes itself as a “free-market think tank” and says a key goal is to “challenge the narrative that the world faces a climate crisis” driven by the burning of fossil fuels. The organization does not disclose its funder list but has received financial support from oil and gas interests.

James Taylor, the group’s president, hailed Zeldin’s speech and called Zeldin “the greatest EPA administrator ever.”

The 2009 endangerment finding determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare. The Obama-era finding is the legal underpinning of nearly all climate regulations under the Clean Air Act for motor vehicles, power plants and other pollution sources that are heating the planet.

The repeal eliminates all greenhouse gas emissions standards for cars and trucks and could unleash a broader undoing of climate regulations on stationary sources such as power plants and oil and gas facilities, experts say. Legal challenges have been filed by nearly two dozen states, along with cities and public health and environmental groups.

Bonfiglio, of EDF, called it “surreal” that the head of the EPA would appear before a “fringe of the conservative right” and “ask for his flowers.” He called the speech tone-deaf and even insulting to Americans, given the rising costs of gasoline and other energy and more frequent occurrences of extreme weather such as a gigantic heat dome that baked the Southwest last month and smashed March heat records in 14 states.

The Heartland Institute and its supporters “don’t want you to look out the window,” Bonfiglio said in an interview. “They actually need you to not look out the window in order to defend their positions. A core to their belief is that climate change is not a threat.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/what-to-know-about-the-epa-decision-to-revoke-the-endangerment-finding-on-greenhouse-gases/

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