The Trump administration deleted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's main climate change webpage on Oct. 16, 2018. Now, it's back.
The EPA announced Thursday that it rebooted its climate webpage, which includes information about how the climate is warming and how the regulatory agency seeks to curb heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions. "Climate facts are back on EPA's website where they should be,"the newEPA Administrator Michael Regan said in a statement.
The government watchdog group Environmental Data and Governance Initiative(EDGI), which monitors federal websites, spotted the eliminated climate pages in fall 2018. Previously, in 2017, the Trump administration's EPA had only removed climate content from the pages, posting "This page is being updated." But eventually the administration just terminated the pages. "There's no indication now that there was even a climate change website," EDGI's Eric Nost, who reported the deletion, told Mashable at the time.
According to former EPA officials, the move to eliminate climate information was relatively straightforward. The EPA protects human health and the environment, in large part by limiting pollutants and emissions from the likes of power plants and automobiles. Yet the Trump administration sought to promote fossil fuel extraction and burning. This meant the EPA would need to curb or ease rules that limit the amount of heat-trapping carbon emissions that enter the atmosphere and add to Earth's skyrocketing greenhouse gas levels (they did).

But displaying climate science information, which shows how carbon emissions are heating the globe, is at odds with allowing largely unchecked emissions of potent planet-warming gases like CO2 and methane.
"They're protecting themselves from scrutiny — an uninformed public is key to shielding them from scrutiny," Joe Goffman, a former EPA senior counsel in the Office of Air and Radiation during the Obama administration, told Mashable in November 2018. Goffman has since rejoined the Biden administration's EPA.
"It’s sad, but straightforward," Stan Meiburg, a former acting deputy administrator of the EPA during the Obama administration, also told Mashable in November 2018. "It’s a consistent reflection of the position the [Trump] administration has taken about the lack of need to address greenhouse gas emissions," added Meiburg.
Earth is now reacting to the highest atmospheric levels of heat-trapping carbon dioxide in at least800,000 years, but more likely millions of years. The consequences are clear:
Wildfires are surging in the U.S.
Major Antarctic ice sheets have destabilized, with the potential for many feetof sea level rise.
The ocean is absorbing unfathomable amounts of heat.
Heat waves are becoming longer and more frequent, while smashing records.
Storms are intensifying, leading to more billion-dollar floods.
Arctic sea ice is in rapid decline
A screenshot of the rebooted EPA climate change homepage.Credit: epa website / screenshotThe EPA has a clear authority from the U.S. Supreme Court to limit and regulate greenhouse gases, like it does the harmful air pollution from automobiles. As Mashable previously reported:
Settled by a five to four vote in 2007, Massachusetts v. EPAruled for the first time that heat-trapping greenhouse gases are pollutants, and that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can regulate them, just as the agency reins in pollution emitted by cars and trucks.
"I think Massachusetts v. EPAis the most important environmental decision the Supreme Court has ever decided," Ann Carlson, the director of the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the UCLA School of Law, said in an interview.
The new EPA administrator, Michael Regan, told the New York Timesthat the agency is now developing new emissions rules for power plants and vehicles.
As the second-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases on Earth, the U.S. has a critical role to play in curbing the planet's warming this century. Earth's warming has accelerated in recent decades, and currently shows no signs of slowing: 20 of the 21 hottest years have occurred since 2001.
(责任编辑:焦點)
Uber's $100M settlement over drivers as contractors may not be enough
Watch live as SpaceX attempts to land another rocket on a drone ship Wednesday
Australian couple evicted for listing their rental apartment on Airbnb
The terrible, awful, no good, very bad newspaper industry
These glasses hide a fitness tracker on your faceHow Hyperloop One went off the rails
In December 2014, an engineer with the unlikely name Brogan BamBrogan was in the driveway of his cla
...[详细]Mom and daughter text priceless misunderstanding about 'drugs'
A mother in Texas had the internet in hysterics after falsely accusing her daughter of hoarding drug
...[详细]LGBTQ people share their stories of violence and resilience
Before Iman Le Caire leaves her house in the morning, she burns sage and prays. Her prayer is always
...[详细]Usher is back with 'No Limit' featuring Young Thug. Yeah!
How many smooth jams perfect for hot summer days can Usher create? The limit does not exist.Today, U
...[详细]PlayStation Now game streaming is coming to PC
Sony's PlayStation Now service is launching for Windows PC, meaning subscribers will soon be able to
...[详细]'Star Trek' actor Anton Yelchin killed in automobile mishap at 27
LOS ANGELES -- Anton Yelchin, a promising and prolific young actor beloved by his peers who recently
...[详细]LGBTQ people share their stories of violence and resilience
Before Iman Le Caire leaves her house in the morning, she burns sage and prays. Her prayer is always
...[详细]Orchestra in Thailand is made up entirely of blind musicians
In Thailand, some Buddhists view physical or intellectual disability as punishment manifested for wr
...[详细]Florida hurricane forecast remains uncertain, but trends in state's favor
For days, a war has been raging between two of the premiere computer models used to help predict the
...[详细]LGBTQ people share their stories of violence and resilience
Before Iman Le Caire leaves her house in the morning, she burns sage and prays. Her prayer is always
...[详细]Over 82,000 evacuate as Blue Cut fire rapidly spreads in southern California

Seinfeld joins Zuckerberg on Facebook Live to talk life, tech and broken bones
