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Casting
doubt on the
determination that
greenhouse gas
emissions endanger
public health and
welfare, he said,
“we’re not accepting
all of the narrative
of the left without
any question or
pushback.”
By
Gabriel Matias
Castilho
WASHINGTON—Addressing
a conference of
scientists and other
experts skeptical of
climate change,
Environmental
Protection Agency
Administrator Lee
Zeldin on Wednesday
celebrated his
decision to repeal
what is known as the
“endangerment
finding,” which
provided the backbone
for federal regulation
of greenhouse gas
emissions.

An
Inside Climate News
analysis found the
department lost 21
percent of its
workforce in 2025.
Those cuts have thrown
it into disarray.
By
Georgina Gustin, Peter
Aldhous
Amanda
Koehler has spent the
past decade working to
help young and
first-time farmers
gain access to
land—the single
biggest obstacle for
people who aspire to
grow crops or raise
animals but can’t
afford the soaring
cost of acreage.

With
the U.S. bombing Iran
and the Strait of
Hormuz closed, energy
experts say countries
transitioning to
renewables will be
more resilient in the
“face of the shock.”
By
Lisa Sorg
The
United States’ war on
Iran could
fundamentally alter
how countries consume
and generate energy
and hamper
international progress
in combating climate
change, a panel of
energy experts said
today.

Seven
Senate Democrats
launched the probe
over controversial tax
credits to the
country’s largest
exporter of liquefied
natural gas.
By
Phil McKenna
Seven
Democratic U.S.
senators have launched
a probe into a $370
million “alternative
fuel” payout to
Cheniere Energy, made
earlier this year by
the IRS, that critics
say the liquefied
natural gas export
company never should
have received.

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