What they're not telling you: # Trump EPA Targets Biden-Era Refrigerant Rules In Affordability Push **THE STORY** EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin is rolling back refrigerant regulations that the Trump administration claims impose $2.4 billion in unnecessary costs, but the agency's own stated rationale contradicts the science underpinning the rules it's dismantling. Zeldin announced the delay of the Biden-era EPA's 2023 Technology Transitions Rule, which implemented phasedowns of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) under the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act. The rule applied to refrigerants used across air conditioning systems, commercial refrigeration, supermarket cooling infrastructure, refrigerated transport, and industrial applications.
What the Documents Show
In a statement to Bloomberg, Zeldin claimed the Biden regulations "didn't protect human health or the environment and instead piled on costly, unattainable restrictions beyond what the law requires." This assertion requires examination against the legislative record. The AIM Act, passed with bipartisan support in 2020, explicitly tasked the EPA with phasing down HFCs—chemicals with global warming potential thousands of times greater than carbon dioxide. The 2023 Technology Transitions Rule operationalized that mandate by setting specific timelines for industry adoption of lower-GWP alternatives. Zeldin's claim that the rule exceeded statutory authority contradicts the plain language of the legislation Congress passed. The EPA did not invent the requirement; it implemented what lawmakers mandated.
Follow the Money
The cost-savings figure requires scrutiny. The $2.4 billion savings estimate, cited by Bloomberg and unchallenged in reporting, appears to measure compliance costs to industry rather than externalized environmental costs avoided through the phasedown. The Trump EPA has not published a corresponding analysis of what the rollback costs in terms of atmospheric warming impact or downstream health effects from increased refrigerant releases. This is a classic regulatory reversal sleight: measure the burden to business in concrete dollars while rendering the benefits invisible through omission. Zeldin's prepared statement employs a rhetorical maneuver worth noting. He frames the rule as "costly and unattainable" without providing evidence that compliance was technically impossible—only expensive.
What Else We Know
Industry compliance timelines set by the rule were staggered over years, allowing phased equipment replacement and technology adoption. "Costly" and "unattainable" are not synonymous, yet they are deployed as such. The Trump administration is also preparing additional rollbacks on HFC regulations specific to refrigerated transport, according to the reporting. Refrigerated trucks are a significant point-source for HFC emissions. This secondary action suggests the affordability justification is secondary to a broader deregulatory agenda. What the initial reporting misses: the absence of any statement from EPA staff scientists, the refrigeration industry's own technical position on HFC alternatives, or independent analysis of whether compliance was genuinely unaffordable or merely inconvenient.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
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