Daily News for February 11, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

End of NDP–Green deal casts uncertainty over BC forestry review

The Tree Frog Forestry News
February 11, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The collapse of the NDP–Green deal fuels early election talk, clouds future of BC forestry review. In related news: Canada considers new fines for GHG emissions, the United States plans to repeal its key climate regulation; FSC Canada’s series on climate change and forests; ENGOs sue Ottawa on BC caribou habitat inaction; and new research on post-fire carbon and fuel profiles.

In Business news: Canada’s unions issue warning ahead of CUSMA review; trade fears linger even as Canada’s outlook improves; US construction prices are on the rise; Western Forest Products and Suzano reported their Q4, 2025 earnings; Russia’s lumber production fell again; and experts warn of pulp overcapacity in Finland. Meanwhile: Forest Professionals BC honours their top members; Silvacom is one of Alberta’s top employers (again) and CWC’s Wood Design & Building is out.

Finally, insurance companies wouldn’t be pricing in climate risk if it was a hoax.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Special Feature

Forest Professionals BC Honours Seven Outstanding Forest Professionals

Forest Professionals British Columbia
February 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver — Forest Professionals British Columbia (FPBC) honoured seven individuals as part of its recognition program in Vancouver on February 5. Forest Professionals BC recognized three Distinguished Forest Professionals, one Forest Professional of the Year, one Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year, and two authors for BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article at the 78th Forest Professionals BC forestry conference recognition banquet. Jeff Fisher (North Vancouver), BSF, RPF, Christopher Vukovic (Qualicum Beach), HBScF, RPF(Ret), and John Walker (Williams Lake), RPF, were honoured as Distinguished Forest Professionals for 2025. This category recognizes significant accomplishments over a career, for providing outstanding service to the profession of forestry and for furthering the principles of Forest Professionals BC. It is the profession’s highest honour for a registrant. Peter Flett, MSFM, RPF, of Penticton is the 2025 Forest Professional of the Year. Margaret Symon, RPF, PCP, of Duncan is the 2025 Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year. Lastly, Vanessa Fetterly, BSc, RPBio, and Carl Pollard, BSc, RPF, collaborated on the 2025 BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article.

Additional coverage:

Read More

Business & Politics

Workers must come first: Unions issue urgent warning to Ottawa ahead of CUSMA review

By Robin MacLennan, Editor
Ontario Construction News
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Some of Canada’s major labour organizations are urging Ottawa to put workers at the centre of any renegotiation of the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement as preparations begin for the pact’s mandatory 2026 review. Leaders met with Dominic LeBlanc, the federal minister responsible for Canada–US trade, for what they described as a high-level roundtable on the future of CUSMA amid rising trade tensions and renewed threats of U.S. tariffs. Canadian Labour Congress president Bea Bruske said unions delivered a “clear and urgent message” that Canada should not accept a revised trade deal that weakens domestic industry or costs Canadian jobs. …Bruske was joined by leaders from several large manufacturing and building trades unions representing sectors heavily exposed to trade policy decisions, including auto manufacturing, construction and resource-based industries. Bruske said the upcoming CUSMA review should strengthen Canadian industries and working-class communities, not “hollow them out” in the rush to renew the agreement.

Read More

Local Government Panel announced for COFI event: Resilient Forestry, Resilient Communities

BC Council of Forest Industries
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Municipal leaders are on the front lines of BC’s economy, where the health of the forest sector directly impacts jobs, services, and long-term community stability. This timely panel brings together mayors from across the province for a practical, solutions-focused discussion on what a competitive and resilient forestry future means for families and local economies — and what’s needed to ensure forestry remains a cornerstone industry for generations to come. Featuring mayors Maria McFaddin (Castlegar), Brad West (Port Coquitlam), Leonard Krog (Nanaimo) and Gary Sulz (Revelstoke), the conversation will offer grounded municipal perspectives from communities both large and small. The session will be moderated by Karen Brandt, Senior Vice President, Public Affairs and Partnerships with Mosaic Forest Management. Expect candid insights, local realities, and a forward-looking discussion on strengthening forestry and the communities it supports.

Read More

Pender Harbour and Area Residents Association Files Updated Legal Action to Strike Down DRIPA

Pender Harbour Residents Association
February 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Pender Harbour and Area Residents Association (PHARA) has filed a Notice of Civil Claim in BC Supreme Court, seeking to have the DRIPA struck down and declared of no force and effect. The constitutional challenge argues, among other things, that the DRIPA: is beyond the province’s constitutional authority; breaches the democratic rights of citizens by leaving them governed by an entity they had no say in electing; and illegally tries to tie the hands of future governments by dictating what types of laws they must pass… In 2024 PHARA filed a petition seeking to challenge the DRIPA and a related Order in Council that proposed to give the shíshálh Nation statutory decision-making powers under what is known as a DRIPA “section 7 agreement”. Government has since rescinded that specific Order in Council and signed an agreement with the shíshálh Nation to pursue other section 7 decision-making in the Sunshine Coast. 

Read More

The Silvacom Group Celebrates a Decade as One of Alberta’s Top Employers

By Mandy Bilous
Silvacom Ltd.
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON, AB –The Silvacom Group is proud to announce it has once again been named one of Alberta’s Top Employers, marking a significant milestone: ten consecutive years of recognition. This achievement reflects a decade-long commitment to building an exceptional workplace where people feel supported, engaged, and empowered to succeed. The Alberta’s Top Employers designation is part of the Canada’s Top 100 Employers project, organized by Mediacorp Canada Inc. Each year, the competition recognizes organizations across the province that demonstrate leadership in creating outstanding workplaces and progressive human resources practices. Being recognized for ten straight years highlights the consistency of Silvacom’s values and its sustained focus on people-first practices. Employers are evaluated based on eight key criteria, including physical workplace; work atmosphere & social; health, financial & family benefits; vacation & time off; employee communications; performance management; training & skills development; and community involvement.

Read More

Collapse of NDP-Green pact gives Eby one more excuse to call early election

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The only thing more surprising than the collapse of the co-operation agreement between the BC Greens and NDP would have been if the two sides had agreed on a new deal. …The Co-Operation and Responsible Government Accord (CARGA)… didn’t seem to be meeting anyone’s needs. For the NDP, the deal was supposed to act as a safety net for a slim one-seat majority. …It worked for last year’s budget. But outside of that, the Greens refused to back the NDP on three other confidence matters. And for that, the government agreed to advance the Green causes… [including] an early review of CleanBC and another review of the forestry system. For the Greens …it was a mixed bag, at best. The NDP did launch reviews of CleanBC and forestry, but then didn’t accept the resulting recommendations. The documents seem destined for that dusty shelf in the legislature library where unwanted reports go to die.

Read More

Steve Swanson Assumes the Role of Chairman of the U.S. Lumber Coalition

The US Lumber Coalition
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – Steve Swanson, CEO & Executive Chairman of the Swanson Group, has for the second time assumed the role of Chairman of the U.S. Lumber Coalition. Under Steve Swanson’s prior leadership of the U.S. Lumber Coalition, the organization implemented structural changes that yielded today’s organization.  These changes sharpened the focus of the organization to better address Canada’s unfair trade practices using all available tools under U.S. law.  As a result, the Coalition has been able to produce unprecedented results for its membership and the U.S. forestry industry following the organization’s most successful set of trade cases under the U.S. trade laws.  Steve Swanson was previously Chairman from 2005 through 2012. “I would like to thank Andrew Miller for his great leadership of the U.S. Lumber Coalition over the last four years through some challenging times all the while pressing the organization unyieldingly forward in its mission to address Canada’s unfair softwood lumber trade practices,” stated Swanson.

Read More

Inside a high-tech Maine sawmill powering the state’s forest economy

By Scott McDonnell
WMTW ABC News 8
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ENFIELD, Maine — “Everything you see in back of us here is new,” said Jason Brochu of Pleasant River Lumber. Between this mill in Enfield and another in Dover-Foxcroft, Pleasant River Lumber produces about 130 million board feet of lumber each year. The operation employs around 300 Mainers with jobs tied to logging, trucking, cabinet-making and log home businesses. Reaching that level of production required a major investment. “Since 2018, we’ve put in about 100 now, probably $80 million on this site alone,” said Chris Brochu of Pleasant River Lumber. Inside the mill, the results are hard to miss. Advanced technology now drives nearly every step of the process. …For Pleasant River Lumber, owners say protection comes not just from forest management, but from trade policy. “Canada produces way more lumber than they need, so they’ve got to dump it somewhere. And we can’t compete with that,” Jason Brochu said.

Read More

Experts warn of pulp overcapacity in Finland

By Markku Björkman
Pulp and Paper News
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Finland’s forest industry could be forced to reduce capacity again as rising raw material costs and weaker market conditions weigh on profitability. That assessment comes from Juha Varis, senior portfolio manager at S-Bank. …The warning comes amid a more challenging environment for pulp and paper producers. Wood prices remain elevated while demand for several forest industry products has developed more weakly than expected, increasing investor expectations that production cuts may follow. …Björn Wahlroos said that a large and modern pulp mill in Finland could be forced to shut down due to a lack of raw material. His remarks triggered wider discussion within the sector. …Varis said overcapacity in the European forest industry is evident across several segments. He added that investors expect some reduction in capacity but that it remains unclear which companies or plants might be affected.

Read More

Finance & Economics

Trade fears linger even as the Bank of Canada survey brightens outlook

By Liezel Once
The Canadian Mortgage Professional
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

The Bank of Canada’s latest survey of financial-market participants pointed to a modestly brighter growth outlook than the central bank’s own projections, even as trade tensions with the US remain the dominant threat hanging over Canada’s economy and housing market. In the fourth‑quarter Market Participants Survey, 93% of respondents cited an “increase in trade tensions” as the top downside risk to Canadian growth, well ahead of tighter global financial conditions and weaker consumer spending. Participants still assign a 20% probability to a recession over the next six months, but their median forecast calls for real GDP growth of 1.6% by the end of 2026 and 1.9% by late 2027, slightly stronger than the Bank’s own projections of 1.1% and 1.5%. While the survey suggests some stabilization in expectations, it underscores that tariff policy remains the key macroeconomic swing factor. …PwC Canada’s latest survey among 133 CEOs showed that only 27% expect the domestic economy to improve over the next 12 months.

Read More

Western Forest Products reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $17.5 million

Western Forest Products Inc.
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – Western Forest Products reported adjusted EBITDA of negative $6.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. In comparison, the Company reported Adjusted EBITDA of $14.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and Adjusted EBITDA of negative $65.9 million in the third quarter of 2025, which included a non-cash export tax expense of $59.5 million related to the determination of final duty rates from the sixth Administrative Review. Net loss was $17.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2025, as compared to a net loss of $1.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and net loss of $61.3 million in the third quarter of 2025. …For the full year 2025, the net loss was $82.4 million compared to to a net loss of $34.5 million in 2024. …“Despite more challenging markets and higher softwood lumber duties and tariffs in 2025, we enter 2026 with a significantly improved balance sheet to navigate the expected near-term market uncertainty,” said Steven Hofer, President and CEO of Western Forest Products.

Read More

US Construction Costs on the Rise: Unpacking the Producer Price Index Price Surge

By Alex Carrick
Construct Connect
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports that as of December 2025, the year-over-year increase in consumer prices and construction bid prices both stood at 2.7%. While an annual price increase below 3.0% is generally considered manageable, several factors suggest construction material costs are more concerning than they may appear. …The international oil market has been relatively stable, with gasoline prices decreasing by 10.8% in the PPI and diesel fuel costs dropping by 8.2%. Additionally, the weak new homebuilding market has eased pressure on construction materials. Softwood lumber prices declined 8.2%, while plywood and gypsum saw slight gains of 0.6% and 0.5%, respectively. Particle board and oriented strandboard (OSB) prices retreated significantly, falling 28.5%. …Two key PPI sub-indices reveal broader trends in construction material prices. The “inputs to new construction” series rose 3.5% year-over-year, while the “construction materials special index” climbed a steeper 6.2%. These figures indicate that some materials are experiencing sharp price hikes, particularly those affected by tariffs.

Read More

Suzano reports Q4, 2025 net income of $R116 million

Reuters in Trading View
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Brazilian pulp maker Suzano posted a core profit and a net revenue for the fourth quarter above analysts’ expectations, while also announcing a new share buyback program and its market pulp strategy for the year. Core profit, or adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), stood at 5.58 billion reais, down 14% year-on-year. Suzano attributed the core profit fall to a lower average net pulp price and the depreciation of the US dollar against the Brazilian real in the period. Net profit of 116 million reais reversed a 6.7 billion real loss, on the back of lower net financial expenses. Net revenue fell 8% to 13.1 billion reais. Volumes of pulp sold by Suzano rose 4% to 3.4 million metric tons; paper sales increased 10% to about 474,000 tons.

Read More

Russia timber industry under pressure after 2.5% lumber output drop

Wood & Panel Europe
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Russia’s lumber industry is entering a period of sustained pressure as production volumes continue to fall and regulatory risks increase. Official data shows that lumber output declined by more than 2.5% last year, reinforcing concerns across the forestry and wood processing sectors. According to Rosstat, Russia’s lumber production dropped from 29.2 million cubic metres in 2024 to 28.48 million cubic metres in 2025. Output remains well below historical highs. Current production is estimated to be 2 to 3 million cubic metres lower than the 2019 peak of roughly 32 million cubic metres. The downturn reflects structural challenges rather than short-term disruption. Domestic demand has weakened. Export markets have narrowed. Access to European machinery and technology has been reduced. These pressures are being felt across both logging and downstream processing operations. China now absorbs more than 70% of Russia’s lumber exports. …Softwood lumber production fell by 3.5% last year. Output declined to 25.7 million cubic metres. 

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

The latest issue of the Wood Design & Building Magazine is now available!

The Canadian Wood Council
February 10, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

The newest issue of Wood Design & Building magazine is now available — and it’s another strong showcase of innovation, performance, and beauty in wood construction. This edition features projects that push design and logistics boundaries, including a helicopter-access alpine cabin in British Columbia, a thoughtfully designed community hall in Nova Scotia, and in-depth analysis on the real-world costs and competitiveness of mass timber. As always, the magazine — published by the Canadian Wood Council — blends architecture, engineering, and forest sector insight, highlighting how wood continues to lead in sustainability, resilience, and smart design. For Tree Frog readers who follow the evolution of mass timber, value-added wood products, and the growing influence of low-carbon construction, this issue offers both inspiration and practical perspective. Worth a read — and worth sharing.

Read More

Forestry

Dr. Jennifer Grenz Wins Lane Anderson Book Award

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A huge congratulations to Dr Jennifer Grenz, Assistant Professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management, for receiving the prestigious Lane Anderson Award for her book, Medicine Wheel for the Planet: A Journey Toward Personal and Ecological Healing. The Lane Anderson Award is an annual award honouring the best non-fiction, science-based Canadian works, recognizing books that deepen public understanding of science and its relevance to contemporary life. Published in 2024, Dr. Grenz’s book received the award in the adult category at a ceremony in Toronto in January. Medicine Wheel for the Planet traces Jennifer’s professional and personal journey as a restoration ecologist, discovering why well-intentioned, science-driven environmental efforts often fall short. Drawing on Indigenous teachings and anecdotal experiences, the part memoir, part manifesto shows a path towards ecological healing as told through the teachings of the Native American sacred symbol: the Medicine Wheel.

Read More

The Wildfire Act needs your input

BC First Nations Forestry Council
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On behalf of the BC Wildfire Service, we are pleased to share this opportunity with First Nations communities. The BC Wildfire Service is in the early stages of policy development to address issues with the Wildfire Act and Regulation that are affecting wildfire operations and public safety in the province. Following the Interim Approach to Implementing the Requirements of Section 3 of the Declaration Act, the BC Wildfire Service is inviting First Nations to join us in dialogue that will shape the outcome of this policy development. We will be hosting three virtual sessions with the intention of hearing your feedback, perspectives, and suggestions for addressing issues with the Wildfire Act. The webinars will be February 10, 12 and 18. For more information, or to request other opportunities to participate such as Government-to-Government discussions, please email BCWS.Engagement@gov.bc.ca.

Read More

Environmental groups sue Ottawa over decade-long failure to map B.C. caribou habitat

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three environmental groups have sued the federal government for allegedly failing to map out critical habitat for B.C.’s threatened caribou. The request for judicial review was filed in the Vancouver Federal Court Monday, Feb. 9 by Wildsight, Stand.earth and Wilderness Committee. …Southern mountain caribou were listed under SARA in 2003. The legislation requires Ottawa to identify what critical habitat a species needs, so it can implement a plan for it to survive and recover. …After a previous round of litigation in 2014, Ottawa said it would finish by the end of the year. More than a decade later, that still hasn’t happened. …By delaying 11 years, the three groups claim Ottawa’s unlawful and unreasonable failure to produce the maps has caused further harm to the threatened caribou herds. …Fully protecting southern mountain caribou could involve curbing logging activity in large swaths of B.C.—something that has worried the province’s forest industry.

Read More

Forests in a changing climate: How the world’s forests are impacted by and are solutions to climate change

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

This article is based on Episode 1 of a three-part series on climate change and forests, on the Forests of the Future podcast. It explores how FSC understands climate change, the difference between mitigation and adaptation, and why accounting for climate risks is becoming essential for sustainable forest management. For the Indigenous peoples in Labrador, caribou have deep cultural significance. “Our whole understanding of our place in the world revolves around our relationship with caribou,” says Valérie Courtois, CEO of Indigenous Leadership Initiative and forestry expert. But recently, elders began noticing something strange. Herds were moving away from the best sources of food. The changed behaviour puzzled researchers and the community, until they noticed the bugs. “Caribou are a really sensitive animal and, like us, they don’t like biting insects,” she says. As climate change raises temperatures, insects are moving further north, pushing the caribou into windier locations with fewer insects. 

Read More

Indigenous communities look to ‘rekindle’ traditional practice of controlled burns

By Lindsay Kelly
Northern Ontario Business
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Elder Edward Perley recalled, as a boy, watching the people of his community conducting controlled burns to keep their forested land healthy. …“If they noticed that there was a piece of the forest somewhere that was diseased, they would go and they would burn that area,” said Perley, a Wolastoqey knowledge keeper and fire keeper from Nekotkuk in New Brunswick. …As climate change warms up the planet, and we experience hotter, more intense fires, Perley and others believe that fire isn’t always something to be feared. It can also be used as a tool to prevent those blazes from causing wider devastation. …Jonathon Cote, a land guardian with Kitigan Zibi Anishinābeg in Quebec, is actively working to bring back the practice to his community and others. …Provincial regulations limiting prescibed burns make it more challenging to be able to use fire in traditional ways, Cote said.

Read More

Pre-fire structure drives variability in post-fire aboveground carbon and fuel profiles in wet temperate forests

By University of Washington
Ecosphere Journal
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Biological legacies (i.e., materials that persist following disturbance; “legacies”) shape ecosystem functioning and feedbacks to future disturbances, yet how legacies are driven by pre-disturbance ecosystem state and disturbance severity is poorly understood—especially in ecosystems influenced by infrequent and severe disturbances. Focusing on wet temperate forests as an archetype of these ecosystems, we characterized live and dead aboveground biomass 2–5 years post-fire in western Washington and northwestern Oregon, USA, to ask: How do pre-fire stand age and burn severity drive variability in initial post-fire legacies, specifically aboveground biomass carbon and fuel profiles? …Our findings demonstrate the importance of pre-disturbance ecosystem state in dictating many aspects of initial post-disturbance structure and function, with important implications for managing post-fire recovery trajectories in some of Earth’s most productive and high-biomass forests.

Read More

Tasmanian logging sites and mill shut down as protests escalate

The Echo
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Twenty forest defenders protested at the Smithton Ta Ann mill yesterday, while more than 100 forest defenders are involved in frontline actions across three sites as part of Bob Brown Foundation’s Forest Resistance Tour. Two treesitters have spent two nights holding off logging in the Lake St Claire area, while other protesters continue to occupy the forests in the Central Highlands. …At the contentious Ta Ann Smithton mill, Anna Markey and Erin Miller are with fellow forest defenders peacefully occupying the mill. ‘I’m here today with BBF to protest the logging of native forests. I am disgusted and terrified that the government here subsidise this foreign company to destroy and profit from our beautiful native forests,’ said Anna Markey, retired schoolteacher and grandparent from Goolwa, South Australia, who is locked on at the Ta Ann mill.

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

For insurers, climate change is just the tip of the iceberg

By Anushka Yadav
Canadian Press in The Canadian Underwriter
February 9, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

With global temperature rising and extreme weather becoming the new normal, ballooning insurance premiums and shrinking coverage are hitting Canadians hard. Basement floods and severe winter storms have brought the financial fallout of climate change home—it is no longer a hypothetical. …“The fact that every insurance company has climate scientists on staff and insurance companies are all pricing in climate risk; there is no financial incentive for them to do that if it wasn’t real,” said Dr. Kate Marvel, a NASA climate scientist. If climate change were a hoax, insurers would simply undercut one another, offering cheaper coverage and dismissing long-term risk, Marvel explained. Instead, they are doing the opposite; quietly rewriting the rules of risk as extreme weather becomes more frequent, more destructive and more expensive. …The question is whether governments will act quickly enough to adapt to a warming climate and confront who pays for the damage when they don’t.

Read More

Canada eyes boosting fines for industrial emissions

By Anne Mulkern
E&E News by Politico
February 10, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Mark Carney

Major Canadian factories and power plants could soon pay more for their planet-warming emissions. Prime Minister Mark Carney is pushing to strengthen a federal policy that forces many industrial, manufacturing and electricity-generating facilities to reduce their carbon intensity. The aim is, in part, to make up the emissions reductions lost when Carney ended a carbon tax on gasoline, diesel and natural gas consumption. Carney’s administration is already negotiating potential rule changes with oil-rich Alberta, a province responsible for about a quarter of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions. The two aim to agree on changes by April 1. But with many provinces using their own carbon-pricing system, changing the federal standards could be politically difficult, experts said. Canada’s 10 provinces and three territories regulate several hundred factories and power plants. [to access the full story an E&E News subscription is required]

Read More

Trump EPA set to repeal scientific finding that serves as basis for US climate change policy

The Associated Press
February 10, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday will revoke a scientific finding that long has been the central basis for US action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change, the White House announced. The Environmental Protection Agency will issue a final rule rescinding a 2009 government declaration known as the endangerment finding. That Obama-era policy determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare. …White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said… the action “will save $1.3 trillion in crushing regulations,” she said. …The endangerment 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. It is used to justify regulations, such as auto emissions standards, intended to protect against threats made increasingly severe by climate change — deadly floods, extreme heat waves, catastrophic wildfires and other natural disasters.

In related coverage by:

Read More