After weeks of buildup, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) unveiled its strictest-ever rules for power produced using natural gas, coal, and oil that could spur the use of carbon capture technologies.
The standards released on May 11 would impact new and old power infrastructure, including new natural gas turbines and the country’s existing coal fleet. Though the United States still has hundreds of coal plants, the number of such installations has fallen sharply during the past decade.

U.S. Climate Envoy John Kerry in 2021 said America simply “won’t have coal” on its grid by 2030.
More Details from EPA
Regan told reporters that the standards are about “clean air to breathe,” claiming they would yield “substantial health benefits” as well as “regulatory certainty” for the energy sector.The agency projects that the standards will help America avoid thousands of premature deaths, tens of thousands of lost workdays, and over 300,000 asthma attacks just in the year 2030.
Regan and others with the EPA repeatedly stressed that they do not believe their vision runs afoul of West Virginia v. EPA.
That landmark Supreme Court decision, decided 6 to 3, concerned a carbon emissions plan for existing power plants put forth by the EPA under former President Barack Obama.
The court found that Congress hadn’t given the agency the authority to issue such emissions caps, referencing the plan’s “generation shifting approach” from coal to natural gas and other sources.
“The proposed limits and guidelines follow EPA’s traditional approach under the Clean Air Act to control pollution from stationary sources by relying on control technologies that are cost-effective and can be applied directly to power plants to reduce CO2,” an EPA spokesperson told The Epoch Times in a May 10 email.
In its 681-page notice, the agency argued that co-firing hydrogen as a substitute for natural gas can qualify as a “system of emission reduction” under the Clean Air Act. It specified that hydrogen would have to be low-GHG, “the availability of which is expected to increase significantly and the cost of which is expected to decline significantly in the near future.”
“The EPA recognizes that even though the combustion of hydrogen is zero-GHG emitting, its production entails a range of GHG emissions, from low to high, depending on the method,” the proposal reads.
2035 Target for Carbon-Free Electricity Still Viable: Officials
The EPA said their proposal offers “ample lead time and substantial compliance flexibilities.” That might appear to conflict with President Joe Biden’s aim of achieving “a carbon pollution-free electricity sector by 2035,” as expressed in a 2021 executive order.There will be a 60-day comment period once the rule appears in the Federal Register.
The proposals come against a backdrop of various major EPA actions bearing on fossil fuels, including new tailpipe emission standards.
Anger and Skepticism
Ahead of the EPA’s May 11 announcement, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) threw down the gauntlet on the looming proposals.
“Rather than encouraging greater emissions of CO2 to enhance life on Earth, thereby greening the planet, they tell us we must reduce ‘carbon pollution’ to save the climate. But CO2 is anything but pollution. It is an invisible, non-toxic, trace, natural component of the atmosphere, allowing plants, and thus all life on Earth, to thrive,” he added.
Steve Milloy, a former member of the EPA’s transition team under Trump, challenged the idea that the rulemaking is in line with West Virginia v. EPA.
“They [the EPA] can regulate emissions for a variety of reasons, and that’s fine if they’re going to try to do that, but what they can’t do is they can’t use emissions as an excuse to implement a different social agenda,” he told The Epoch Times in an April 27 interview.
Carbon Capture’s Feasibility
Other experts have a different perspective.Yet, carbon capture is key for cutting emissions from at least some sources, according to EPA documentation.

Milloy noted that a similar endeavor launched under Obama in Mississippi, the Kemper project, failed too.
Carbon capture “is not even scientifically developed yet,” James Taylor of the Heartland Institute said in an April 27 interview with The Epoch Times.
Like Milloy, he expects the EPA’s standards to lose in the courtroom.
Yet, both men also believe the proposal’s existence as law for any length of time could lead to serious downstream results. They foresee it effectively forcing behaviorial change from an energy sector that fears the consequences of non-compliance.
“This is a lawless administration imposing a lawless rule that they know is illegal,” Taylor said.
EPA staff on May 10 said that carbon capture systems are demonstrated and ready for immediate deployment. They noted that the carbon capture tax credits in the 2022 Schumer-Manchin bill are crucial to making the technology economically feasible.
They also said such systems are demonstrated and ready for immediate deployment.
Meanwhile, some environmental groups have rejected carbon capture technology altogether.
The EPA’s notice claims the agency “carefully considered the impacts of these proposals on communities with potential environmental justice concerns.”
Other environmental organizations have voiced support for the proposed changes.
