State of Indiana

10/02/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/02/2025 07:21

Attorney General Rokita, IDEM champion EPA’s rollback of terrible regulations to boost Hoosier economy, cut red tape

Attorney General Rokita, IDEM champion EPA's
rollback of terrible regulationsto
boost Hoosier economy, cut red tape

Attorney General Todd Rokita and Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) Commissioner Clint Woodsare championing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) plan to repeal burdensome and ineffective climate regulationsfor cars and trucksthat hurt Hoosiers and the economy. These regulations, which cost Americans $54 billion annually, reston the ObamaEPA's controversial 2009 decision to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.

Attorney General Rokita said these regulations restrictHoosiers' ability to access affordable, reliable vehicles and hurtIndiana'ssmall businesses in themanufacturing and industrial industries.

"Theserules are abureaucratic power grab that burdens hardworking Hoosiersand families with unaffordable regulations," Rokita said. "By scrapping it, the EPA would be restoring commonsense, the rule of law, and American energy independence. We fully support the rollback to restore polices that put our country back on the path to prosperityand protect Hoosier workers."

The letter, submittedlast week, argues the Obama EPA misused a statute that Congress designed in the 1960s and 1970s to tackle local problems like smog, not global warming. Recent Supreme Court decisions have made clear that EPA cannot regulate carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gasesbased on speculative concerns about their indirect effects on the environment.

Attorney General Rokita added that the rule's science is shaky, relying on outdated predictions that overstate CO2's impact. Even if the U.S. stopped all car emissions, it wouldn'tnoticeably change global temperatures. Meanwhile, these rules inflate car prices by thousands, hitting low-income Hoosiers hardest and keeping older, dirtier vehicles on the road.

As Indiana's lead environmental regulator, Commissioner Woods emphasized IDEM's success in balancing air quality gains with economic growth.

"The U.S. EPA's 2009 Endangerment Finding and its resulting greenhouse gas regulations exceed the Agency's limited authority under the Clean Air Act and suffer from significant scientific, procedural, and legal defects," said IDEM Commissioner Woods. "Given Indiana's primary responsibility for air pollution control, its proven track record of improving air quality, and its bottom-up success in reducing greenhouse gases without federal overreach, IDEM strongly supports reconsidering these heavy-handed standards that impose costs on Hoosiers without delivering measurable environmental benefits."

In July, U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin visited Indianapolis to announce the proposal on U.S. energy policy and deregulation.

Read the joint letter here.

A headshot of Attorney General Rokita is available for download.

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