Under Trump's EPA, a New Math on Human Health Emerges
The Environmental Protection Agency is pushing to redefine how it calculates the value of human health in terms of dollars and cents.
In recent months, the agency has begun phasing out the practice of assigning monetary values to lives saved and hospital visits avoided by air pollution regulations. This shift towards a new math puts people over profits, but critics fear it may come at a cost to public health.
The decision comes as part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to weaken environmental regulations. As one former EPA official put it, "It really illustrates what the ulterior motive is – and that's to mute or mask the true impact of [particulate matter] exposure."
The agency will no longer tally up the dollar value of lives saved when setting pollution limits for pollutants like fine particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) and ozone.
Instead, the EPA is expected to ignore the economic benefits of regulations and focus solely on their costs. Experts warn this new approach will likely skew the balance towards less stringent rules, allowing industries to operate with greater impunity.
"This change in math is part of a broader pattern at the EPA – and across the federal government – of just measuring and counting fewer things under the second Trump Administration," said one expert. "With less data on science and economics, agencies like the EPA have less accountability for their actions as they face more pressure from the White House to cut regulations."
Critics argue that this shift in approach could lead to worsening air quality and a significant increase in premature deaths due to pollution.
"Every year in the United States alone, air pollution pushes 135,000 people into early graves," said Janet McCabe, who served as the EPA's deputy administrator under President Joe Biden. "There is a lot of science that shows very clearly that being exposed to increasing levels of PM2.5 has significant health impacts."
As the EPA continues down this path, it seems increasingly likely that air pollution will escalate and public health will suffer.
The Environmental Protection Agency is pushing to redefine how it calculates the value of human health in terms of dollars and cents.
In recent months, the agency has begun phasing out the practice of assigning monetary values to lives saved and hospital visits avoided by air pollution regulations. This shift towards a new math puts people over profits, but critics fear it may come at a cost to public health.
The decision comes as part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to weaken environmental regulations. As one former EPA official put it, "It really illustrates what the ulterior motive is – and that's to mute or mask the true impact of [particulate matter] exposure."
The agency will no longer tally up the dollar value of lives saved when setting pollution limits for pollutants like fine particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) and ozone.
Instead, the EPA is expected to ignore the economic benefits of regulations and focus solely on their costs. Experts warn this new approach will likely skew the balance towards less stringent rules, allowing industries to operate with greater impunity.
"This change in math is part of a broader pattern at the EPA – and across the federal government – of just measuring and counting fewer things under the second Trump Administration," said one expert. "With less data on science and economics, agencies like the EPA have less accountability for their actions as they face more pressure from the White House to cut regulations."
Critics argue that this shift in approach could lead to worsening air quality and a significant increase in premature deaths due to pollution.
"Every year in the United States alone, air pollution pushes 135,000 people into early graves," said Janet McCabe, who served as the EPA's deputy administrator under President Joe Biden. "There is a lot of science that shows very clearly that being exposed to increasing levels of PM2.5 has significant health impacts."
As the EPA continues down this path, it seems increasingly likely that air pollution will escalate and public health will suffer.