Federal Court Blocks Trump-Era EPA Attempt to Roll Back Soot Rules
A federal appeals court has delivered a sharp rebuke to the Trump administration’s deregulatory agenda, unanimously rejecting an attempt by the Environmental Protection Agency to scrap stricter national soot standards. The ruling preserves a 2024 policy that forces coal plants and factories to slash fine particulate matter emissions.

The three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit maintained the current limit on soot, which restricts fine particulate matter to 9 micrograms per cubic meter, down from the previous 12. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin had sought to invalidate these requirements, arguing that the Biden-era mandate bypassed economic considerations and exceeded federal authority.
Public health advocates cheered the decision as a vital victory for communities living near industrial pollution sources. Patrice Simms of Earthjustice noted that the 2024 standard remains a critical tool for preventing premature deaths linked to toxic air. Medical professionals, including Katie Huffing of the Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments, emphasized that the court’s move directly impacts the prevalence of asthma, heart disease, and other chronic conditions treated in clinical settings daily. By upholding the standard, the court forces the EPA to move forward with implementation rather than continuing its efforts to dismantle the environmental protections.
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