KEY POINTS
  • President Trump will continue to weaken environmental regulations on industries if reelected in November, the EPA's Andrew Wheeler told The Wall Street Journal. 
  • The administration would establish a cost-benefit analysis of any new regulation and expand the use of "science transparency" to justify new regulations. 
  • After three years in office, the administration sought to reverse more than 100 major environmental rules that it has deemed burdensome to the fossil fuel industry, even as climate change accelerates. 
  • Analysts say many of the administration's rollbacks could increase emissions and lead to thousands of additional deaths from bad air quality.  
Andrew Wheeler, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), speaks during a Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing, May 20, 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

President Donald Trump will move to weaken more environmental regulations on industries if reelected in November, while work to complete Superfund cleanup projects, according to Environmental Protection Agency administrator Andrew Wheeler. 

The Trump administration in a second term would establish a cost-benefit analysis of any new regulation and expand the use of "science transparency" in order to justify the science behind implementing new regulations, Wheeler said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. The EPA also plans to continue working on cleanup efforts at Superfund sites that have gotten delayed.