EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced a major rollback of Biden-era refrigerant regulations this week, declaring the move will save Americans an estimated $2.4 billion annually by lowering the cost of transporting, storing, and refrigerating goods nationwide. Standing alongside President Donald Trump during the May 21 announcement, Zeldin argued that the previous administration’s environmental mandates imposed crushing compliance costs on supermarkets, trucking companies, warehouses, and refrigeration industries already struggling under inflation and rising operational expenses.

The Trump administration’s decision specifically targets portions of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule and related hydrofluorocarbon phase-down regulations that officials say forced businesses into expensive equipment upgrades with little regard for immediate economic consequences. Zeldin emphasized during a televised CNN interview that the administration is prioritizing affordability, energy reliability, and job protection over what he described as rushed and unrealistic climate policies pushed by the Biden White House, warning that excessive regulation ultimately drives up grocery prices for working Americans.

Supporters of the rollback praised the administration for moving aggressively to reduce costs across the supply chain at a time when many families remain frustrated by stubbornly high food prices and economic pressure. Trump allies framed the policy shift as another example of the administration reversing burdensome federal mandates to revive American industry, stabilize consumer costs, and restore what they call practical, commonsense governance after years of heavy-handed environmental regulation.