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Wall Street regulators scrap climate regulation of Biden's time

According to an 'notice' on the US. Budget office website.

The Securities and Exchange Commission made the move a year ago, after refusing to say to a federal judge whether it intended to either change the rule or defend its 2024 regulations from industry-backed legal challenges which 'dogged' the agency’s rule-making under the previous administration. Donald Trump has rejected 'the scientific consensus regarding climate change, and his administration is moving to undo the?related regulations that were adopted by former president Joe Biden.

Paul Atkins, SEC chair, said in a statement that the agency is working to rescind this rule and return to the SEC’s “core mandate” of requiring corporate disclosures to focus on information material to investors. He said that was "in accordance with its legal authority." The SEC, under former president Joe Biden adopted watered down rules that required publicly traded companies tell investors about climate related?risks and emissions, and expenditure. Republican-led state and an industry group immediately challenged this in court. The SEC then'stayed' the rule until the court battles were resolved. In March last year, under 'Republican President Donald Trump,' the SEC decided to stop defending the rule in court. Industry and conservative critics claimed that the SEC had exceeded its legal authority. The appeals court suspended the case.

After the Office of?Management?and Budget finishes reviewing the draft regulations of the SEC, the SEC could?act? on the proposal. Uncertain is the timeline for final decision. Reporting by Douglas Gillison, Washington; editing by Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)