white and red wooden house miniature on brown table with keys

Mortgage giants face growing climate risk with little protective action

Rising flood and wildfire risks are threatening U.S. housing values, but Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have taken minimal steps to shield themselves and taxpayers from potential financial fallout.

Lydia DePillis reports for The New York Times.


In short:

  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac back half of U.S. mortgages, but climate-related disasters are increasing risks to their portfolios.
  • Efforts to address these risks are stalled due to concerns over raising housing costs for low-income homeowners in vulnerable areas.
  • The Federal Housing Finance Agency has offered limited guidance, leaving Fannie and Freddie unprepared for escalating climate threats.

Key quote:

“We’ve got this mortgage-generating machine that is just moving blindly on without taking into account these risks.”

— Susan Crawford, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Why this matters:

Unaddressed climate risks could destabilize the mortgage system, forcing taxpayer bailouts. Homes in flood- and fire-prone areas may lose value, affecting homeowners and lenders alike. Without reforms, vulnerable communities may face rising costs and financial losses.

Learn more: Rising insurance costs linked to climate change spark mortgage troubles

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Disaster aid cuts raise fears of post-Katrina failures as hurricane risks grow

A generation after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, survivors and experts warn that sweeping cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) under President Trump could leave the U.S. dangerously unprepared for future climate-driven disasters.

Dharna Noor reports for The Guardian.

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New Orleans children carry Hurricane Katrina’s trauma into adulthood

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Kathleen Schuster reports for Deutsche Welle.

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Local emergency alert systems often go unused, with deadly results

As extreme weather and climate-driven disasters intensify, many local officials fail to send lifesaving warnings through a federal emergency alert system designed to quickly reach people in harm’s way.

Jennifer Berry Hawes reports for ProPublica.

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Democrats target Trump’s energy law as driver of rising electricity bills

Democrats are blaming Republican-backed rollbacks of clean energy programs for rising electricity costs as they craft a midterm campaign strategy around energy prices.

Nico Portuondo reports for E&E News.

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Oil and gas firms press Carney to scale back climate rules as Canada weighs emissions plan update

Oil and gas companies have lobbied Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government to roll back key Trudeau-era climate policies ahead of an expected update to Canada’s Emissions Reduction Plan.

Carl Meyer reports for The Narwhal.

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U.S. tariffs hit Indian solar exports as domestic market faces pressure to absorb surplus

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Somini Sengupta reports for The New York Times.

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Koch-funded campaign ramps up fight against Vermont’s clean energy laws

A national conservative group backed by oil money is spending heavily to weaken Vermont’s climate policies, challenging the state’s efforts to curb fossil fuel use.

Austyn Gaffney reports for Grist in partnership with VTDigger.

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