Trump administration cancels funding crucial to landmark federal climate report

The Trump administration is quietly gutting the government’s most important climate science program, a move that could cripple efforts to prepare for global warming.

Zack Colman reports for Politico.


In short:

  • The Trump administration is terminating funding for the U.S. Global Change Research Program, ending the cross-agency work that results in the National Climate Assessment, a report issued every four years to inform U.S. climate policy.
  • The move severs coordination between 13 federal agencies tasked with producing the legally mandated report, threatening the next edition due in 2027.
  • Several federal employees tied to the program have been fired, and critics say this aligns with Trump’s broader push to undercut science that challenges its deregulatory agenda.

Key quote:

“NASA is working with OSTP on how to best support the congressionally-mandated program while also increasing efficiencies across the 14 agencies and advisory committee supporting this effort.”

— NASA spokesperson in a statement

Why this matters:

The National Climate Assessment was supposed to be the country’s climate reality check — a blunt, science-backed answer to a burning question: What will climate change actually do to our lives, our cities, our food, our health? Now, the Trump administration is pulling the plug on the U.S. Global Change Research Program, the very backbone of the NCA. Without the National Climate Assessment, the government would lose an important, comprehensive resource for climate mitigation as well as anticipating and responding to climate impacts, including on water resources, agriculture, energy and transportation infrastructure, housing, and human health.

Read more:

Snowy owl in winter plumage flying over a non-winter landscape
Credit: Manoj Balotia/Unsplash

Species slowdown: Is nature’s ability to self-repair stalling?

When scientists recently analyzed hundreds of studies of ecosystems, they were surprised to see a marked slowing in the rate of species turnover. If new species don’t replace old ones, they say, ecosystems may have less flexibility to respond to habitat loss and climate change.
Power plant discharging smoke and dirty orange air obscuring the sun
Credit: Mikhail Dudarev/BigStock Photo ID: 14021453

Opinion: Chokehold: The Trump administration’s stealth plan to unleash poisonous air

The EPA stopped valuing the lives it could save​​, setting up a deregulatory disaster that will be hazardous to your health.
Bleached out cow skull with horns intact against a dry earth background

Nature report, killed by Trump, is released independently

A draft assessment of the health of nature in the United States is grim but shot through with bright spots and possibility.
Healthy coral reef and associated fish

How protecting nature could make the world safer

Debt-for-nature swaps and conservation funds to halt biodiversity loss are gaining traction as governments link ecosystem collapse to geopolitical instability.
A gavel sitting on a judge's desk

The Supreme Court case that could end local climate suits

Nearly a dozen states are suing the oil and gas industry over climate. The fossil fuel industry is pushing back.
An aerial view of San Francisco

Trump may have inadvertently invited a wave of climate action from blue states

The administration’s decision to rescind the Obama-era endangerment finding undercuts its own legal arguments against state-level climate superfund laws.
Computer generated 3D illustration with oil pumps, solar panels and wind turbines.
Credit: MIRO3D/BigStock Photo ID: 147195269

Texas seizes the solar crown from California, and other key points from the latest electricity data

Utility-scale solar soared in 2025 across the country; coal also grew, while natural gas was down.
From our Newsroom
Multiple Houston-area oil and gas facilities that have violated pollution laws are seeking permit renewals

Multiple Houston-area oil and gas facilities that have violated pollution laws are seeking permit renewals

One facility has emitted cancer-causing chemicals into waterways at levels up to 520% higher than legal limits.

Regulators are underestimating health impacts from air pollution: Study

Regulators are underestimating health impacts from air pollution: Study

"The reality is, we are not exposed to one chemical at a time.”

Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro speaks with the state flag and American flag behind him.

Two years into his term, has Gov. Shapiro kept his promises to regulate Pennsylvania’s fracking industry?

A new report assesses the administration’s progress and makes new recommendations

silhouette of people holding hands by a lake at sunset

An open letter from EPA staff to the American public

“We cannot stand by and allow this to happen. We need to hold this administration accountable.”

wildfire retardants being sprayed by plane

New evidence links heavy metal pollution with wildfire retardants

“The chemical black box” that blankets wildfire-impacted areas is increasingly under scrutiny.

Stay informed: sign up for The Daily Climate newsletter
Top news on climate impacts, solutions, politics, drivers. Delivered to your inbox week days.