People in white lab coats stand outside with a large blue banner reading "science makes america great."
Credit: Geoff Livingston/Flickr/https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

Trump’s anti-science crusade threatens America’s climate readiness

President Trump is gutting climate science programs across the government, crippling our ability to track — let alone respond to — the unfolding climate crisis.

Scott Waldman reports for E&E News.


In short:

  • Hundreds of federal climate scientists have been fired or sidelined, and programs essential for tracking global warming — from NASA satellites to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency climate monitoring — are being dismantled.
  • The administration justifies the cuts as cost-saving, but many of the targeted programs are inexpensive and critical for everything from hurricane forecasting to public health.
  • New rules would give political appointees the power to decide what science the government can use, echoing Trump’s pandemic-era strategy of suppressing data that contradicts his message.

Key quote:

“They hate science because it leads to regulation, so they want to do everything they can to stop science from being used to regulate.”

— Andrew Dessler, climate scientist at Texas A&M University

Why this matters:

Back when COVID-19 was tearing across the country, President Trump had a go-to move: deny the science, then silence the scientists. His administration has been running the same playbook on climate change — and now the damage is emerging. Stripped of data, expertise, and, often, the ability to communicate openly with the public, public health officials, emergency responders, and frontline communities are left trying to navigate the climate crisis without a complete map.

Read more: Nearly one million US deaths from COVID-19—the grim consequences of sidelining science

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Credit: A. C/Unsplash+

Trump officials quietly tighten control over renewable energy projects on public lands

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Frances Vinall reports for The Washington Post.

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Parks lose ground on clean air as wildfire smoke and budget cuts grow

Air quality across U.S. national parks has improved since the 1990s, but growing wildfire smoke and shrinking federal budgets threaten to reverse those gains.

Niko Kommenda reports for The Washington Post.

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Virginia clean energy advocates question reliability of new federal energy report promoting coal

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Charles Paullin reports for Inside Climate News.

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Trump administration revives plan to open Alaska’s Tongass rainforest to logging

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Ted Williams reports for Yale Environment 360.

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Credit: Lo Lo/Unsplash

Wall Street firms move to buy electric utilities as data centers drive energy demand

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Ivan Penn reports for The New York Times.

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Trump administration halts hydrogen furnace project in polluted Ohio steel town

A plan to replace a coal-fired furnace at an Ohio steel mill with cleaner hydrogen technology has stalled after the Trump administration withdrew key federal support.

Stephen Starr reports for The Guardian.

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