Saturday, January 25, 2025

Trump's climate whiplash

A look back at a dizzying week |
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Bloomberg

Today's newsletter looks back at President Donald Trump's nonstop stream of executive orders this week and what they mean for US climate progress. You can read and share the full story on Bloomberg.com. For more climate and energy news, please subscribe 

Trump's Week One ended with a heap of climate rollbacks

By Zahra Hirji

President Donald Trump wasted no time in laying the groundwork for a sweeping anti-climate agenda, signing a series of executive orders just hours after being sworn into office that seek to unravel former President Joe Biden's policies and double down on fossil fuel extraction.

President Donald Trump raises a fist after signing executive orders at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC, on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.  Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg

That was just the beginning. The rest of the week brought even more executive orders, vows to shrink or dismantle the Federal Emergency Management Agency and more. "It is all happening very fast," says Michael Burger, executive director of Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law.

The dizzying pace of announcements gives the impression that the nation's entire climate landscape has changed in less than a week, even when that's not entirely true, explains Burger. While much has indeed happened, he says, "lots of these things are not actually doing what they sound like they're doing — they're telling others to look into things and come back with a plan to pursue a broad policy." Ultimately, whether or not most things take effect and then stay in place will likely be determined in the courts.

Here's a quick overview of some of the most notable climate-related actions so far:

Paris Agreement exit

In one of Trump's first acts, he signed an order directing the US to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, the deal that nearly 200 countries signed to rein in greenhouse gas emissions to avoid catastrophic warming. Trump did this the last time he was in office too, and no other country followed. It will take at least a year for the move to become official. Environmental leaders have decried the withdrawal, which could give other blocs and nations, especially China, more leverage in global climate talks. 

Trump also revoked the US International Climate Finance plan, which had directed billions to help other countries respond to climate impacts.

IRA spending paused

Via executive order, Trump directed agencies to "immediately pause" and review the spending of money through the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, two major Biden-era laws. The next day, the administration clarified that the pause only relates to energy-related programs, including ones tied to renewable energy and electric vehicle charging but not, say, bridges or highways. The pause is expected to last 90 days, after which federal officials have been directed to share their reviews with the White House and provide recommendations on next steps to take. 

It's unclear what will happen after the pause, and climate experts say there are sure to be legal fights over any attempts to claw back spending.

National energy emergency declaration

In a first-of-its-kind maneuver, Trump on Monday declared a national energy emergency. The executive order prioritizes fossil fuels, hydropower, biofuels and nuclear over other energy sources. Because the nation has been producing record levels of oil and gas, calling an emergency is "a farce," says Alan Krupnick, a senior fellow at the nonprofit research institution Resources for the Future. But the move does have "real impacts," Krupnick says, because the president is directing federal agencies to tap into emergency powers that can give them more discretion to "disregard or reduce regard for environmental damages" during specific energy-related project reviews, such as for pipelines. If that happens, expect environmental groups to sue. 

Electric vehicles targeted

As part of his broader energy order, Trump ordered his administration to look into the elimination of subsidies and other policies supporting electric vehicles. In particular, he stated his interest in terminating "state emissions waivers that function to limit sales of gasoline-powered automobiles." This signals Trump is looking to renew his first-term challenge of California's ability to limit gas-powered car sales.

Some wind and solar project approvals halted

The Interior Department on Monday ordered a 60-day halt in approval of leases, rights of way and other authorizations tied to wind and solar projects on federal lands and waters. In a separate move, Trump signed an executive order, also on Monday, that temporarily halts permitting for new offshore wind projects. Trump has been vocal about his dislike of wind for years, and experts anticipated his targeting of the energy source this time around.

Wind turbines at the San Gorgonio Pass wind farm in Whitewater, California, in 2021.  Photographer: Bing Guan/Bloomberg

LNG export ban lifted

In sharp contrast to his actions on renewable energy and electric vehicles, Trump immediately moved to lift a Biden-era ban on new liquefied natural gas export licenses. In late December, the Biden administration released a study finding additional exports would raise natural gas prices for US consumers and worsen global warming. Trump similarly revoked offshore oil and gas leasing bans, though it's unclear how soon new offshore lease sales would occur.

Environmental justice dropped

Trump not only overturned Biden-era executive orders directing federal agencies to further consider environmental justice in everything they do, but revoked a 1994 Clinton-era executive order on the issue. The impacts of these rollbacks are tricky to determine: This is partly because agencies may have built environmental justice considerations into their regulations, and undoing that could require new, slow regulatory changes, notes Alice Kaswan, a law professor at the University of San Francisco. One clear immediate impact, though, is the expected shuttering of various environmental justice offices and positions across government. 

American Climate Corps canceled

Biden created the American Climate Corps, a program designed to get young people working in climate-related starter jobs across the country. This week, Trump dissolved it. It's unclear if and how this affects people already in jobs they got through the program, which didn't start from scratch but was built from and embedded within an existing network of job programs run by state and national partners.

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Offshore wind chilled

29%
That's how much BloombergNEF analysts cut their projections for US offshore wind from 2024 to 2035 after Trump won the presidential election in November.

What Trump is saying 

   I terminated the ridiculous and incredibly wasteful Green New Deal — I call it the "Green New Scam"; withdrew from the one-sided Paris climate accord; and ended the insane and costly electric vehicle mandate. We're going to let people buy the car they want to buy. 
President Donald Trump
Speaking via teleconference at Davos on Thursday

What else we learned this week

  1. Areas abandoned after a fire can become more flammable. Any increased vegetation in the spot is dangerous. Some parts of the Mediterranean that depopulated have led to more severe wildfires in later years.
  2. Indonesia's forests have historically been a net carbon source. Deforestation in the country has led to the emitting of more than 300 million tons a year on average between 2001 and 2023, according to Global Forest Watch.
  3. China broke its own record in installing renewable power. The world's second-largest economy added roughly 277 gigawatts of solar last year, surpassing the previous year's record of 217 gigawatts, the National Energy Administration sai.
  4. Brazil COP30 has a new chief in charge. President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva named Andre Correa do Lago, the secretary of energy and environment at Brazil's foreign affairs ministry, as head of the annual UN Climate Change Conference.
  5. The UK government is fighting over Heathrow Airport's future. Prime Minister Keir Starmer's plans to green-light a third runway at the London airport risks triggering a damaging split within his governing Labour Party amid concerns about its potential impact on the environment, growth and regional inequality. 
Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

Worth your time

Every year, hundreds of firefighters, planes and other equipment crisscross the globe to quell infernos on foreign soil as part of regular exchanges between nations including the US, Canada, Australia and South Africa. But climate change is starting to upend that long tradition of international collaboration.

For decades, wildfires have followed a predictable pattern. They burn most intensely from around July through September in the Northern Hemisphere before shifting to the Southern Hemisphere from December through March. As the planet warms, however, what were once discrete fire seasons are becoming one blurry, ash-filled year. That's forcing governments to weigh commitments to help each other against their own national interests. And it's kicked off a resource scramble that's boosted a multibillion-dollar fire industry for everything from planes to trucks and protective equipment. Read more of this story on Bloomberg.com.

A Super Scooper drops ocean water on a hillside as the Palisades fire rages in California earlier this month. Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

Weekend listening

As Donald Trump returns to the White House, Akshat Rathi speaks to Yale University historian Paul Sabin about whether recent presidential history might hold some lessons on what to expect from the Trump administration's approach to energy and environmental policy this term. Looking back at the Carter and Reagan years, Sabin says Trump's priorities — from dismantling government agencies to ramping up oil and gas production — have historical precedent. And Jonathan Lash, who was an environmental lawyer in the Reagan years, explains why he's feeling déjà vu in these early days of Trump's second term.  Listen now, and subscribe on Apple,  Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

Readers really liked 

Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

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