Trump Is Leading an ‘All-Out Assault’ on the Climate

March 10, 2025

It’s no secret that Donald Trump has zero interest in fighting climate change and enthusiastically supports the fossil fuel industry. Trump’s 2024 victory was expected to set the climate fight back, but in less than two months, his administration has already done irreparable harm to efforts to address climate change. This can primarily be seen in key agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

For example, the EPA is currently working on rewriting its finding from 2009 that has been critical for regulating greenhouse gases. This was initiated by an executive order Trump issued on his first day in office. The so-called “Endangerment Finding,” which has been unsuccessfully challenged in court multiple times, says that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare. It allows the EPA, under the Clean Air Act, to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. If the finding were to be watered down or essentially done away with, that would largely take the EPA out of the climate fight.

“Revisiting and potentially reversing the Endangerment Finding could be the most drastic step that the Trump Administration will take on climate,” says Barry Rabe, a professor emeritus of environmental policy at the University of Michigan. “It would upend a consensus running across prior presidencies and the courts, underpinning a range of domestic policy steps and global ones.”

Michael Gerrard, a climate law professor at Columbia University, tells Rolling Stone that rewriting the Endangerment Finding would mean that the EPA would no longer be able to regulate emissions from power plants or motor vehicles. He says the finding is the “legal basis for most of what the EPA does under the Clean Air Act to regulate climate change.”

At the NOAA, the Trump administration is firing hundreds of workers and looks intent on closing some of its most important offices. The NOAA does critical work on climate science and weather monitoring, which is needed when extreme weather events hit. Its weather forecasting models are also what power everyone’s weather apps, so the private sector can’t just easily step in and pick up the slack. Gerrard says the agency is being “decimated” with these firings. 

 

Search

RECENT PRESS RELEASES