Trump’s Assault on the Environment Has Been Even Worse Than Experts Predicted

January 6, 2026

Donald Trump has been on a vendetta against “windmills” — and, really, any form of clean energy — for many years. He has close ties to the fossil fuel industry, essentially telling them he’d do whatever they want if they gave his presidential campaign $1 billion. We knew Trump’s first year back in office would be a disaster for the climate — but experts say the scope of the damage has exceeded their worst fears. 

Like the Los Angeles fires at the start of 2025, which were fueled by climate change, the damage that has been done has been overwhelming and brutal. 

“I think that a lot of these actions were straight out of the Project 2025 playbook,” Jennifer Duggan, executive director of the Environmental Integrity Project, tells Rolling Stone. “I think that what has been surprising or shocking has been the speed and the scope and just the complete disregard for the rule of law.” 

One of the most recent examples came in December, when Russell Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget and one of the architects of Project 2025, announced that the Trump administration was dismantling the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. The climate research center provided essential data for climate scientists — playing a key role in everything from weather forecasting to flight safety. Vought called it a source of “climate alarmism.”

The administration has meanwhile been canceling major renewable energy projects in numerous states, which has set up various court battles. It plans to lower fuel efficiency standards for motor vehicles, which are one of the primary sources of carbon emissions, and the historic climate investments contained in the Inflation Reduction Act were largely dismantled — even though much of the money that was invested went to conservative states. 

The Biden administration had moved to regulate methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, generated by the oil and gas industry, but those regulations may be out the window, too. Dozens and dozens of other environmental regulations have been repealed — often to the benefit of large corporations.

 

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