To help the struggling coal industry, President Trump used his executive authority to try to keep aging plants alive and burn more coal for electricity.
The moves include loosening environmental rules, but it is unclear how much they can help reverse the sharp decline in coal power over the last two decades.
President Trump signed several executive orders on Tuesday aimed at reviving the coal industry. But a major coal revival seems unlikely, some analysts say.
President Trump may be turning relations with NATO and Russia inside out, but winter war games revealed that two militariesβ cooperation was unchanged.
Gutting the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program would effectively leave the federal government blind when it comes to identifying and measuring sources of pollution that are dangerously heating the planet.
New warnings from financial firms and insurers point to a future defined by profound risks to the global economy from heat, storms and other disasters.
After halting federal attempts to combat global warming, President Trump is now targeting efforts by states to reduce greenhouse gases, setting up a legal clash.
President Trumpβs executive order appeared to be directed at state measures that limit use of fossil fuels or hold fossil fuel companies liable for environmental damage.
The cuts included funding for a collaborative program between NOAA and Princeton University. One of the programβs meteorologists, Syukuro Manabe, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2021.
To help the struggling coal industry, President Trump used his executive authority to try to keep aging plants alive and burn more coal for electricity.