President Joe Biden's major domestic policies, including infrastructure and climate change laws, will continue to affect Americans after he leaves office.
Executive orders and announcements by President Trump have put billions of dollars in U.S. climate commitments into question.
For more than a century, conservation policy has focused on economic development and wisely using natural resources.
The members of the Young Lawyer Editorial Board hope that this article will provide a “judicial elections refresher” to our fellow attorneys so that we all may be well-informed voters and continue to educate and empower our friends,
Some of the moves could have major effects for climate change and climate technologies—for example, one of the first orders Trump signed signaled his intention to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, the major international climate treaty.
In an executive order last week, the Trump administration called for a pause on handing out the funds that are legally set aside under the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. That includes hundreds of billions of dollars for climate research and infrastructure.
Federal grants "are investments," a veteran researcher explains, and cutting them will endanger people's lives here and elsewhere.
The stock market has largely tuned out the noise as the new administration carries out what may be the largest reorganization of government since Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The U.S. Transportation Department said on Wednesday it plans to rescind a climate rule adopted by the administration of former President Joe Biden requiring states to measure and set declining targets for greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles using the national highway system.
An agreement between four Native American Tribes, two states, and the U.S. government unlocks investments that can restore salmon runs and meet growing energy demands in the Snake River Basin—and will do so in ways that reinvest in rural communities and honor treaty obligations to Native American Tribes.
When Joe Biden first became president, some found it hard to believe that he cared very much about climate change.
It’s no secret that conservatives have developed a disdain for the democratic institutions that make up the United States. This has been proven by a new ludicrous attempt by Republican lawmakers to allow Donald Trump to run for a third term in 2028.