Major reports about how climate change affects the US are removed from websites
- The Trump administration removed the National Climate Assessment website, which provided information about climate change effects in the US.
- Congress requires the federal government to publish the National Climate Assessment every four years, and the next edition was due in 2027.
- An archived version of the original website is available through the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine tool.
80 Articles
80 Articles
Letters to the Editor: Trump’s suppression of climate change science will have devastating long-term effects
'President Trump doesn't just stop at modifying near-term energy policies,' writes an L.A. Times reader. 'He chooses instead to bury the very data that we need to inform our long-term strategies for protecting our planet.'
Federal climate website goes dark as Trump administration promises policy reset
The federal website hosting U.S. climate assessments has been inaccessible, with White House stating reports will move to NASA amid Trump administration's shift toward climate realism.
Scientists are embracing activism as climate threats mount and public trust erodes
Amid mounting attacks on science and worsening climate threats, more U.S. scientists are rejecting political neutrality and stepping into the arena.Ruxandra Guidi writes for High Country News.In short:Hundreds of U.S. scientists have been laid off from key federal agencies in Trump’s second term, gutting climate programs just as states brace for extreme weather.Many researchers, once hesitant to appear political, now see activism as a moral obli…
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Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources lean Left, 45% of the sources are Center
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