Trump administration wants to axe all of NOAA’s climate research
UNITED STATES, JUL 1 – NOAA's 2026 budget proposal would cut $1.8 billion and reduce staff by 17%, ending funding for key climate research labs and cooperative institutes nationwide.
- In February 2025, NOAA terminated around 800 probationary staff members, leading to a class-action lawsuit that alleges the dismissals were based on faulty performance evaluations.
- These firings followed a background of proposed budget cuts aiming to reduce NOAA’s workforce by about 17% and eliminate climate research programs.
- NOAA intends to reduce its budget by more than $1.8 billion, which includes shutting down research facilities such as the long-established Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory located in Miami.
- James Franklin noted these labs support hurricane forecasting models, and Alan Gerard criticized the budget as an attempt to "completely abandon climate science."
- The cuts and firings could impair NOAA’s scientific progress and public safety roles, while terminated employees face challenges due to classified performance-related separations.
31 Articles
31 Articles
Trump Administration Acts to ‘Severely Weaken’ a Key Environmental Law - Inside Climate News
The White House said changes issued under the National Environmental Policy Act would simplify an “overly burdensome process.” Critics accused agencies of gutting the law.By Kiley Bense, Wyatt MyskowThe Trump administration began this week to radically alter how the National Environmental Policy Act is implemented across the federal government, alarming environmentalists.


Trump’s NOAA budget proposes eliminating funding for six Colorado climate and science labs
A budget proposal by President Donald Trump's administration for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, would slash funding for climate and earth sciences labs in Colorado.
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