One year into his second term, President Donald Trump aggressively dismantled environmental protections and boosted fossil fuels, slowing U.S. clean energy momentum. However, many actions rely on reversible executive orders amid legal pushback and market-driven renewable growth, limiting their long-term effects.
President Donald Trump's return to the White House in January 2025 prompted a rapid shift toward fossil fuel dominance. He declared a "national energy emergency," filled his cabinet with oil executives and climate skeptics, revived coal production with $625 million in funding, eliminated Biden-era EV tax credits and subsidies, lowered fuel-economy standards from 50 mpg to about 35 mpg by 2031, and eased regulations on oil, gas, and drilling. Congress passed the "Big Beautiful Bill" (or "One Big Beautiful Bill Act"), phasing out tax credits for wind, solar, and EVs while preserving some for nuclear and geothermal. The administration resumed LNG permitting, reopened coastlines including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, issued 6,027 new drilling permits, banned offshore wind leases, killed climate jobs programs, and delayed EPA methane rules.
Internationally, Trump withdrew from the Paris Agreement and the 1992 U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change. Domestically, environmental enforcement reached lows with over 11,500 EPA and Justice Department staff losses, civil cases dropping from 40 to 11, and FEMA hazard mitigation funding halted, creating a billion-dollar backlog. Public lands totaling 88 million acres opened for oil, gas, and logging; tribal programs lost $1.25 billion, affecting solar and microgrids for communities facing high outage rates. A trade war imposed tariffs on Chinese, Canadian, and Mexican goods, disrupting agriculture and indirectly boosting Amazon deforestation.
These moves slowed progress: EV market share fell to single digits from over 10%, with Tesla losing ground to BYD globally and Ford writing down $19.5 billion on EV plans. Critics like Rachel Cleetus of the Union of Concerned Scientists called it "extraordinarily destructive."
Yet resilience persists. Solar generation rose 27% in 2025, covering much of a 3.1% electricity demand increase; states like California and Texas expanded renewables and storage. Federal judges in Rhode Island and New York allowed offshore wind projects to resume, including overriding a Michigan coal plant closure. Trump's reliance on executive actions—fewer bills than any president since Eisenhower—means future reversals are likely, as noted by Elaine Kamarck of Brookings: "He is changing practice, not law."
Market forces favor clean energy: zero-carbon sources like solar, wind, nuclear, and geothermal are now cheaper than fossil fuels on the margin, per Rep. Sean Casten (D-IL). Coal efforts face competition from cheap natural gas, with analysts like Josh Freed of Third Way questioning its viability without subsidies. Globally, renewables hit 40% of electricity, with clean investments 50% above fossils. These pendulum swings highlight U.S. policy volatility, but economic trends may outlast the blitz.