International law The United States, although a
signatory to the
Kyoto Protocol, has neither
ratified nor withdrawn from the protocol. In 1997, the US Senate voted unanimously under the
Byrd–Hagel Resolution that it was not the sense of the Senate that the United States should be a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol. In 2001, former National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice, stated that the Protocol "is not acceptable to the Administration or Congress". In October 2003,
the Pentagon published a report titled
An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and Its Implications for United States National Security by
Peter Schwartz and Doug Randall. The authors conclude by stating, "this report suggests that, because of the potentially dire consequences, the risk of abrupt climate change, although uncertain and quite possibly small, should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a U.S.
national security concern."
Congress In October 2003 and again in June 2005, the
McCain-Lieberman Climate Stewardship Act failed a vote in the US Senate. In the 2005 vote, Republicans opposed the Bill 49–6, while Democrats supported it 37–10. In January 2007, Democratic
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced she would form a
United States Congress subcommittee to examine global warming. Sen.
Joe Lieberman said, "I'm hot to get something done. It's hard not to conclude that the politics of global warming has changed and a new consensus for action is emerging and it is a bipartisan consensus."
Senators Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and
Barbara Boxer (D-CA) introduced the
Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act on January 15, 2007. The measure would provide funding for R&D on geologic
sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2), set emissions standards for new vehicles and a renewable fuels requirement for gasoline beginning in 2016, establish energy efficiency and renewable portfolio standards beginning in 2008 and low-carbon electric generation standards beginning in 2016 for electric utilities, and require periodic evaluations by the
National Academy of Sciences to determine whether emissions targets are adequate. However, the bill died in committee. Two more bills, the Climate Protection Act and the Sustainable Energy Act, proposed February 14, 2013, also failed to pass committee. The
House of Representatives approved the
American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES) on June 26, 2009, by a vote of 219–212, but the bill failed to pass the
Senate. In March 2011, the
Republicans submitted a
bill to the
U.S. Congress that would prohibit the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from regulating greenhouse gasses as pollutants. As of 2012, the EPA was still overseeing regulation under the Clean Air Act. In 2019, there were 130 elected congresspeople who had expressed doubt about the science of climate change.
Clinton administration Upon the start of his presidency in 1993,
Bill Clinton committed the United States to lowering their
greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2000 through his biodiversity treaty, reflecting his attempt to return the United States to the global platform of climate policy. Clinton's British Thermal Unit (BTU) Tax and Climate Change Action Plan were also announced within the first year of his presidency, calling for a tax on energy heat content and plans for
energy efficiency and
joint implementations, respectively. The Climate Change Action Plan was announced on October 19, 1993. This plan aimed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2000. Clinton described this goal as "ambitious but achievable," and called for 44 action steps to achieve this goal. Among these steps were voluntary participation by industry, especially those in the commercial and energy supply fields. Clinton allotted $1.9 billion to fund this plan from the federal budget and called for an additional $60 billion funding to come voluntarily businesses and industries. The tax also applied to electricity produced by hydro and nuclear power, but exempted renewable energy sources such as geothermal, solar, and wind. The Clinton Administration planned to collect up to $22.3 billion in revenue from the tax by 1997. The tax was opposed by the energy-intensive industry, who feared that the price increase caused by the tax would make U.S. products undesirable on an international level, and thus was never fully implemented. In 1994, the U.S. called for a new limit on greenhouse gas emissions post-2000 in at the August 1994 INC-10. They also called for a focus on joint implementation, and for new developing countries to limit their emissions. Environmental groups, including the
Climate Action Network (CAN), critiqued these efforts, questioning U.S. focus on limiting the emissions of other countries when it had not established its own. The U.S. government under Clinton succeeded in pushing its agenda for joint implementation in the 1995
Conference of the Parties (COP-1). This victory is noted in the Berlin Mandate of April 1995, which called for developed countries to lead the implementation of national mitigation policies. Clinton signed the
Kyoto Protocol on behalf of the United States in 1997, pledging the country to a non-binding 7% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. He claimed that the agreement was "environmentally strong and economically sound," and expressed a desire for greater involvement in the treaty by developing nations. In his second term, Clinton announced his FY00 proposal, which allotted funding for a new set of environmental policies. Under this proposal, the President announced a new Clean Air Partnership Fund, new tax incentives and investments, and funding for environmental research of both natural and man-made changes to the climate. The Clean Air Partnership Fund was proposed to finance state and local government efforts for greenhouse gas emission reductions in cooperation with EPA. Under this fund, $200 million was allotted to promote and finance innovation projects meant to reduce air pollution. It also supported the creation of partnerships between the local and federal governments, and private sector. The Climate Change Technology Initiative provided $4 billion in tax incentives over a five-year period. The tax credits applied to energy efficient homes and building equipment, implementation of solar energy systems, electric and hybrid vehicles, clean energy, and the power industry. The Climate Change Technology Initiative also provided funding for additional research and development on clean technology, especially in the building, electricity, industry, and transportation sectors. In February 2002, President Bush announced his alternative to the Kyoto Protocol, by bringing forth a plan to reduce the intensity of greenhouse gasses by 18 percent over 10 years. The intensity of greenhouse gasses specifically is the ratio of greenhouse gas emissions and economic output, meaning that under this plan, emissions would still continue to grow, but at a slower pace. Bush stated that this plan would prevent the release of 500 million metric tons of greenhouse gases, which is about the equivalent of 70 million cars from the road. This target would achieve this goal by providing
tax credits to businesses that use renewable energy sources. The Bush administration has been accused of implementing an industry-formulated disinformation campaign designed to mislead the American public on global warming and to forestall limits on "climate polluters", according to a report in
Rolling Stone magazine that reviewed hundreds of internal government documents and former government officials. The book
Hell and High Water asserts that there has been a disingenuous, concerted and effective campaign to convince Americans that the science is not proven, or that global warming is the result of natural cycles, and that there needs to be more research. The book claims that, to delay action, industry and government spokesmen suggest falsely that "technology breakthroughs" will eventually save us with
hydrogen cars and other fixes. It calls on voters to demand immediate government action to curb emissions. Papers presented at an International Scientific Congress on Climate Change, held in 2009 under the sponsorship of the
University of Copenhagen in cooperation with nine other universities in the
International Alliance of Research Universities (IARU), maintained that the
climate change skepticism that is so prevalent in the USA "was largely generated and kept alive by a small number of conservative think tanks, often with direct funding from industries having special interests in delaying or avoiding the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions". According to testimony taken by the
U.S. House of Representatives, the Bush White House pressured American scientists to suppress discussion of global warming "High-quality science" was "struggling to get out", as the Bush administration pressured scientists to tailor their writings on global warming to fit the Bush administration's skepticism, in some cases at the behest of an ex-oil industry lobbyist. "Nearly half of all respondents perceived or personally experienced pressure to eliminate the words 'climate change,' 'global warming' or other similar terms from a variety of communications." Similarly, according to the testimony of senior officers of the
Government Accountability Project, the White House attempted to bury the report "National Assessment of the Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and Change", produced by U.S. scientists pursuant to U.S. law, Some U.S. scientists resigned their jobs rather than give in to White House pressure to underreport global warming. The Bush Administration worked to undermine state efforts to mitigate global warming.
Mary Peters, the Transportation Secretary at that time, personally directed US efforts to urge governors and dozens of members of the House of Representatives to block California's first-in-the-nation limits on greenhouse gases from cars and trucks, according to e-mails obtained by Congress.
Obama administration New Energy for America is a plan to invest in renewable energy, reduce reliance on foreign oil, address the global climate crisis, and make coal a less competitive energy source. It was announced during
Barack Obama's presidential campaign. A form of it was signed into law in February 2009 as the
American Reinvestment and Recovery Act, which invests $26.6 billion in renewable energy, $19.9 billion in energy efficiency and conservation, $18.1 billion in transit and
high-speed rail, $10.5 billion in
electric power transmission upgrades, $6.1 billion in
alternative fuel vehicles, $3.4 billion in
carbon capture and storage, and at least $600 million in
Superfund, underground fuel tank and
brownfield land cleanups. An estimate in 2016 by Obama's
Council of Economic Advisers found the ARRA boosted GDP by 2-3%, supported 900,000 clean energy job-years and leveraged $150 billion in private sector clean energy investments. On November 17, 2008, President-elect
Barack Obama proposed, in a talk recorded for YouTube, that the US should enter a
cap and trade system to limit
global warming. The
American Clean Energy and Security Act, a cap and trade bill, was passed on June 26, 2009, in the House of Representatives, but was not passed by the Senate. President Obama established a new office in the White House, the
White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy, and selected
Carol Browner as Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change. On January 27, 2009, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appointed
Todd Stern as the department's Special Envoy for Climate Change. Clinton said, "we are sending an unequivocal message that the United States will be energetic, focused, strategic and serious about addressing global climate change and the corollary issue of clean energy." In February 2009, Stern said that the US would take a lead role in the formulation of a new climate change treaty in
Copenhagen in December 2009. President Obama said in September 2009 that if the international community would not act swiftly to deal with climate change that "we risk consigning future generations to an irreversible catastrophe... our prosperity, our health, and our safety are in jeopardy, and the time we have to reverse this tide is running out." In 2010, the president said, similarly, that it was time for the United States "to aggressively accelerate" its transition from oil to alternative sources of energy and vowed to push for quick action on climate change legislation, arguably seeking to harness the deepening anger over
the oil spill in the
Gulf of Mexico. The
2010 United States federal budget proposed to support clean energy development with a 10-year investment of US$15 billion per year, generated from the sale of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions credits. Under the proposed cap-and-trade program, all GHG emissions credits would be auctioned off, generating an estimated $83 billion in new revenue by FY 2019. New rules for power plants were proposed March 2012. In the US and China's Sunnylands Summit on June 8, 2013, President Obama and
Chinese Communist Party leader
Xi Jinping worked in accordance for the first time, formulating a landmark agreement to reduce both production and consumption of
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). This agreement had the unofficial goal of decreasing roughly 90 gigatons of by 2050 and implementation was to be led by the institutions created under the
Montreal Protocol, while progress was tracked using the reported emissions that were mandated under the
Kyoto Protocol. The Obama administration viewed HFCs as a "serious climate mitigation concern." On March 31, 2015, the Obama administration formally submitted the US
Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) for greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) to the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The United States committed to reducing emissions 26-28% below 2005 levels by 2025, a reflection of the Obama administration's goal to convert the U.S. economy into one of low-carbon reliance. In 2015, Obama also announced the
Clean Power Plan, which was the final version of regulations originally proposed by the EPA the previous year, and which pertained to carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. Even though it had never been fully implemented, it was replaced by the Trump administration's Affordable Clean Energy rule in 2019, itself voided by the
DC Circuit Court of Appeals in 2021. In the same year, President Obama announced his aim for a 40-45% reduction below 2012 levels in
methane emissions by 2025. In March 2016, the President would later solidify this goal in an agreement with Prime Minister of Canada,
Justin Trudeau, stating that the two federal governments will jointly work together to reduce methane emissions in North America, coordinating particularly on research and development and standards creation. On May 12, 2016, the administration released an Information Collection Request (ICR), requiring all methane-emitting operations to provide emission levels reports to EPA analysts to deal with high-emitting sources. New standards set emission limits for methane; reductions were to be made through transition to newer and cleaner production equipment, fixed monitoring of leaks at operation sites using innovative techniques, and the capturing of emissions from
hydraulic fracturing. A September 2016 study from
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory analyzed a set of definite and proposed climate change policies for the United States and found that these were insufficient to meet the US
intended nationally determined contribution (INDC) under the 2015/2016
Paris Agreement. Additional
greenhouse gas reduction measures were required to meet this international commitment. An October 2016 report compared US government spending on climate security and military security and found the latter to be 28 times greater. The report estimated that public sector spending of $55billion was needed to tackle climate change. The 2017 national budget contained $21billion for such expenditures, leaving a shortfall of $34billion that could be recouped by scrapping underperforming weapons programs. The report recommended the
F-35 fighter and
close-to-shore combat ship projects as possible targets.
Transportation President's 21st century clean transportation plan In June 2015, the Obama administration released the President's 21st Century Clean Transportation Plan with the goal of reducing carbon pollution by converting the nation's century old infrastructure into one based on clean energy. The President's multibillion-dollar proposal provided incentives to reduce reliance on international oil and
fossil fuels. It involved adding $20 billion per year transit and
high-speed rail investments, $10 billion per year to improved regional transportation planning reform, and $2 billion per year to alternative fuel and autonomous vehicle research. Previously, similar investments in transportation were supported by the
Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act (FAST), an act passed in December 2015 by the Obama administration. FAST was formulated to reduce traffic and increase the quality of air by reducing emissions, yet it proved to be slow in gathering infrastructure investments. Thus, the President proposed a tax on oil of $10 per barrel to pay for it. The plan failed in the House due to the Republican majority.
Climate Action Plan progress report In June 2015, under Obama's Climate Action Plan Progress Report, the EPA announced that they were going to propose new standards for both medium and heavy-duty engines and vehicles, building off standards that were already enacted. These proposals were projected to decrease emissions by 270 million metric tons and save vehicle owners around $50 billion in fuel costs. The Climate Action Plan progress report also addressed aircraft, transit, and maritime emissions. The EPA proposed a rule tightening carbon pollution standards in civil aviation. Additionally, under the
Next Generation Air Transportation System, the
Federal Aviation Administration worked with the aviation industry on lower-emissions technologies, the
Maritime Administration oversaw an increase of investments into more fuel-efficient ships, and incentives made it possible for buses and other forms of transit to switch to other forms of energy such as natural gas and electric. In August 2012, the administration expanded on these standards for model years 2017 through 2025 vehicles, issuing final rules and standards that were to result in a 163 gram emission per mile by model year 2025.
First Trump administration During his campaign,
Donald Trump promised to roll back some of the Obama-era regulations enacted with the purpose of combating
climate change. He
questioned the existence of climate change and stated that efforts to curb fossil fuel emissions could harm the United States' global competitiveness. He pledged to roll back regulations placed on the oil and gas industry by the EPA under the
Obama administration in order to boost the productivity of both industries. As president,
Trump withdrew the U.S. from the
Paris Climate Agreement, a major international convention to
address climate change.
Appointment of energy industry-affiliated officials As president, Trump appointed
Scott Pruitt, a
climate change denialist with a history of close ties to energy industry interests, to head the EPA. While serving as Attorney General of Oklahoma, Pruitt removed Oklahoma's environmental protection unit and sued the EPA a total of fourteen times, thirteen of which involved "industry players" as co-parties. He was confirmed to head the EPA on February 17, 2017, with a 52–46 vote and resigned on July 5, 2018, amid ethics violation controversies. Trump then nominated
Andrew Wheeler, an attorney who worked as a
coal lobbyist. Wheeler was confirmed as head of the EPA on February 28, 2019, by a 52–47 vote. Trump nominated
Rex W. Tillerson, the former CEO and chairman of
Exxon Mobil, the multinational
oil and gas giant, as
Secretary of State. His nomination was confirmed on February 1, 2017, by a 56–43 vote. He was fired on March 31, 2018, and replaced by
Mike Pompeo.
Pipeline expansion and attempts at major cuts to EPA After less than a week as president, on January 24, 2017, Trump issued an executive order that removed barriers from the
Keystone XL and
Dakota Access Pipelines, making it easier for the companies sponsoring them to continue with production. On March 28, 2017, President Trump signed an
executive order aimed towards boosting the
coal industry. The executive order rolls back on Obama-era climate regulations on the coal industry in order to grow the coal sector and create new American jobs. The
White House indicated that any climate change policies that they deem hinder the growth of American jobs will not be pursued. In addition, the executive order rolled back on six Obama-made orders aimed at reducing climate change and carbon dioxide emissions and called for a review of the
Clean Power Plan.
Suppression and politicization of climate science In his first year in office, President Trump ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to remove references to climate change from its website, suppressed government publication of scientific reports showing the threat of climate change and the effectiveness of
renewable energy, and
politicized decisions made at the EPA. In a similar vein, the Trump Administration prevented scientists from reporting to Congress regarding the threat of climate change and the urgent need to address it. However, buried inside a 500-page
Environmental Impact Statement (EIP) published by the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Trump administration acknowledged that, without a course correction, the planet is on track for global average temperature warming by approximately four degrees Celsius by the end of the century, compared with preindustrial levels. Such warming would be catastrophic for organized human life, according to scientists. The EIP supports the U.S. government's decision to maintain without increase
fuel-efficiency standards for cars and other vehicles. In his
budget proposal for 2018, President Trump proposed cutting the EPA's budget by 31% (reducing its current $8.2 billion to $5.7 billion). Had it passed, it would have been the lowest EPA budget in 40 years adjusted for inflation, but Congress did not approve it. Trump tried again unsuccessfully in his
budget proposal for 2019 to cut EPA funding by 26%. The EPA provides technical assistance to cities as they update their infrastructure to adapt to climate change, according to Joel Scheraga, the EPA senior advisor for climate change adaptation who has worked for the EPA for three decades. Scheraga said he was working with a reduced staff under the Trump administration.
Environmental justice The shift in direction of environmental policy in the United States under the Trump administration has led to a change in the
environmental justice sector. On March 9, 2017, Mustafa Ali, a leader of the environmental justice office at EPA, resigned over proposed cuts to the agency's environmental justice program. The preliminary budget proposals would cut the environmental justice office's budget by 1/4, causing a 20% reduction in its workforce. The program is one of a dozen vulnerable to losing all governmental funding.
Biden administration The Biden administration paused construction of the
Keystone XL Pipeline, created a National Climate Task Force, paused oil and gas leases on public lands, and re-joined the
Paris Agreement. His administration proposed spending on climate change in his $2.1 trillion
infrastructure bill, including $174 billion for
electric cars and $35 billion for research and development in climate-focused technology. In June 2021 the Keystone XL pipeline, considered by some as dangerous for climate, was cancelled, following strong objection from
environmentalists,
indigenous peoples, the
Democratic Party, and
the Joe Biden administration. However, in 2023, the Biden administration approved the
Willow project, a new oil refinery in northern Alaska, and faced many objections from climate activists, who said it would contribute 287 million tons of carbon emissions. It came amid a slew of hundreds of other new oil and gas project approvals under Biden. In response, Biden stopped oil and gas leases in and around the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (though not the Willow lease itself) in September 2023, and temporarily suspended regulatory approvals for new natural gas export terminals in January 2024, though this suspension was halted by Louisiana federal judge
James D. Cain Jr. in July. Even still, the Biden administration presided over record oil and gas production highs, reaching 12.9 million barrels per day in 2023 and 530,000 barrels per day from public lands since 2020 (despite a campaign pledge to halt drilling on said lands), though growth has been driven more by
Permian Basin drilling than by the administration's policies. Biden's goals in developing a federal climate change policy were hampered by the
Supreme Court ruling in
West Virginia v. EPA, where the court ruled against the EPA's ability to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. Around spring 2024, the Biden administration announced several changes to its climate policy approach. First, the EPA issued new tailpipe emissions limits that it projected would cut emissions by 7 billion metric tons, or 56% of 2026 levels, by 2032. Second, the Interior Department raised royalty rates from 12.5% to 16.7%, doubled rents and increased lease bond minimums by a factor of 15 on federal lands for oil and gas companies. Third, it allowed wildlife conservation groups to pay rents to restore federal lands for the first time. Fourth, the EPA finalized new standards for power plant carbon emissions, projecting cuts of 65,000 tons by 2028 and 1.38 billion tons by 2047. Fifth, the DOE announced that it would assume the role of default lead agency on regulatory approvals for most new power transmission projects, streamline permitting approvals, enact a two-year deadline, require only one environmental impact statement per project, and increase transparency around the permitting process. Lastly, it issued a new rule to make large water heaters much more energy-efficient by 2029, cutting carbon emissions by a projected 332 million tons over 30 years, as part of the DOE's overall effort since 2020 to drive 2.5 billion tons in 30-year appliance emissions cuts. In May 2024, the Biden administration doubled
tariffs on
solar cells imported from China and more than tripled tariffs on
lithium-ion electric vehicle batteries imported from China. The increased tariffs will be phased in over a period of three years. $66 billion in
rail transport, $11 billion in
electric power transmission reform, $8.6 billion in
carbon capture and storage projects, $7 billion in
hydrogen economy projects, $430 million in factory decarbonization projects, $8 billion in Western state
drought mitigation programs, $7.5 billion in
charging stations,
freeway removal,
cycling and
complete streets, and numerous ecosystem restoration and wildlife conservation programs. However, before its passage into law, the impact of the Act on climate was forecast to be small (with emissions reductions on the order of 200 million metric tons in the best-case scenario), and highly dependent on implementation of the highway provisions. Under the IIJA, in April 2023, President Biden's administration made $450 million available for
solar farms and other sustainable energy projects at the sites of active or former
coal mines.
Inflation Reduction Act The
Inflation Reduction Act was a
reconciliation bill that was the largest investment in climate change mitigation in US history to date, setting out provisions to invest in increasing
renewable energy and
electrifying areas of the US economy. The legislation, signed into law by Biden on August 16, 2022, invests approximately $400 billion to climate-related projects, primarily in the form of tax credits for consumers and private businesses. The majority of these investments is intended to increase the amount of wind and solar energy in the United States grid by providing tax incentives to
renewable energy producers, as well as companies that manufacture batteries and wind and solar power components. The Act may also invest $28–48 billion in building retrofits and energy efficiency, $23–436 billion in clean transportation, $22–26 billion in
environmental justice, land use, air pollution reduction and resilience, and $3–21 billion in
sustainable agriculture. However, the law also requires that for federal lands, oil and gas projects be considered before wind and solar rights of way, even as it brought about the aforementioned royalty rate increases. The law explicitly defines carbon dioxide as an
air pollutant under the
Clean Air Act to make the Act's
EPA enforcement provisions harder to challenge in court, and created a first-of-its-kind
green bank, among a wide variety of other provisions to cut pollution. According to several independent analyses, the law is projected to reduce 2030 U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions to 40% below 2005 levels. By the Act's first anniversary, emissions projections had begun to shift. According to Rhodium Group and the
World Economic Forum, in the first year of implementation, the Act had a significant impact on the environment: their expectations for
GHG emissions reductions by 2030, relative to 2005 levels, moved from 17%-30% to 29%-42%, and to 32%-51% by 2035. The
EPA used dozens of millions of dollars to improve
air quality and hundreds of millions for environmental justice and local climate plans,
NOAA spent hundreds of millions to adapt coastlines to climate change, and more than $1 billion was allocated to equitable access to
urban heat island reductions.
Second Donald Trump administration, 2025 The climate change policy under the second Trump administration continued the deregulation begun under its first term. The administration moved to abandon all efforts to regulate greenhouse gases by reversing the
endangerment finding, fired all staffers working on the congressionally-mandated
National Climate Assessment, hired prominent climate skeptics for government positions, and promoted
climate change denial and misinformation. On February 11, 2026, Trump signed an executive order titled "Strengthening United States National Defense with America's Beautiful Clean Coal Power Generation Fleet," directing the Secretary of War, in coordination with the Secretary of Energy, to procure power from
coal-fired generation facilities through long-term
Power Purchase Agreements for
Department of War installations. The order prioritized coal as essential to national security, framing it as a more reliable energy source than intermittent renewables. It built on earlier executive orders promoting the coal industry (
Executive Order 14261) and electric grid security (
Executive Order 14262), and cited the national energy emergency declared under
Executive Order 14156. ==State and local policy==