The Trump administration announced its decision Thursday to retire the database of billion dollar weather and climate disasters, part of an ongoing purge of federal scientific data. The number of billion dollar disasters hitting the US has increased over the years as climate change fuels stronger storms, floods, and fires — a trend the US is no longer tracking.
Justine Calma

Senior Science Reporter
Senior Science Reporter
More From Justine Calma
We saw this coming with President Trump and Elon Musk pummeling federal agencies including the EPA with budget and staffing cuts. DOGE kneecapped the agency after it cracked down on Musk’s companies, we reported last month. Health and environmental advocates are fighting the deregulatory spree at the EPA.
The company announced a new agreement with project developer Elementl Power to prepare three different sites for next-generation nuclear power plants. Google and other tech giants are putting their faith — and capital— in new nuclear technologies they hope can provide enough electricity for AI data centers.
More than 90 percent of Americans rely on federal science information, from weather forecasts to food safety warnings, according to a recent poll by the Association of Science and Technology Centers. Many of those resources are in jeopardy now as the Trump administration slashes the federal workforce and funding for health and science research.
The company announced the grant last week, which is supposed to support an effort to train 100,000 electrical workers and 30,000 apprentices across the US. A shortage of electricians has hampered efforts to add new, clean energy to power grids. And Google and other tech giants need more electricity for energy-hungry AI data centers.
In April, Google shared plans to use AI to speed up the process of connecting new power sources to the grid.
Even if Musk plans to take a step back from DOGE, his influence grows with each Starlink launch. Space is getting crowded with satellite internet companies vying to control the future of our information flows. Musk is crowding out the competition.
“Musk is clearly imagining a future in which neither his network nor his will can be restrained by the people of this world,” Ross Andersen writes in The Atlantic.
[theatlantic.com]
The Trump administration reportedly plans to shutter the program that certifies products for energy efficiency and slaps the recognizable blue Energy Star label on refrigerators, washers, dryers, LED bulbs, and more. CNN and E&E News report that Energy Star is on the chopping block as part of a “reorganization” planned at the Environmental Protection Agency that would end key initiatives on climate change.


“The report reads less like a medical analysis and more like an anti-trans screed—politicized, inflammatory, and devoid of scholarly grounding,” writes journalist Erin Reed in comprehensively fact-checking the 400-page document.
The HHS report has also been repudiated by the medical community. “This report misrepresents the current medical consensus and fails to reflect the realities of pediatric care,” Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said in a statement yesterday.

