Biden Protects 84% of IRA Clean Energy Grants From Being Clawed Back By Timothy Gardner WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's administration ... Department of Energy funding for state energy efficiency rebate programs for home retrofits and ...
It appears that the biggest winners under Trump's executive orders are domestic oil and gas exploration and production companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp. ( XOM ), Chevron Corp. ( CVX) and EOG Resources Inc. ( EOG ).
Hours after his inauguration, President Donald Trump signed 26 executive orders (EOs). These EOs rescinded 80 prior executive actions issued
In one of his final acts as president, Joe Biden issued an executive order to accelerate development of AI data centers and clean energy sources to power them. Biden’s directive gives the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy the authority to lease federal sites where the private sector can build AI infrastructure “at speed and scale.
Hundreds of millions of federal dollars are now at risk as the administration orders pauses to projects across the state.
US exits Paris Agreement after submitting Nationally Determined Contributions. In mid-December, the Biden Administration announced it submitted the
New U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy signed an order on Tuesday directing U.S. regulators to rescind landmark fuel economy standards issued under President Joe Biden that aimed to drastically reduce fuel use for cars and trucks.
In his first moments after being sworn in as Transportation secretary, Sean Duffy sought to reverse Biden regulations requiring passenger cars to be more efficient. The Biden administration rule
Update: U.S. District Judge Loren L. AliKhan has temporarily blocked parts of Trump’s federal funding freeze minutes before it was set to take effect. The ruling came in response to
Supporters of climate, infrastructure, mortgage, tech, health, veterans' and other projects expressed alarm as tens of thousands of programs appeared possibly at risk.
U.S. District Judge Loren AliKhan on Tuesday temporarily paused part of the Trump administration's sweeping directive. AliKahn, at a hearing in Washington, D.C., federal court, ordered the Trump administration not to block "open awards," or funds that were already slated to be disbursed, until at least Feb. 3.