The week in climate
Changes at FEMA, more Trump rollbacks and see where marine heat is spreading.
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Climate Forward
For subscribersJune 15, 2025

The Sunday edition of the Climate Forward newsletter highlights some of our best climate reporting from the week and is open to all readers.

A view of a large office building with a plaque and FEMA written on the side.

Al Drago for The New York Times

Head of FEMA Command Center Quits After Trump Says He’ll Phase Out the Agency

Article Image

Joshua A. Bickel/Associated Press

E.P.A. Axes Biden’s Climate and Pollution Limits on Power Plants

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Matt York/Associated Press

Ask NYT Climate

How Is Extreme Heat Affecting Air Travel?

A Tesla is parked near a charging station, while a woman grabs the electric vehicle charging cable.

Rachel Bujalski for The New York Times

Trump Blocks California E.V. Rules in Latest Move to Rein In the State

A man stands on a slanted roof of a house and is being handed a rectangular solar panel tfrom a man o the ground.

Rachel Bujalski for The New York Times

Why Rooftop Solar Could Crash Under the G.O.P. Tax Bill

Four cooling towers rise from a construction site against a cloudy sky.

Abdul Goni/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

World Bank Ends Its Ban on Funding Nuclear Power Projects

An image of a heat map of the oceans.

The New York Times

See How Marine Heat Waves Are Spreading Across the Globe

A wide expanse of mountains are dusted with white snow.

Russel Daniels for The New York Times

A G.O.P. Plan to Sell Public Land Is Back. This Time, It’s Millions of Acres.

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The front facade of a JBS plant, with a large company in front of the building and the cab of a large trick visible in the foreground.

A Scandal-Plagued Meatpacking Giant Comes to the U.S. Stock Market

JBS, the biggest meatpacker in the world, is set to go public on the New York Stock Exchange this week.

By Claire Brown

A worker in a bright jacket and orange hard hat walks in front of a large gray industrial plant, with snow on the ground.

Carbon Capture Comes Back Down to Earth

Billions have been invested in technologies to remove carbon dioxide from the sky in recent years. But Trump’s policies have clouded the outlook.

By David Gelles

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