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White House actions to hamper national climate assessment

Two sources with knowledge of the matter have confirmed that the Trump administration intends to cancel a contract for an assessment of climate change in order to guide government policy.

The administration will terminate the contract with ICF, the global advisory firm that works on the National Climate Assessment. This is a comprehensive report on climate change in the United States published every five-years.

ICF is the largest employer of U.S. The U.S. Global Change Research Program, an agency established by Congress in 1990 for the coordination of research and investment related to climate change and overseeing the last five national assessments.

In 2023, the last assessment said that climate change would increase costs for Americans as insurance prices and certain foods rise, and medical care will become more expensive due to threats such as extreme heat.

One source, not authorized to talk to the media, stated that it is unclear what will happen with the assessment due by 2028 without the contract.

Requests for comment from ICF and White House Office of Science and Technology Policy were not immediately responded to.

The Trump administration is cutting government jobs in many areas, including the National Institutes of Health and Environmental Protection Agency, to curb what they call wasteful spending.

The administration has issued a stop work order to USGCRP and NOAA employees who are contributing to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (a UN body which produces regular climate assessments). (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue; Valerie Volcovici)

(source: Reuters)