menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Authors of nixed nature report plan independent release

2 1
15.02.2025
*{box-sizing:border-box}body{margin:0;padding:0}a[x-apple-data-detectors]{color:inherit!important;text-decoration:inherit!important}#MessageViewBody a{color:inherit;text-decoration:none}p{line-height:inherit}.desktop_hide,.desktop_hide table{mso-hide:all;display:none;max-height:0;overflow:hidden}.image_block img div{display:none}sub,sup{font-size:75%;line-height:0} @media (max-width:620px){.desktop_hide table.icons-outer{display:inline-table!important}.image_block div.fullWidth{max-width:100%!important}.mobile_hide{display:none}.row-content{width:100%!important}.stack .column{width:100%;display:block}.mobile_hide{min-height:0;max-height:0;max-width:0;overflow:hidden;font-size:0}.desktop_hide,.desktop_hide table{display:table!important;max-height:none!important}.reverse{display:table;width:100%}.reverse .column.first{display:table-footer-group!important}.reverse .column.last{display:table-header-group!important}.row-11 td.column.first .border,.row-7 td.column.first .border,.row-9 td.column.first .border{padding:5px 5px 15px 25px;border-top:0;border-right:0;border-bottom:0;border-left:0}.row-11 td.column.last .border,.row-7 td.column.last .border,.row-9 td.column.last .border{padding:5px 20px 25px 5px;border-top:0;border-right:0;border-bottom:0;border-left:0}} Click for the latest from The Hill

{beacon}

Energy & Environment

Energy & Environment

The Big Story

Trump canceled a report on American nature. The authors are still trying to share it.

Researchers behind a massive report on the state of nature in America are seeking to release it despite President Trump’s cancellation of the project, one of the authors told The Hill.

© Greg Nash

President Trump canceled the National Nature Assessment, which began its work under the Biden administration, shortly after he took office in January. It would have been due for submission to the White House earlier this week.

“The idea was that we don’t have a good national inventory of the state of nature,” Howard Frumkin, a professor emeritus of environmental science at the University of Washington School of Public Health who was lead author on the report’s chapter on the relationship between nature and public health, told The Hill in an interview.

“We know a lot about our economy, we know a lot about our transportation infrastructure and our kids’ academic achievement, but nature is such an important basis for the economy and for health and well-being, for cultural benefits, but we never have had a good inventory of the state of nature across the country, of trends that may be affecting it, positive or negative, where and how it’s delivering benefits,” Frumkin added.

Frumkin called the decision to pull the plug “a little mystifying.”

“This is really not a political or ideological topic. We know that across the country, in red states and blue states and red counties, blue counties, people love the nation’s natural heritage,” he said.

He pointed to his experience working at the Trust for Public Land, where he said Americans in Democratic and Republican areas and everything in between regularly voted to issue bonds to protect green space.

The report has nearly 200 authors across 12 chapters covering nature’s intersection with everything from the economy to cultural heritage, and had a target publication date of 2026 before Trump canceled it. However, Frumkin told The Hill, the authors are currently weighing options for how to publish the final report in another form.

Read more at TheHill.com.

Welcome to The Hill’s Energy & Environment newsletter, we’re Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk — keeping you up to speed on the policies impacting everything from oil and gas to new supply chains.

Did someone forward you this newsletter? Subscribe here.

Essential Reads

How policy will affect the energy and environment sectors now and in the future:

Vance: If US survived Greta Thunberg, Europe ‘can survive a few........

© The Hill