"Both House and Senate lawmakers have advanced bills rejecting the Trump administration’s proposal to eliminate climate research at the weather agency."
"To understand the bipartisan support that has emerged in Congress for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, it only takes a glance at the list of stakeholders who have been lobbying to save the embattled agency from the Trump administration’s budget knife.
Those who fish the oceans and those who ship goods over their waves, officials who maintain dams and those who manage drinking water systems, the insurance industry and a slew of universities from red and blue states alike have all made the case for maintaining NOAA funding this year.
On Sept. 10, members of the House Appropriations Committee made clear that they heard this message, rejecting the White House proposal to eliminate NOAA’s research arm and cut the agency’s budget by one-third. Instead, the legislators approved a fiscal year 2026 spending bill that includes a modest trim—about 6 percent—and directs the agency to avoid closure of any of its laboratories or cooperative research institutes. The Senate, meanwhile, is set to consider a budget bill that would maintain the current funding level at NOAA: about $6.1 billion.
In any other year, such Congressional unity would be a roadblock to the Trump administration’s drive to slash NOAA and its climate science research. This year, it may only be a speed bump."
Marianne Lavelle reports for Inside Climate News September 13, 2025.










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