Florida communities with highest climate risk face new Tallahassee hurdles

By Kylie Williams | 04/06/2026 06:35 AM EDT

A bill that passed Florida’s Legislature would prevent local governments from capping greenhouse gas emissions.

People ride along a sand-covered road as the community starts to recover from Hurricane Milton in Clearwater Beach, Florida.

Most of the effected communities are coastal, directly facing sea-level rise, damaging hurricanes and sunny day flooding. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

TALLAHASSEE, Florida — Coastal Florida cities and counties fighting the impacts of climate change may soon also face the rising tide of Tallahassee opposition.

More than a dozen cities and counties statewide have committed to bold net-zero or fully renewable energy policies, aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions and transitioning to renewable energy sources. Most of these communities are coastal, directly facing sea-level rise, damaging hurricanes and sunny day flooding.

But a bill that passed Florida’s Legislature and is expected to be signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis would impose a sweeping ban on limiting greenhouse gases — a move some local governments say could undo years of progress.

Advertisement

“I wish Tallahassee would let us do the business of running government,” said Raquel Regalado, a Republican Miami-Dade County commissioner. “On an election year, I’m not surprised that there’s a net-zero bill that’ll be signed. People just want to say they’re against that.”

GET FULL ACCESS