Judge bars Trump’s EPA from taking back $20B in climate grants — for now

By Zack Colman | 03/19/2025 06:21 AM EDT

The ruling orders EPA and climate change groups to return to court to argue about the fate of the money.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan is seen.

Judge Tanya Chutkan's order is a setback for the Trump EPA's effort to claw back funding for the climate investments passed by Congress during the Biden administration. Mark Schiefelbein/AP

A federal judge temporarily blocked the Environmental Protection Agency’s attempt to recoup $20 billion in Biden-era climate grants — dealing the latest judicial setback for President Donald Trump’s attempt to assert unilateral control over spending.

Tuesday’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan prevents EPA from reclaiming money it had deposited at Citibank for the groups Climate United, Coalition for Green Capital and Power Forward Communities. But the decision did not revive those groups’ ability to draw from the funds, postponing that decision until after further court proceedings.

The EPA “gave no legal justification for the termination” of the contracts, wrote Chutkan, an appointee of President Barack Obama, saying the administration had only “vaguely” outlined its allegations that the grant program was marked by waste and potential conflicts of interest.

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The fight over the EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund has become a major front in Trump’s battle to claw back hundreds of billions of dollars in former President Joe Biden’s climate and clean-energy agenda — with the administration seeking to override the spending decisions of past Congress that Trump disagrees with, despite decades of accepted legal tradition suggesting that this would violate the Constitution.

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