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News Briefs

October 29, 2025
Trump Administration sued over waivers for chemical plant air pollution

Community groups and national environmental organizations are suing the administration for giving chemical plants a break from rules meant to prevent toxic and cancer-causing pollution.

October 29, 2025
Pennsylvania House committee to hold hearing Nov. 5 on LNG export terminal

A committee of state legislators will hold a public hearing on a proposed liquified natural gas export terminal near Philadelphia.

October 29, 2025
Construction begins on 122-mile gas pipeline in Tennessee

On Oct. 7, a subsidiary of Canadian energy firm Enbridge began construction on a gas pipeline expansion across north-central Tennessee.

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News Articles

Brendan Gibbons
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October 23, 2025

U.S. data center boom driving wave of new gas-fired power plants

The U.S. is facing a boom in data centers, with the number of these facilities projected to more than double or even triple by 2030, which is triggering a surge in the proposed construction of gas-fired power plants. This growth is being driven by the race to develop artificial intelligence (AI) and cryptocurrency, as well as the ever-increasing demand for cloud-based storage. The wave of new data centers and related gas plants are raising concerns about the potential greenhouse gas impact of the boom.

Ari Phillips
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October 16, 2025

Trump cancels billions in clean energy grants while increasing subsidies for oil and gas

On Oct. 2, the Trump Department of Energy announced it was cancelling over $7.5 billion in federal funding for 223 clean energy projects that the administration argues would be a waste of taxpayer dollars. The projects are mostly in states that voted for Democrat Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election. But President Trump’s own landmark legislation signed in July, the “Big Beautiful Bill,” grants an additional $4 billion a year in new taxpayer subsidies to the fossil fuel industry.

Brendan Gibbons
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October 9, 2025

The oil and gas industry keeps laying off workers as Trump pushes 'drill, baby, drill!'

The record-high oil and gas production that President Donald Trump inherited when he took office has not translated to more jobs in the industry. Major oil and gas companies, including ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, and BP, are all laying off workers amid a decade-long trend of declining industry employment. Industry leaders and analysts attribute the job losses to a combination of persistently low oil and gas prices; higher supply costs, in part due to Trump’s tariffs; and consolidation in the industry, with company mergers leading to eliminating redundant positions.

Ari Phillips
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October 2, 2025

Deep blue California ‘panics’ about refinery closures by allowing more drilling

As recently as a few years ago, California Gov. Gavin Newsom was calling on the state to ban hydraulic fracturing for oil and gas by 2024 and to consider phasing out all oil production statewide by 2045. Newsom has since pivoted to support a six-bill package of energy and climate legislation, including a bill that allows oil-rich Kern County, north of Los Angeles, to issue 2,000 new drilling permits a year without further environmental review for the next decade.

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