The abrupt termination of the so-called “anti-weaponisation” fund, a controversial mechanism established during the Trump administration to block federal agencies from using climate data in regulatory decisions, marks a significant escalation in the Republican party’s reassertion of climate scepticism. For those of us tracking the energy transition, this is not a policy tweak: it is a deliberate dismantling of scientific governance.
The fund, formally titled the ‘Scientific Integrity and Data Transparency Initiative’, was created in 2020 via executive order. It allocated $10 million annually to the Office of Management and Budget to review any federal rule that relied on climate models or emissions projections. In practice, it acted as a procedural chokehold: agency staff were required to prove that their data met ‘reproducibility standards’ that effectively excluded peer-reviewed climate science. The result was a two-year freeze on new emissions standards, fuel economy rules, and methane regulations.
What changed this week? The fund’s sunset clause expired on 31 March, and Republican congressional leaders opted not to renew it. Instead, they have introduced the ‘Energy Independence and Climate Resilience Act’ which, despite its anodyne name, strips the Environmental Protection Agency of its authority to regulate carbon dioxide as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. The bill is expected to pass along party lines in the House, though its fate in the Senate remains uncertain.
This is not a return to the status quo ante. It is a deliberate reassertion of the idea that climate science is a political weapon. Senator James Lankford of Oklahoma, a key architect of the new bill, stated on Tuesday that “the era of using climate alarmism to shut down American energy production is over.” The language is precise: alarmism, not science; energy production, not emissions reduction.
Let us be clear about the physical reality. Global carbon dioxide concentrations are now at 423 parts per million, a level not seen since the Pliocene epoch, when sea levels were 20 metres higher. The past eight years have been the warmest on record. The Arctic sea ice minimum in 2023 was 4.2 million square kilometres, roughly 40% lower than the 1981-2010 average. These are not political statements. They are measurements.
The Republican fightback is happening at a moment when the energy transition is already accelerating. Renewable energy now accounts for 22% of US electricity generation, up from 11% in 2018. Battery storage capacity has increased tenfold since 2020. The cost of solar photovoltaic modules has fallen by 90% over the past decade. The market has already moved.
What the termination of the anti-weaponisation fund does is create a legal vacuum. Without the procedural barriers, agencies like the EPA and the Department of Energy can once again propose rules based on climate science. But without the authority to regulate CO2, those rules are toothless. It is like allowing a surgeon to operate but forbidding them from using a scalpel.
The biosphere does not care about congressional procedures. The ocean continues to absorb heat at a rate equivalent to five Hiroshima bombs per second. Coral reefs are bleaching at depths previously considered refuges. The Amazon is now a net carbon source, not a sink. These are not scenarios from a climate model; they are observations from satellites, buoys, and field stations.
Technological solutions exist. Direct air capture plants are operating in Iceland and the United States. Enhanced weathering projects are being tested in farms across the Midwest. But these technologies require regulatory certainty to attract investment. The Republican bill does not ban them, but it sends a signal that the federal government will not prioritise their deployment.
The calm urgency of this moment is difficult to convey without sounding alarmist. The planet is warming at a rate of 0.3°C per decade. We have perhaps five years of current emissions levels before we lock in 1.5°C of warming. The end of one obscure fund is not the cause of that trajectory, but it is a symptom of a deeper refusal to engage with physical reality.
For the record, I have no personal animus towards Senator Lankford or any other politician. My concern is with the data. And the data show that the Republican fightback is not a return to normal politics. It is a bet that the laws of thermodynamics can be outvoted.








