The EPA notified grant recipients that they will no longer receive funding under the program.
A federal judge asked the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on March 12 to submit evidence justifying its decision to terminate a $20 billion climate funding program.
Judge Tanya Chutkan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia said during a court hearing that she would order the administration to file a sworn statement by March 17 detailing the evidence it used as the basis for ending the grant.
โYou canโt even tell me what the evidence of malfeasance is,โ Chutkan told a lawyer for the Trump administration during the hearing.
The EPA confirmed earlier this month that it had canceled what it described as a $20 billion โgold barโ scheme introduced by the previous administration.
The program, formally known as the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, is commonly called the โgreen bank.โ It was approved under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, with the EPA awarding $20 billion in grants to eight entities to launch projects aimed at curbing pollution.
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced in early February that the agency was working to claw back the funding, citing concerns about lack of oversight and transparency.
In a March 11 statement, Zeldin said the EPA had conducted a โcomprehensive reviewโ and identified โmaterial deficiencies which pose an unacceptable risk to the lawful execution of these grants.โ
As a result, the agency notified recipients of the grant that they would no longer receive funding, he said.
โThe days of โthrowing gold bars off the Titanic’ are over. The well documented incidents of misconduct, conflicts of interest, and potential fraud raise significant concerns and pose unacceptable risk,โ Zeldin said. โI have taken action to terminate these grants riddled with self-dealing and wasteful spending. EPA will be an exceptional steward of taxpayer dollars dedicated to our core mission of protecting human health and the environment, not a frivolous spender in the name of โclimate equity.โโ
The EPA said it would work to โre-obligate lawfully appropriated fundsโ in the green bank program with โenhanced controls to ensure adequate governance, transparency, and accountability, consistent with statutory requirements.โ