During President Donald Trump’s first days in office, the barrage of climate change and energy-related executive orders he issued reflects — and in some cases goes beyond — the plans laid out in Project 2025, despite the president’s past attempts to distance himself from the extreme right-wing policy framework.
The executive orders pave the way for unfettered and unnecessary oil and gas exploration and development, which is a gift to fossil fuel executives and an existential threat to public health and safety — and which was endorsed in Project 2025’s 900-page policy book Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise. The orders represent the start of what will surely be the hasty abandonment of most efforts to mitigate toxic pollution and planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, develop cleaner technologies, and improve our electric grid.
They also come as experts have highlighted how extreme drought and heat fueled the recent devastating — and unseasonal — fires in Los Angeles, where residents and first responders are now dealing with toxic ash, flooding, and mudflows as well.
Trump has also given figures involved in the Heritage Foundation-led Project 2025 powerful positions in his new administration.

Molly Butler/Media Matters
Research/Study
Trump's climate and energy executive orders are Project 2025 approved and then some
The president’s decision to declare a national energy emergency goes further than anything in the Mandate for Leadership
Published