Theo Daniels, Author at Second Nature https://secondnature.org/author/tdaniels/ We accelerate climate action in, and through, higher education. Thu, 12 Feb 2026 22:28:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://secondnature.org/wp-content/uploads/cropped-SecondNature_MarkOnly_FullColor-1-32x32.png Theo Daniels, Author at Second Nature https://secondnature.org/author/tdaniels/ 32 32 Impact of EPA’s Decision to Rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding on Higher Education https://secondnature.org/2026/02/12/impact-of-epas-decision-to-rescind-the-2009-endangerment-finding-on-higher-education/ Thu, 12 Feb 2026 21:00:46 +0000 https://secondnature.org/?p=40599 Second Nature has closely tracked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) decision to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, the determination that greenhouse gas pollution threatens public health and welfare. This finding has served as a foundational legal basis for federal greenhouse gas standards, particularly for new motor vehicles under the Clean Air Act.  The EPA […]

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Second Nature has closely tracked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) decision to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, the determination that greenhouse gas pollution threatens public health and welfare. This finding has served as a foundational legal basis for federal greenhouse gas standards, particularly for new motor vehicles under the Clean Air Act. 

The EPA has stated that the Endangerment Finding is a prerequisite for regulating greenhouse gas emissions from new motor vehicles and engines under Clean Air Act Section 202, and the agency’s proposal would also remove greenhouse gas regulations for light-duty, medium-duty, and heavy-duty on highway vehicles. If finalized, this decision would represent one of the most consequential federal climate rollbacks in decades, with immediate implications for the policy environment that higher education institutions operate within and plan around. Legal challenges are anticipated, which could create a prolonged period of uncertainty for markets and institutions alike. 

Second Nature’s Statement: The EPA’s Decision to Rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding 

Higher education will feel the impacts through procurement, operations, capital planning, research, and community engagement. Key effects include:

  1. More state-driven policy variance across multi-campus systems

Institutions operating across states may face diverging rules and incentives, particularly where states move to maintain or strengthen clean transportation standards while others do not. That increases administrative burden and complicates systemwide climate planning. 

  1. Higher costs and planning volatility for long-term infrastructure design

Investors have warned that reversing the Endangerment Finding could produce regulatory whiplash that raises costs and increases uncertainty for long-term investment decisions. Campuses already making multi-decade commitments on infrastructure, fleet, and resilience projects may see that same volatility in procurement timelines, vendor strategies, and financing conditions. 

  1. Increased pressure on institutions to lead without federal backing

As federal policy becomes less predictable, institutions will face greater expectations from students, faculty, local governments, and communities to sustain climate commitments based on public health, risk management, and institutional mission, not just regulatory compliance. 

Learn more about Second Nature’s policy work.

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Over $1 Billion in DOE Projects Cancellations Leave Universities in Limbo https://secondnature.org/2025/10/28/over-1-billion-in-doe-projects-cancellations-leave-universities-in-limbo/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 23:08:34 +0000 https://secondnature.org/?p=40079 Theo Daniels | Second Nature | October 2025 This month, the Department of Energy (DOE) cancelled more than $1 billion in research and infrastructure projects tied to higher education institutions across the United States. The cancellations, found in DOE’s public USAspending database, halt at least 150 active projects that had been awarded to 73 universities […]

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Theo Daniels | Second Nature | October 2025

This month, the Department of Energy (DOE) cancelled more than $1 billion in research and infrastructure projects tied to higher education institutions across the United States. The cancellations, found in DOE’s public USAspending database, halt at least 150 active projects that had been awarded to 73 universities and colleges nationwide, with only 16% of the original awards ever reaching campuses. While the DOE has yet to issue a comprehensive explanation, the scope and concentration of these cancellations offer an early glimpse into shifting federal priorities and the potential cost to the nation’s climate innovation pipeline.

The Scale of the Pullback

According to the federal spending data, roughly $1.06 billion in funds had been obligated to higher education institutions before the cancellations took effect. Only $167 million had been outlayed, meaning work had begun, labs had been outfitted, and graduate students were already conducting research when the funds were frozen. 

Among specific universities, Colorado State University faced the most significant loss, with approximately $336 million in cancelled DOE obligations, followed by the University of Texas at Austin ($62.6M), New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology ($56.2M), and the University of Wyoming ($52.3M). Together, these institutions anchor some of the nation’s most ambitious regional energy transition initiatives, carbon capture hubs, geothermal pilots, and advanced manufacturing corridors. Their cancellations mark not just the loss of funding, but also the loss of federal coordination between government agencies and climate-forward institutions.

Impact on Regional Innovation

The pattern is clear: the Mountain West and Great Plains are the most severely affected.

Colorado, Wyoming, North Dakota, and New Mexico, states that the Biden-Harris DOE had previously identified as energy transition “testbeds”, now face uncertainty about whether their university-led research networks can sustain ongoing work without federal support. These projects were not purely academic or merely symbolic. They were the connective tissue between federal climate goals, local workforce pipelines, and industry partnerships. When universities lose this funding, local economies lose jobs, states lose research capacity, and the clean-energy economy loses momentum.

A Setback for Clean Energy and Higher Education

Land-grant and public research universities make up the majority of the affected institutions. For many, DOE partnerships represent their most tangible link to national decarbonization efforts. The cancellations will likely slow progress in areas such as hydrogen production, carbon storage, and advanced geothermal, sectors that rely heavily on university research infrastructure. At a time when the higher education sector is being asked to do more with less, these cancellations send a chilling message to institutions trying to align their research portfolios with national climate priorities. The Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure, Investments, and Jobs Act’s promise of durable, science-based clean-energy deployment depends on academic capacity, and that capacity just took a major hit. For universities already balancing shrinking state budgets, the loss of DOE support will force tough decisions about staffing, facilities, and the future of federally supported clean-energy education.

Looking Ahead

Second Nature and our partners will continue tracking the implications of these cancellations on climate-focused research, workforce training, and university-led decarbonization efforts.

We encourage campus leaders to assess affected projects, engage with DOE regional offices, and communicate how these changes could impact their institutional climate goals. Long-term federal investments in climate research are essential, not just for innovation, but for credibility. The clean-energy transition doesn’t happen without universities, and the universities can’t lead it without commitment from Washington.

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