Reckless agency layoffs and the dismantling of federal relief programs could leave the Lone Star State in peril.
Donald Trumpās commitment to āenergy dominanceā would seem to be good news for the Texas economy. But in the administrationās reversal of environmental policiesāincluding via the chaos of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) trashing federal agenciesāit is easy to overlook changes that are of particular importance for the state.
Federal resources for managing climate-augmented weather disasters are being wiped out, and crucial information about future risks is being destroyed or degraded. Meanwhile, state leaders stand by while denying the seriousness of climate change as a driver of these eventsāand the threat this poses to the state economy.
It is not exactly breaking news that Texas is vulnerable to extreme weather, with recent hurricanes and wildfires fresh in mind, nor is the well-documented effect of a warming climate in magnifying severe weather. Just look to the growing count of billion-dollar natural disasters (severe storms, drought, flood, wildfires, severe cold). For example, from 2020 to 2024 Texas suffered 68 of these costly events, with Florida second at 34.
I voted for Harris. Why do I deserve this?
You donāt, but youāre getting it anyway. I reckon some of yāall deserve it and some of yāall donāt. Such is life. I live in Florida and canāt wait to see how this years hurricane season pans outā¦