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US judge prevents Trump's EPA to claw back climate grants

A U.S. Judge on Tuesday temporarily barred the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from recovering grant money issued as part a $20 billion Climate Funding Program that President Donald Trump’s administration is moving to terminate.

U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan issued a temporary restraining in Washington, halting EPA's terminations of grant agreements with three environmental nonprofit organizations and prohibiting Citibank from dispersing grants held in their bank accounts.

These grants were terminated in the course of EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin’s campaign to claw money back from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. The fund was authorized by Congress in 2022, as part the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022 during the tenure of then-President Joe Biden to kickstart projects aimed to curb pollution.

Under Zeldin, the EPA has stated that the program does not align with agency priorities and cited potential fraud, abuse and waste. The EPA said that the FBI and Justice Department were also investigating the program for possible fraud, waste and abusing.

Chutkan, however, said that it appeared as though the EPA had failed to take all the legal steps required to cancel the $13,97 million in grants given to Climate United and the Coalition for Green Capital.

Chutkan stated that the EPA had terminated their employment due to "substantial" concerns about fraud, abuse and waste, but provided "vague, unsubstantiated statements" to support those claims.

Chutkan stated that without a court order maintaining the status quo while the litigation progresses, these groups would suffer imminent harm if Citibank moved money from their accounts to pay for employees, rent, and fund projects.

Chutkan wrote that funds would not be recouped if Citibank transferred money from these accounts. Chutkan was an Obama appointee.

In a statement, Zeldin said that he wouldn't rest until all the funds had been returned to the U.S. Treasury. He claimed they were "riddled" with self-dealings and wasteful expenditure.

Citigroup, the parent company of Citibank, has not responded to a comment request.

The nonprofits who had sued Citibank earlier in the month for withholding money and terminating their grants by the EPA won an initial victory.

Climate United CEO Beth Bafford said in a press release that Tuesday's decision was "a step in the right directions" and the organization will work to find a solution over the next few weeks. (Reporting and editing by Jamie Freed in Boston, Nate Raymond)

(source: Reuters)