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2025 Environmental Wins Despite Trump-Era Rollbacks
Environment

2025 Environmental Wins Despite Trump-Era Rollbacks

GristJan 4
3 min read
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Key Facts

  • ✓ California launched a $100 million satellite program to track methane leaks, identifying 10 large leaks by November.
  • ✓ University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa scientists found over 60% of marine fungi can break down polyurethane.
  • ✓ New Mexico invested $50 million into wildlife crossings, the largest single-year state appropriation in the U.S.
  • ✓ Hypoxia levels in Long Island Sound reached their lowest levels in 40 years.

In This Article

  1. Quick Summary
  2. Space Technology and Marine Biology
  3. Agriculture and Water Quality Improvements
  4. Conservation and Technology

Quick Summary#

As 2025 draws to a close, environmental advocates across the U.S. are weighing a year marked by both setbacks and successes. Despite major environmental reversals taken by the Donald Trump administration, including loosening fossil fuel rules and weakening endangered-species safeguards, conservationists, lawmakers, and researchers still notched key wins at local and state levels.

Key victories included California launching a methane-tracking satellite program, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa researchers identifying microplastic-eating fungi, and scientists discovering the drivers behind honeybee decline. Additionally, hypoxia levels in Long Island Sound reached their lowest levels in 40 years, San Diego researchers developed a new gel to restore coral reefs, New Mexico invested $50 million into wildlife crossings, and researchers reduced sea turtle bycatch through solar-powered fishing nets. These triumphs occurred across the country amid a year of political turbulence.

Space Technology and Marine Biology#

California turned to space technology this year to curb methane pollution, launching a new program that uses satellite-mounted sensors to spot major leaks in near real time. The $100 million effort, funded through the state’s cap-and-trade program, sends data to the California Air Resources Board as the satellite passes over the state roughly five times a week. One satellite is already in orbit, with seven more expected to launch in the coming years. By November, the system had helped identify and stop 10 large leaks of the colorless and odorless gas since May — the climate equivalent of taking about 18,000 cars off the road for a year.

Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa have discovered that many fungi living around the islands can naturally degrade plastic, with some even being trained to consume the microparticles faster. In February, after testing various marine fungi species, researchers announced that over 60 percent could break down polyurethane, a common plastic found in consumer and commercial products. By repeatedly exposing the fastest-growing fungi to plastic, researchers also boosted their degradation rates by up to 15 percent in just three months. With the equivalent of roughly 625,000 garbage trucks worth of plastic entering the ocean annually, researchers are now determining whether the plastic-eating species or other fungi can break down more stubborn, less degradable plastics such as polyethylene.

Agriculture and Water Quality Improvements#

Scientists have identified key viral drivers behind the massive honeybee die-off that has devastated U.S. beekeepers since early 2025. In a new Department of Agriculture study awaiting peer review and conducted amid Trump-era funding cuts, researchers found that nearly all sampled colonies carried bee viruses spread by Varroa mites — parasites now resistant to amitraz, the primary chemical used to control them. These mites rapidly transmit infections, which can also spill over into wild pollinators. However, researchers have also cautioned that resistant mites are only part of the problem, with the climate crisis, pesticide exposure, and shrinking forage also contributing to record-breaking colony losses.

Levels of hypoxia, or low oxygen in bottom waters as a result of an overgrowth — and decomposition — of algae, have reached their lowest in 40 years, marking a major recovery milestone for the East Coast’s second-largest estuary. New state data shows the sound’s “dead zones,” which are depleted of oxygen and uninhabitable for marine life, shrank to 18.3 square miles and lasted only 40 days — among the shortest and smallest events since monitoring began in the late 1980s. The numbers reflect a significant decline from 43 square miles in 2024 and 127 square miles in 2023. Scientists credit decades of local and state-led efforts to cut nitrogen pollution, as well as this year’s dry summer conditions that helped reduce algae growth across the sound.

Conservation and Technology#

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego have developed a groundbreaking gel, Snap-X, that could transform coral reef restoration. With coral larvae being particularly selective about where they settle, researchers announced in May the creation of a material that releases chemical cues to indicate suitable habitats. Snap-X, composed of nanoparticles suspended in a UV-curable gel, gradually releases coral-attracting chemicals over the course of a month. In laboratory tests on the Hawaiian stony coral species Montipora capitata, surfaces treated with Snap-X promoted coral resettlement at six times the rate of untreated surfaces. Furthermore, in experiments simulating reef environments with flowing water, Snap-X boosted coral larval settlement by 20 times, according to researchers. The research breakthrough comes as more than 80 percent of the world’s reefs were hit earlier this year by the worst global bleaching event on record.

In April, New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham committed $50 million to expand wildlife crossings as part of a statewide effort to reduce dangerous wildlife collisions. The funding, included in the state’s House Bill 5, marks the largest single-year state appropriation for wildlife crossings in the U.S. It supports projects identified in the New Mexico Wildlife Corridors Action Plan, including the high-priority US 550 corridor north of Cuba, commonly known as the Valley of Death due to severe elk and deer collisions. With roughly 1,200 wildlife crashes in the state each year, officials and conservationists have welcomed the investment, saying it will help reduce collisions while also protecting the natural behaviors of elk, mule deer, pronghorn, bighorn sheep, black bears, and cougars.

Finally, researchers from Arizona State University, NOAA Fisheries, and the World Wildlife Fund have developed solar-powered, flashing LED lights for gillnets — walls of netting designed to entangle fish — to reduce sea turtle bycatch. While the source text cuts off, the intent of the research is to mitigate the accidental capture of sea turtles in fishing gear.

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