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Trump pulls the United States out of the UN climate treaty
Summary
On Jan. 7, 2026, President Trump announced the United States would leave the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, saying it ran "contrary to the interests of the United States." The article notes the decision follows a series of late-2025 and early-2026 policy moves that reduced U.S. participation in international climate reporting and research.
Content
On Jan. 7, 2026, President Donald Trump announced an order to pull the United States out of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The statement said the treaty ran "contrary to the interests of the United States," without specifying which interests were meant. The move follows earlier administration actions that reduced U.S. participation in international climate reporting and research. The article places this action in the context of several late-2025 policy changes affecting federal climate rules and programs.
Key facts:
- On Jan. 7, 2026, the president announced the United States would leave the UNFCCC and cited it as contrary to U.S. interests.
- The UNFCCC was ratified by the U.S. Senate in October 1992 and entered into force on March 21, 1994.
- The administration had already taken steps to stop certain greenhouse gas data collection and reporting and ended some U.S. scientists' involvement in international research; it had also begun a process related to leaving the Paris Agreement.
- The article reports other recent actions, including the EPA sending a draft rule to the White House to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding and several policy changes in late 2025 affecting emissions standards, offshore wind leases and federal climate pages.
Summary:
The announcement vacates U.S. participation in a treaty the Senate ratified in 1992 and follows multiple policy changes that reduced formal U.S. engagement in international climate processes. Undetermined at this time.
