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Electric Vehicles

John Barrasso.
Electric Vehicles

We Should Be Talking About an EV Tax — But Not This One

The math behind a $1,000 EV fee is specious to say the least.

Politics

AM Briefing: Clawing Back Climate Grants

On the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, armored EVs, and China’s coal addiction

Yellow
Economy

AM Briefing: A $1 Billion Bailout

On costly payouts, soaring air travel, and EV sales

Yellow
Climate

AM Briefing: A New Era of Warming?

On breaching 1.5, NYC’s new EV chargers, and deforestation

Yellow
A car dealership.

The EV Tax Credit Has a Looming Paperwork Crisis

Dozens of people are reporting problems claiming the subsidy — and it’s not even Trump’s fault.

A Ford F-150 Lightning.

The Tide Is Turning Against Giant EVs

For now, at least, the math simply doesn’t work. Enter the EREV.

Blue
Climate

AM Briefing: Trump’s Environmental Justice Crackdown

On changes at the EPA, New York’s climate superfund, and a failed merger

Trump’s Crackdown on Environmental Justice Begins
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: Winter storm Garnett could drop up to 9 inches of snow on parts of New England this weekend • A blast of warm air is breaking temperature records in Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado • Two people were killed in Tennessee by a possible tornado. If confirmed, this would be the first deadly tornado of 2025.

THE TOP FIVE

1. Trump administration pauses federal EV charger program

The Federal Highway Administration issued a letter to state Departments of Transportation on Thursday declaring that states were no longer authorized to spend billions of dollars previously approved for electric vehicle charging networks. The decree pertains to the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program, or NEVI, a program created in 2021 under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which allocated $5 billion to states to strategically build electric vehicle charging networks along major roads. As Heatmap’s Emily Pontecorvo explains, advocates believed the NEVI program was untouchable because money that’s already been allocated can’t be recalled, but the FHWA apparently thinks it has found a workaround. Under NEVI, states are each allocated a certain amount of money every year for five years, and they have to submit an annual plan for how they intend to use the funds. Those plans must align with overall program guidance published by the secretary of transportation. The new leadership at the Department of Transportation has decided to rescind the previously issued guidance. That means the state plans that were previously approved are no longer valid. The letter says states will still be able to get reimbursed for expenses related to previously awarded projects, “in order to not disrupt current financial commitments.” But the more than $2.6 billion that has not been awarded will be frozen.

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Electric Vehicles

Trump’s Latest Ploy to Kill America’s EV Charger Program

The Federal Highway Administration believes it has found a workaround to a court-ordered stay of execution.

Trump stepping on an ev charger.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

The Federal Highway Administration issued a letter to state Departments of Transportation on Thursday declaring that states were no longer authorized to spend billions of dollars previously approved for electric vehicle charging networks. The decree pertains to the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program, or NEVI, a program created in 2021 under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which allocated $5 billion to states to strategically build electric vehicle charging networks along major roads.

The program has been under threat since the day Donald Trump stepped into the White House. His executive order “Unleashing American Energy,” which ordered agencies to pause the disbursement of funds from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, specifically called out NEVI as a program to freeze. Twenty-two Democrat-controlled states quickly took legal action, and a U.S. District court issued a temporary restraining order requiring the Trump administration to keep congressionally-approved funds flowing, at least to those states.

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