Cold winter and AI boom pushed US emissions increase in 2025

BSS
Published On: 13 Jan 2026, 18:45

WASHINGTON, United States, Jan 13, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Greenhouse gas emissions 
in the United States rose last year, snapping a two-year streak of declines 
as cold winter temperatures drove demand for heating fuel and the AI boom led 
to a surge in power generation, a think tank said Tuesday.

The 2.4 percent increase in the world's largest economy came as President 
Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress enacted a series of policies hostile 
to climate action, though the authors of the Rhodium Group report said the 
full impact of those decisions will only be felt in the coming years.

Rich nations, including Europe's largest economies Germany and France, are 
slowing the pace of planet-warming gas reductions even as global temperatures 
continue to soar, with 2025 set to be confirmed as the third-hottest year on 
record.

US emissions fell in 2024 by 0.5 percent and in 2023 by 3.5 percent, after 
the economy rebounded from the Covid pandemic and emissions rose in both 2021 
and 2022, by 6.3 percent and 1.2 percent respectively.

Building emissions rose 6.8 percent, followed by the power sector where 
emissions increased by 3.8 percent, the report found.

"Weather is bumpy year-to-year -- we tend to see building emissions bump 
around like this due to higher fuel use for heating," Rhodium Group analyst 
and the report's co-author Michael Gaffney told AFP.

"But in the power sector this is about growing significant demand from data 
centers, cryptocurrency mining operations and other large load customers," he 
added.

Compounding matters, high natural gas prices driven by heating demand and 
increasing liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports allowed a comeback for coal, 
the "dirtiest" fossil fuel, which accounted for 13 percent more electricity 
generation than in 2024.

Still, solar had a strong year, surging by 34 percent and helping lift the 
grid share of zero-emitting power sources by one percentage point to a 
record-high 42 percent -- even as wind growth slowed and nuclear and 
hydropower output held steady.

In transport, the highest-emitting sector, emissions were nearly flat despite 
a fifth straight year of record road traffic, as the vehicle fleet became 
more efficient and consumers rushed to buy electric and hybrid vehicles 
before tax credits expired.

- Solar energy up -

The United States is the world's second-largest emitter after China, but has 
the highest cumulative emissions since the start of the industrial era in the 
mid-19th century.

US greenhouse gas emissions have generally trended downward since peaking in 
2007, averaging a decline of around one percent per year despite periods of 
flat or rising emissions, driven by natural gas replacing coal, a growing 
share of renewables in power generation, improved energy efficiency and more.

Since taking office, Trump has declared war on renewable energy -- from 
abruptly halting wind farm permits to signing into law legislation that 
brought an early end to clean energy tax credits and revoking electric 
vehicle incentives.

He has also opened more public lands to drilling, while his administration 
has sought to repeal regulations aimed at limiting emissions of the super-
pollutant methane from oil and gas facilities.

But co-author Ben King told AFP that growth in solar generation and electric 
vehicle sales still pointed to "sustained progress."

What this all means for the medium and long term remains unclear, though the 
United States is far off track to meet its previous Paris Agreement target of 
cutting emissions 50-52 percent by 2035 relative to 2005 levels, set under 
former president Joe Biden.

"Solar, wind, batteries, these are some of the cheapest things to bring onto 
the grid right now and some of the most available things," said King.

"So there's some economic impetus to be doing that, regardless of whether the 
White House or Congress, or whoever likes it or doesn't."

The Rhodium Group generates its annual estimates using a combination of 
official data and -- because government greenhouse gas inventories have a 
significant lag -- supplements this with modeling based on economic and 
power-generation data.

But since the Trump administration is no longer expected to collect relevant 
data, future forecasts are set to become more difficult.


     

 

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