E.P.A. to Stop Updating Popular Database After Lead Scientist Criticized Trump
E.P.A. to Stop Updating Popular Database After Lead Scientist Criticized Trump

The database, which helps companies calculate their greenhouse gas emissions, will continue under a consortium that includes Stanford University.
Read the full article on NY Times Politics
Truth Analysis
Analysis Summary:
The article's claim about the EPA stopping updates to a database after criticism of Trump is plausible given the political climate during his administration, but difficult to verify definitively with the provided sources. The article exhibits moderate bias by framing the event as a direct consequence of the criticism, potentially overlooking other contributing factors.
Detailed Analysis:
- Claim: EPA to Stop Updating Popular Database After Lead Scientist Criticized Trump
- Verification Source #2: Brookings.edu tracks regulatory changes during the Trump administration, suggesting potential shifts in environmental policy, but does not specifically confirm this claim.
- Verification Source #4: PMC article mentions massive cuts to science and medicine in Trump's budget, which could indirectly support the claim of reduced EPA database updates, but doesn't directly address it.
- Verification Source #5: The scholarlycommons.law.case.edu article discusses vulnerabilities of the EPA during the Trump administration, providing context but not directly verifying the claim.
- Assessment: Unverified. While the sources suggest a trend of environmental policy changes and budget cuts during the Trump administration, none directly confirm the specific claim about the EPA database.
- Claim: The database, which helps companies calculate their greenhouse gas emissions, will continue under a consortium that includes Stanford University.
- Assessment: Unverified. None of the provided sources confirm this claim.
Supporting Evidence/Contradictions:
- Source 4 mentions 'massive cuts to science and medicine in Trump budget', which provides some context for potential EPA database changes.
- Source 2 tracks regulatory changes during the Trump administration, suggesting a climate where such actions could occur.