Citibank faces growing legal battle over frozen climate funds

A third nonprofit has sued Citibank for blocking access to climate funding backed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, intensifying a legal fight over the Trump administration’s efforts to roll back Biden-era green initiatives.

Jean Chemnick reports for E&E News.


In short:

  • Power Forward Communities, awarded $2 billion through the EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, sued Citibank after its accounts were frozen for nearly three weeks.
  • The bank, which administers $14 billion in green banking funds, has frozen multiple accounts since at least Feb. 18, despite contractual obligations to provide access unless EPA intervenes over fraud or misuse.
  • The move follows pressure from President Donald Trump and EPA administrator Lee Zeldin, who have sought to reclaim climate-related funding, citing political concerns.

Key quote:

“We entered into a contract with the federal government in good faith, and as a result, we have obligations we must meet, and commitments to the American people we intend to keep.”

— Tim Mayopoulos, CEO of Power Forward Communities

Why this matters:

The fight over green banking funds is shaping up to be a flashpoint in the broader struggle over climate policy under the Trump administration. At the heart of the dispute is Citibank’s decision to freeze accounts tied to green banking initiatives — an action that has effectively cut off financing for clean energy and low-carbon projects.

Critics see the move as part of a larger pattern in which financial institutions, facing pressure from Republican lawmakers and regulators, are retreating from climate-focused investments. The implications could be far-reaching, potentially undermining future federal climate programs, stalling nonprofit-led renewable energy initiatives, and limiting access to clean energy funding for low-income communities.

Read more: Trump administration sued over frozen climate funds

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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