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Climate Leadership Continues By New York State: Infrastructure Investments, Community Projects, Environmental Conservation, Emmissions Standards

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Editor’s note: Last year, the Nature Conservancy held a symposium to discuss the pressing Climate related issues affecting New York State and City.  Back in 2023, the conservancy released a report on the tree canopy that exists in each of the five boroughs, as part of the Forest For All NYC plan to increase tree cover across the city.  See below for our interview with the Nature Conservancy’s policy expert on some of the wins in the latest approved budget for New York State: 

 

Ahead of Budget Deadline: Urgent Statement on NY Climate Law Changes

 

Statement from Natural Resources Defense Council, New York League of Conservation Voters, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund

April 22, 2026 – The following statement from Natural Resources Defense Council, New York League of Conservation Voters, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund was released in response to the proposed CLCPA changes presented to the State Legislature:

“New York has long been a national leader on climate. What we do here sets the standard for the rest of the country. Maintaining a strong, nation-leading climate law is how we protect that leadership and the New Yorkers counting on it.

New Yorkers are already reeling from utility bills and prices at the pump that keep climbing, pushed higher by spiking fossil fuel costs and volatile global markets. The climate law is one of the few tools we have to break that cycle by investing in clean energy, efficiency, and a modern grid that lowers costs over time and insulates families from the next price shock.

Reported proposals amount to a sweeping rollback, one that would delay the clean energy transition at the very moment New Yorkers need it most, leaving households more exposed to the fossil fuel volatility driving their bills up today.

There is a path forward to reasonable changes to the CLCPA that maintain New York’s leadership and commitment to scaling clean, affordable energy.  That starts with ensuring New York has a credible, near-term plan to implement the law, including cap-and-invest regulations in the next year. With regulations already two years overdue, waiting until 2029 or 2030 – a decade after the CLCPA’s passage – is simply too late.

New York must also maintain enforceable emissions reduction requirements rather than replace them with voluntary goals. Ten states have binding climate targets to reduce pollution. If these proposals move forward, New York would be the first to roll any target back in law.

A well-designed cap-and-invest program is essential to cutting emissions while driving investment in utility bill rebates and clean energy to lower costs for New Yorkers.

On Earth Day, we are reminded that protecting the environment and building a more affordable future go hand in hand. Investing in clean energy, efficiency, and modern infrastructure is how we lower energy bills and deliver clean air for every family in New York.”

 

Prior to our meeting but after the budget had passed, with many of the desired changes mentioned above, the following was released.  Most of our discussion centered on the bullet points below: 

 

STATEMENT BY THE NATURE CONSERVANCY ON NEW YORK STATE BUDGET
 
May 27, 2026 (Albany, NY) – This year’s New York State budget includes:
The Nature Conservancy in New York released the following statement from Jessica Ottney Mahar, The Nature Conservancy’s New York policy and strategy director:
Regarding environmental funding:
“The state budget continues historic levels of funding for the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) and increases funding for the Clean Water Infrastructure Act (CWIA). The EPF provides critical funding to every county in the state including every borough of New York City to reduce pollution, improve public health, conserve natural resources, and expand access to nature. The CWIA enables communities to protect clean water and public health through programs that repair and modernize drinking water and wastewater infrastructure. This funding is essential for New Yorkers’ health and safety.”
“This year’s budget includes significant shifts of funding from two cornerstone EPF programs – state land conservation and state land stewardship – into other programs. These programs are then backstopped with transfers from the Sustainable Future Program, outside the EPF. This shift of funding from one environmental program to another supplants rather than supplements funding that is needed now, more than ever. We urge lawmakers to refrain from future diversions of EPF program funding and restore the two reduced programs in the next state budget.”
Regarding amendments to the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act:
“While other states are reducing pollution and lowering energy bills by expanding clean energy, our state leaders are slowing the progress New York needs to make to deliver clean air, lower costs, and energy reliability by prolonging our reliance on fossil fuels.”
“We need to get on track as soon as possible and continue progress towards New York’s long-term goals, which remain unchanged. This means advancing an affordable cap-and-invest program as soon as possible to reduce pollution and generate sustainable revenue to support the transition to a clean energy economy. Until cap-and-invest is enacted, we need to implement the Sustainable Future Program and other complementary policies that fund clean transportation, energy efficient buildings, and other solutions that deliver the lower costs, cleaner air, reliable energy and healthier communities that New Yorkers deserve.”
“As part of the budget agreement, the ‘ASAP Act,’ which enables the generation of more clean, locally produced, low-impact energy distributed solar energy was passed. This will increase energy affordability and support economic development. This policy and associated new funding for the NY Sun Program is a big win for New Yorkers and for our environment. Thank you to Assemblymember Barrett and Senator Harckham for their leadership, and to members of the Legislature for ensuring this was part of the final budget agreement.”
Regarding amendments to the State Environmental Quality Review Act:
“Unfortunately, the state budget includes significant changes to the New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA). These changes to SEQRA weaken safeguards that ensure development projects protect public health, safety, and the natural resources we all depend on. While the changes include some improvements from the original proposal, the enacted language remains confusing and may lead to uneven implementation across the state.”
To learn more about The Nature Conservancy’s work, visit nature.org/NewYork.

 

Banner Image: Nature Conservancy animal contest. Image Credit – Nature Conservancy


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The Nature Conservancy is a global conservation organization dedicated to conserving the lands and waters on which all life depends. Guided by science, we create innovative, on-the-ground solutions to our world's toughest challenges so that nature and people can thrive together. We are tackling climate change, conserving lands, waters and oceans at an unprecedented scale, providing food and water sustainably and helping make cities more sustainable. Working in 76 countries and territories: 37 by direct conservation impact and 39 through partners, we use a collaborative approach that engages local communities, governments, the private sector and other partners.