US Climate Tech Faces Cancellations and Uncertainty Amid Shifting Trends

Major project cancellations and growing uncertainty are clouding the future of US climate technology, despite recent years of strong momentum and investment.

After a period of sustained optimism and headline-grabbing investment in US climate technology, the sector is experiencing a noticeable downturn. Throughout the past few years, the American climate tech space saw significant government grants, private capital inflows, and rapid advances in research and development. However, in 2025 alone, a substantial value of US climate tech projects have faced cancellation or downsizing, a trend mapped and reported in recent industry coverage.

One illustrative case is Aspen Aerogels´ decision to halt plans for a Georgia factory that would have produced advanced materials for battery fire suppression. This reversal came just months after a significant Department of Energy loan was announced for the project, highlighting the abrupt nature of current setbacks. Aspen Aerogels will partially shift production to Rhode Island and handle some operations overseas, but this is just one among many. According to a nonprofit organization´s latest report, over a dozen prominent climate tech projects were abandoned or significantly altered in the early months of the year—an abnormal development in a sector previously defined by forward momentum.

Industry tracking databases, such as Jay Turner´s Big Green Machine, corroborate this negative shift, documenting that more investment value has been lost through delays, cancellations, or bankruptcies than gained via new or expanded projects since the start of the year. Factors fueling this trend include increased uncertainty from new tariffs and broader economic pressures, making it difficult for businesses reliant on significant, long-term financing to manage risk. While some climate tech initiatives continue to advance, analysts warn that the broader environment is turning less hospitable and could slow US progress in the global energy transition. Experts suggest that, as America’s climate tech sector contends with these headwinds, competing nations—especially China—stand to strengthen their positions in global climate industries like electric vehicles and batteries, raising questions about whether the US risks losing ground in critical clean energy markets.

67

Impact Score

IBM and AMD partner on quantum-centric supercomputing

IBM and AMD announced plans to develop quantum-centric supercomputing architectures that combine quantum computers with high-performance computing to create scalable, open-source platforms. The collaboration leverages IBM´s work on quantum computers and software and AMD´s expertise in high-performance computing and Artificial Intelligence accelerators.

Qualcomm launches Dragonwing Q-6690 with integrated RFID and Artificial Intelligence

Qualcomm announced the Dragonwing Q-6690, billed as the world’s first enterprise mobile processor with fully integrated UHF RFID and built-in 5G, Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6.0, ultra-wideband and Artificial Intelligence capabilities. The platform is aimed at rugged handhelds, point-of-sale systems and smart kiosks and offers software-configurable feature packs that can be upgraded over the air.

Recent books from the MIT community

A roundup of new titles from the MIT community, including Empire of Artificial Intelligence, a critical look at Sam Altman’s OpenAI, and Data, Systems, and Society, a textbook on harnessing Artificial Intelligence for societal good.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.