News CA
U.S. carbon emissions were falling. Why did they go up in 2025?

Coal plants churned out more electricity. Power-hungry data centers and cryptocurrency mining operations drove up demand. And colder winter temperatures meant more furnaces working overtime.
After two years of declines in the amount of greenhouse gases the United States pumped into the atmosphere, the nation’s planet-warming emissions rose an estimated 2.4 percent during 2025, according to an analysis published Tuesday by the independent economic research firm Rhodium Group.




