Introduction
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has reached a legal settlement with environmental and agricultural nonprofits after the agency temporarily removed online resources referencing climate change. The dispute focused on public access to tools farmers use to plan for extreme weather and climate risk. While many webpages were restored before the case reached a key hearing, the settlement centers on ensuring continued access to the underlying datasets that power USDA climate mapping tools.
How the Dispute Began
After President Donald Trump took office last January, USDA staff were reportedly instructed to flag and delete webpages mentioning climate change, including guidance and planning resources used by farmers. Environmental and agricultural groups sued, arguing that removing the information harmed producers who rely on federal tools to manage wildfire, drought, and other climate-linked risks.
What the Settlement Requires
Under the settlement, USDA agreed to share the datasets used for its climate risk viewer and related tools. The agency also agreed to keep the climate risk viewer online at least until plaintiffs receive the raw data. The viewer is described as containing more than 140 map layers, including wildfire risk information. The practical purpose of the data transfer is to ensure the plaintiffs can recreate the maps if the online tools are removed again in the future.
What the Settlement Does Not Guarantee
The agreement does not require USDA to keep climate-related webpages online indefinitely. Instead, it reinforces the idea that agencies can update or change websites, but should do so with appropriate process, including notice to the public when access to important informational tools changes. The settlement focuses on preserving public access through data availability rather than locking in permanent website language.
Legal Arguments Raised in the Case
The lawsuit alleged the webpage purge violated multiple federal requirements. The complaint cited rules that govern how agencies manage public access to information tools and datasets, including requirements to provide adequate notice when changing access to certain informational resources. The plaintiffs argued that abrupt removals created a real-world impact by interrupting farmers’ ability to prepare for extreme weather and navigate conservation and resilience programs.
Why Farming Groups Joined the Lawsuit
One plaintiff, the Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York, highlighted that growers depend on USDA webpages that explain financing and support options for climate-smart conservation practices. Farming groups said they routinely direct producers to these resources to offset costs tied to soil health, resilience upgrades, and other sustainability measures. Even after restoration of webpages, farm advocates said uncertainty remains over which loan and support programs are currently active.
Broader Context: Funding Uncertainty for Farmers
The settlement arrives amid wider anxiety in the farm sector about shifting federal support, including concern that future legislation could reduce funding for conservation practices. Farm advocates described a landscape where producers face financial precarity while needing stable, navigable federal guidance to manage weather volatility and long-term risk.
Conclusion
The USDA settlement resolves a dispute about transparency and continuity of public climate resources by focusing on access to the underlying data, not permanent guarantees about webpages staying online forever. For farmers and agricultural nonprofits, the agreement provides a backstop: even if digital tools disappear again, the raw datasets will enable independent rebuilding of climate risk maps and planning resources. The broader challenge, however, remains ensuring clear, stable access to the programs and funding farmers need to adapt.

