SATURDAY, JULY 4, 2026|No. 5780
News · Energy · US

White House Deletes Thousands of Energy Conservation Web Pages Amid Heatwave

The Department of Energy removed roughly 6,000 web pages on energy conservation following political controversy over heatwave advice, sparking debate about public access to critical information.

A heatwave grips New York City as temperatures exceed 95°F, straining the electrical grid.
A heatwave grips New York City as temperatures exceed 95°F, straining the electrical grid.
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White House deletes thousands of web pages about energy conservation as heatwave slams US

It follows Republican outrage over Mamdani offering the same heatwave advice as everyone else.

by Terrence O'Brien

Jul 4, 2026, 12:19 PM EDT

The US Department of Energy reportedly deleted about 6,000 pages related to energy conservation as a historic heatwave tears across the country.

The deletion was suspiciously timed, following Republican outrage over Mayor Zohran Mamdani asking New Yorkers to help reduce strain on the grid by setting their AC to 78 degrees. Republicans like Ted Cruz (who has famously fled severe weather in his home state), Nikki Haley, and Representative Nancy Mace (South Carolina) quickly pounced, framing the request as socialism and an act of war on women in menopause (the Republican Party is notoriously friendly to women’s health).

Of course, this is pretty standard advice during a heatwave. It was the official stance of the Department of Energy that Americans should set their thermostats between 75 and 78 degrees, and Republican governors in deep red states like Texas have issued the same advice in the past — including current governor Greg Abbott.

The deletions by the Trump administration are broad and indiscriminate. While pages that would support Mamdani’s request to lower thermostats were deleted, so too were pages about water conservation, types of insulation, and its solar decathlon challenge. The Internet Archive preserved the pages that have been lost.

Temperatures topped 95 degrees for four straight days in New York City, including two days over 100 degrees. Those sorts of temperatures put significant strain on the electrical grid, especially when more people are home during a holiday weekend.

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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