ALBANY, NY (10/30/2025) (readMedia)-- Today, TIME Magazine named Governor Kathy Hochul as one of its 100 Most Influential Climate Leaders of 2025. The award is not deserved.
In her interview with TIME, Hochul repeatedly claimed to stand up to the Trump administration's assault on renewable energy and proudly declared that New York is "actively fighting pollution and climate change." In response, Julia Walsh, Director at Frack Action, issued the following statement urging the Governor to stand by her word and stop pushing fossil fuel pipelines at the Trump administration's direction:
"Governor Hochul is talking like an environmentalist but acting like a Trump appointee. Rather than actually lead on climate and listen to the science like she says she is, the Governor is pressuring state regulators to approve two massive fracked gas pipelines that would be a disaster for New York - going against New Yorkers just to score some political points with Trump. If the Governor is the climate champion she claims to be, she should respect the State's previous repeated decisions to reject these pipelines and invest in clean, renewable energy that won't destroy our environment."
Fact-checking Gov. Hochul's claims
Background
Neither the NESE or Constitution applications have been amended since they were repeatedly denied by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), which means they both still pose the exact same environmental threats to New York. The Constitution pipeline would threaten more than 250 waterways throughout Upstate New York, endangering sensitive habitats and wildlife populations that depend on healthy ecosystems, while the Williams NESE pipeline would stir up toxic contaminants in the New York Harbor that harm critical fisheries and other wildlife habitats.
In addition to serious threats to ecosystems across the State, these pipelines would force regular New Yorkers to pay billions to expand fossil fuel infrastructure that is increasingly unreliable and expensive to maintain. National Grid's own estimates state that the NESE pipeline alone will cost New Yorkers at least $2.2 billion and force ratepayers to pay more than $200 million every year for the next 15 years - though a report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) suggests the real cost to New Yorkers is closer to $3.2 billion.