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A federal judge on June 2, 2026 issued a preliminary injunction blocking the Trump administration and the National Science Foundation from transferring stewardship of the NCAR‑Wyoming Supercomputing Center away from the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). Senior U.S. District Judge R. Brooke Jackson found the administration’s move likely unlawful — describing the decision as arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of discretion — and said officials failed to explain the action or follow the agency’s public‑comment process.
The court record also cites evidence the transfer was tied to political retaliation against Colorado after state officials refused pressures related to former Mesa County clerk Tina Peters.
UCAR warned the transfer would disrupt critical weather, climate and space‑weather modeling used by DoD, NASA, NOAA, FAA, DOE, agriculture and emergency management; roughly 1,500 researchers from more than 500 universities rely on its computing resources.
The injunction preserves UCAR’s rights, resources and responsibilities for the supercomputing center while the nonprofit’s lawsuit proceeds, marking a significant legal setback to the administration’s plan to break up NCAR.








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