Trump handed Elon Musk more than 700 acres of a protected Texas wildlife refuge, and the federal agency that gave it away is calling the move conservation. The land sits inside the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge, home to endangered animals and sacred to the Indigenous people who have lived alongside it for generations, and now it is being cleared for the world’s first trillionaire to launch more rockets.
The deal runs through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which approved a land swap that moves roughly 712 acres of the wildlife refuge into SpaceX’s hands. In exchange, SpaceX hands the government about 683 acres it owns elsewhere in Cameron County, some of it sitting as far as 20 miles from the refuge. On paper it is a trade. In practice the public is giving up irreplaceable protected coastline so a private rocket company can expand a launch site it already built on top of wetlands. The acreage has been reported as high as 775 in some documents, but the number everyone agrees on is more than 700.
What lives on that land is the whole point. The wildlife refuge shelters two endangered wild cats, the ocelot and the jaguarundi, along with the aplomado falcon, sea turtles, and migratory birds that move through one of the last intact wildlife corridors on the Gulf Coast. The area is also a designated National Historic Landmark, and it is sacred ground to the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, whose tribal chair has said the government is allowing the destruction of their lands and ecosystems in pursuit of space ventures. This is not empty scrubland. It is one of the most ecologically and culturally loaded stretches of coast in the country.
The timing makes it worse. Elon Musk just became the first trillionaire in human history, riding the largest public offering the stock market has ever seen for SpaceX. Days later, the same man is being handed hundreds of acres of a public wildlife refuge at no real cost to him. A government that tells working families there is never enough money for housing or healthcare found 700 acres of protected habitat to give a man who could buy the entire state several times over. The optics are not subtle, and neither is the transfer.
Conservation groups are not letting it slide. On June 10, a coalition led by the Center for Biological Diversity, joined by tribal and environmental organizations, sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to block the giveaway. The lawsuit argues the agency broke three separate federal laws when it approved the swap, including the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, the National Historic Preservation Act for handing away a National Historic Landmark, and the National Environmental Policy Act. The groups say the agency cannot legally trade away refuge land in a way that permanently degrades the wildlife refuge it is sworn to protect.
The government’s defense leans on a classification game. Fish and Wildlife graded its own 712 acres of refuge as poor to medium quality while grading the 692 acres SpaceX offered in return as high quality, a tidy way to make a lopsided trade look generous. Critics are not buying it, because quality on a spreadsheet does not replace an established wildlife corridor that endangered cats already use. A spokesperson for the agency said the exchange advances long term wildlife conservation and aligns with the administration’s goals of strengthening American innovation and economic competitiveness, which is the kind of sentence written to make a land transfer sound like a public service.
SpaceX’s record on that coast does not inspire confidence either. The company has already burned down more than 60 acres of wildlife habitat during rocket testing, dumped polluted water on the beach, and sent rocket debris into nearby communities on both sides of the border with Mexico. Residents have reported their windows cracking and their home foundations shifting from the force of the launches. SpaceX built its company town, Starbase, on the wetlands in 2014 and got it officially designated a city in 2025, and the new refuge land would let it push its operation even further into territory that was never supposed to be industrial.
So the honest answer to whether Trump gave Elon Musk over 700 acres of endangered land is yes, with the asterisk that it was dressed up as a swap and stamped with the word conservation. A wildlife refuge created to protect species that cannot survive anywhere else is being converted into runway for the richest man alive, and the only thing standing between the ocelots and the bulldozers right now is a lawsuit. The administration calls it innovation. The people who live there, fish there, and pray there call it a land grab, and the courts are about to decide which word wins.
