Current:Home > MarketsTrump Proposes Speedier Environmental Reviews for Highways, Pipelines, Drilling and Mining -TruePath Finance
Trump Proposes Speedier Environmental Reviews for Highways, Pipelines, Drilling and Mining
View
Date:2025-04-24 12:34:57
Just 110 days before he faces the nation’s voters for the second time, President Donald Trump continued his three-and-a-half-year attack on the nation’s environmental laws on Wednesday by seeking to reign in one of the most important—the statute that requires federal agencies to assess the environmental consequences of their actions.
The new rule Trump put forth would shorten review times under the National Environmental Policy Act, establishing a two-year limit for full environmental reviews and a one-year deadline for less detailed assessments of projects ranging from pipelines and freeways to drilling on federal lands.
Environmentalists are concerned that the new NEPA rule would also limit those reviews from fully considering the effects of climate change, the biggest environmental threat of all.
Trump unveiled the proposed changes at a UPS hub in Atlanta, walking on stage to Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA” before announcing that he was “modernizing” NEPA.
He recalled his own “years and years” of litigation as a developer and what he described as a “maze-like approval process that costs millions and millions of dollars.”
“All of that ends today,” Trump said. It will mean “better roads, bridges and highways for every UPS driver and citizen across our land.”
Industries supporting the administration welcomed the promise of a less costly and streamlined environmental review process.
But environmental lawyers in academia and with environmental groups predicted that the Trump administration would fail. They said they expected courts will find the new regulations overreaching in part because they erode the law’s requirement that environmental reviews examine indirect and cumulative environmental impacts—for example, how a petroleum pipeline could contribute to global warming.
Trump’s action also raises the stakes in the November election. His opponent, Democrat Joe Biden, laid out a $2 trillion plan on Tuesday to address climate change and boost jobs and the economy amid a coronavirus-caused recession.
In some ways, Trump’s NEPA maneuver could be seen as a response to Biden’s climate plan, which the president on Wednesday attacked as a job killer.
The new NEPA regulations could be swept aside by Democrats if they win the White House and both houses of Congress in November, just as Republicans and President Trump, under the Congressional Review Act, rejected some of the Obama administration’s final-month actions. Among the Trump administration’s actions: the scuttling of the Obama administration’s rule protecting streams near coal mines.
“There have long been calls to streamline the NEPA process and specifically shorten the timeline for completing that process,” said Jayni Foley Hein, natural resources director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law. “But the scope of these regulatory revisions far exceeds anything in recent memory.”
She said the Trump administration NEPA rule-making could be open to challenge because it goes beyond the scope of the law.
“There is a potential conflict between what the statute requires on its face and these new regulations,” she said. “Agencies would be wise to follow the letter of the statute.”
Patrick A. Parenteau, professor of law and senior counsel in the Environmental Advocacy Clinic at Vermont Law School, put it more bluntly.
The regulations, he said, “won’t survive judicial review, or they will be immediately erased from the books as soon as Biden is in office. This is just a waste of time, except it will provide a lot of business for lawyers.”
NEPA was passed in 1969, even before the first Earth Day, at a time when the nation was dealing with severe air and water pollution and major development fights, like a proposed Everglades airport to serve supersonic planes.
Congress wrote lofty goals into the act, including declaring “a national policy which will encourage productive and enjoyable harmony between man and his environment, to promote efforts which will prevent or eliminate damage to the environment and biosphere and stimulate the health and welfare of man.”
NEPA also can apply to state, local and private entities when there is a federal link.
The Trump administration has rolled back dozens of environmental regulations, and in January, it proposed relaxing NEPA by prohibiting consideration of the long-term effects of climate change.
This earlier proposal was an attempt to sweep away a hurdle slowing his agenda for unfettered fossil fuel development. Since then, tens of millions of Americans have lost their jobs amid the coronavirus pandemic, and both Biden and Trump are now offering programs they say will help the economy recover.
“This move is really going after one of the bedrock environmental laws and it’s not undoing an action as much as systematically shifting how things have been done for a long time,” said David Konisky, a political scientist and professor at the Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs.
What makes NEPA distinct from other environmental laws is that it is primarily a procedural process, rather than a regulation focused on a particular industry, and it informs what the government needs to consider in implementing infrastructure projects, he said.
NEPA’s process can delay projects, and environmental groups have become good at using the environmental review process to slow or halt projects that could be harmful to the environment, he said. “They do this by holding agencies’ feet to the fire to make sure they complete all elements of the review,” he said.
Sometimes the government finds that cutting corners doesn’t pay off.
Last week, for example, a federal judge ordered the shut-down and emptying of the Dakota Access Pipeline—the largest pipeline out of North Dakota’s Bakken shale basin—pending a more complete environmental review in what was an extraordinary remedy for the Standing Rock Sioux tribe in its long fight against the project.
The new NEPA rule, long awaited, had been expected to limit the consideration of climate impacts by specifying that agencies are only required to analyze effects of a project that are immediate, local and direct, as the president first proposed in January.
In the final rule Trump announced on Wednesday, produced by his Council on Environmental Quality, climate impacts could be considered if they could be “reasonably foreseeable” or “have a reasonably close causal relationship to the proposed action or alternative.”
More than 1 million people, businesses or organizations submitted comments.
The American Petroleum Institute and the Association of Oil Pipelines, in a joint filing, said that delays caused by NEPA “compounded regulatory uncertainty and chilled trillions of dollars of investment in vital infrastructure and other projects that would otherwise bear significantly more timely benefits in the form of job creation, economic activity, and federal, state, and local tax revenue.”
The American Petroleum Institute, which represents 600 companies in the oil and natural gas sector, praised the Trump administration on Wednesday. “These reforms will help accelerate the nation’s economic recovery and advance energy infrastructure while continuing necessary environmental reviews,” Mike Sommers, API’s president and CEO, said in a press release.
The National Association of Home Builders said that a streamlined permitting process, with time restrictions on full and limited environmental reviews, would support the housing market.
“The final rule to reform the National Environmental Policy Act is the most recent example of the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to reduce harmful regulations that hurt small businesses and impede economic growth,” Chuck Fowke, the association’s chairman, said in an emailed statement.
Environmental groups panned the regulations and promised legal challenges, saying the rules would hurt low-income and minority communities that often feel the brunt of development.
“This is a clear attempt to silence and sideline people to make it easier for industry to pollute our communities,” Gina McCarthy, president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council and President Obama’s EPA Administrator, said in a written statement. “We will not let this stand.”
EarthJustice said the Trump administration was trying to gut more than 40 years of settled environmental law.
The new regulations will open the door for the government to exempt pipelines, large-scale logging operations, waste incinerators, smog-spewing highways and countless other federal actions from environmental review, or sharply limit local communities’ ability to participate in the environmental decision-making process, the environmental group said.
Gutting NEPA “silences voices and puts vulnerable communities, health, and our environment—including our air and water—at risk,” said Kristen Boyles, staff attorney at Earthjustice.
It is not NEPA that slows projects, but underfunded government agencies, said Kym Hunter, a senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center.
Streamlining the process may reduce opportunities for the public to weigh in on the environmental impacts of certain projects, Konisky said. “If any of these changes to NEPA come to fruition, that could cut off those opportunities,” he cautioned.
Konisky expects to see lawsuits “immediately,” especially regarding the possibility that some types of projects could be relinquished from a full environmental review process.
Boyles, the Earthjustice attorney, agreed.
“We’re not going to sit back and allow a decision that could harm public health during a public health crisis go unscathed,” she said. “We’ll be seeing them in court.”
veryGood! (89)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- As home costs soar, Massachusetts governor unveils $4B proposal to build and preserve housing
- “They burned her: At the end of an awful wait for news comes word that a feared hostage is dead
- A new study points to a key window of opportunity to save Greenland's ice sheet
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- NFL Week 7 odds: Moneylines, point spreads, over/under
- Biden’s visit to Israel yields no quick fixes: ANALYSIS
- What we know about the deadly blast on the Al Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Las Vegas Aces become first repeat WNBA champs in 21 years, beating Liberty 70-69 in Game 4
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Former official accused in Las Vegas journalist killing hires lawyer, gets trial date pushed back
- Poland’s opposition parties open talks on a ruling coalition after winning the general election
- Eddie George rips Tennessee State football fans for not supporting winning team: 'It hurts the kids'
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Lawsuit dropped after school board changes course, adopts Youngkin’s transgender student policy
- Spooked by Halloween mayhem, Tokyo's famous Shibuya district tells revelers, please do not come
- Marine killed in homicide at Camp Lejeune; second Marine held for suspected involvement
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Mega Millions numbers from Tuesday's drawing: Jackpot reaches $69 million
US says initial independent review shows no evidence of bomb strike on Gaza hospital
Trailblazing Brooklyn judge Rachel Freier recounts difficult return from Israel
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Start Your Fall Fashion Capsule Wardrobe With Amazon Picks From Darcy McQueeny
South Carolina coach Shane Beamer breaks foot kicking 'something I shouldn't have' after loss
Hundreds mourn as Israeli family of 5 that was slain together is laid to rest