Trump to revamp environmental law in bid to fast track pipelines, roads
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[July 15, 2020]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump is expected to announce his final plans to expedite permitting for
major infrastructure like oil pipelines and road expansions in Atlanta
on Wednesday, a move that environmentalists say will bypass public
input.
The proposal to update how the 50-year old bedrock National
Environmental Protection Act (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-climate-nepa/white-house-unveils-plan-to-speed-big-projects-permits-idUSKBN1Z81IM)
(NEPA) is implemented is part of Trump’s broader campaign to cut
environmental regulation to boost industry and fast-track projects that
often take years to complete - an effort that has been blocked or slowed
down by courts.
Just last week (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-pipelines/end-of-an-era-series-of-u-s-setbacks-bodes-ill-for-big-oil-gas-pipeline-projects-idUSKBN2491M5),
a federal judge ordered the Dakota Access pipeline to shut down because
the Army Corps of Engineers had failed to do an adequate NEPA impact
study and the Supreme Court blocked construction of the Keystone XL line
from Canada pending a deeper environmental review.
The White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) proposed the
changes to NEPA in January, kicking off a public comment period.
Officials had called the proposal "the most significant deregulatory
proposal" of the Trump administration.
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President Donald Trump attends a news conference in the Rose Garden
at the White House in Washington, U.S., July 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Two sources familiar with the plan said the final rule doesn't
differ significantly from the previous proposal, which sets time
limits for environmental reviews and says federal agencies need not
factor in the “cumulative impacts” of a project, which could include
its impact on climate change.
The CEQ received over 1 million comments after the January proposal,
many of which opposed the changes and offered evidence that they
could have "harmful results," said Caitlin McCoy, a staff attorney
for the Harvard Law School Environmental and Energy Law Program.
This could make the rule vulnerable in lawsuits, she said.
"CEQ will need to show that it grappled with these adverse comments
and considered all of the important aspects of making these changes,
otherwise aspects of the regulations could be ruled arbitrary and
capricious," she said.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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