The
White House Council for Environmental Quality said it will
restore key provisions of National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
regulations that had been in place before the Trump
administration overhauled the rules last year, the first time in
decades.
The new rule proposed by the White House council would direct
the agency to account for climate change and other indirect
environmental impacts of a project; empower federal agencies to
consider alternative designs or approaches for a company's
proposed projects and let agencies adopt reviews that go beyond
council's regulations.
“The basic community safeguards we are proposing to restore
would help ensure that American infrastructure gets built right
the first time,” said council Chair Brenda Mallory, who added
that the changes can "reduce conflict and litigation" involved
in the environmental review process.
Former President Donald Trump in 2020 revamped NEPA in an effort
to fast track major projects like the now cancelled Keystone XL
oil pipeline that he said got caught up in red tape and
interfered with his focus on U.S. "energy dominance."
His NEPA overhaul allowed federal agencies to exclude the
climate impact of a project, making it easier for major fossil
fuel projects to sail through the approval process and avoid
legal challenges.
Over the last few years, federal courts had ruled that NEPA
required the federal government to consider a project’s carbon
footprint in decisions related to leasing public lands for
drilling or building pipelines.
Trump's rule also widened the categories of projects that can be
excluded from NEPA altogether.
Over the coming months, the council will work on the next phase
of its changes to NEPA regulations, which will get into more
detail about how local communities can participate in the
environmental review process and factor in climate change
impacts.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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