Santa Fe New Mexican

Biden restores climate impact safeguards, reversing Trump policy

- By Dino Grandoni and Anna Phillips

WASHINGTON — The White House on Tuesday announced it has restored key protection­s to a landmark environmen­tal law governing the constructi­on of pipelines, highways and other projects former President Donald Trump had swept away as part of an effort to cut red tape.

The new rule will require federal agencies to scrutinize the climate impacts of major infrastruc­ture projects under the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, a 1970 law that required the government to assess the environmen­tal consequenc­es of federal actions, such as approving the constructi­on of oil and gas pipelines.

In 2020, Trump introduced major changes to the law’s implementa­tion, saying the government would exempt many projects from review and speed up the approval process. His administra­tion also said federal agencies would not consider “indirect” climate impacts. Trump and allies in the business community said the move would reinvigora­te infrastruc­ture projects across the nation.

Under the rule finalized by the Biden White House this week, regulators will now have to account for how government actions may increase greenhouse gas emissions and whether they will impose new burdens on communitie­s, particular­ly poor and minority neighborho­ods, that have already faced disproport­ionate amounts of pollution.

The move underscore­s how President Joe Biden is looking for ways to push forward on his climate agenda despite rising concerns about cost increases in the economy. Under pressure to increase the supply of energy and reduce the price of fuel, his administra­tion announced on Friday it would resume issuing oil and gas leasing, disappoint­ing climate activists. The administra­tion is also working to implement a roughly $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill passed last fall.

Business groups and Republican­s are likely to argue the move will raise costs and slow constructi­on, but White House officials insisted that won’t be the case.

“Patching these holes in the environmen­tal review process will help projects get built faster, be more resilient, and provide greater benefits — to people who live nearby,” Brenda Mallory, chair of the White House’s Council on Environmen­tal Quality, said in a statement.

The Trump-era changes made it more difficult for environmen­tal and community activists to challenge federal infrastruc­ture projects, limiting public review of the constructi­on of roads, bridges and power plants — and freeing agencies from having to consider all the ways the projects could affect climate change.

Trump said he was cutting “mountains and mountains of bureaucrat­ic red tape,” saving millions of dollars and kick-starting the economy.

Now, the Biden administra­tion is telling agencies to consider the “direct,” “indirect” and “cumulative” impacts of their actions. The new rule will also give agencies greater leeway to consider less ecological­ly harmful alternativ­es and craft their own, tighter procedures for environmen­tal assessment­s.

When Biden entered office, many of his environmen­talist allies pushed the president to reinvigora­te the law. The statute is considered one of the nation’s most consequent­ial environmen­tal laws, one widely imitated by other countries.

Its teeth lie in its requiremen­t that federal agencies conduct environmen­tal reviews and consult the public before breaking ground. Black and Latino communitie­s in the U.S. that have suffered from poor air quality and industrial pollution have used the law to win significan­t changes in projects that would have further harmed their neighborho­ods.

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