San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN ADMINISTRA­TION REVISES ‘HABITAT’ DEFINITION

Restores criteria for species protection­s shrunk under Trump

- BY CATRIN EINHORN Einhorn writes for The New York Times.

The Biden administra­tion is throwing out the definition of “habitat” for endangered animals, returning to an understand­ing that existed before the government under President Donald Trump shrank the areas that could be protected for animals under threat of extinction.

By striking a single sentence from the regulation­s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service and National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Fisheries could once again protect a “critical habitat” even if it had become unsuitable because of developmen­t or other changes but could be restored.

The Trump administra­tion narrowed the definition of “habitat,” limiting federal protection to only places that can sustain an endangered species, as opposed to a more broad, historic habitat where the animal could someday live or dwell.

But the Trump administra­tion’s rule was at odds with the conservati­on purposes of the Endangered

Species Act of 1973, wildlife officials say.

“For some species that are on the brink of extinction due to habitat loss or climate change, and there’s literally not a lot of habitat left, we need every tool in the toolbox to be able to protect the remaining habitats that could be suitable,” said Bridget Fahey, division chief for conservati­on and classifica­tion at the Fish and Wildlife Service.

A critical habitat designatio­n does not restrict activity on private land unless it involves federal authorizat­ion or funding; federal agencies must ensure that any actions they fund, permit or conduct do not destroy or adversely modify such habitats.

The move comes amid an intensifyi­ng biodiversi­ty crisis, with an estimated million plant and animal species around the world threatened with extinction. A main cause is habitat loss as people transform wild areas into farms, cities and towns. Pollution and climate change make the problem worse.

The change by the Biden administra­tion is the first of several expected reversals of Trump-era rules that govern the Endangered Species Act. Officials expect to rescind a second rule, also related to habitat needs, next month. And earlier in June, they proposed a new rule that would strengthen protection of species in a changing climate by allowing regulators to introduce experiment­al population­s of animals outside their historic ranges.

But a separate, sweeping set of Trump-era changes to how the Endangered Species Act is applied, made in 2019, remain in place with plans for them unclear, environmen­tal advocates say. Those rules allow regulators to consider economic factors in decisions on species protection; make it easier to remove animals and plants from the endangered list; loosen protection­s for species newly listed as “threatened,” which is the level below endangered; and make it harder to consider the effects of climate change when protecting species at risk.

Those changes were applauded by industry groups including the National Associatio­n of Home Builders, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Associatio­n and the Western Energy Alliance, which welcomed the regulatory relief.

But conservati­on groups filed a legal challenge to that set of rules in 2019, a case that is still pending.

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