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This post was originally published on Legal Planet. Reprinted with permission.

Readers can find Professor Farber’s follow-up post, “Finetuning the New NEPA Rules,” on Legal Planet.

Early on July 28, the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) released the proposed Phase II revisions of its National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) regulations. The CEQ proposal deftly threads the needle, streamlining the NEPA process while protecting the environment and disadvantaged communities.

The proposal is a clear improvement over both earlier versions: 1978 rules issued by the Carter administration, and 2020 rules issued by the Trump administration. “Phase II “revisions were already in the works when Congress played a wildcard at the beginning of June: rewriting NEPA itself as part of the debt ceiling bill. That made redoing the NEPA rules trickier.

Streamlining

In terms of streamlining the process, the new rules incorporate the deadlines and page limits found in the Financial Responsibility Act. The inclusion of these statutory requirements is not notable in itself, but CEQ did not provide support for using possible ways to bend the rules.

The new rules also have several provisions that are intended to improve efficiency. Here are some of the important examples:

Environmental values

The proposed rules contain numerous provisions promoting fuller consideration of environmental impacts. For example:

Environmental justice

The Biden administration has worked to increase the focus on the environmental woes of disadvantaged communities. Attention to environmental justice is a theme of the proposed rules:

Striking a balance

There is a broad consensus that the NEPA process badly needs streamlining. Conservatives and industry have taken that position for years. That view is now shared, however, by advocates for clean energy and climate resilience. The current proposal pursues streamlining with minimal impact on environmental protection and environmental justice.

The Trump administration used streamlining as an excuse to curtail analysis of environmental impacts, focusing only on the most immediate and downplaying issues like climate change. The current proposal rejects that philosophy. It requires only that impacts be reasonably foreseeable. Streamlining efforts are focused on the process rather than the substance of environmental assessment.

We are likely to see complaints on both sides — but especially from those who want more streamlining regardless of the impacts on the environment or disadvantaged communities. We may also see complaints from groups that feel the current system gives them more leverage to protect the environment or the interests of disadvantaged communities.

CEQ wisely refrained from pursuing streamlining at all costs or jettisoning the value of honestly examining environmental consequences. CEQ was also aware that, unless the permit process for clean energy projects is streamlined, both the environment and disadvantaged communities will be more exposed to the ravages of climate change. This was not an easy balance to strike, and the inept drafting of the most recent NEPA amendments only made it harder.

To my mind, the proposal is an important step forward. This is not to say that I think it’s perfect. I will discuss some initial thoughts about possible improvements in my next post. But the CEQ proposal will improve the NEPA process in tangible ways.