Current:Home > FinanceEPA Plans to Rewrite Clean Water Act Rules to Fast-Track Pipelines -Wealth Pursuit Network
EPA Plans to Rewrite Clean Water Act Rules to Fast-Track Pipelines
Algosensey View
Date:2025-04-10 16:45:09
The Trump administration is proposing changes to federal regulations that could fast-track the approval of natural gas pipelines and other energy infrastructure. Environmental advocates say the move will weaken the ability of states and tribes to protect their waters.
The proposed changes to Clean Water Act permitting rules, announced Friday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, would limit the amount of time states and tribes can take to review new project proposals to a “reasonable period” of no more than one year, with the definition of “reasonable period” left to federal agencies to determine and the clock starting from the inital request for a permit, with no pauses or restarts.
It also would limit states to considering only water quality and allow the federal government to override states’ decisions to deny permits for projects in some situations.
“This proposed rule change would hobble the most important tool that states have to protect significant waters, from prized trout streams to essential drinking water sources,” said Bradley Campbell, president of the Conservation Law Foundation.
States need time and access to information to properly analyze the potential water quality impacts of proposed infrastructure projects, particularly pipelines. “Putting limitations on that and the types of information they can consider is a problem,” said Matthew Gravatt, deputy legislative director for the Sierra Club.
Gravatt said the changes also would limit states’ authority to protect their waterways from effects such as erosion and sedimentation by restricting their permit decisions to only considering the potential for discharges into the water from a point source. When Washington state rejected a water quality permit for a coal terminal in 2017, it cited several environmental repercussions of the project, including air pollution and the findings in an environmental impact statement that included climate change.
The proposed rule changes follow an executive order President Donald Trump issued in April directing his administration to accelerate and promote the construction of pipelines and other energy infrastructure.
Specifically, Trump directed the EPA to propose revisions to the rules for permits issued under Section 401 of the Clean Water Act, which gives states and some tribes the authority to assess the potential impact infrastructure projects might have on rivers and other navigable waters within their borders.
“Our proposal is intended to help ensure that states adhere to the statutory language and intent of [the] Clean Water Act,” EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler, a former fossil fuels lobbyist, said in a written statement. “When implemented, this proposal will streamline [the] process for constructing new energy infrastructure projects that are good for American families, American workers, and the American economy. ”
Industry groups said the rule change would provide project developers with greater regulatory certainty.
“A well-defined timeline and review process for water quality certifications are integral to developing infrastructure that reliably provides clean and affordable energy to American families and businesses every day,” said Robin Rorick, vice president of midstream and industry operations at the American Petroleum Institute.
Sen. Tom Carper, the top Democrat on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, blasted the proposal.
“President Trump and EPA Administrator Wheeler like to tout that this administration has made ‘crystal clear water’ a top priority,” Carper said in a written statement. “But the only thing today’s proposed rule makes crystal clear is that this administration prioritizes the false promises of ‘energy dominance’ over clean water, even if it means defying the intention of Congress, undermining the Clean Water Act and abandoning all pretense of cooperative federalism to do so.”
Expect Legal Challenges
Once finalized, the proposed changes face inevitable legal challenges.
The EPA’s plan conflicts with decades of legal precedents, said Jennifer Danis, a staff attorney at Columbia Law School’s Environmental Clinic. “There is a vast body of precedent that confirms the critical importance of states’ primacy over and expertise in protecting their own waters,” she said.
Carper and two other Democratic senators, Tammy Duckworth of Illinois and Cory Booker of New Jersey, expressed similar views in a letter to the EPA following Trump’s executive order this spring.
“After nearly five decades and multiple opportunities to amend the 1972 Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Congress has never seen the need to significantly revise Section 401(d)—even after the Supreme Court’s 1994 decision explicitly affirming state authority to impose conditions based on state law,” the letter stated.
“Our concern is that your purported deference to states and tribes flies in the face of your mandate to speed up federal permitting, and there is nothing cooperative about robbing states and tribes of the time and careful analyses they require to protect their invaluable water resources,” the senators wrote.
A New York Pipeline Rejected Over Water Issues
Significant delays in pipeline projects due to state water permits are rare, with most projects certified by the state and federal regulators within a year, Danis said.
“I think any delays in the large gas infrastructure projects are largely a result of shoddy and incomplete applications or route selection that’s going to imperil fragile and protected resources,” she said.
Wheeler, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, pointed to the Constitution Pipeline, a proposed 124-mile pipeline that would transport natural gas from Pennsylvania into New York, as an example of a pipeline that was stopped. The project was denied a water quality permit by state officials in New York, a decision that has since been appealed by the Williams Companies, Inc., the project developer.
Christopher Stockton, a spokesperson for the company, praised the proposed rule changes.
“Williams supports efforts to foster coordination, predictability and transparency in federal environmental review and permitting processes for energy infrastructure projects,” Stockton said in a written statement.
EPA will accept public comment on the proposed rule changes for the next 60 days. In his executive order, Trump wrote that the EPA should have the rule change finalized by May 2020.
Published Aug. 9, 2019
veryGood! (5998)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- George Clooney urges Biden to drop out of the 2024 race: The dam has broken
- Blake Lively Reveals the “Best Compliment” She’s Received in Her Life
- Sophia Bush Shares Insight Into “Priceless” Friendship With One Tree Hill Costar Hilarie Burton
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Blown landing-gear tire causes a flight delay at Tampa International Airport; no injuries reported
- Costco is raising membership fees for the first time in 7 years
- Kyle Richards Shares a Hack for Doing Her Own Makeup on Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Cast Trips
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Powerball winning numbers for July 10: Jackpot rises to $41 million
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Montana’s High Court Considers a Constitutional Right to a Stable Climate
- Customer fatally shoots Sonic manager in San Antonio, Texas restaurant: Police
- Copa America 2024: Everything you need to know about the Argentina vs. Colombia final
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Rep. Bob Good files for recount in Virginia GOP congressional primary
- Sophia Bush Shares Insight Into “Priceless” Friendship With One Tree Hill Costar Hilarie Burton
- Noah Lyles withdraws from Diamond League meet in Monaco to focus on Olympic training
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Shelley Duvall, star of ‘The Shining,’ ‘Nashville,’ dies at 75
Despite problems, Boeing Starliner crew confident spacecraft will bring them safely back to Earth
AI-generated jokes funnier than those created by humans, University of Southern California study finds
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Lawsuit filed in case of teen who died after eating spicy chip as part of online challenge
Man detained after BBC commentator's wife, 2 daughters killed in crossbow attack in U.K.
ABTCOIN Trading Center: Turning Crisis into Opportunity, Bull Market Rising