Posted on March 4, 2021 by Rich Powell and Mitch Kersey
We’ve all heard The Biden Administration’s mission to “Build Back Better,” but right now, we can only build new clean energy projects and reduce CO2 emissions as fast as we can permit new projects. If we are to truly build back better, the mission ought to be Build Cleaner Faster. Watch ClearPath’s latest whiteboard video explaining the history of the environmental permitting process, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and why modernizations must keep pace with the transition to a clean energy economy that will require tens of thousands of miles of new pipelines carrying hydrogen and captured carbon dioxide from power plants and industrial facilities, new transmission infrastructure to carry electricity around an increasingly electrified country, and new power plants sited everywhere will be key to a clean energy future. This will be the largest continental construction project in history, and every one of those projects will begin with a permit.
Every single one of those projects will begin with a permit. Often called the “Magna Carta” of environmental laws, the National Environmental Policy Act, also known as “NEPA,” was signed into law by President Nixon in 1970 and was one of the first laws ever written to establish a broad national framework for environmental protection. NEPA’s purpose is to ensure that Federal agencies consider the environmental, social, and economic impacts of proposed projects, and inform and involve the public in the decision making process.
Unfortunately, the simple process envisioned in 1970 looks nothing like the process today. Since its inception more than 50 years ago, the NEPA process has become costly and ineffective, slowing down progress and becoming a tool to delay or kill energy projects without providing a better outcome for the environment. Astoundingly, NEPA was enacted as just six pages of legislation. Now, it has resulted in a federal permitting process that can take a project as long as 5 to 10 years to complete and cost millions of dollars. The most impactful and important infrastructure projects are the ones NEPA slows the most. The irony? Delays to good projects means delays to the environmental and economic benefits that could improve Americans’ quality of life.
Making the permitting process more efficient is essential for two reasons: one, stewardship of taxpayer resources, and two, scaling clean energy rapidly. Streamlining and accelerating project permitting should focus on the following four steps:
At ClearPath, we believe all of this can be done by improving the process without changing any of the environmental protection laws. Let’s remember streamlining NEPA changes nothing requiring a project to comply with the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act, etc. And, we believe such reform can be done without introducing more regulation or new taxation, or revoking the public’s opportunity to be involved in the review process.
We have seen dozens of major U.S. companies announce ambitious net-zero targets by 2050 or before. NEPA’s current review process is of concern if we are to meet these ambitious climate goals and spur economic growth. The good news: a number of legislative proposals to modernize the process are being written as we speak. The need to act is urgent, and can only be done if there are efforts to Build Cleaner Faster.
View more of Our Take and let us know what you think at jaylistens@clearpath.org.