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The SPEED Act and the Pandora’s Box of Permitting Reform

President Donald Trump holds up the executive order “Unleashing American Energy,” part of a series of actions directing federal agencies to accelerate energy project approvals and dismantle the regulatory framework used to implement the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

A sweeping rollback of U.S. environmental protections is moving through Congress with remarkably little public attention. In December 2025, the House quietly passed the Standardizing Permitting and Expediting Economic Development (SPEED) Act, legislation that would dramatically weaken—and in key areas effectively gut—the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the nation’s cornerstone environmental review law. Despite the far-reaching consequences of the bill, it received little national media coverage and almost no public debate outside congressional hearings. The legislation has now moved to the U.S. Senate, where negotiations are beginning over a permitting overhaul that could permanently dismantle some of the legal tools communities rely on to challenge environmentally harmful projects.

The SPEED Act would write many of these environmental rollbacks directly into federal law. The legislation narrows which projects qualify for environmental review, severely restricts agencies from analyzing cumulative environmental impacts, and imposes strict deadlines and page limits on environmental studies. It would also slash the time allowed to challenge federal approvals in court—from up to six years under existing federal law to just 150 days—restrict judges from halting unlawful projects through injunctions, and limit the ability to introduce new scientific evidence after permits have been issued.

Supporters frame the proposal as “permitting reform,” arguing that environmental review slows the construction of renewable energy projects such as wind and solar. But weakening environmental oversight to accelerate development opens a Pandora’s box. Once the legal tools that allow communities, tribes, and local governments to challenge federal approvals are dismantled, the consequences extend far beyond renewable energy—to pipelines, mining operations, nuclear facilities, fossil-fuel infrastructure, and other industrial megaprojects.

SPEED and NEPA: How Environmental Review Works

NEPA requires federal agencies to analyze environmental impacts before approving development projects such as nuclear facilities, uranium processing plants, waste storage sites, pipelines, mining operations, and other major infrastructure. Agencies such as the Department of Energy (DOE), Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) must evaluate environmental consequences, consider alternatives, publish their analyses, and respond to public comments before issuing final approvals.

Environmental review typically begins with an Environmental Assessment (EA), which evaluates whether a proposed project is likely to cause significant environmental impacts. If impacts may be significant, the agency must prepare a much more detailed Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). Draft environmental reviews are opened for public comment, allowing communities, tribes, scientists, and organizations to submit concerns that agencies must address before making a final decision. If the agency concludes impacts are not significant, it may issue a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) instead of preparing a full EIS. Historically, major environmental reviews have often run hundreds or even thousands of pages and taken years to complete, with input from multiple federal and state agencies.

Although NEPA itself is a statute passed by Congress, the detailed procedures agencies follow are shaped by regulations issued by the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) within the Executive Office of the President. Because those rules sit within the executive branch, they can be reshaped through Executive Orders (EOs) and regulatory rulemaking. Presidents cannot change the law itself—that authority belongs to Congress—but they can direct federal agencies in how the law is implemented.

For example, President Donald Trump’s EO 13807 in 2017 imposed a two-year target for completing federal environmental reviews under NEPA. President Joe Biden revoked that order in 2021 through EO 14008, restoring elements of the prior regulatory framework.

In early 2025, the Trump administration again moved aggressively to weaken environmental review through EO 14154, “Unleashing American Energy,” directing federal agencies to accelerate project approvals and dismantle the regulatory framework historically used to implement NEPA. The order was followed by a CEQ interim ruleproposing removal of the government-wide NEPA regulations, forcing agencies to rewrite their own procedures while narrowing environmental analysis and speeding approvals. These actions closely track recommendations outlined in the conservative governing blueprint known as Project 2025, which called for restructuring CEQ and significantly weakening NEPA’s role in federal decision-making.

Efforts to weaken environmental review did not begin with Trump alone. In 2023, President Biden signed the Fiscal Responsibility Act, which amended NEPA by imposing statutory deadlines on environmental reviews—generally two years for an EIS and one year for an EA. Supporters argued the changes would accelerate renewable-energy projects such as wind and solar. Critics warned that weakening environmental review for one category of development weakens it for all.

An example of how these compressed timelines have already reshaped environmental review is DISA Technologies’ application to the NRC to license its High-Pressure Slurry Ablation (HPSA) uranium-processing technology. Regulators at the NRC advanced the licensing review in a matter of months using an EA and FONSI rather than a full EIS, even though the licensing effort lacked the kind of site-specific environmental analysis that normally triggers a more comprehensive review for uranium-processing activities. The accelerated timeline significantly limited the time available for residents living near abandoned uranium mines on the Navajo Nation to review the proposal and submit comments before the licensing process moved forward.

Courts have historically enforced NEPA when agencies fail to follow its requirements. Judges can halt projects, vacate permits, and require agencies to redo environmental review before construction continues. The SPEED Act would sharply restrict those remedies, preventing courts from halting projects even when agencies violate environmental law. It would go further by writing many of these limits directly into federal law, transforming policies currently imposed through executive orders and regulatory rulemaking into statutory requirements that future administrations could not easily reverse.

The SPEED Act in Congress

The House passed the SPEED Act (H.R. 4776) on December 18, 2025 by a vote of 221–196 after months of debate over federal permitting reform and the future of environmental review under NEPA. During a hearing of the House Natural Resources Committee, Ranking Member Jared Huffman warned that the legislation would undermine NEPA’s core protections.

“In the name of ‘speed,’ this legislation takes a sledgehammer to NEPA’s core functions—the very things that help keep communities safe, projects accountable, and our environment protected,” Huffman said.

Huffman also criticized the bill’s treatment of public participation, arguing that “the SPEED Act treats public input like it’s an annoyance rather than a resource that can guide better decisions.” He warned that narrowing the scope of environmental review would prevent agencies from fully evaluating environmental consequences and that the bill “restricts what major environmental impacts can even be considered for review.”

The California congressman also rejected the claim that environmental laws themselves are responsible for permitting delays. “The most effective, proven way to speed permitting is to ensure we have properly staffed and trained federal permitting offices to process applications,” Huffman said, pointing to the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), created under EO 14158, whose restructuring efforts he said had “decimated agency staffing” at key permitting offices. According to Huffman, the real bottleneck is not NEPA but chronic underfunding and understaffing of the federal agencies responsible for reviewing projects.

The SPEED Act has now moved to the Senate, where it sits before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee (EPW). In March 2026, Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Martin Heinrich announced in a joint statement that discussions over permitting reform were restarting. Although the SPEED Act was not mentioned explicitly in their statement, the timing strongly suggests it sits at the center of the negotiations now underway in the Senate. Just days after the announcement, the Congressional Research Service released a detailed legal analysis examining how the House-passed bill would reshape federal environmental review under NEPA. Requests for clarification sent to EPW and to the offices of Whitehouse and Heinrich asking whether the SPEED Act would be the focus of those negotiations had not been answered at the time of publication.

Permitting Reform and Pandora’s Box

As negotiations move forward in the Senate, Democrats now face a deeper strategic question: whether weakening environmental review in the name of permitting reform to accelerate renewable energy development risks permanently dismantling the protections those laws provide. Environmental law does not apply selectively. Any change made to speed one category of development automatically applies to every other federally permitted project as well.

In a recent interview with Axios, Senator Brian Schatz argued that the House-passed SPEED Act fails to address major barriers to renewable energy expansion. “I looked at the SPEED Act… there’s like nothing on transmission in the SPEED Act,” Schatz said. Schatz also warned that any permitting overhaul must ensure it does not primarily accelerate fossil-fuel development, saying “we need to have some confidence that we’re not going to make the world safe for the American Petroleum Institute and not for all these solar projects.”

At the same time, Schatz suggested the environmental movement must rethink its traditional role, arguing that “we need to build big things rather than just be fixated on stopping bad things.” Many environmental advocates view that compromise as a deal with the devil. Opening Pandora’s box by weakening environmental protections in order to speed renewable development would not stop with wind and solar. The same weakened legal framework would apply to pipelines, mining operations, nuclear facilities, fossil-fuel infrastructure, and other industrial megaprojects.

Earthjustice warned in its opposition to the SPEED Act that stripping courts of their authority to halt unlawful projects would make it “nearly impossible for communities to hold federal agencies accountable for unlawful environmental reviews.” Multiple requests for comment sent to Schatz’s office asking whether he would support negotiating the SPEED Act in the Senate were not answered before publication.

In a phone conversation on March 12, Huffman said he believes the SPEED Act is fundamentally misdirected and warned that Democrats should resist pressure to compromise on environmental law in the current political moment. The legislation, he argued, attempts to rewrite environmental review while ignoring what he described as the administration’s “crazy war on clean energy,” including policies affecting wind and solar development.

Earlier in the House debate, Huffman posed a question that cuts to the heart of the issue:

“Who is this legislation actually for? Because it’s not tribes whose sacred land is at risk of being desecrated. It’s not impacted communities worried about toxic projects that could irreversibly pollute where they live. It’s certainly not hardworking, everyday folks being pummeled by the insane cost of living, who are desperate for more affordable energy. It’s crystal clear that this legislation is for corporate polluters and Big Oil donors so they can keep padding their pockets at the expense of every other person in America. The American people deserve better.”

Call your senators today and demand they kill the SPEED Act. The U.S. Capitol switchboard is 202-224-3121.

The post The SPEED Act and the Pandora’s Box of Permitting Reform appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

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