The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) has finalized the removal of its government-wide National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) regulations, a move that fulfills a major deregulatory objective of the Trump Administration. This final action reaffirms an interim rule from early 2025, which was initiated by President Trump’s “Unleashing American Energy” Executive Order to simplify the federal permitting process.
Key highlights include:
Rescinding Old Mandates: The action revokes a 1977 Carter-era Executive Order, shifting the CEQ away from enforcing centralized, government-wide regulations.
Agency Autonomy: Federal agencies are now responsible for updating their own specific NEPA procedures. As of June 30, 2025, several major agencies had already streamlined these processes to eliminate bureaucratic delays.
Economic Goals: CEQ Chairman Katherine Scarlett described the move as ending a “regulatory reign of terror,” asserting that cutting "red tape" will accelerate infrastructure investment, job creation, and "energy dominance."
New Role for CEQ: The CEQ will now focus on its core mission of consulting with agencies and providing modernization guidance and templates to ensure consistent, efficient environmental reviews.
The administration maintains that these reforms will fix a "broken" permitting system while continuing to protect the nation's air, water, and land.