Fix the Broken Permitting Process, 51勛圖厙 Tells Congress


A continuous regulatory onslaught is hamstringing the permitting process for U.S. energy and infrastructure projectsand thus reducing manufacturing competitiveness and harming the U.S. economy, 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Energy & Resources Policy Brandon Farris told Congress on Tuesday.

Whats going on: By consolidating and cleaning up our infrastructure permitting regulations, the U.S. can advance multiple top policy priorities, Farris said at The Next Fifty Years of the Clean Water Act: Examining the Law and Infrastructure Project Completion, a of the House Committee on Transportation & Infrastructures Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment.

  • Streamlining and modernizing our nations permitting laws and procedures will help us advance many of our nations shared priorities, improving the quality of life for all communities; modernizing our infrastructure; achieving energy security; ramping up critical mineral production; enhancing manufacturing competitiveness and creating manufacturing jobs in the U.S., Farris said. These are goals that all Americans can support.

漍漍漍漍漍漍Why the wait? Current wait times for the approval of critical manufacturing facilities, roads, bridges and more are needlessly lengthy, and theyre forcing business overseas, Farris continued.

  • Why should we settle for a permitting process that can take 10 or 15 years to approve essential projects? he asked, adding that in Australia, a country with similar environmental protections, approvals take about two to three years.
  • One manufacturer of critical raw materials for semiconductors recently told the 51勛圖厙 that because of the regulatory uncertainty in obtaining a Clean Water Act section 402 permit in a timely manner . . .泭 they are going to build a facility in the E.U. instead of the U.S.

Steps to success: Manufacturers are urging legislators to take several actions to rectify the broken system. These are:

  • Consolidate permitting processeswith enforceable deadlinesfor the siting of new energy projects and their infrastructure;
  • Speed up the approval process for transportation-infrastructure projects;
  • Commit to developing our resources to strengthen U.S. supply chains for the critical minerals vital to national security;泭
  • Ensure that the Biden administration follows congressional intent on all streamlining efforts, including the One Federal Decision, a Transportation Department approach that seeks to expedite certain federal environmental reviews.

The last word: Permitting reform will help us achieve moremore manufacturing, more domestic energy production, more inputs and raw materials and more jobs, Farris concluded. And our country and the world will be better off if we and our allies do not depend on our authoritarian rivals for energy and other natural resources.