Trump opens endangered species’ habitats to developers—50 yr law axed
Big Change to Endangered Species Law: A Super Simple Guide
What Happened on Friday?
The Trump administration flipped a long-standing rule that protected animals in danger of disappearing forever.
For decades, a special environmental law kept the homes (called habitats) of these endangered species safe. Now, those sensitive areas can be used for:
- Drilling (like taking out oil)
- Mining (digging for minerals)
- Farming
- Real estate development (building houses or shops)
[!IMPORTANT]
This is the first time ever that a presidential administration says changing or destroying where these animals live is not automatically considered “harm” under the law.
What is the Endangered Species Act (ESA)?
Think of the ESA as a big rulebook from 1973 made by the U.S. Congress (the people who write federal laws). Its job is to be a shield for plants and animals that are at risk of going extinct (vanishing from Earth completely). It tells the government to protect these species and the places they live.
How Did the Old Rule Define “Harm”?
The old understanding of the law said that “harm” included:
- Habitat modification or degradation (changing or damaging an animal’s home)
Why was that a problem? Because if their home is hurt, the animals might not be able to:
- Breed (have babies)
- Find food
- Find shelter
This broad definition was checked and approved by the U.S. Supreme Court (the highest court in the country) in a 1995 ruling.
The New Definition of “Harm”
Two government groups — the Interior Department and the Commerce Department — finished a new rule that changes what “harm” means under the ESA.
The Trump administration says the old definition was “outdated.” They argue this move:
- Returns the law to its “actual text and original intent”
- Ends “years of federal overreach” (the government going too far)
Steps the Government Took
- On Friday, the Interior and Commerce Departments finalized the change.
- They said the new rule will be printed in the Federal Register (the official daily journal where the government publishes its rules) early next week.
- The new rule narrows “harm” so it only blocks actions that directly injure or kill listed wildlife (animals on the protected list).
- Officials insist narrower “core protections” will still exist, but hurting habitats is no longer automatic harm.
Why Did They Make This Change?
Government leaders explained their side in plain statements:
-
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said the old approach:
- Turned normal activities into a “regulatory trap” (a confusing rule that catches people)
- Raised costs that “impacted people’s lives”
- Gave federal authority “beyond what Congress intended”
He also added: “For years, federal agencies abused the ESA to obstruct lawful land use and burden American families and businesses.” He called the new action “common sense” and said it “follows the statute Congress actually passed.”
-
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the new rule helps fishermen who suffered from “overly broad and burdensome regulations” (rules that were too wide and heavy).
- The administration overall said the previous definition was outdated and the change stops federal overreach.
What Do Environmental Groups Say?
Groups that love nature are very upset and will fight back.
- They plan to challenge the change in court imminently (very soon).
- Kristen Boyles, a lawyer at Earthjustice, said:
“For the first time ever, a presidential administration now claims that species protected by the Endangered Species Act shouldn’t be safe from habitat modification that destroys where they live, raise their young, or search for food.”
She added there is “no scientific support, no legal support, no public support” for the rule. - Gib Brogan, senior campaign director at Oceana, said:
“Habitat loss is the number one cause of extinction. When you remove habitat protections, you remove one of the law’s most important safeguards.”
[!NOTE]
The government says the new rule still stops actions that directly hurt or kill protected wildlife. Critics say that’s not enough because without home protection, animals can still die out.
What Happens Next in Court?
- Environmental groups will point to the 1995 Supreme Court case that backed the broader definition (including habitat destruction).
- If the challenge goes back to the Supreme Court, the current court is far more conservative (leans toward less regulation) than in 1995, so the result could be different.
Other Times They Tried to Change the Rules
The Trump administration has tried to roll back the ESA during both of Trump’s terms, with mixed success:
- Earlier this year: Several top officials, including Burgum, voted to gut long-standing ESA rules in the Gulf of Mexico for the critically endangered Rice’s whale, exempting all oil and gas drilling from the federal law.
- Last year: Interior and Commerce proposed bringing back rules from Trump’s first term that stripped safeguards for plants and animals threatened by human development and a warming planet. Some of those changes were recently struck down in federal court.
Want to Learn More?
- Check out CNN’s Weather App for more on endangered species.
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Summary
In simple terms: the Trump administration changed a 1973 law called the Endangered Species Act so that damaging the homes of endangered animals is no longer automatically “harm.” This opens protected lands for drilling, mining, farming, and building. The government says it’s fixing an outdated rule and keeping core protections, but environmental groups say it removes the most important shield against extinction and plan to sue. The legal fight may reach a conservative-leaning Supreme Court.
FAQ
1. What is the Endangered Species Act?
It’s a 1973 law that protects animals and plants at risk of extinction by stopping actions that hurt them or their homes.
2. What is a “habitat”?
A habitat is the natural home of an animal — where it lives, eats, and raises babies, like a forest for a bird or a reef for a fish.
3. Will endangered animals still have any protection?
Yes. The new rule says it still prevents directly injuring or killing protected wildlife, but it no longer treats destruction of their home as automatic harm.
4. Why are scientists and groups so worried?
Because losing their home is the #1 reason animals go extinct. Without habitat protection, they may not survive even if they aren’t directly killed.
5. Can this change be stopped?
Environmental groups are going to court immediately. They might win, but if the case reaches the Supreme Court, the current judges may side with the administration.
