Trump administration rule weakens protections for threatened species 11-Jul 03:05

The Trump administration finalized a major change on Friday to how threatened species are considered in ​agency actions, removing regulatory language aimed at preventing ‌damage to wildlife habitats.

The change limits the reach of the 50-year-old Endangered Species Act, which is credited with helping to save ​the bald eagle, California condor and numerous other ​animals and plants from extinction.

The departments of Interior ⁠and Commerce said the final rule will reduce ​permitting and compliance costs for energy producers, farms, fishing interests and ​more. The move is aligned with U.S. President Donald Trump's goal to reduce regulations that he says constrain American businesses.

"This action restores ​common sense, respects private property, provides much-needed certainty for ​landowners and follows the statute Congress actually passed," Interior Secretary Doug ‌Burgum ⁠said in a statement.

The Endangered Species Act is a key regulatory consideration for government agencies when considering whether to grant permits for oil and gas, mining, electric ​transmission and other ​operations on ⁠federal lands and water. The law requires agencies to evaluate the impact of proposed ​operations on threatened and endangered species.

The new ​rule ⁠removes habitat destruction from the definition of the word "harm" in the ESA, meaning project developers would be allowed to ⁠impair ​places where species live so long ​as wildlife is not injured directly or killed.

It was proposed in April ​of last year.