The Federal Communications Commission initiated a formal rulemaking process on August 7 aimed at streamlining its environmental review procedures under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The move is part of the FCC’s broader Build America Agenda, focused on expediting high-speed broadband and telecom infrastructure deployment by eliminating regulatory bottlenecks.
The newly issued Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (FCC 25-47) seeks to modernize the Commission’s NEPA and National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) rules in alignment with the amended NEPA statute, which was revised under the Trump administration to redefine what constitutes a “major federal action.” The FCC is now soliciting public input on how these updated statutory definitions should apply to telecommunications projects and what exclusions or modifications may be warranted to reduce permitting delays.
The FCC emphasized that these reforms aim to support faster deployment of next-generation infrastructure by clarifying ambiguous environmental obligations and reducing procedural delays. The agency will also revisit legacy environmental processes to determine whether they remain justified under current law and technology deployment practices.
“Our goal is to align our rules with modern realities and ensure that regulatory processes don’t stand in the way of getting fast, reliable broadband to Americans who need it most,” said FCC Chair Brendan Carr.
🌐 Why it Matters: Permitting delays under NEPA have been a persistent barrier to broadband and wireless infrastructure rollouts. By revisiting these rules, the FCC could significantly reduce deployment timelines for fiber networks, 5G towers, and rural broadband builds—especially in areas where NEPA reviews have historically slowed progress. However, environmental reviews under NEPA have long played a vital role in protecting ecosystems, cultural heritage, and public lands. As the demand for high-speed broadband and 5G infrastructure intensifies—especially in underserved rural and tribal areas—permitting delays tied to environmental assessments can significantly slow deployments.







