WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday narrowed the scope of environmental reviews required for major infrastructure projects in a ruling that could accelerate development of railroads, highways and pipelines around the country.
The 8-0 decision follows an appeal to the high court from backers of a multibillion-dollar oil railroad expansion project in Utah, which is aimed at quadrupling oil production in the remote area of sandstone and sagebrush.
Environmental groups said the decision would have sweeping impacts on how the National Environmental Policy Act is applied. The landmark environmental law requires federal agencies to study the likely environmental impacts of government-funded projects in an often lengthy review process.
President Donald Trump's administration has already said it's speeding up that process after the president in January declared a ''national energy emergency'' and vowed to boost U.S. oil and gas production.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh referred to the decision as a ''course correction'' in an opinion fully joined by four conservative colleagues.
''Congress did not design NEPA for judges to hamstring new infrastructure and construction projects,'' he wrote. The three liberal justices agreed the Utah project should get its approval, but they would have taken a narrower path.
The justices reversed a lower court decision that required a more thorough environmental assessment and restored an important approval from federal regulators on the Surface Transportation Board.
The board's chair, Patrick Fuchs, said the ruling reins in the scope of environmental reviews that are ''unnecessarily hindering'' infrastructure construction throughout the country.