The Endangered Species Committee, chaired by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, convened at the request of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The panel, which includes high-level officials from the EPA and the Army, met for only the fourth time in its five-decade history to grant the waiver. Hegseth argued that domestic oil production is vital to national security, claiming that energy development in the Gulf must not be hindered by environmental regulations.
Conservation groups immediately condemned the decision as a calculated move to prioritize industry profits over biodiversity. Brett Hartl of the Center for Biological Diversity labeled the exemption both illegal and amoral, confirming that the organization plans to amend its existing federal lawsuit to challenge the committee's determination. Defenders of Wildlife president Andrew Bowman echoed this sentiment, describing the meeting as "farcical political theater" that lacks genuine deliberation.





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