By late November 2025, the Trump administration rolled back Biden-era safeguards for endangered species and their habitats, reviving its first-term rules: prioritizing economic factors in conservation decisions and axing the “blanket protection” policy (which extended endangered-species safeguards to “threatened” species). The move has split environmental groups and industry stakeholders.

Trump Administration Rolls Back Biden-Era Endangered Species Protections, Reviving First-Term Rules Amid Backlash
(Which Should Take Priority: Economic Development or Animal Protection? Brandon Schmidt Unsplash)

Economic Priorities, End to “Blanket Protections”

Jointly proposed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), the changes focus on two shifts: 1) making economic factors a top consideration for ESA protections; 2) scrapping the “blanket rule” for threatened species. The proposal is in a 30-day public comment period. A prior version (Trump’s first term) was paused by property-rights group lawsuits, which remain on hold.

“Restoring the ESA’s Original Intent”

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum defended the plan: “We’re restoring the Endangered Species Act’s original intent—protecting species with clear standards, while honoring Americans’ land-dependent livelihoods.” Officials noted the move addresses energy, mining, and development industries’ longstanding complaints about overly restrictive environmental rules

Environmental Alarm vs. Industry Praise

Environmental groups blast the rollback as catastrophic. “Species like the Florida manatee could lose recovery progress and face greater endangerment,” said Wildlife Conservation Society senior attorney Jane Davenport.Energy and mining groups, however, praise it: the change will streamline permitting, cut regulatory barriers, and boost industry growth