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The Permitting Trap: Is Green Tape Killing Green Energy?

Empirical data undercuts the dominant narrative: fewer than 5% of wind and solar projects required the most burdensome federal permits between 2010–2021, and median permitting duration nearly halved over the same period—suggesting transmission queues, supply chains, and local opposition are larger bottlenecks than environmental review. The more consequential threat to renewable deployment may now be legislative rather than regulatory, as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act compressed tax credit deadlines from 2032 to end of 2027, creating a financial cliff that bears no relationship to permitting speed. The deepest tension in the briefing is not procedural but political: proposed permitting reforms are simultaneously demanded by clean energy developers, opposed by 650+ environmental groups as a fossil fuel Trojan horse, and challenged by Global South scholars who argue that fast-tracking without community consent produces legally reversible projects—as Argentina's $1.3B Cauchari annulment demonstrated.

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