Endangered Species Committee

The Endangered Species Committee is a high-level federal committee established in 1978 under the Endangered Species Act. It was created to address extremely rare situations in which proposed federal action conflicts with the protection of an endangered or threatened species and no workable alternatives appear to exist. 

Purpose of the Endangered Species Committee 

The Endangered Species Act requires federal agencies to avoid actions that could jeopardize a listed species or destroy its critical habitat. In most cases, agencies resolve these issues through planning, consultation and mitigation. The committee is used only when those tools fail and a project of significant national or regional importance faces unresolvable conflicts with Endangered Species Act requirements. The Committee may grant an exemption to Endangered Species Act protections only when certain criteria are met. 

Committee Membership 

The Committee has seven voting members: 

  • Secretary of the Interior (Chair)
  • Secretary of Agriculture
  • Secretary of the Army
  • Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
  • Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • One individual appointed by the President
  • A representative from the affected state 

This structure ensures that exemption decisions consider environmental, economic and public interest perspectives. 

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