
Headline: Interior Secretary Burgum Expands Hunting, Streamlines Energy Permitting in Trump Administration's First 100 Days
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The same day, Secretary Burgum appeared in the weekly "This Week at Interior" video, where he outlined the department's energy efforts as part of the Trump administration's first 100 days. In the video, Burgum discussed the implementation of emergency energy permitting procedures designed to fast-track approvals. These new procedures will dramatically overhaul the energy permitting process, reducing environmental and tribal reviews from years to weeks. This emergency measure responds to President Trump's declared national energy emergency and covers oil, gas, coal, and various other energy sources.
Also on May 2, the Interior Department announced plans to update offshore financial assurance rules to support future energy development. The Department expects to finalize this rule later in 2025 and will welcome public comments on the proposal.
These recent actions align with the administration's stated goal of achieving "energy dominance." Secretary Burgum was shown visiting an oil rig and an LNG export facility, emphasizing the administration's focus on increasing domestic energy production.
In other developments, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has announced its intent to revise the previous administration's offshore bonding requirements for oil and gas operations. Additionally, the U.S. Geological Survey has been tasked with mapping underwater minerals as part of the administration's resource development strategy.
Earlier in April, Secretary Burgum issued an order authorizing a major reorganization of the Interior Department. The restructuring will be led by Tyler Hassen, reportedly an official from Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Burgum's order grants Hassen "all authority necessary" to oversee the consolidation process, including control over funding, policy, and personnel decisions. This move follows a February executive order from President Trump directing federal agencies to downsize.
The reorganization has drawn criticism from some quarters, including Native American organizations. A coalition of Native advocacy groups sent a second letter to Secretary Burgum in late April urging him to oppose President Trump's FY 2026 Budget Request, which would cut billions of dollars from Indian Country programs, including a $1.2 billion reduction to the Indian Affairs budget and a $100 million cut to the Office of Justice Services.