The Environmental Protection Agency’s Draft Strategic Plan

Oct 12, 2021

Reading Time : 1 min

The first goal, tackling the Climate Crisis, tasks the EPA with prioritizing reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from all sectors and increasing the adaptive capacity of tribes, states, and other communities. The plan commits the agency to long-term performance goals of finalizing regulations to curb GHG emissions from light, medium and heavy-duty vehicles, electric generating units and the oil and gas industry. It also sets an agency priority goal for 2022-23 of phasing down production and consumption of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). Methane emissions are already in the administration’s sights with the recent pledge to reduce them by 30 percent by 2030.

The second goal, taking decisive action to advance environmental justice and civil rights follows up on Executive Order commitments from the earliest days of the Biden-Harris administration and is consistent with other actions elsewhere in the administration. Language around tangible progress for historically disadvantaged environmental communities and fair environmental quality is common in the academic sphere, but the new strategic plan takes that language further into practice than seen before for a federal agency. This goal dovetails with broader strategies of the Biden-Harris administration, such as the recent establishment of the Office of Climate Change and Health Equity under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The President’s 2022 budget proposal also includes a call for a new Senate-confirmed assistant administrator for environmental justice at the EPA, and designates half of a proposed $1.8 million funding boost to the EPA for environmental justice work.

Other goals in the draft 2022-2026 plan include enforcement of existing regulation, cleaner air and water, responding to environmental emergencies, and ensuring chemical safety. Cross-agency strategies include scientific integrity, workforce equity, children’s health, and engagement in civic partnerships. The strategic plan is open for public comment through November 12, and the final plan will be issued in February 2022 together with the EPA’s fiscal 2023 budget proposal.

Share This Insight

Previous Entries

Speaking Sustainability

March 31, 2026

On March 23, 2026, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) held a public workshop on implementation of the Corporate Climate Data Accountability Act (SB 253), as companies prepare to comply with initial greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting requirements later this year. The workshop followed CARB’s February 2026 adoption of initial regulations under SB 253 and SB 261, which we discussed here, and focused largely on potential future rulemakings, particularly with respect to Scope 3 emissions, GHG accounting methodologies, assurance and organizational boundary setting.

...

Read More

Speaking Sustainability

March 6, 2026

The California Air Resources Board (CARB) recently finalized a narrowly crafted, initial set of implementing regulations (Regulations) for California’s climate‑reporting statutes (i.e., SB 253 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reporting) and SB 261 (climate‑related financial risk disclosures).1 As adopted, the Regulations largely mirror the proposal issued in December 2025, without material changes. The Regulations provide a limited set of foundational compliance mechanics, but defer many consequential issues to future rulemaking initiatives, particularly in relation to how Scope 3 GHG emissions are to be reported under SB 253.

...

Read More

Speaking Sustainability

March 5, 2026

On February 18, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued its final rule repealing the greenhouse gas (GHG) “endangerment finding.” EPA’s leadership has characterized the repeal as a return to a narrower reading of the statute in light of scientific, technological and policy developments since 2009. The move significantly attempts to reshape the federal climate regulatory landscape and promptly drew legal challenges.

...

Read More

Speaking Sustainability

February 12, 2026

In a presidential memorandum issued January 7, President Trump announced the United States will begin executive proceedings to withdraw from a historic number of international organizations, conventions and treaties, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and others aimed at environmental protection and climate action.

...

Read More

© 2026 Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. All rights reserved. Attorney advertising. This document is distributed for informational use only; it does not constitute legal advice and should not be used as such. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Akin is the practicing name of Akin Gump LLP, a New York limited liability partnership authorized and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority under number 267321. A list of the partners is available for inspection at Eighth Floor, Ten Bishops Square, London E1 6EG. For more information about Akin Gump LLP, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP and other associated entities under which the Akin Gump network operates worldwide, please see our Legal Notices page.