Opinion for the Court PER CURIAM.
Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge MIKVA.
This case is before us a second time following a remand to the Interstate Commerce Commission. The controversy relates to the ICC’s relaxation of regulatory strictures triggered by a railroad’s proposed abandonment of rail lines that have fallen into a state of rail-traffic desuetude. In our prior consideration, we concluded that the ICC’s order establishing a class exemption for abandonments was, in certain respects, deficient under the applicable standards of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (1982). Specifically, we concluded that in three particulars the Commission failed adequately either to address salient points adumbrated in comments submitted to the ICC or to marshall the requisite factual support for the conclusions undergirding the Commission’s final rule.
The question now before us is whether the ICC complied on remand with both the APA’s strictures and the specific requirements previously articulated by this court. In addition, an entirely new set of questions arose during the course of the proceedings on remand, namely, whether the ICC’s actions comply with various federal environmental statutes. For the reasons that follow, we uphold the Commission’s decision.
I
The order in question involves an expedited method of effecting abandonment of “out of service” rail lines,1 which are defined as those carrying no local traffic for at least two years. The Commission promulgated the regulation, 49 C.F.R. § 1152.50 (1985), pursuant to the deregulatory mandate of the Staggers Rail Act of 1980,2 *217specifically section 10505. 49 U.S.C. § 10505 (1982). Section 10505 requires the ICC to exempt a transaction or class of transactions from regulation when the Commission finds that (1) regulation is not necessary to carry out the multi-faceted national rail transportation policy (RTP), as set forth in 49 U.S.C. § 10101a; and (2) either (a) the transaction is of limited scope, or (b) regulation is not needed to protect shippers from the abuse of market power. Id. § 10505(a). The statutory and procedural background of the rulemaking is thoroughly chronicled in our previous opinion, the upshot of which was to dispatch the rulemaking back to the Commission for further consideration and explanation. Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. ICC, 787 F.2d 616 (D.C.Cir.1986).
In directing a remand, our colleagues faulted the Commission’s order in several respects. First, the ICC had failed adequately to consider whether the abandonment regulations from which it was exempting eligible rail lines were necessary to effectuate relevant goals of the RTP, specifically: (1) energy conservation, (2) maintenance of reasonable rates, (3) meeting the needs of the national defense, and (4) cooperation with States in respect of transportation matters. Id. at 629-32.3 Second, the Commission had neglected to assess the adequacy of its findings concerning the limited scope of the exemption and the potential for abuse of market power, in light of the expanded definition of “out of service” adopted in the final rule. Id. at 634-35. The originally proposed definition of “out of service,” which encompassed only rail lines carrying no traffic at all for at least two years, had been expanded in the final rule to include lines carrying overhead traffic, i.e., traffic that neither originates nor terminates on a line and can be rerouted over other lines. Id. at 634. Finally, the original regulation had specified no clear procedure for challenging the sufficiency of employee protections automatically provided under the exemption. Id. at 636.
On remand, the ICC readopted the class exemption for “out of service” lines, but elaborated on the points found wanting in our prior opinion. Exemption of Out of Service Rail Lines, 2 I.C.C.2d 146 (1986). Unenamored of this result, the Illinois Commerce Commission and Patrick Simmons (Illinois) filed a petition with the ICC requesting a stay of the decision’s effective date pending appeal. Expanding the already broad horizons of the proceeding, Rails to Trails Conservancy (RTC), joined by two other nonprofit organizations,4 entered the fray for the first time by petitioning the ICC for reconsideration and a stay of its decision. Ex Parte No. 274 (Sub-No. 8) Exemption of Out of Service Rail Lines, (not printed) decided June 15, 1987. RTC argued, first, that the rulemaking constituted a major federal action triggering the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. § 4332 (1982), with which the Commission had failed to comply; second, that the exemption requirements failed to assure compliance with a number of applicable environmental statutes, including NEPA and the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), 16 U.S.C. § 470f (1982); and, finally, that the ICC failed adequately to *218consider the effect of the regulations on public use of abandoned lines under the National Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1247 (1982), and the public use provision of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. § 10906 (1982). Id. The Commission denied all the petitions, and these petitions for review followed.5
II
A
In our earlier decision, the first area of concern articulated by our colleagues related to the ICC’s treatment of the RTP or, more specifically, the agency’s examination of the five RTP goals listed above.' See 49 U.S.C. § 10505(a)(1). Now, after reviewing the agency’s analysis on remand of each of these five factors, we are persuaded that the Commission’s conclusion (that application of the abandonment regulations to “out of service” lines is not necessary to carry out the RTP) is neither arbitrary nor capricious; to the contrary, the Commission’s analysis is reasonable and adequately supported by the record. Cf. Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. ICC, 819 F.2d 311, 317 (D.C.Cir.1987) (applying “arbitrary and capricious” standard to trackage rights agreements); Brae Corp. v. ICC, 740 F.2d 1023, 1038 (D.C.Cir.1984), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1069, 105 S.Ct. 2149, 85 L.Ed.2d 505 (1985) (“arbitrary and capricious” review of exemption of boxcar freight rates from regulation).
In our prior consideration of this case, the court faulted the agency’s finding that exemption would promote energy conservation, 49 U.S.C. § 10101a(15), as being “utterly lacking in record support.” Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 629. On remand, the agency modified this particular determination, concluding “upon further reflection ... that energy conservation is unlikely to be affected in any significant way.” Out of Service, 2 I.C.C. 2d at 148. In arriving at this latter, more modest conclusion, the Commission reasoned as follows: where a line has carried no traffic at all, abandonment will have, no effect on energy consumption since there is no traffic to be cut off or diverted to other routes or modes of transportation. Although abandonment of a line that has carried overhead traffic may result in some increase (or decrease) in fuel consumption due to rerouting, any such change, the ICC reasoned, should be insignificant since it is in the carrier’s interest to maintain the most efficient routes and to aggregate traffic in order to minimize energy costs. Id.
Illinois attempts to derail this line of reasoning by arguing that even if carriers operate efficiently, they will nonetheless reroute traffic in ways that save costs elsewhere in their operations, but not necessarily in a manner that conserves energy. Brief for Illinois at 13. Illinois further contends that rerouting traffic may involve much more than a minimal increase in fuel consumption. Id. Illinois cites nothing, however, in support of either of these speculative assertions. Nor do petitioners point to anything indicating that application of the abandonment regulations is, as the statute contemplates, necessary to the promotion and encouragement of energy conservation. In contrast to petitioners’ creative exercise in the realm of the hypothetical, the ICC’s analysis logically and persuasively explains why the agency believes the effect on energy matters will be de minimis;6 in the absence of an indication that the agency’s judgment is flawed, we are persuaded that the explanation is am*219ply reasoned to pass muster under the APA.
B
The second RTP-related concern which had been inadequately addressed in the ICC’s earlier decision involved the effect of the class exemption on rate reasonableness. In the court’s view, the ICC had failed to consider whether abandonment of “out of service” lines will expose shippers to excessive rates in circumstances where there is a want of competition. Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 630.7
Upon reexamination of this point, the Commission concluded that the class exemption will not affect the agency’s ability to assure the reasonableness of rates. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C.2d at 148. In so concluding, the ICC observed that exemption will not in any way alter the Commission’s authority to regulate rates nor will it provide carriers with an opportunity to initiate previously forbidden rate actions. With or without an exemption for abandonments of “out of service” lines, the ICC emphasized, carriers are at liberty to set rates at levels of their choosing, subject to protest by shippers. Id. at 149.8 Nothing in the exemption works a change to this carefully crafted scheme.
Illinois attacks the Commission’s finding as to rate reasonableness on several fronts, only two of which merit discussion. Illinois contends, first, that the exemption will have an adverse effect on rates because the abandoned lines would no longer be available for constructing more favorable rates in what is known as “short line rate-making.” Brief for Illinois at 15.9 But this argument, on reflection, largely ignores the process by which rates are established. “Short line ratemaking” is completely voluntary; carriers may terminate the use of a particular “short line” rate at any time, regardless of whether the line has been abandoned and, if it has been abandoned, regardless of whether abandonment was effected pursuant to the statutory or exemption abandonment procedures. Conversely, carriers may maintain a favorable rate, based on an abandoned line, simply by filing a tariff to that effect. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C.2d at 149. In short, the abbreviated abandonment procedures have little if anything to do with a carrier’s ability, obligation, or incentive to continue offering a particular rate.
Next, Illinois questions the ICC’s reliance on its authority to regulate rates as sufficient to prevent carriers’ imposing unreasonable rates following on the heels of an abandonment, asserting that a rate can be “unreasonable” yet lawful and thus beyond the ICC’s rate-regulatory reach. Brief for Illinois at 17-19. Illinois cites no authority for this proposition, however.10 This should come as no surprise. The ICC is empowered to regulate any unreasonable *220rate charged by a carrier with market dominance. 49 U.S.C. § 10709. In the absence of such dominance, however, the statute assumes that competition in the marketplace will, as it were, “regulate” rates; all rates outside a market-dominant setting are presumed to be reasonable (and thus lawful). The ICC is without power, either with or without the exemption for “out of service” lines, to alter lawful rate increases.
In sum, Illinois’ attempts to demonstrate that the statutory abandonment procedures are necessary to ensure rate reasonableness are unavailing. The Commission's determination that the exemption does not affect the rate reasonableness policies of section 10101a, undergirded as it is by a reasoned explanation, readily withstands APA scrutiny.
C
In our previous decision, the court condemned the agency's treatment of a third RTP goal, namely developing a sound rail transportation system to meet the needs of the national defense, 49 U.S.C. § 10101a(4), as inadequate by virtue of the Commission’s failure to respond to comments submitted by the Department of Defense. Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 630-31. Illinois asserts that the Commission on remand once again failed to do its job in this respect. Brief for Illinois át 29-30. The two main points flagged by DOD in its comments back in 1982 were, first, that advance notice of abandonments is essential to safeguard the national defense and, second, that the financial assistanee procedures available in the statutory abandonment provisions (designed to provide for the rescue of about-to-be-abandoned lines) should be made available under the exemption. Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 630 n. 102.11 Both concerns, we are satisfied, received adequate consideration on remand.
For one thing, the ICC effectively mooted DOD’s earlier comments on the financial assistance program since the agency promulgated rules specifically providing for application of those provisions in exemption cases. See Ex Parte No. 274 (Sub-No. 16) Exemption of Rail Line Abandonments or Discontinuance — Offers of Financial Assistance, decided Dee. 14, 1987. As to DOD’s concern over the adequacy of impending abandonments, the Commission observed that, in a separate proceeding,12 it had in fact extended the period for notice provided to the Defense Department. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C. at 151. Railroads invoking the class exemption are now required to notify DOD in writing at least ten days prior to the filing of a notice of exemption with the ICC, thereby according the Department at least sixty days’ notice before the abandonment’s effective date. 49 C.F.R. § 1152.50(d). The Commission determined that, although this provides less notice than DOD had originally requested,13 the sixty-day period should afford ample time to identify lines that should be preserved by virtue of national defense considerations.
Illinois’ sole criticism of this analysis is that “[t]he System Diagram Map require*221ment ... is the critical notice period.” Brief for Illinois at 30. The System Diagram Map, which is part of the statutory abandonment scheme, provides interested parties with four months’ notice of potential or proposed abandonments. See supra note 13. Illinois neglects to explain why this four-month period, while obviously helpful, is critical or why, if additional time is necessary to meet the Nation’s defense needs, DOD failed to reiterate its concern by petitioning for review. Although additional notice would presumably be helpful from DOD’s standpoint, Illinois provides us with nothing to indicate that additional time beyond the sixty-day period is in any way necessary to DOD’s evaluation of proposed abandonments. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we are satisfied as to the reasonableness of the agency’s determination that sixty days’ notice is adequate.
D
A related issue which was remanded for further consideration involved the RTP goal of cooperation with the States in transportation matters, 49 U.S.C. § 10101a(9). Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 631. In our previous decision, the court faulted the ICC’s failure to consider comments submitted by States protesting the lack of notice of proposed abandonments under the class exemption. Id.14 Basically, the States contended that retention of the System Diagram Map, or its equivalent, is necessary both to the States’ rail planning efforts and to provide notice to rail users who might oppose the abandonment. Id. Illinois and New York continue to press that point before us. Brief for Illinois at 30-31; Brief for New York at 7-8. On remand, the Commission considered and rejected these contentions, providing a thorough and well-reasoned explanation for doing so. We turn, then, to the Commission’s explanation.
Although rejecting the argument that the statutory abandonment procedures, specifically System Diagram Maps, are necessary to further the goals of the RTP, the Commission squarely responded to the position that notice should be afforded prior to consummation of an abandonment. Under the exemption procedures, States receive notice at least sixty days before the exemption is effective and an abandonment can occur. 49 C.F.R. § 1152.50(d). In justifying the adequacy of the sixty-day period, the Commission observed that the exemption, which by definition applies solely to lines that have generated no traffic for at least two years and carry only overhead traffic that can be rerouted (and thus readily accommodated), results in no loss of service to shippers. Out of Service, 2 I.C. C.2d at 154-55. Furthermore, the transactions encompassed by the exemption tend to be noncontroversial, as evidenced by the small number of abandonments generating opposition under the exemption (only 10 of the first 200 eases). See id. at 150. In light of this factual predicate, the Commission concluded that the benefits of the additional notice accruing to the small number of States and shippers affected by abandonments of out-of-service lines are outweighed by the costs to railroads both in maintaining the Maps and in delaying desired abandonments for four months. Id. at 154.
The ICC’s reliance on the sufficiency of the sixty-day notice period did not rest on this balancing alone, however. The Commission considered the situations of various parties who might potentially be affected or involved in rail planning and explained why the notice provided by the System Diagram Maps is unnecessary to protect the interests of such groups. For example, if, in spite of the absence of local traffic, a particular line is important to the State’s rail system, the State should monitor its activity, as lack of use will tend to herald *222eventual abandonment. Id. at 153-54. Similarly, a shipper dependent on a particular line but who (somehow) fails to use the line for two years can likewise be expected, in reason, to shoulder the burden of monitoring material developments under such rather unusual circumstances; a shipper of that sort cannot reasonably presume an indefinite continuation of service on a manifestly marginal line. Id. at 154. Finally, a new business that wishes to employ the affected line can reasonably be expected to inquire into the line’s future, with the railroad presumably having no reason to be less than forthright about any plans to abandon the track. Id.
In the absence of indications that additional notice is necessary to promote cooperation with the States, the Commission’s classic line-drawing choice of sixty days’ notice appears reasonable.15 We are further persuaded that the Commission’s determination, predicated as it is on the agency’s experience, is entirely in keeping with the deregulatory thrust of the Staggers Act.
Ill
We turn to the next major area of concern articulated in our prior visitation to this case, namely the ICC’s treatment of section 10505’s second prerequisite to exemption. To recap, in order to qualify for an exemption, section 10505' requires either that the transaction be of limited scope, or that application of the statutory provision be unnecessary to protect shippers from the abuse of market power. 49 U.S.C. § 10505(a)(2) (emphasis added). In its original decision, the Commission failed to examine whether its findings on these points were valid in light of the expanded definition of “out of service” contained in the final rule. Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 634-35. On remand, the ICC reaffirmed its conclusions, finding that the exemption, as expanded, was limited in scope and that regulation was unnecessary to protect shippers from market power abuses. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C. at 156.
Illinois challenges both determinations, arguing that the exemption, as expanded, is not limited in scope and that regulation is necessary to protect shippers. Brief for Illinois at 20-29; Brief for New York at 8. We need not plumb the depths of the first point, however, inasmuch as we are satisfied that the agency acted properly under the “abuse of market power” clause. See Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. ICC, 819 F.2d at 314 (requirements of section 10505(a)(2) are disjunctive; as long as the ICC properly determined that regulation is unnecessary to protect shippers from abuse of market power, it need not find the exempt transaction to be limited in scope).
The Commission provides a reasonable explanation for its conclusion that regulation of abandonments is unnecessary to prevent the abuse of market power. Essentially, the ICC relies on the proposition that a carrier’s market power is unaffected by an abandonment. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C.2d at 156. The carrier’s market power is determined not by the presence or absence of particular lines, but by the existence (or lack) of transportation alternatives available to shippers. Obviously, a carrier does not compete with itself, with one routing option vying with another for the greater share of traffic. If a carrier *223lacks market power prior to abandonment, then the carrier’s decreasing the number of available routes on its own lines will do nothing to create power that did not otherwise exist. That is to say, after the abandonment, the carrier will be subject to the same competitive forces as previously. Conversely, if a carrier possess market power prior to an abandonment, reducing its routing options will neither augment nor diminish that power. Id. Although, as Illinois elaborately explains, abandonments may obviously alter a carrier’s operations, see Brief for Illinois at 21-24, such alterations do not bear on the extent of competition (either from other rail carriers or from other modes of transportation) to which the carrier is subject.
Somewhat more specifically, the challengers emphasize the effect of abandonments on shippers located adjacent to the abandoned line. Illinois and New York hypothesize that railroads will employ the exemption as a device to sever important lines providing service to overhead shippers. Id. at 31-33; Brief for New York at 6-8. According to this gloomy view, when a line is severed, shippers located on the segments adjacent to the abandoned section will suffer from the exercise of the carrier’s increased market power. Id. Although Illinois cites a specific instance of abandonment within its borders as an example of this phenomenon, the State fails to explain how, if at all, the abandonment led to an abuse of market power. The sole evidence adduced by Illinois is a difference in rates charged to shippers on the two segments of line that were severed by the abandonment. Brief for Illinois at 33. For starters, however, Illinois does not explain how the rate differential constituted an abuse of market power.16 Nor does Illinois demonstrate how the abandonment enabled the carrier to charge the differential; presumably, for reasons previously set forth, the carrier could have increased the rate charged the shippers on both segments of the line prior to the abandonment. See Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. ICC, 819 F.2d at 314-15 (although the acquisition of trackage rights under a class exemption may enable carriers to alter routes or raise rates on old routes under threat of abandonment, such behavior is not an “abuse of market power,” but rather reflects the economics of the marketplace.)17
Thus, the rationale informing the Commission’s “market power” determination appears sound; indeed, on remand the agency has more than adequately covered its tracks. In the absence of concrete evidence to the contrary, we are satisfied that the ICC’s treatment of the “abuse of market power” factor was neither arbitrary nor capricious.
IV
The final issue remanded to the ICC involved the protection of railroad employee interests. Section 10505(g) prohibits the Commission from exercising its exemption authority to relieve a carrier of its obligation to protect employee interests. 49 U.S.C. § 10505(g). Pursuant to this mandate, the ICC ordered the standard labor protections, adopted by the agency in Oregon Short Line R.R. — Abandonment— Goshen (OSL), 360 I.C.C. 91 (1979), applicable to carriers seeking to abandon lines under the auspices of the Commission-fashioned exemption. Observing that the OSL protections constituted only the requisite minimum, the court faulted the ICC for failing to clarify the appropriate procedures for seeking enhanced labor protection conditions. Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 636.
*224Responding to the court’s directive, the Commission on remand established that the appropriate procedure by which labor organizations may seek higher levels of employee protection is a petition for partial revocation. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C.2d at 157. In the wake of the Commission's ameliorative action, the attack on this point is now waged all alone by Simmons,18 who claims (for the second time) that protective conditions in abandonment proceedings must be implemented prior to consummation.19 Simmons contends that OSL requires preservation of the status quo until the necessary labor protections are embodied in an agreement. Brief for Illinois at 34-35. Simmons claims that reconsideration rather than revocation should have been the procedural vehicle embraced by the ICC. Id. at 35 n. 35.
Although the Commission’s discussion fails expressly to address Simmons’ point, we nevertheless find nothing arbitrary or capricious in its action. Undoubtedly, we would have been edified by the agency’s views as to the proper interpretation of OSL. But in view of our express rejection of Simmons’ argument the last time around, see supra note 19, we cannot fault the Commission for failing to set forth its views in this particular. See Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 636 n. 157. As the old saying goes, enough is enough. What is more (than enough), the ICC provided a sensible explanation for its determination that post-abandonment revocation constitutes an adequate procedure to safeguard employee interests. The Commission pointed to the extremely limited number of abandonment cases under the statutory procedures in which labor interests had established a case of protections going beyond the OSL conditions. Out of Service, 2 I.C.C.2d at 157.20 The ICC further predicted that the labor-related effects of abandonment of “out of service” lines would be minimal, since few employees would likely be serving lines that had generated no local traffic for over two years. Id. Moreover, to the extent that the OSL conditions may prove inadequate, the Commission’s procedures expressly permit, as we have just seen, those conditions to be augmented as circumstances warrant. Id.
Simmons says nothing that undermines the agency’s reasoning, nor does he indicate how the legitimate interests of employees are prejudiced by consideration of protection issues post abandonment (again, in view of the panoply of remedies afforded by the standard OSL conditions). In light of (1) the small number of cases in which labor protection conditions would likely require augmentation, (2) the limited universe of railroad employees involved, and (3) the absence of any showing of prejudice to labor interests, it was reasonable for the Commission to conclude that pre-consummation consideration of labor protection issues beyond the OSL conditions is unnecessary to protect employees’ interests.
V.
Having determined that the Commission has adequately addressed the concerns expressed in our previous opinion, we proceed to consider the arguments raised by Rails to Trails Conservancy (“RTC”) in its appeal from the Commission’s denial of RTC’s petition for reconsideration.21 RTC *225argues, first, that inadequate consideration was given to environmental consequences during the rulemaking itself, in violation of section 102 of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. § 4332 (1982). In its order denying reconsideration, the ICC rejected this contention, in part because the rulemaking would not result in more or less abandonments being granted, but instead would simply reduce regulatory burdens on abandonments that would occur in any event, and hence could have no environmental impact. The ICC’s reasoning here is unsatisfactory, for it is not at all apparent that a change in procedure alone will not affect the environment — the new procedure may, for example, lessen the opportunity for environmental groups to influence the agency’s final decision. The procedural nature of a regulation does not, therefore, exempt an agency from complying with NEPA and preparing an environmental assessment (“EA”) or an environmental impact statement (“EIS”) where appropriate.22
Contrary to RTC’s suggestion, however, we do not believe the Commission did, in fact, ignore environmental factors when it promulgated this regulation. In its first rulemaking (prior to remand), the Commission noted that track removal and dispositions of rights-of-way could affect the environment and correctly stated that its exemption authority did not extend to exempting transactions from relevant environmental laws. Thus the Commission required parties seeking exemptions to submit evidence on environmental issues. 49 C.F.R. § 1152.50(d)(4) (1985). The Commission also cautioned that individual exemption authorizations “may at times be conditioned upon compliance with environmental conditions.” Exemption of Out of Service Rail Lines, 366 I.C.C. 885, 890 (1983); Illinois Commerce Comm’n, 787 F.2d at 629 n. 89. Furthermore, subsequent to the rulemaking, in response to concerns raised by its own staff, the Council on Environmental Quality (“CEQ”), and RTC, the Commission has engrafted onto the abandonment regulations additional procedures to ensure compliance with NEPA and other environmental statutes at the individual abandonment stage.
It is true, nevertheless, that the Commission was obligated by its own regulations and those of CEQ to prepare at least an EA prior to promulgating this regulation. But because the Commission did not ignore environmental consequences during the rule-making, and subsequently has developed procedures to focus on those consequences when individual abandonments are authorized, we decline to remand. An order to the Commission to prepare an EA or an EIS and engage in rulemaking for a third time would be a meaningless gesture, not necessary to guarantee that the Commission will consider environmental concerns when it authorizes abandonments. See Kerner v. Celebrezze, 340 F.2d 736, 740 (2d Cir.1965) (Friendly, J.) (remand for procedural error not necessary where it would accomplish nothing “save further expense and delay”).
We turn next to RTC’s contention that the actual procedures established by the regulation will result in the violation of NEPA each time the Commission authorizes an exemption. Under the regulation as promulgated, a carrier seeking an exemption must file a notice with the appropriate state Public Service Agency ten days prior to filing with the Commission. The carrier’s application to the Commission itself must address environmental issues, and must be submitted fifty days before the date of abandonment. Within twenty days after receiving the application, the Commission publishes notice of abandonment in the Federal Register, and the exemption is effective thirty days later without any further Commission action. Under the regulation as originally promulgated, petitions to stay the exemption had to be filed within ten days of publication of no*226tice in the Federal Register, and petitions to reconsider within twenty days. Those deadlines have since been modified by the Commission, as will be discussed below.
RTC attacks this regulation on grounds that it impermissibly shifts to private parties the burden of raising environmental concerns, that it allows the Commission to authorize an abandonment without considering the effect of that action on the environment, that it sets such a high burden on an applicant for a stay or reconsideration that abandonments will go forward despite submission of valid objections, and that the short notification period does not provide a reasonable opportunity for public participation.
RTC raises several powerful points, and if the regulation had not been modified at all in response to environmental concerns, the appropriate disposition of RTC’s petition would be a remand to the Commission. Nevertheless, a remand is no longer necessary, for in several subsequent orders the Commission has addressed RTC’s concerns by adding additional procedures and clarifying the burden that intervenors must meet to stay an abandonment proceeding. These subsequent orders, in addition to representations by counsel for the Commission at oral argument, persuade us that the current procedural regime for authorizing abandonments is not facially inconsistent with NEPA and other environmental statutes. Nothing we decide here, however, affects the rights of these petitioners or any others to challenge the adequacy of the Commission’s procedures as applied to a particular abandonment.
We agree with RTC that, under the regulation as originally promulgated, the Commission's reliance on private parties to raise environmental concerns was unlawful. The Commission may not delegate to parties and intervenors its own responsibility to independently investigate and assess the environmental impact of the proposal before it. Harlem Valley Transp. Ass’n v. Stafford, 500 F.2d 328, 336 (2d Cir.1974); see also Steamboaters v. FERC, 759 F.2d 1382, 1394 (9th Cir.1985); Calvert Cliffs’ Coordinating Comm., Inc. v. Atomic Energy Comm’n, 449 F.2d 1109, 1118-19 (D.C.Cir.1971). In December 1987, however, the Commission instructed its Section of Energy and Environment to complete and make available to the public an environmental assessment within five days of publication of the exemption notice in the Federal Register.23 At oral argument, counsel for the Commission represented that this EA would be the product of independent staff investigation and evaluation of the abandonment proposal — not a pro forma reworking of the applicant’s assertions regarding environmental impact.
RTC questions whether an adequate EA can possibly be prepared in the time allotted. We review the Commission’s judgment that its procedure satisfy NEPA for abuse of discretion. See Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Nat’l Resources Defense Council, 435 U.S. 519, 554, 98 S.Ct. 1197, 1217, 55 L.Ed.2d 460 (1978); Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 427 U.S. 390, 412-14, 96 S.Ct. 2718, 2731-32, 49 L.Ed.2d 576 (1976). While the time for preparation of an EA is abbreviated, particularly if the proposed abandonment is extensive, see Scientists’ Inst. for Pub. Information, Inc. v. Atomic Energy Comm’n., 481 F.2d 1079, 1092 (D.C.Cir.1973) (NEPA statements will vary in length and complexity in relation to size of project being considered), we cannot say, in the context of this facial challenge, that the Commission has acted *227arbitrarily. Furthermore, if an abandonment application does present complex environmental problems, the Commission may on it own motion stay the exemption to allow an adequate EA or EIS to be prepared by its staff.
RTC also contends the EA comes too late in the authorization process to be meaningful. Council on Environmental Quality regulations require that “NEPA procedures must insure that environmental information is available to public officials and citizens before decisions are made and before actions are taken.” 40 C.F.R. 1500.1(b) (emphasis added). RTC asserts that the publication of notice of abandonment in the Federal Register is the relevant agency action or decision, and argues that the EA must therefore be prepared prior to publication, and not five days later, as provided by current procedures.
We think this argument is overly technical — an order to the Commission to prepare the EA five days earlier so as to coincide with publication of notice would exalt form over substance. The decision at issue here — that a particular abandonment is not subject to regulation — is not made at the moment notice is published in the Federal Register. While it is true, as RTC notes, that the exemption may become effective thirty days after publication without further action by the Commission, publication is nevertheless not the final step. The Commission’s staff continues to investigate and assess environmental issues after publication, and if the staff or any intervenors raise questions suggesting the exemption should not be granted, the Commission will stay authorization while it considers such issues. Hence, publication of notice prior to completion of the EA does not conflict with NEPA, for it does not diminish the Commission’s capacity to take environmental concerns into account in its decisionmaking. No “irretrievable commitments” of agency or private resources occur upon publication, nor are options precluded or positions finally determined. See Scientists’ Institute, 481 F.2d at 1094. Rather, the notice serves to alert interested parties about the abandonment and provides information on how to obtain the EA and request a stay or reconsideration. Of course, since publication of notice is not itself the final decision, the Commission, or some responsible official delegated authority by the Commission, must formally consider staff recommendations contained in the EA and comments by intervenors at some time prior to the effective date of abandonment. Moreover, the record of the abandonment authorization must clearly reflect this, in order to withstand subsequent judicial review. See id. at 1094-95. It must reflect, as well, an affirmative determination that the agency’s environmental analysis permits the rail abandonment to go forward. Otherwise, a substantive decision may be made — the granting of the exemption — without the agency ever taking a hard look at environmental factors. As this court has held, “NEPA was intended to ensure that decisions about federal actions would be made only after responsible decision-makers had fully adverted to the environmental consequences of the actions, and had decided that the public benefits flowing from the actions outweighed their environmental costs.” Jones v. District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency, 499 F.2d 502, 512 (D.C.Cir.1974), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 937, 96 S.Ct. 299, 46 L.Ed.2d 271 (1975).
RTC correctly asserts that after an exemption is finally authorized and the railroad begins to tear up the track and dispose of the right-of-way, alternatives are clearly foreclosed and it would be too late at that point for the Commission to consider environmental factors. And yet, RTC argues, if the Commission declines to grant a stay at the request of an intervenor who raises environmental concerns, because the intervenor has failed to make the required showing of probability of success and irreparable injury, the abandonment process will go forward even though the Commission may not have responded to serious questions presented it. Thus, according to RTC, a short notice period and a high threshold for granting a stay conspire to prevent the full consideration of environmental issues demanded by NEPA before major federal action is taken.
*228The Commission has responded to RTC’s concern by informing this court in its brief and at oral argument that the Commission’s current practice is to “stay any individual abandonment of an out-of-service line if environmental issues are raised and cannot be resolved through a Commission decision before the exemption would otherwise become effective for that line.” Brief for the ICC and the United States at 40; see also ICC Docket No. AB-32 (Sub.-No. 36X), Boston & Maine Corporation and Springfield Terminal Railway Company — Abandonment and Discontinuance of Service (not printed), served Nov. 25, 1987. At oral argument, counsel for the Commission stated that no showing of irreparable harm or probability of success is required of intervenors or parties who raise environmental concerns — a stay will automatically be granted until the concerns are resolved by the Commission. As this procedure obviates the possibility that an abandonment would be authorized even though environmental questions were still outstanding, a remand is not necessary.
The importance of an EA or an EIS lies not merely in the aid it may give to the agency’s own decisionmaking- process, but also in the notice it gives the public of both the environmental issues the agency is aware of and those it has missed. The EA or EIS should provide a springboard for public comment, bringing to the agency viewpoints and options it might otherwise lack. See Calvert Cliffs’ Coordinating Comm., 449 F.2d at 1114; 40 C.F.R. § 1501.2(d)(2). RTC contends that the procedures set forth on the abandonment regulation fail to provide a reasonable period of time for meaningful public comment. A railroad seeking an abandonment exemption must notify the state public service commission ten days prior to filing the exemption provision. The Commission states that public interest groups such as RTC could establish a relationship with the public service commission in their locality and so receive early notification that an exemption will be requested. No EA would be available at that time, though, and so the usefulness of such notice to environmental groups is limited. The Commission, moreover, does not advance any evidence that state public service agencies will perform this service, and, in fact, the Commission’s own staff in comments concerning another exemption proceeding suggest that state agencies do not carry out this function very well. “The designated agency ... cannot circulate the environmental notice quickly enough to afford any meaningful opportunities for involvement in the ICC’s decisionmaking process.” Comments of the Section of Energy and Environment on Class Exemption for the Construction of Connecting Tracks under 49 U.S.C. § 10901. J.A. at 300. We therefore give little weight to this method of notification.
Five days after the notice of exemption is published in the Federal Register, the EA prepared by the Commission’s staff will be publicly available. Parties and intervenors then have fifteen days to request a stay.24 If the Commission required a detailed statement and a showing of irreparable injury and probability of success, this time period might be inadequate as a matter of law, but since, as we have stated, the Commission has indicated it will grant a stay upon a minimal showing, we cannot hold that fifteen days is always impermissibly short. Where, in a particular abandonment proceeding, special circumstances render fifteen days unreasonably short even to make a minimal showing, the Commission could grant an extension in order to comply with NEPA. We therefore decline to rule that the Commission’s procedures, as set forth in the regulation and modified by subsequent action, are facially inconsistent with NEPA.
In addition to its arguments regarding lack of compliance with NEPA, RTC asserts that the Commission’s procedures violate section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, 16 U.S.C. § 470f (1982). Like section 102 of NEPA, section *229106 of the Historic Presérvation Act is a “stop, look, and listen” provision; it requires federal agencies to take into account the effect of their actions on structures eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places. As the Commission recognized in its first rulemaking (pri- or to remand), track abandonment may affect historic structures. Exemption of Out of Service Rail Lines, 366 I.C.C. 885, 890 (1983). In order to fulfill its obligations under the Historic Preservation Act, the Commission requires applicants for abandonment exemptions to include in their application information concerning whether any sites listed in the National Register of Historic Places are affected. Furthermore, the applicant must submit detailed descriptions of any affected structures fifty years old or older to the appropriate State Historic Preservation Office. 49 C.F.R. 1105.7(c)(10) (1987).
RTC’s attack on the Commission’s Historic Preservation Act procedures is similar to its arguments concerning NEPA. In particular, RTC asserts that publication of notice of abandonment prior to consultation with state and federal agencies concerning historic preservation violates the Act. For the reasons stated in our discussion of NEPA, we do not agree. So long as the record in an individual abandonment shows that the required consultations and deliberations concerning historic preservation occur before the exemption becomes effective, the purposes of the Historic Preservation Act are met.
Section 8(d) of the National Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1247(d) (Supp. II 1984), directs the Commission to encourage state and local agencies and private parties to establish recreational trails along abandoned rail lines. See also 49 U.S.C. § 10906. Such use serves to preserve established rights-of-way for future reactivation as working railroads — hence the name “rail banking.” Section 1247(d) provides that any line preserved in this way shall not be treated as abandoned — thus preventing rights-of-way obtained through easements from reverting to their owners upon the cessation of railroad use. See generally Washington State Dep’t of Game v. ICC, 829 F.2d 877 (9th Cir.1987). RTC contends that the Commission has failed to consider its obligations under section 8(d) in issuing the abandonment regulation. We disagree. The regulation specifically provides that persons interested in interim use of abandoned rail lines as recreational trails may submit evidence, and refers the reader to 49 C.F.R. § 1152.29 (1987) which sets out the statement required of prospective users. Although the regulation requires the statement be submitted within ten days, the Commission has informed the court that “it would accept and act on late-filed Trails Act requests so long as it still retains jurisdiction to do so.” Brief of I.C.C. and United States at 37.25 Private organizations and state or local agencies interested in interim use of rail lines may monitor the Federal Register and upon notification of an abandonment, may make the submission required by § 1152.29. We reject FTC’s contention that the time allotted under the Commission’s regulation as modified is not adequate, and we do not believe the Commission has ignored its obligations under section 8(d) of the National Trails Systems Act.26