Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 3

Public Land Activists Sue Interior Department on Plan to Keep Millions of Acres Open for Industrial Solar Development

Contacts: Janine Blaeloch, Western Lands Project, Seattle, (206)325-3503; cell 206-498-6695 blaeloch@westernlands.org Christopher Krupp, Western Lands Project, Seattle, (206)325-3503; cell 206-417-6363 krupp@westernlands.org Terry Weiner, Desert Protective Council, San Diego, (619)342-5524; terryweiner@sbcglobal.net Michael Connor, Western Watersheds Project, Reseda, (818)345-0425 mjconnor@westernwatersheds.org (Hyperlinks are provided at the end of this release for ease of forwarding) February 12, 2013-- Three public-interest environmental organizations have filed a legal challenge against Interior Secretary Ken Salazars decision to keep millions of acres of public land available to industry for siting of destructive utility-scale solar plants. In the complaint filed Tuesday, Western Lands Project, Desert Protective Council, and Western Watersheds Project cited the governments failure to consider alternatives that would focus solar development on degraded lands and in the already-built environment. The governments analysis under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) ignored alternative approaches that would be less damaging to the environment, more efficient, and less costly to taxpayers and ratepayers. Plaintiffs are represented by Western Lands Project Staff Attorney Christopher Krupp. The Administration is opting to needlessly turn multiple-use public lands into permanent industrial zones. said Janine Blaeloch of the Seattle-based Western Lands Project. Solar development belongs on rooftops, parking lots, alreadydeveloped areas, and on degraded sites, not our public lands. The Administrations plan, as detailed in its Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Solar Energy Development in Six Southwestern States (PEIS), established solar energy zones on a little less than 300,000 acres, in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah, but the agencys preferred alternative, selected by Salazar, is to keep 19 million acres of public land open to industrial solar applications. The Secretary signed off on the plan on October 12, 2012. "The public lands of our southwestern deserts provide habitat for many special status species of wildlife and rare plants, said Michael Connor, California Director for Western Watersheds Project. "If these species are to survive in the face of climate change, we need to protect their habitat, not convert it into an industrial wasteland."

The groups have worked to highlight the environmental destruction and waste associated with industrial solar and to raise public awareness of distributed generation (DG)the localized, efficient, democratic, and cost-effective alternative. DG puts solar generation at the point of use. Germany has proven that massive installations of distributed solar photovoltaics can be achieved rapidly when it is a policy priority. In the complaint, the groups assert that the BLM violated NEPA by failing to examine two additional alternatives: a distributed generation (DG) alternative, and an alternative in which solar energy facilities would be sited on previously degraded or damaged lands. The groups, as well as the Environmental Protection Agency, called for analysis of these alternatives during comment periods, but BLM ignored them. An essential purpose of NEPA alternatives analysis is to inform better decisions. Had these alternatives been analyzed next to the others, the superiority of the DG and degraded-lands options would be clear, said Blaeloch. "Our desert species and ecological communities are already severely stressed by urbanization, roads, transmission lines, mining, military uses, recreation, grazing, and other impacts, said Terry Weiner of the Desert Protective Council. "Interiors plan intensifies the potential for permanent loss of all the things people cherish about the desert--uncluttered vistas, dark night skies, and deep peace and quiet. As of mid-January, 11 solar projects had been approved on 41,350 acres of public land. The projects range from 516 to 7,025 acres, with the average power plant exceeding 3,700 acres. Pending proposals number 87, and would cover a total of 670,599 acres of public land. The 98 total approved and pending projects do not fall within the framework of the PEIS, which is designed to facilitate future projects under a more expedited review. Massive solar power plants will have irreversible, essentially permanent, impacts. The BLM admits that ecological recovery after solar plants are decommissioned, if even possible, could take 3,000 years. The Western Lands Project monitors federal land transactions and public land policy across the West and beyond. Its mission is to keep public land public. Desert Protective Council works to safeguard desert areas of unique scenic, scientific, historical, spiritual or recreational value and to educate children and adults to a better understanding of the deserts. Western Watersheds Project works to protect and restore western watersheds and wildlife through education, public policy initiatives and litigation. LINKS: Western Lands Project, Desert Protective Council, Western Watersheds Project The complaint can be viewed at http: //www.scribd.com/doc/125184283/PEIS-FinalComplaint Information about and links to Salazars decision can be viewed at http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/info/newsroom/2012/october/NR_10_12_2012.html

Information on the EPAs program for siting renewables on damaged and contaminated lands can be found at http://www.epa.gov/renewableenergyland/ The EPAs comments on the PEIS can be viewed at http://www.epa.gov/region9/nepa/letters/solar-energy-six-states-DPEIS.pdf (see pages 4-10) Articles about Germanys success and the potential here in the U.S. can be found here: http://www.ilsr.org/over-80-percent-german-pv-installed-rooftops/ http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/opinion/solar-panels-for-every-home.html?_r=0 and here: http://www.ilsr.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/rooftop-revolution-ilsr.pdf END

Вам также может понравиться