Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Jewell Announces Mitigation Strategy For Public Lands Energy Development

Plan calls for landscape planning and mitigating the impacts of energy development

(Washington, D.C., April 10, 2014) The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) announced a new strategy to avoid and mitigate the impact of energy projects on federal lands that should benefit imperiled species such as the Greater Sage-Grouse. The "Strategy for Improving the Mitigation Policies and Practices of the Department of the Interior" stems from Secretarial Order Number 3330 issued by DOI Secretary Jewell in October 2013, which seeks to shift from project-by-project mitigation to landscape-level planning.

"Though ABC supports individual project reviews, we're encouraged by these initiatives to avoid and minimize project impacts through advance planning," said Steve Holmer, Senior Policy Advisor with American Bird Conservancy (ABC). "This is the best and, in some the cases, the only way to address cumulative impacts and to conserve declining populations of wide-ranging species such as the Greater Sage-Grouse and Marbled Murrelet."

In addition to landscape-scale science assessments and planning, the strategy follows a hierarchy that seeks to fully mitigate potential impacts. Notably, the hierarchy starts with avoidance. The strategy report states that, "If a project can reasonably be sited so as to have no negative impacts to resources of concern, then it is generally the most defensible approach. By avoiding impacts in the first place, there is no need to take further action to minimize or offset such impacts."

"Landscape planning is urgently needed that makes the siting of wind projects a priority," said Michael Hutchins, National Coordinator of ABC's Bird Smart Wind Energy Campaign. "We hope Secretary Jewell's mitigation policy will catalyze reform of the wind industry, requiring siting practices that avoid key habitats and migration routes (such as those highlighted on ABC's Wind Development Bird Risk Map) and compensating the public for unavoidable impacts that result in bird mortality."

The report notes that major energy and infrastructure development projects can adversely affect a broad array of resources and values including birds and other wildlife. It also acknowledges that pressures for more projects is increasing, with the result that "cumulative impacts of these uses are having a significant effect on the landscape."

"We are encouraged by the regional planning effort to conserve Greater Sage-Grouse and the potential for the Bureau of Land Management master leasing plans to reduce the impact of oil and gas drilling," said Holmer. "Additional plans are needed to guide wind and solar development on public lands, and to recover wide-ranging species of conservation concern such as the western population of Yellow-billed Cuckoo, bi-state population of Greater Sage-Grouse, and Marbled Murrelet."