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Solar Energy Projects being Fast Tracked to Meet Federal Funding Deadline

thumb_05With the December 2010 deadline for obtaining incentive funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act only a year off, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Director Bob Abbey today reaffirmed the agency’s commitment to helping the nation reach its “green energy future” by guaranteeing full environmental analysis and public review for the 31 projects that have met the required milestones to remain on the fast-track list for expedited processing.

Abbey said that this first wave of projects (14 solar, 7 wind, 3 geothermal, and 7 transmission) range in scale from as small as 24 megawatts up to 986 megawatts, large enough to supply power to 900,000 homes. Technologies vary, as does acreage involved, but he said “they represent the first generation of large-scale projects to be carefully sited on public lands over the next several years.”

“The BLM is committed to helping diversify this country’s energy portfolio in an environmentally responsible manner,” Abbey said.

Fast-track projects are those where the companies involved have demonstrated to the BLM that they have made sufficient progress to formally start the environmental review and public participation process. These projects are advanced enough in the permitting process that they could potentially be cleared for approval by December 2010, thus making them eligible for economic stimulus funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

 “The fast-track process is about focusing our staff and resources on the most promising projects,” said Abbey, “not about cutting corners, especially when it comes to environmental analyses or opportunities for public participation.” All projects proposed for BLM-managed lands will receive the full environmental review required by the National Environmental Protection Act and will include the same opportunities for public involvement required for all other land-use decision making by the BLM.

 To help focus the BLM’s resources on the processing of wind, solar and geothermal energy applications and electrical transmission facilities on the public lands, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar called for the BLM to establish a network of Coordination Offices that would include appropriate multi-disciplinary BLM staff and resources from other Federal and State agencies to assist in the processing of applications. So far, the BLM has established Coordination Offices in California, Nevada, Arizona, and Wyoming, where the majority of the existing workload for applications and projects is currently located.

 The BLM has also identified nearly 23 million acres of public land with solar energy potential in six southwestern states and more than 20 million acres of public land with wind energy potential in 11 western states. It has completed programmatic environmental impact studies for wind and geothermal development and is working on a programmatic environmental impact study (PEIS) for solar development. The Solar PEIS has preliminarily identified 24 Solar Energy Study Areas on BLM-administered land located in six western states. The BLM would fully evaluate these solar energy study areas for their environmental and resource suitability for large-scale solar energy production. The objective is to provide landscape-scale planning and zoning for solar projects on BLM lands in the West, allowing a more efficient process for permitting and siting responsible solar development.

State County Project Name Potential Output* Acreage
AZ Maricopa NextEra (Boulevard), Sonoran Solar Project 375 MW 4,000
CA Imperial Stirling Solar, Solar Two 750 MW 6,140 on BLM, additional 360 on private land
CA San Bernardino BrightSource, Ivanpah SEGS 400 MW 4073
CA  Riverside  OptiSolar (First Solar), Desert Sunlight 550 MW   7040
CA  Riveside  Solar Millenium, Chevron 1 (Blythe)  986 MW  6300 in 9560 Right of Way
CA Riverside Solar Millenium, Chevron 2 (Palen) 484 MW 3800 in 5176 Righ of Way
CA  Kern  Solar Millenium, Ridegecrest  745 MW  1760 in 3920 Right of Way
CA  San Berardino  SES (Stirling) Solar One  850 MW  8230
 CA  Riverside  Nextera Genesis, Ford Dry Lake  250 MW  4640
 CA  San Bernardino  Chevron, Lucerne Valley Solar Project  60 MW  516
 NV  Clark Nextlight , Silaver State South   267 MW  7,840 for South and North
 NV  Clark  Nextligh, Silver State North  140 MW  same as above
 NV  Nye  Tonopah Solar ( Solar Reserve), Cresecent Dunes  180 MW  1600
 NV  Nye  Solar Millenium, Amargosa Farm Road  484 MW 4350

“Diversifying our energy supply does not mean that we will neglect the responsible development of the oil and gas resources on the public lands,” added Director Abbey. Since January 21, 2009, the BLM has held 35 oil and gas lease sales offering 2.7 million acres across the West. The 1,312 leases that sold generated over $136 million in revenue for American taxpayers.

The BLM manages more land – 253 million acres – than any other Federal agency. This land, known as the National System of Public Lands, is primarily located in 12 Western states, including Alaska. The Bureau, with a budget of about $1 billion, also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. The BLM’s multiple-use mission is to sustain the health and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. The Bureau accomplishes this by managing such activities as outdoor recreation, livestock grazing, mineral development, and energy production, and by conserving natural, historical, cultural, and other resources on public lands.


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