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ARTICLES

 

BLM RESOURCES FOR ROCKHOUNDS

  

 

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Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP)

Land usage encompassing 22.5 million acres of California's deserts will be administered according to DRECP guidelines for the next 25 years.  The plan makes a mosaic of the desert, with Development Focus Areas designated for private industry to build utility-scale energy projects adjacent to public lands or on 177,000 acres of BLM-administered public lands.  DRECP's implementation will pave the way for large industrial developments to be connected to the power grid via power transmission corridors running through fragile ecosystems and pristine natural landscapes on public lands.

BLM needs to know your concerns about preserving the desert environment.  BLM needs to know about the specific areas for which recreational uses or conservation concerns are important to you.

The comment period has been extended
through February 23, 2015

Comment directly to DRECP at:
http://www.drecp.org/about/contact.html#comments

 

 

Make your voice heard by taking the Survey for DRECP
Final Deadline Extended: Feb 15, 2015

Note (online survey): If there is more than one user in your household who wants to take the survey or you got the survey link from a forwarded email, and the survey is being blocked, you may have to close your browser and clear the history/cache, then open a fresh window.

Areas currently designated as recreational areas are at risk of restricted access, closure in the Draft DRECP.  Some are adjacent to Development Focus Areas (DFAs) and may become energy transmission corridors for them.  Comments about these areas are especially important at this time.

  • Alvord Mine
  • Brown Butte and Lonely Butte
  • Cadiz and Marble Mountains
  • Calico and Mule Canyon
  • Chambless
  • Gem Hill
  • Hector Hills
  • Mineral Hill
  • Newberry (adj. areas to the north)
  • North Edwards
  • Pisgah Crater
  • Rainbow Rock
  • Stoddard Wells
  • Wiley Wells
  • Yermo

Crafting an effective letter on DRECP

The more specific your comments, the more effective you will be in communicating to the BLM.  The Tubb Canyon Desert Conservancy website has some great tips.

Desert activist Shaun Gonzales authored a cogent article on the conservation concerns attached to the locations and sizes of the Development Focus Areas (DFAs) in the DRECP.(Gonzales 2014b)

The concerns and issues addressed in the article are echoed in his own comment letter to the DRECP.  It is an excellent model for its content, clarity, specificity, and tone.(Gonzales 2013)

A sample letter:
“I strongly support conservation designations that would protect the natural character of California's desert landscapes and offer enduring protection of desert wildlife, habitat, and previously untouched wild areas that rockhounds appreciate. Such designations include new areas of critical environmental concern (ACEC), National Landscape Conservation System (NLCS), and Special Recreation Management Areas (SRMA).

I recommend that ACEC and NLCS management objectives should explicity specify that rockhounding is an acceptable/compatible activity for such designations. In addition, Special Recreation Permits for rockhounding should be identified as a compatible use in the management objectives for the NLCS lands. Also, designated routes should remain open.

Specific areas of concern to me include:
List the areas here with pertinent details.
Attach maps with annotations.
You can use the DRECP map tool at:
http://drecp.databasin.org

More things you can do…

DRECP does not include distributed energy generation (e.g., rooftop solar) in any of its five alternative plans. Tell BLM to include this option.

Sign the Petition:
We don't have to sacrifice California's deserts
for renewable energy!

www.tubbcanyondesertconservancy.org

 — and

Sign on to the Basin and Range Watch letter »

 

 

DRECP banner - save California's desert

 

Storm clouds gather over the California desert
January 26, 2015
by Lisbet Thoresen

Natural habitat, ecosystems, and scenic and wilderness areas, as well as geologically distinctive or historically significant areas in the California desert will be altered dramatically, perhaps irrevocably, if the Recommended Alternative Plan of the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP) is adopted as drafted currently.

Southern California desert communities can look forward to the unspoiled vistas and natural environment they value being blighted by the construction of power transmission corridors through public lands and utility-scale projects on adjacent private lands. Areas previously accessible for recreational uses, including sites that have been popular with amateur rockhounds for many decades, may be closed or become inaccessible due to trail and road closures on adjacent lands.  At the least, recreational users can look forward to restricted access and an uncertain future in which development trumps other considerations on BLM-administered lands.

The comment period for the DRECP, which closes on February 23rd, provides opportunity for the public to influence provisions that determine the destiny of our natural resources on public lands.

Comments are needed NOW on the DRECP.  We've made a start with the SDMG DRECP SurveyShirley Leeson presented more than 100 survey results collected over two days at the December 6th BLM meeting held in Palm Springs.  As of this writing, the next BLM meeting on the DRECP has not been scheduled, but we want to be prepared to submit many more surveys at the next meeting.  This input is important – it will become part of the permanent record of the public response to the DRECP.

If you have not already taken the survey, please take a few minutes to do it, just do it.

You don't have to be a rockhound to take the survey, or for that matter, to sign on to letters and petitions.  The DRECP affects residents of desert communities and visitors alike.  It affects nature lovers, naturalists, recreational users (i.e., hikers, campers, rock climbers, photographers), botanists, geologists, hydrologists and palaeontologists, among others.  It affects the watershed, flora and fauna of fragile ecosystems that are unique to California.  Areas beloved by all of us may become inaccessible as trails and roads are closed and "recreational use" or special conservation designations are changed by BLM to accommodate large scale development plans (see box, right: a list of potentially vulnerable rock-collecting areas).

DRECP – Background

Land usage encompassing 22.5 million acres of California's Deserts will be administered according to DRECP guidelines for the next 25 years.  Its implementation will pave the way for private companies to build utility-scale energy projects that will be connected to the power grid via power transmission corridors criss-crossing public lands (Figure 1).  A jointly administered project of the BLM, California Energy Commission, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the goals of the DRECP are driven by the legal requirement that "renewables" (solar, wind, geothermal) shall account for 33% of California's energy sources by 2020.  The state has led the nation in the proliferation of solar energy projects, with the goals set for the 2020 target date having been realized already – six years ahead of schedule.  Now, Governor Brown has upped the target to 50%.  Wind and geothermal projects have flourished under the same mandate.

BLM has been criticized from many quarters for its lack of transparency on drafting the Plan and for eschewing public engagement or providing sufficient public notice to comment on its provisions.(Clarke 2012)  When the DRECP was published on September 26, 2014, consistent with past behavior, the BLM provided limited opportunity for public review.  A public hearing was scheduled in San Diego only 30 days after release of the 8,000-page document.

Environmental journalist Chris Clarke has been critical of both the Plan and the process.  In a commentary last Fall on the KCET website, in which he advocated extending the comment period, Clarke wrote:  "The draft DRECP is a mind-bendingly massive and complex document….It proposes to manage a change in the Californian landscape that rivals some of the largest environmental changes in California in the 19th and 20th centuries, like hydraulic mining, or the plowing of the Central Valley's wetlands and meadows, or the damming of most of the state's major rivers." (Clarke 2014)

In the face of strong criticism, the comment period was extended through January 9th, then again to February 23, 2015.  Given the Draft DRECP's scope, complexity and voluminous size, the opportunity for cogent public participation is still inadequate.

Figure 1. DRECP DFAs and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.  Map courtesy of J. David Garmon.

Figure 1. DRECP DFAs and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Map courtesy of J. David Garmon.

Devil in the details

Or lack thereof.  All five of the DRECP Alternative Plans consider only utility-scale projects.  Distributed energy generation options (e.g., rooftop solar) are excluded from consideration.   Why?

Why are massive transmission lines, which will have to be built to connect newly built plants to the power grid, not accounted for in the DRECP?  They are an indispensible factor in California's energy equation.  For the equation to balance, no facility can operate without a conduit linking to the grid.

While nearly 80% of the DRECP Development Focus Areas (DFAs) in the DRECP's Preferred Alternative Plan targets private property, and 90% of the conservation (no renewable development) is on public lands, one only has to look at a DRECP map to see that transmission corridors will have to pass through public lands to connect to the grid (Figure 1).  The juxtaposition of private and public lands is a checkerboard with porous boundaries.  Do birds know to fly around the DFAs and tortoises to avoid them?(Wolf 2014)  The footprint of acres of solar panels and profiles of 260 ft. tall wind turbines in this gerrymander-patterned landscape will hardly be inconspicuous from the vantage of adjacent residential communities or public lands designated as wildlife or conservation areas.  Southern California communities in Lucerne and Victor Valleys, and also Imperial Valley show the sorry toll imposed by DFAs on their rural character.(Gonzales 2014b)

The DFAs have been characterized as previously disturbed lands with lowest biological value and lowest conflict with existing uses.  By whom?  What will the demand be for water resources and fossil fuels to operate the plants?  What will be the impact on air quality?  (The air quality of the "disturbed" private lands is already the worst in the country.)  What will happen when the land is no longer irrigated or planted with anything to hold down the soil? What about hazardous waste disposal?  What will be the provisions for EPA and Air Quality Management District compliance?  Down the road, if projects fail and plants close, what will be the provisions for the safe and complete dismantling of plant facilities and restoration of natural landscapes and habitat?  Can California taxpayers look forward to being on the hook for the costs?  The DRECP doesn't spell it out.

Surely, the public deserves more time to review and comment on the implications of these and other troublesome questions embodied in the DRECPAlliance for Desert Preservation thinks so.  The 501(C)(4) organization submitted a letter to the California Energy Commision on January 16th formally requesting that the whole comment process be restarted.  The letter also requests a 60-day extension of the comment period.  Anyone can sign on to this letter.

California's experience
with utility-scale renewable energy

Certainly, renewable energy sources are a desirable alternative to fossil fuels and "dirty" energy sources.  Past renewable energy projects and facilities currently in operation provide useful reference for comparison to evaluate objectively the prospects of future development administered under the DRECP guidelines.  In California, a myriad of factors have turned more than a few "green" energy projects into problem-plagued ventures or colossal boondoggles.

DRECP proponents overlook the troubled recent history and continue to focus only on the promise of upside benefits: economic relief for consumers, energy independence and sustainability, a low carbon footprint, creation of jobs, revenues for city and state coffers, et cetera; however, as projects have come online, the downside aspects are neither few nor trivial.  Some are proving to be intractable.

Solar and wind farms in Ocotillo Wells in Imperial County, wind turbines in San Gorgonio Pass in Coachella Valley, and the solar project at Ivanpah Valley in the Mojave Desert, San Bernardino County, are illustrative case studies.  The negative impact on ecosystems and quality of life/health-safety issues for desert communities have been underestimated, while the net benefits redounding to consumers or city, county and state governments, not to mention private industry, have been equivocal, at best.  They have consistently over-promised and under-performed, with some serious, negative consequences. 

The Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System, for example, which received $1.6 billion in Federal loan guarantees, was a joint venture among NRG Energy, Bright Source Energy and Google.  Built to be the world's largest solar project of its kind, serious problems have bedeviled the enterprise (Danko 2014): it consumed 63% more fossil fuel to operate than originally estimated, its annual consumption of water in the drought-starved state hit 33 million gallons, and to date, it has achieved operational capacity of only 25% of the original projection.(Miller 2014)  Boosting the lower than anticipated energy output draws significantly more natural gas to run the plant than originally estimated, and it comes at a significantly higher cost.(Gonzales 2014a; Danko 2014)

As it turns out, not all solar panels are created equal.  They have a variable degradation (life expectancy) and fail rate, and their performance is highly weather-dependent.(Jordan and Kurtz 2012; Kelly-Detwiler 2013)  In general, they do not operate optimally in environments that characteristically have extreme temperature excursions – like the desert.  Dust, which deserts produce naturally in abundance, is another problem.  It lowers performance, and so, solar arrays in the desert require more fossil fuel and water to keep them clean and generating energy optimally.

Another unintended consequence of large-scale energy projects built in the desert has been the disastrous impact on wildlife and their natural habitat.  The Ivanpah project has displaced desert tortoises and killed thousands of birds.(Laufer 2014; Rowe 2014; Wolf 2014; [video] The Heat is On: Desert Tortoises & SurvivalTerry Weiner, head of the Desert Protective Council, wrote: "The DPC disagrees with the premise of the DRECP, which is to continue expanding renewable energy development in our beleaguered California desert.  We are learning from the photovoltaic solar developments in Imperial County that the "lake effect" of the panels from a birds-eye view has caused the death of over 150 species, and thousands of individual birds.  Birds are being incinerated in the solar flux at the Ivanpah Solar Power Tower project in the Mojave Desert."(Raftery 2014)  Burning birds fall to the ground, often still alive, blinded and horribly injured, where they die or are mercifully killed by roaming predators attracted to the carnage. Ivanpah also kills eagles, as well as other endangered birds and butterflies.

Ivanpah has also raised safety concerns for aircraft along a popular flight corridor. Its intensely bright towers produce a blinding glare for pilots.  This is the face of so-called "green" energy generation in the desert and the future legacy of the DRECP, if it is implemented as proposed.

The travails at Ivanpah led NRG Energy's CEO David Crane to publish a letter to shareholders in 2012, in which he advocated a drastically revised perspective on the viability of renewable energy projects.  In a complete turnabout, he was now embracing "a distributed energy generation clean energy future featuring individual choice and the empowerment of the American energy consumer" – in other words, point-of-use solutions such as rooftop solar panels versus the utility-scale model.(quoted in: Miller 2014) Environmentalists and other nature conservation advocates who are usually on the opposite side of the issue, can agree with Crane on this alternative vision.

Riverside County Supervisor John Benoit could have been speaking for municipalities everywhere, when he remarked in 2012, "We're [Riverside] going to be carrying the burden of having these types of facilities for decades to come, and because of the incentives that have been provided by federal and state government, there's virtually nothing left for the county government or the local people to get benefit back after the small number of construction jobs are gone," and further, "...the long-term effect is clear: We're going to have a desert that's dramatically changed and forever off the tax roll and out of use for any other recreational or other purpose."(quoted in: La Jeunesse 2012)

J. David Garmon, president of the Tubb Canyon Desert Conservancy, is critical of the DRECP for excluding distributed energy generation (DG) proposals.  In an op-ed that appeared in the San Diego Union-Tribune in December, Dr. Garmon presented the case for embracing a DG/point-of-use model, and he made a cogent argument exposing the costly drawbacks of the DRECP Alternative Plans – all of which propose only utility-scale projects.(Garmon, 2014)  Concerning the DRECP's Alternative Plans, including the Preferred or Recommended plan, Garmon said in an article for East County Magazine, "This rationale [omitting rooftop solar as an option] implies that anything that does not result in the creation of utility-scale generation facilities is in actuality not an alternative at all….The perverse rationale implied by the above reasoning is that we cannot pursue conservation goals unless we are simultaneously 'sacrificing' millions of acres of desert habitat."(quoted in: Raferty 2014)  In an effort to persuade the BLM to incorporate DG alternatives into the DRECP, Garmon has authored a petition to support alternative distributed energy generation proposals and to oppose what he characterizes as a wholesale, unnecessary and expensive giveaway to industry. 

Kevin Emmerich and Laura Cunningham share many of the same concerns of David Garmon and others.  Under the auspices of Basin and Range Watch, they have been documenting conditions in the Mojave Desert and the deleterious effects renewable energy developments are having on the environment and habitat.  They have written a detailed letter to the DRECP proposing inclusion of a point-of-use alternative plan and are inviting individuals and organizations to sign on.

If no less an industry authority than David Crane, CEO of NRG Energy, one of Ivanpah's partners, came to the conclusion – based on real world experience – that utility-scale generation was untenable in California's deserts and further, that distributed generation (rooftop solar) is the viable alternative, one has to wonder why the DRECP's authors and the rest of industry isn't listening.  One explanation may be that it is far more profitable to transport electricity along far off transmission lines than to work through local power grids on rooftops near the destination where the energy is actually needed.

Alfredo Martinez-Morales, managing director of UC Riverside's Southern California Research Initiative for Solar Energy, may have summed it up best: "These projects, no matter what, are going to have significant impacts, wherever they go….A lot of people assume that because they're located in the desert, the impact is minimal, but it's been shown now that that's not the case.  The desert is a thriving environment, and it's home to very unique animals and plants."(quoted in: Roth 2014)  And, we might add, it's home to a unique geological landscape.  It's home to us.

 

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank J. David Garmon, Shaun Gonzales, and Bob Howells for reading the text and providing data and many useful comments.  Lori Paul is also thanked for providing constructive comments.

 

References

Chris Clarke. 4 Apr 2012. BLM Still Limiting Public Comment on Desert Renewables. www.kcet.org. Available at: <http://www.kcet.org/updaily/socal_focus/commentary/blm-continues-its-campaign-against-public-input.html> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Chris Clarke. 7 Oct 2014. California's Huge Renewable Energy Plan is Bad for Democracy. www.kcet.org. Available at: <http://www.kcet.org/news/redefine/rewire/commentary/drecp-bad-for-democracy.html> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Peter Danko. 29 Oct 2014. At Ivanpah solar power plant, energy production falling well short of expectations. www.breakingenergy.com. Available at: <http://breakingenergy.com/2014/10/29/at-ivanpah-solar-power-plant-energy-production-falling-well-short-of-expectations/> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

J. David Garmon. 18 Dec 2014. Costly new transmission lines not the only energy choice. The San Diego Union-Tribune. Available online at: <http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/dec/18/desert-renewable-energy-plan/> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Shaun Gonzales. 25 Aug 2013. Comments on Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan [Docket: 09-RENEW EO-01] Available online at: <http://www.drecp.org/documents/docs/comments-general/2013-08-25_Shaun_Gonzales_comments.pdf> (Accessed 13 January 2015).

Shaun Gonzales. June 2014(a). BrightSource Underperforming; Adds Fossil Fuels. mojavedesertblog.com. Available online at: <<http://www.mojavedesertblog.com/2014_06_01_archive.html> (Accessed 12 January 2015).

Shaun Gonzales. Dec 2014(b). The DRECP plans to guide the way: The future of the California desert. Desert Report (News of the desert from Sierra Club California/Nevada Desert Committee), 1, 6–7. Available online at: <http://www.desertreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/DR_Winter_20141.pdf> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

William La Jeunesse. 10 Dec 2012. California doubles down on solar power, as critics question cost, job results. www.foxnews.com. Available online at: <http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/12/10/california-doubles-down-on-solar-power-as-critics-question-cost-job-results/> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Dirk C. Jordan and Sarah R. Kurtz. June 2012. Photovoltaic Degradation Rates– An Analytical Review. Report NREL/JA-5200-51664. Available online at: <http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy12osti/51664.pdf> (Accessed 22 January 2015).

Peter Laufer. Mar 19, 2014. The tortoise is collateral damage in the Mojave Desert: Large solar arrays can harm threatened species. High Country News. Available online at: <http://www.hcn.org/wotr/the-tortoise-is-collateral-damage-in-the-mojave-desert> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

David Miller. Nov 9, 2014. CDC SolarMASTER 03 01 1. Available online at: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5CA7WuJJ1ZI> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Miriam Raftery. Nov 28, 2014. Petition launched opposing opening millions of acres of Calif. desert to industrial-scale energy projects. www.eastcountymagazine.org. Available online at: <http://www.eastcountymagazine.org/petition-launched-opposing-opening-millions-acres-calif-desert-industrial-scale-energy-projects> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Sammy Roth. Aug 24, 2014. Solar slowdown: Stalled projects dot desert landscape. The Desert Sun. Available online at: <http://www.desertsun.com/story/tech/science/energy/2014/08/24/stalled-solar-projects-desert-landscape/14522553/> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Peter Rowe. Giant solar plant said to fry flying birds. The San Diego Union-Tribune. Available online at: <http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/aug/23/ivanpah-streamers-big-solar/> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

Mosheh Wolf. Dec 2014. Energy Versus Tortoises, The Sequel. Desert Report (News of the desert from Sierra Club California/Nevada Desert Committee), 5, 18. Available online at: <http://www.desertreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/DR_Winter_20141.pdf> (Accessed 8 January 2015).

 

Additional Resources on Desert Preservation and Sustainable Renewable Energy

Alliance for Desert Preservation
Petition: Support NCLS for Juniper Flats
Petition: Stop Coldwater-Lugo Transmission Project
Sign on to the Alliance for Desert Preservation letter asking the CEC to restart the comment period on the DRECP and extend it

Basin and Range Watch
Endorse the Basin and Range Watch letter requesting inclusion of a proposed alternative distributed energy plan in the DRECP

Desert Protective Council

J. David Garmon. Petition: We don't have to sacrifice California's deserts for renewable energy!

D. Miller. 13 May 2014. What is DRECP? Heads-Up! (Video overview of DRECP)

Mojave Communities Conservation Collaborative
Call to action letters and links to local representatives: www.mojavec3.org/take-action.html

Mojave Desert Blog

Save Gem Hill and Lonely Butte

Sierra Club Desert Chapter Newsletter

Solar Done Right

Tubb Canyon Desert Conservancy (Includes tips on preparing a comment letter on DRECP)

 

Cite this article

Lisbet Thoresen. 26 Jan 2015. Storm clouds gather over the California desert. www.sdmg.org. Available at: <https://www.sdmg.org/articles/201501/storm-clouds-gather-over-the-California-desert/>.

A print-friendly version of this article can be found at: https://www.sdmg.org/articles/201501/storm-clouds-gather-over-the-california-desert.pdf.

This article is a revised version of an article that originally appeared online on January 8, 2015 at: https://www.sdmg.org/sdmg-public/resources/blm-resources/#astorms

Contact the author: editor@sdmg.org

© 2015 San Diego Mineral and Gem Society, Inc. Non-commercial reprint permission given, unless otherwise noted, provided proper credit is given.

 

 

 

 

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