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Proposed Legislation Aims to Balance Conservation,Recreation and Renewable Energy Development in Mojave Desert

Proposed Legislation Aims to Balance Conservation,Recreation and Renewable Energy Development in Mojave DesertWashington, DC – U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the author of the 1994 California Desert Protection Act, today introduced a comprehensive bill to designate new lands in the Mojave Desert for conservation, enhance recreational opportunities, and streamline and improve the federal permitting process to advance large-scale wind and solar development on suitable lands. The carefully crafted legislation, titled the California Desert Protection Act of 2010, is the product of discussions with key stakeholders in Southern California.

The bill builds upon the legacy of the 1994 California Desert Protection Act – sponsored by Senator Feinstein – which protected more than 7 million acres of pristine desert in Southern California, and established Death Valley National Park, Joshua Tree National Park and the Mojave National Preserve.

Senator Feinstein said;

“I strongly believe that conservation, renewable energy development and recreation can and must co-exist in the California Desert. This legislation strikes a careful balance between these sometimes competing concerns.”

“Earlier this year, I learned that Bureau of Land Management had accepted numerous applications to build vast solar and wind energy projects on former railroad lands previously owned by the Catellus Corporation that had been donated to the federal government or acquired with taxpayer funds for conservation.

I believe the development of these new cleaner energy sources is vital to addressing climate change, yet we must be careful about selecting where these facilities are located.

Approximately $45 million of private donations, including a $5 million land discount from Catellus, and $18 million in federal Land and Water Conservation funds were spent to purchase these lands, with the intent of conserving them in perpetuity.

We have an obligation to honor our commitment to conserve these lands – and I believe we can still accomplish that goal while also fulfilling California’s commitment to develop a clean energy portfolio. There are many places in the California desert where development and employment are essential and appropriate. But there are also places that future generations will thank us for setting aside.

Over the course of the past year, we have worked painstakingly to ensure that this legislation balances the needs of all stakeholders. This bill, if enacted, will have a positive and enduring impact on the landscape of the Southern California desert, and I hope it will stand as a model for how to balance renewable energy development and conservation. I would urge my colleagues in the Senate and the House to support this legislation, so that we can get it enacted as quickly as possible.”

As of today, the legislation has the support of:

  • The California Wilderness Coalition
  • The Wildlands Conservancy
  • The Wilderness Society
  • The National Parks Conservation Association
  • Friends of the River
  • Campaign for America’s Wilderness
  • Cogentrix Energy
  • Edison International (parent company of Southern California Edison)
  • Friends of Big Morongo Canyon Preserve
  • Friends of the Desert Mountains
  • Mojave Desert Land Trust
  • Desert Protective Council
  • Amargosa Conservancy
  • Death Valley Conservancy
  • Cities of Barstow, Desert Hot Springs, Hesperia, Indio, Palm Springs, San Bernardino and Yucaipa
  • Riverside County Supervisor Marion Ashley
  • San Bernardino County Supervisor Neil Derry
  • Imperial County Supervisor Wally Leimgruber
  • Coachella Valley Association of Governments
  • SummerTree Institute
  • Route 66 Preservation Foundation

Expedites the permitting of temporary meteorological measurement devices.

Authorizes grants and provides loan guarantees to innovative electricity transmission technologies that will reduce the need to build massive, visually and environmentally disruptive transmission lines in the desert.

Returns 25 percent of the revenue generated by new renewable energy projects to the state, and 25 percent to local county governments, ensuring that these entities have the resources to support permitting, public lands protection, and local conservation efforts.

Proposed Legislation Aims to Balance Conservation,Recreation and Renewable Energy Development in Mojave Desert
Proposed Legislation Aims to Balance Conservation,Recreation and Renewable Energy Development in Mojave Desert

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