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Plan for Promoting Efficient Responsible Geothermal Energy
Development on Federal Lands Open for Comment.
In the next step toward efficient development of geothermal
energy resources on Federal lands, the Bureau of Land Management and
the USDA Forest Service have initiated a public comment period on a
Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) for leasing
geothermal resources in the Western States and Alaska Publication of
a Notice of Availability for the Draft PEIS in today's Federal
Register begins a 90-day public comment period on the alternatives
nd impact analysis presented in the draft document.
The preferred Alternative considers approximately 117 million
acres of public lands and 75 million acres of National Forest lands
for potential geothermal leasing. The BLM administers geothermal
leasing on the public lands it manages and on lands in the National
Forest System, where the Forest Service is the surface management
agency. "Federal lands in the West and Alaska contain the largest
potential geothermal resources in this country," said BLM Director
Jim Caswell. "With the strong interest and support of state and
local governments and clear direction from Congress, we are taking
the next step in an aggressive program to make these resources
available for responsible development to help meet the Nation"s
energy needs."
For lease applications pending as of January 1, 2005, the Record
of Decision (ROD) on the Final PEIS will identify whether geothermal
leasing is appropriate on lands identified in the applications and
complete processing of these applications, as required by the Energy
Policy Act of 2005. The ROD will also amend BLM resource management
plans to allocate lands with geothermal potential as being closed or
open to leasing with minor or major constraints, and will provide
information to the Forest Service to facilitate the agency's consent
decisions for geothermal leasing on National Forest System lands.
Additionally, to protect special resource values, the BLM and
Forest Service are proposing a comprehensive list of stipulations,
conditions of approval (COAs), and best management practices (BMPs)
to be incorporated into future leases. The preferred Alternative in
the Draft PEIS considers all public lands and National Forest System
lands with potential for geothermal development available for
leasing except those that are withdrawn or administratively closed
to geothermal leasing. The Draft PEIS also evaluates another
alternative based on public input gained during scoping that would
limit geothermal leasing for electrical generation to areas near
transmission lines. Written comments on the Draft PEIS may be
submitted by any of three methods:
Email to:
geothermal_EIS@blm.gov
FAX to: 1-866-625-0707
US Mail: to Geothermal Programmatic EIS, c/o EMPSi, 182 Howard
Street, Suite 110, San Francisco, California 94105
In addition, comments may be submitted at public meetings scheduled
for 13 cities in July. Dates and locations for the meetings are as
follows:
July 8, 2008 Anchorage, Alaska; Alaska Energy Authority, 813 W.
Northern Lights Boulevard
July 9, 2008 Fairbanks, Alaska; Fairbanks North Star Borough
Library, 1215 Cowles Street
July 14, 2008 Reno, Nevada; Washoe County Library - Spanish Springs
Branch, 7100 Pyramid Highway
July 15, 2008 Salt Lake City, Utah; Salt Lake City Library, 210 East
400 South
July 16, 2008 Tucson, Arizona; Pima County Public Library,
Dusenberry River Branch, 5605 E. River Road
July 17, 2008 Cheyenne, Wyoming; Laramie County Library, Willow
Room, 200 Pioneer Avenue
July 21, 2008 Boise, Idaho; Boise Public Library, 715 South Capitol
Boulevard
July 22, 2008 Albuquerque, New Mexico; UNM, Conference Center, Room
C, 1634 University N.E.
July 23, 2008 Helena, Montana; Lewis and Clark Main Library, 120 S.
Last Chance Gulch
July 24, 2008 Denver, Colorado; PPA Event Center, 2105 Decatur
Street
July 28, 2008 Seattle, Washington; Seattle Public Library,
University Branch, 5009 Roosevelt Way, N.E.
July 29, 2008 Portland, Oregon; Multnomah County Library, Central
Branch, 801 SW 10th Avenue
July 30, 2008 Sacramento, California; California Energy Commission,
1516 Ninth Street
The hours for all meetings are 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., local time.
Geothermal energy production uses heat located naturally beneath the
surface of the earth to generate electricity with little or no need
to burn fuel. Geothermal energy currently accounts for 8.5 percent
of renewable energy generation in the U.S. Though it generates a
small portion of the Nation's electricity, the U.S. continues to be
the world leader in generating electricity using geothermal energy.
In 2005, geothermal energy generated over 14,800 gigawatt-hours (GWh)
of electricity, which is enough power to supply the annual needs of
1.3 million homes. Almost half of the nation's geothermal energy
production and about 90 percent of U.S. geothermal resources occur
on Federal lands. Currently, 29 geothermal power plants are
operating under BLM authorization on Federal lands in California,
Nevada and Utah. They have a total capacity of 1250 MW and supply
the needs of 1.2 million homes.
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