Thursday, May 9

Burning Man cheers Nevada county’s overturning geothermal allow

RENO, Nev. — County commissioners have rescinded an vitality firm’s allow to drill exploratory wells for a geothermal challenge within the Nevada desert close to the location of the annual Burning Man counterculture pageant about 110 miles (177 kilometers) north of Reno.

Officials for the Burning Man group and others who’ve filed swimsuit in U.S. District Court to dam Ormat Technologies’ exploration within the Black Rock Desert say the transfer places the challenge on maintain indefinitely and will scuttle it altogether.

The Washoe County Commission voted 3-2 this week to overturn the allow that the county’s Board of Adjustment permitted in January to permit for the drilling of as much as 13 geothermal check wells within the space close to Gerlach, a city of about 130.

Opponents of the challenge say it may jeopardize the city’s water provide and detract from the distant space’s pure magnificence.

“Gerlach’s very existence is threatened by the Ormat geothermal development,” Allen Nash, vp of the Gerlach Volunteer Fire Department and member of a county residents advisory board, advised the fee earlier than Tuesday night time’s vote.

The challenge “runs the risk of changing a spectacular mountain vista into a spectacular vista of an industrial plant,” mentioned Seth Schrenzel, an area enterprise proprietor and trustee for the Gerlach General Improvement District.

The nonprofit Burning Man Project primarily based in San Francisco mentioned in a press release that the fee’s choice delays the challenge “for a substantial period of time and could result in it never moving forward.”

“This community stood up and and made a difference. Burning Man is pleased to have played a role in protecting the town and this special wilderness we call home,” mentioned Marnee Benson, the group’s director of presidency affairs.

Ormat Technologies didn’t reply to requests for remark.

The Reno-based firm is already concerned in a prolonged federal court docket battle over a geothermal energy plant it desires to construct about 100 miles east of Reno adjoining to wetlands the place an endangered toad lives and are fed by sizzling springs that tribal leaders say are sacred.

In the desert north of Reno, Ormat initially proposed a pair of geothermal energy crops with overhead energy traces and a number of other miles of pipelines however withdrew that proposal in 2020 and changed it with a smaller exploratory challenge to find out whether or not such improvement was commercially possible.

The Bureau of Land Management permitted the exploratory challenge with the check wells final October. All exploration wells and gear can be positioned on BLM-managed land.

Ormat mentioned in court docket filings in March in response to the opponents’ lawsuit that the exploratory challenge “does not include – and the (BLM’s) decision does not approve – construction of a power plant or development of electric transmission lines.”

“Ormat would seek BLM permission for further development if, and only if, the project proves the commercial viability of the geothermal resources,” it mentioned.

But the opponents’ lawsuit accuses Ormat of trying to evade evaluation of the geothermal energy crops’ potential detrimental results on the setting by segmenting the challenge, which limits BLM’s overview to solely the exploratory stage of its plans.

“This first stage merely confirms where the resources are located to inform future industrial scale geothermal energy development,” the lawsuit mentioned. “Once the exploration project begins, it will be impossible to stop the effects of the entire geothermal production project.”

Local residents joined the Burning Man Project in January in interesting the allow. They argue that the timing of the general public discover of a gathering to collect neighborhood enter simply after the Christmas holidays prevented anybody from attending. They additionally mentioned the proposed challenge fails to adjust to the county’s “High Desert Area Plan” supposed to guard scenic vistas and pure sources.

Clara Andriola, the fee’s latest member who was appointed final week by Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo to fill a emptiness, joined Commissioners Jeanne Herman and Mike Clark in voting to rescind the allow, based on the Reno Gazette Journal, which first reported the choice.

Chairwoman Alexis Hill and Commissioner Mariluz Garcia voted in assist of the allow.

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