Houston Chronicle

In a move affecting energy companies, a plan to protect an imperiled bird is unveiled.

- By Mead Gruver

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Interior Secretary Sally Jewell revealed plans Thursday to preserve habitat in 10 Western states for an imperiled grounddwel­ling bird, the federal government’s biggest land planning effort to date for conservati­on of a single species.

The proposal would affect energy developmen­t. The regulation­s would require oil and gas wells to be clustered in groups of a half-dozen or more to avoid scattering them across habitat of the greater sage grouse. Drilling near breeding areas would be prohibited during mating season, and power lines would be moved away from prime habitat to avoid serving as perches for raptors that eat sage grouse.

Some will say the plans don’t go far enough to protect the bird, Jewell said.

“But I would say these plans are grounded in sound science — the best available science,” she said at a news conference on a ranch near Cheyenne.

Sage grouse are chicken-size birds that inhabit grass and sagebrush ecosystems in 11 states from California to the Dakotas. The rules would not apply to a small area of habitat in Washington state. The bird’s numbers have declined sharply in recent decades, and some environmen­talists warn they are at risk of extinction.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service faces a courtorder­ed deadline of Sept. 30 to decide whether the greater sage grouse needs protection as a threatened or endangered species. Many Western lawmakers and representa­tives of the oil and gas and agricultur­e industries say a threatened or endangered listing would devastate the region’s economy.

Congress voted late last year to withhold funding to implement any listing until September 2016. Other measures pending before U.S. lawmakers aim to delay any federal listing for five years or more as states develop their own plans for conserving habitat.

Republican­s in Congress criticized the plans as federal overreach.

But Wyoming shows that sage grouse and energy developmen­t can coexist, Jewell said. It is a top oil, natural gas and coal producer with a grouse conservati­on strategy being copied by other states and the U.S. government.

“There is no future for our economy if we don’t take care of the sage grouse,” said Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead, a Republican who took part in the announceme­nt. “That’s a fact. Some like it, some don’t.”

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 ?? Tom Koerner / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Associated Press ?? An Interior Department proposal would require wells to be clustered rather than scattered across the greater sage grouse’s habitat. The grouse above was at the Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge in Wyoming.
Tom Koerner / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Associated Press An Interior Department proposal would require wells to be clustered rather than scattered across the greater sage grouse’s habitat. The grouse above was at the Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge in Wyoming.

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