Las Vegas Review-Journal

Solar project near LV up for review

Plan for largest panel array in U.S. draws criticism

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

The first environmen­tal review is out for the nation’s largest solar power array, and conservati­onists are already pushing back against the proposed project 30 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

If approved, the Gemini Solar Project would use 7,100 acres of photovolta­ic panels to generate up to 690 megawatts of electricit­y. Plans include some on-site battery storage that would allow the facility to continue delivering power after the sun goes down.

The Bureau of Land Management released its draft environmen­tal impact statement on the project June 6. The agency will hold a pair of public meetings in July and accept public input on the document through Sept. 5.

Kevin Emmerich, director of the Nevada-based environmen­tal group Basin and Range Watch, said the proposed developmen­t is too large and too close to wilderness and other fragile areas to avoid harming the environmen­t.

He said he is all for green energy, “but it’s not green when you do it like this.”

Gemini is a joint venture by Australia’s Quinbrook Infrastruc­ture Partners and California-based Arevia Power, which plan to develop 440 MW of solar capacity for use in Nevada in the first phase of the planned developmen­t east of Interstate 15 along the road to Valley of Fire State Park.

Another 250 MW of generating capacity would be added in the second phase, with the power to be sold in Nevada or exported to Arizona and California.

“Developmen­t of renewable energy has become a priority in Nevada and across the nation, and the Gemini Solar Project will have a positive impact in meeting our energy needs while reducing our carbon footprint,” said Ricardo Graf, Managing Partner of Arevia Power, in a statement.

“We are committed to addressing environmen­tal concerns and working with the community to ensure the developmen­t of an energy resource that all can be proud of.”

According to the BLM, the finished project just south of the Moapa River Indian Reservatio­n would rank as the largest solar facility in the United States and one of the largest in the world.

“The proposed Gemini Solar

Project would represent a significan­t increase in renewable energy capacity for Nevada and the West,” said Tim Smith, Southern Nevada district manager for the BLM. “We look forward to receiving public input as we continue to evaluate this project.”

Emmerich said the developer’s surveys suggest that almost 300 desert tortoises will have to be relocated during constructi­on. He said the federally protected reptiles face higher mortality rates when they are moved because they expose themselves to predators and the elements while trying to make it back to their old homes.

Emmerich said the project also will have serious “visual impacts” to the area just west of Valley of Fire State Park and the Muddy Mountains Wilderness Area — so much so that the BLM is seeking to downgrade the Visual Resource Management designatio­n for the land in question.

He would prefer to see solar panels covering rooftops in Las Vegas and other already developed areas. “Why destroy valuable habitat for desert species when more environmen­tally friendly options are out there?” Emmerich said.

To block the developmen­t, Basin and Range Watch teamed up with the Idaho-based Western Watersheds Project on a petition seeking endangered species protection for the three-corner milkvetch, a rare desert plant that grows in the project area and in isolated parts of Lake Mead National Recreation Area and the Arizona Strip.

Emmerich said they filed the petition in April in anticipati­on of the BLM’S draft environmen­tal review of the solar array.

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