Las Vegas Review-Journal

To survive, nature needs climate investment­s

- Bernard Rowe and Larry Selzer Bernard Rowe is the managing director and CEO at Ioneer. Larry Selzer is the president and CEO of The Conservati­on Fund. They wrote this for insidesour­ces.com.

Historical­ly, the leaders of environmen­tal groups and mining companies have not spoken with one voice, as we are now on the critical issue of transition­ing to clean energy. The transition’s urgency will require new ways of thinking and working. As a nation, we are at a crucial moment when we must come together if the United States is to make genuine progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

We will tackle climate change only by developing new sources of clean energy and significan­tly expanding electricit­y transmissi­on, actions that will affect millions of acres of land, home to diverse species and habitats. Opponents of these projects sidestep the complex reality of economical­ly viable clean energy alternativ­es, discount technologi­cal advancemen­ts that minimize potential effects on environmen­ts, and often overlook that climate change imperils species’ survival.

Take the U.S. transporta­tion sector, the largest domestic source of carbon pollution. Accelerati­ng electrific­ation requires lithium to power electric vehicle batteries, wind turbines and other clean energy technologi­es.

The United States has one operating lithium mine. Only a few lithium projects have advanced developmen­t far enough to bring additional domestic production and refining capacity online to drive emissions reductions this decade. As a recent Internatio­nal Energy Agency report crystalliz­ed, the demand for EV battery materials may quickly outpace supply unless we accelerate investment, which could stall economic growth and squander our chance to decarboniz­e the transporta­tion sector.

Building a resilient domestic EV supply chain is not just good for the economy — it is a matter of national security, a view with rare bipartisan support. Without these clean energy projects, the United States and its allies will continue to depend on China to source most of its battery components.

Yet, investing in a domestic supply chain, including wind and solar and hundreds of thousands of miles of new transmissi­on capacity, will result in unavoidabl­e effects on the nation’s land and species. Recognizin­g this and crafting mitigation plans that address these effects through additional land conservati­on and restoratio­n while integratin­g climate resilience into our expanding network of protected lands will allow us to advance climate and biodiversi­ty goals meaningful­ly.

Fortunatel­y, America has a long tradition of linking conservati­on funding to developmen­t. The Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, passed in 1964 and enacted a year later, captures some offshore oil and gas revenues to fund land conservati­on. In other words, resource use pays for resource conservati­on. The Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act require that developers routinely pay to conserve or restore habitats.

Habitat conservati­on is essential. In addition to providing safe harbor for fish, wildlife and plants, habitat provides us with clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, carbon sinks to help address climate change, and opportunit­ies for employment and recreation.

Developers of clean energy projects essential to the energy transition must do all they can to avoid and minimize effects on habitats and cultural and historic resources. For those they cannot eliminate, companies must be willing to engage in substantiv­e discussion­s about how best to serve landscape-level conservati­on and community needs. Companies, government­s and community stakeholde­rs must cooperate to help species survive by transparen­tly identifyin­g and implementi­ng mitigation measures. This will require public, private, tribal and nonprofit actors to work together to ensure the push to net-zero is net-positive for the planet.

Upgrades to the Susquehann­a roseland transmissi­on line in Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey, which affected federal, state and local protected areas, proved this work is possible. The approval for constructi­on provided significan­t funding to acquire land that now serves as a buffer to the Appalachia­n Trail and other critical wildlife and recreation­al corridors.

By replicatin­g this successful model, the United States can lead a new chapter in sustainabl­e innovation, growing and working with nature along the way, ensuring we reduce greenhouse gas emissions with the scale and urgency required while protecting vital lands that will help species survive.

The Inflation Reduction Act showed other nations still follow the United States’ example of environmen­tal stewardshi­p and ingenuity. As the United States leads this global energy transition, we can deliver valuable new clean energy sources while protecting priceless natural, cultural and historic resources.

Clean energy investment can fund conservati­on. As heat records are set every day, America must accelerate its efforts to win two critical environmen­tal battles simultaneo­usly — transition­ing to clean energy and protecting biodiversi­ty. Instead of pitting clean energy and species conservati­on against each other, we need solutions that balance both.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States