Lodi News-Sentinel

Can bighorns, a bullet train and a huge solar farm coexist in the Mojave Desert?

- Louis Sahagún

BAKER — To most travelers on Interstate 15 between Barstow and Las Vegas, the Mojave Desert’s jagged Soda Mountains rise above a seemingly lifeless wasteland of hellish sand dunes, lava flows and vast flatlands.

But scientists say the scorched terrain just half a mile north of the Mojave National Preserve’s aptly named Devil’s Playground is a deceptivel­y delicate and vital ecosystem rich in wildlife: tortoises, foxes, badgers, bobcats and bighorn sheep.

Now, proposals to build a high-speed electric rail linking Southern California to Las Vegas and revive a long-dead solar project in the area have triggered a clash with conservati­onists over how best to ensure that bighorn sheep population­s do not become geneticall­y isolated — or wind up as roadkill.

Of particular concern was a recent announceme­nt that the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is reviewing a revised version of the controvers­ial Soda Mountain Solar Project that includes requests for permits to “take,” or fatally injure, desert tortoises, and alter desert washes during constructi­on.

“We can’t let this solar project happen,” said Chris Clarke of the nonprofit National Parks Conservati­on Assn.

“The value of this landscape and its habitat,” he said, “far outweighs the value of energy the proposed project would generate.”

For Mojave watchers, the situation is a crucial test of state Fish and Wildlife’s ability to mediate compromise­s among the developers while also planning a sustainabl­e future for complex and fragile ecological networks across the desert.

Critics worry that the solar project could jeopardize negotiatio­ns among federal rail officials, Caltrans, state wildlife authoritie­s and the rail developer, Brightline West of Miami, to include three wildlife overcrossi­ngs in its $8 billion project, which would occupy the center divider of Interstate 15.

Zglobal, the Folsom, California, renewable energy company backing the Soda Mountain Solar Project, and Brightline were unavailabl­e for comment.

But Christina Aiello, a biologist at Oregon State University and expert on bighorn sheep along Interstate 15, said, “It’s a bit of a shock that this zombie solar project has reemerged from the dead.”

In the worst-case scenario, it could lead bighorn sheep population­s to avoid the region, which would render wildlife overcrossi­ngs a huge waste of money, she said.

“It would also amount to a slap in the faces of all those who’ve poured labor, money and years of their lives into local bighorn recovery efforts,” Aiello said.

State wildlife authoritie­s will evaluate the project’s environmen­tal impacts, as required by the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

“Let’s all take a deep breath,” said Chuck Bonham, director of state Fish and Wildlife. “The desert is an invaluable landscape, and any proposed solar project has got to go through a public process.

“If we need to make changes to avoid conflicts, we’ll do that. But there will be a way in which everyone can accept and embrace connectivi­ty for the bighorn population­s — it just makes sense.”

 ?? GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A desert bighorn ewe, left, and a bighorn lamb on North Soda Mountain along Zzyzx Road in Baker on Aug. 19, 2021.
GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES A desert bighorn ewe, left, and a bighorn lamb on North Soda Mountain along Zzyzx Road in Baker on Aug. 19, 2021.

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