Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Tribes get veto over hydropower projects

Regulators previously gave developers approval over their objections

- Michael Phillis

Federal regulators have granted Native American tribes more power to block hydropower projects on their land after a flurry of applicatio­ns were filed to expand renewable energy in the waterscarc­e U.S. Southwest.

Previously, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission granted developers approval to move ahead with planning even if tribes objected. That practice came to an end last week. Now, a new commission policy allows tribes to quickly veto proposals, forcing businesses to cooperate with them if they want the federal government to grant exclusive rights to their hydropower projects.

“This is the acknowledg­ment and respect of tribal sovereignt­y, which is critical,” said George Hardeen, spokespers­on for the Navajo Nation’s president’s office.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission recently rejected seven proposals for projects on the Navajo Nation, which stretches 27,000 square miles across Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. When it issued those rejections, the commission also announced the policy change, handing tribes the same power as federal agencies to block projects.

“It applies anywhere that a hydropower project might be proposed on tribal lands throughout the United States,” said Aaron Paul, an attorney with Grand Canyon Trust, a conservati­on group.

The Hopi Tribe, which is completely surrounded by Navajo, urged the commission to cement the policy announceme­nt in a formal rule, worrying a different administra­tion would be less favorable to tribes and change the policy.

The pumped hydropower projects are essentiall­y big batteries that generate energy when demand is high and there aren’t a lot of other renewable sources like solar and wind available. Hydropower can be turned on when it is needed and works by releasing water from an upper reservoir to a lower one.

Later, when the electric grid has excess power, water is pumped in a loop back up to the higher reservoir, recharging the battery.

Developers have expressed new interest in building these pumped hydropower projects as coal-fired plants shut down in the Southwest. The canyons, towering mesas and dramatic river valleys in the area are ideal terrain because the projects require moving water between different elevations.

Environmen­tal groups and some members of the Navajo Nation argue the projects require enormous amounts of water in a part of the country that already doesn’t have enough. Roughly one-third of the 175,000 people on the Navajo Nation don’t have running water at home.

Some of the proposals that were rejected came from Nature and People First. For example, the company told federal regulators it wanted to build the Black Mesa East project on the Navajo reservatio­n in Arizona that would have two upper reservoirs with a combined capacity of 100,000 acre-feet and a sinsultati­on. gle, lower reservoir with the same total storage capacity. An acre-foot of water serves two or three homes annually.

The project was proposed near a home site lease that Jheremy Young’s family has held for generation­s. He’s happy the commission blocked it. The area around the mesa is rugged, quiet and vast, and water has to be hauled in.

“That’s where my dad came from, that’s where his father came from,” Young said. “The sentimenta­l value of the land – the story, the history – were the biggest concern.”

Denis Payre, president and CEO of Nature and People First, said the commission’s decision was “undeniably dishearten­ing.” The company secured support from local Navajo communitie­s and talked with Navajo government officials for a project he said would create jobs.

“Developing pumped storage projects is inherently challengin­g; this additional obstacle threatens to halt our collective efforts,” Payre said.

The company submitted a proposal for a much larger project than it intends to construct, giving it flexibility to build a smaller project on the piece of land it finds is best after study and tribal conThat approach and using that amount of water engenders opposition, according to the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmen­tal group.

“If you are going to propose a small project, actually propose a small project,” said Taylor McKinnon, the center’s Southwest director.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission also rejected proposals from Rye Developmen­t, which said it values tribal consultati­on and will continue to study opportunit­ies on tribal land.

Malcolm Woolf, president and CEO of the industry group National Hydropower Associatio­n, said he supports tribes’ right to stop unwanted projects. But he said the new policy could halt planning too soon.

The commission denied preliminar­y permits for the seven projects, which only recognize a business is first in line to develop a project and allows further studies. Developers have to consult with tribes before they can be granted a license and start building.

Companies don’t want to navigate a complicate­d permitting process and spend years working with a tribe only for another business to swoop in and win rights to the project at the last minute, Woolf said.

One company quickly caught up in the new policy is Pumped Hydro Storage, which wants a preliminar­y permit for a project near the Little Colorado River on Navajo Nation land in Arizona. In light of its new policy, the commission asked for more input from those it potentiall­y affects before they decide what to do.

The company’s manager, Steve Irwin, said pumped storage is important but hard to build on the Navajo Nation’s land.

“There’s no clear pathway to doing business on the reservatio­n,” Irwin said. “It’s almost like you have to have 100% unanimous consensus. It’s not majority, it’s got to be 100%, and it’s like, you are never going to get 100%.”

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmen­tal policy. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP FILE ?? The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission recently rejected seven proposals for projects on the Navajo Nation, which stretches 27,000 square miles across Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP FILE The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission recently rejected seven proposals for projects on the Navajo Nation, which stretches 27,000 square miles across Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.

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