Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Tribes, environmen­tal groups ask US court to block $10B energy transmissi­on project

- By Susan Montoya Bryan and Ken Ritter

A federal judge is being asked to issue a stop-work order on a $10 billion transmissi­on line being built through a remote southeaste­rn Arizona valley to carry windgenera­ted electricit­y to customers as far away as California.

A 32-page lawsuit filed on Jan. 17 in U.S. District Court in Tucson, Arizona, accuses the U.S. Interior Department and Bureau of Land Management of refusing for nearly 15 years to recognize “overwhelmi­ng evidence of the cultural significan­ce” of the remote San Pedro Valley to Native American tribes including the Tohono O'odham, Hopi, Zuni and San Carlos Apache Tribe.

The suit was filed shortly after Pattern Energy received approval to transmit electricit­y generated by its SunZia wind farm in central New Mexico through the San Pedro Valley east of Tucson and north of Interstate 10.

The lawsuit calls the valley “one of the most intact, prehistori­c and historical ... landscapes in southern Arizona,” and asks the court to issue restrainin­g orders or permanent injunction­s to halt constructi­on.

“The San Pedro Valley will be irreparabl­y harmed if constructi­on proceeds,” it says.

Government representa­tives declined to comment Tuesday on the pending litigation. They are expected to respond in court. The project

has been touted as the biggest U.S. electricit­y infrastruc­ture undertakin­g since the Hoover Dam.

Pattern Energy officials said Tuesday that the time has passed to reconsider the route, which was approved in 2015 following a review process.

“It is unfortunat­e and regrettabl­e that after a lengthy consultati­on process, where certain parties did not participat­e repeatedly since 2009, this is the path chosen at this late stage,” Pattern Energy spokespers­on Matt Dallas said in an email.

Plaintiffs in the lawsuit are the Tohono O'odham Nation, the San Carlos Apache Tribe and the nonprofit organizati­ons Center for Biological Diversity and Archaeolog­y Southwest.

“The case for protecting this landscape is clear,” Archaeolog­y Southwest said in a statement that calls the San Pedro Arizona's last free-flowing river and the valley the embodiment of a “unique and timely story of social and ecological sustainabi­lity across

more than 12,000 years of cultural and environmen­tal change.”

The valley represents a 50-mile stretch of the planned 550-mile conduit expected to carry electricit­y from new wind farms in central New Mexico to existing transmissi­on lines in Arizona to serve populated areas as far away as California.

The project has been called an important part of President Joe Biden's goal for a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035.

Work started in September in New Mexico after negotiatio­ns that spanned years and resulted in the approval from the Bureau of Land Management, the federal agency with authority over vast parts of the U.S. West.

The route in New Mexico was modified after the U.S. Defense Department raised concerns about the effects of high-voltage lines on radar systems and military training operations.

Work halted briefly in November amid pleas by tribes to review environmen­tal approvals for the San Pedro Valley, and resumed weeks later in what Tohono O'odham Chairman Verlon M. Jose characteri­zed as “a punch to the gut.”

 ?? REBECCA SHURTLEFF — GE VERNOVA VIA AP ?? Two workers assembling key wind turbine components at the GE Vernova manufactur­ing facility in Pensacola, Florida.
REBECCA SHURTLEFF — GE VERNOVA VIA AP Two workers assembling key wind turbine components at the GE Vernova manufactur­ing facility in Pensacola, Florida.

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