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Delta Willis
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Nancy Severance
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Google:
Niki Fenwick
415 736-1007 / email
New Mapping Project Shows Path to Green
Energy
Pilot Uses Web-Based Resources to Help
Identify Wildlife-Compatible Sites
New York, NY/ San Francisco, CA, April
1, 2009—An innovative online mapping project will
support renewable energy planning and development by facilitating
consensus in siting decisions. This new tool will provide
industry, conservationists, policy-makers, and concerned citizens
instant access to interactive wildlife, habitat and land management
maps to guide appropriate site selection for renewable power
generation and transmission facilities.
The National Audubon Society and the Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC) have joined forces, with
support from Google.org Geo Challenge Grants, to create Google
Earth maps of 13 states in the western United States.
Now accessible via Google Earth at http://earth.google.com/outreach/protectedareas,
the maps identify areas where land use is legally restricted.
Other data layers highlight areas that should be avoided in
energy development, including habitats critically important
to wildlife. Users exploring specific areas, such as those
proposed for energy development, can easily see how little
land is legally off-limits and which of the remaining areas
have unique qualities that deserve special protection to avoid
imperiling sensitive resources.
“We must strike a winning balance
to meet growing energy needs and this project shows we can,”
said Frances Beinecke, President of the Natural Resources
Defense Council. “This map demonstrates a way forward
for renewable energy development and protection of our wildlife
and landscapes across the West.”
“This is the first step in reducing
energy development conflicts by giving people from all walks
of life the information they need to participate in critical
site-selection decisions,” added Audubon
President John Flicker. “This approach can build
the broad support needed to give the green light to green
energy nationwide by helping to locate wind turbines and other
production and transmission facilities in places that minimize
negative impacts on birds and wildlife.”
The full potential of the Google Earth
project can be seen in maps of six states considered prime
for wind resources: Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Colorado, North
Dakota and South Dakota. Along with existing protected areas,
the maps identify critical habitat for the Greater
Sage-Grouse, an iconic western species that is seriously
threatened by continued loss and degradation of its remaining
native habitat.
Displaying zones of highest grouse concentration
along with the vast number of potential wind-generation areas
that are less critical to wildlife, the maps reveal places
that should and should not be considered for energy development.
The approach is already bringing political, energy and environmental
interests closer to protect critical grouse areas in Wyoming.
A task force representing broad perspectives on energy issues
used the maps to craft a recommendation leading to an executive
order from Governor Dave Freudenthal that limited the amount
and intensity of energy development in identified core sage-grouse
habitat.
“This technology will help in the
very important effort to create precise maps to understand
where wildlife feed, live, breed, and migrate, and where we
should tread the most lightly in our effort to develop our
energy resources," said Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal.
The need for this kind of guidance is
growing. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar just ordered the establishment
of a federal task force to increase the development and transmission
of renewable energy from appropriate public lands. And the
Western Governors’ Association recently unveiled its
own maps of draft renewable energy resource zones for public
comment as a first step to speed renewable energy development.
“Our maps can help establish the
meaning of ‘appropriate public lands’ for renewable
energy development in the federal planning process and guide
the Governors’ Association in refining the preliminary
boundaries of its resource zones,” said Brian
Rutledge, Audubon Wyoming Executive Director.
“With economic stimulus dollars
starting to flow, this project gives us a starting point for
ensuring that we’re investing in both the right technology
and the right places—places where energy development
and wildlife are compatible,” added NRDC’s Beinecke.
“We need to deploy clean energy
on an unprecedented scale,” said David Bercovich, Google.org
Program Manager. “As we decide where to build renewable
energy generation plants and transmission lines, it’s
essential that we protect irreplaceable wildlife and landscapes
while making it as easy as possible for developers to build
these projects. NRDC and the National Audubon Society have
created a valuable tool that can help guide developers away
from sensitive areas and serve as a platform to streamline
the siting process while protecting sensitive wildlife and
landscape areas.”
“Protecting America’s natural
legacy and building a clean energy economy are critical to
our nation’s future,” said Joshua Bar-Lev, vice
president of regulatory affairs for BrightSource Energy, a
California-based company that develops, builds, owns, and
operates large scale solar plants. “By utilizing technology
to identify where to develop renewable projects that will
have the least environmental impact, Google Earth Layers is
helping to achieve both of these objectives.”
Audubon and NRDC plan to expand the new
Google Earth maps with additional habitat information and
other planning data that will inspire the public to discover
and protect the natural areas of the mapped landscapes. They
can travel to “Important
Bird Areas” critical to the health of avian species
or take a closer look at the natural resources that abound
in various protected regions. They can also see 15 types of
sensitive areas showing different categories of land protection.
Links to species and habitat information on www.audubon.org
and www.nrdc.org
offer additional opportunities to connect with the land and
the wildlife, and how we can work together to protect them.
“We want to build on this pilot
to establish common ground and spread green energy opportunities
across America,” emphasized Audubon’s Flicker.
“We’re really mapping a better way to work together
to let green energy fuel a healthier future for people and
wildlife alike.”
Now in its second century, Audubon
connects people with birds, nature and the environment that
supports us all. Our national network of community-based
nature centers, chapters, scientific, education, and advocacy
programs engages millions of people from all walks of life
in conservation action to protect and restore the natural
world. www.audubon.org,
www.audubonwyoming.org
The Natural Resources Defense Council
is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers
and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public
health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has 1.2
million members and online activists, served from offices
in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco
and Beijing. www.nrdc.org
Google's innovative search technologies
connect millions of people around the world with information
every day. Founded in 1998 by Stanford Ph.D. students Larry
Page and Sergey Brin, Google today is a top web property
in all major global markets. Google's targeted advertising
program provides businesses of all sizes with measurable
results, while enhancing the overall web experience for
users. Google is headquartered in Silicon Valley with offices
throughout the Americas, Europe and Asia. For more information,
please visit http://www.google.com.
Photos
and video b-roll available
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Audubon Wyoming Vision
Open spaces rich in birds and other wildlife, and citizens
who value that richness. |