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July 2, 2008 5:45 PM PDT

U.S. lifts block on solar applications for public land

by Elsa Wenzel
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Companies seeking to install utility-scale solar plants on federal land in the sunny Southwest found one barrier removed on Wednesday.

The federal Bureau of Land Management reversed an earlier decision to turn away new applications for solar energy projects on public lands until May 2010.

The agency is scrutinizing the potential ecological impact of solar farms in California, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah.

It had announced that it would stop reviewing new proposals, but would continue to process some 125 plans it had already received. Public rejection to that plan reportedly influenced Wednesday's decision.

"By continuing to accept and process new applications for solar energy projects, we will aggressively help meet growing interest in renewable energy sources, while ensuring environmental protections," agency Director James Caswell said in a statement.

Solar plants don't exist on public land. However, even projects designed to be near protected areas, such as a proposed California project from OptiSolar, must comply with government reviews to prevent harm to wildlife.

The bureau manages 258 million surface acres, mostly in western states.

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by ndehiliyadda July 3, 2008 1:15 AM PDT
Thank you very much......This is good for all. I am a physical science student so this very good for me.
.....................
Nishantha
http://www.goinggreenbuzz.com/
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by benjaminstraight July 3, 2008 3:56 AM PDT
Cool.
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by TogetherinParis July 3, 2008 12:06 PM PDT
The BLM should approve solar projects BEFORE logging projects, BEFORE mining projects. The Bureau of Land Management is obviously out of touch and poorly run, unless you're a clear-cutter or a gold miner.
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by btljooz July 5, 2008 9:59 AM PDT
You forgot about all the wild horses, burros and other equines that are rounded up each year and sent to slaughter simply because the cattle and sheep industries don't want those wild animals 'competing' with cattle and sheep for grazing rights. Ranchers pay less than pennies on the dollar to "lease" gov land. So include them on the list with clear-cutters and *any* miners.
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