OREANDA-NEWS. August 31, 2016. The State of Nevada (acting through the Department of Wildlife (NDOW)
and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (NDCNR)) and
the U.S. Department of the Interior (acting through the Fish and
Wildlife Service (FWS) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM)) today
announced an agreement with Newmont Mining Corporation on a sagebrush
ecosystem conservation program that will guide management of more
than 1.5 million acres of habitat in Nevada.
A first of its kind in the United States for its scope and scale, the
agreement establishes a mutually-agreed upon framework governing
Newmont’s management of sagebrush habitat under the company’s
stewardship. The company also may partner with the BLM to implement
sagebrush ecosystem enhancement measures on BLM-managed public lands in
Nevada.
“Through this historic agreement, Newmont has committed to implementing
a wide-ranging, landscape-level conservation plan that includes
voluntarily managing certain of its private rangelands and ranches in
Nevada to achieve net conservation gains for sagebrush species,” said
Nevada Governor
Brian Sandoval. “This good-faith, public-private
partnership represents a significant and meaningful achievement in the
cause of sagebrush habitat and species protection in the western United
States.”
Implementation of the agreement will allow the State of Nevada to work
with federal agencies and a private entity (Newmont) for the first time
to put into practice its Conservation Credit System (CCS). Under the
terms of the agreement, Newmont will seek approval from signatory
agencies for individual habitat conservation projects for which the
company may receive conservation credits that can later be used to
offset impacts related to future proposals for Newmont’s mining
operations in Nevada.
"This agreement reinforces the Department's efforts to partner
throughout the West with the private sector and other stakeholders to
demonstrate the power of collaborative conservation and that continued
economic growth and conservation of our important natural resource
heritage need not be at odds,” said
Janice Schneider, Assistant
Secretary for Land and Minerals Management. “Working together, the BLM,
FWS, NRCS, and Newmont will help protect and restore habitat for the
Greater sage grouse - while continuing mining operations in Nevada. We
appreciate their leadership and that of the state of Nevada and NDOW in
making this success story possible."
“As the owner of private lands and a steward of a significant amount of
BLM-managed public lands in Nevada, Newmont is uniquely positioned to
work in concert with the BLM and the State of Nevada to advance and test
land and habitat management techniques that will inform conservation
practices going forward,” said BLM Nevada State Director
John Ruhs. ”The
BLM looks forward to applying the habitat conservation methods generated
as a result of this partnership between the agencies and Newmont.”
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has identified invasive annual
grasses as the primary threat to the sage-steppe ecosystem due to the
risk they pose in fueling wildfires that destroy sagebrush habitats. One
of the first pilot projects implemented under the agreement will deploy
targeted grazing activities on a large private land parcel owned by
Newmont to improve the health of desirable plants and manage cheatgrass,
with an overall goal of minimizing wildfire frequency. Other related
Newmont activities will include the testing of other invasive species
management techniques; evaluation of strategic fuels management; changes
in livestock grazing to promote native sagebrush ecosystem health by
increasing the density of deep-rooted perennial grasses; and
implementation of practices to reduce human-induced advantages for
predators of greater sage-grouse.
“Through this planned and coordinated effort to conserve and restore
sagebrush habitat on a landscape level, we will be able to advance
protection for more than 350 different species of animals and other
wildlife and more than 3,500 species of plants that call this ecosystem
home," said
Ted Koch, Reno Fish and Wildlife Office Supervisor. “By
joining with land managers, scientists, industry and other stakeholders
across the Great Basin, we can share the responsibility for enhancing
resource management and collectively learn from our outcomes to create
measurable and sustainable long-term conservation improvements on the
ground."
The historic agreement builds upon a longstanding and ongoing
collaboration among a wide variety of other Newmont partners, including
The Nature Conservancy, Trout Unlimited, Nevada Governor Sandoval’s
Sagebrush Ecosystem Program, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation
Service and Agricultural Research Service, and the University of Nevada
- Reno.
“Newmont looks forward to embracing this historic opportunity and
building upon our 50 years of responsible mining and environmental
stewardship in Nevada,” said Dr.
Elaine Dorward-King, Newmont’s
Executive Vice President for Sustainability and External Relations. “We
appreciate the good-faith demonstrated by all the parties involved to
achieve this historic agreement which will advance sagebrush habitat
management in Nevada while supporting continued sustainable mining
practices over the long term.”
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