U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Federal Energy Management Program
BLM and Forest Service Consider Large-Scale Geothermal Leasing
June 18, 2008
In an effort to encourage appropriate geothermal energy development on
public lands, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the U.S. Forest
Service have prepared a Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (PEIS) for geothermal leasing in the West, including Alaska.
The draft PEIS considers all public lands and national forests with
geothermal resources to be available for leasing, with the exception
of those lands that are withdrawn or administratively closed to
geothermal leasing. That option includes 117 million acres of public
lands and 75 million acres of national forests, while an alternative
option would limit geothermal leasing for power plants to areas near
transmission lines. By 2015, the lands could potentially host 110 new
geothermal plants producing 5,500 megawatts of power, and by 2025, an
additional 132 geothermal plants could produce another 6,600 megawatts
of power. In addition, 270 communities could potentially draw on
geothermal resources as a heating source.
The draft PEIS was opened for public comment on June 13, and it will
remain open until 90 days after the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency publishes its notice in the Federal Register, an event expected
to occur on June 20. The BLM will also hold public meetings in 13
cities throughout the region in July. Approval of the PEIS will allow
the BLM to modify its land use plans and to issue decisions on
geothermal lease applications that are now pending. It will also help
the Forest Service decide when to approve leases in national forests,
although the Forest Service will require a separate environmental
review process to amend its land use plans. See the
BLM press release
and the BLM's Geothermal PEIS Web site.
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