

by Terry Weiner
August 31, 2012 (San Diego)--Ocotillo California is an apron of desert fanning out broadly from the base of the rugged Jacumba and Inkopah Mountains, ninety miles east of San Diego and 60 miles west from Yuma Arizona. After winding down 16 miles of Interstate 8 from the agricultural town of Jacumba at 3,000 ft. to the desert floor at 500 ft., you will be treated to a view of a spectacular and relatively uncluttered Colorado Desert landscape. On a rare clear day, you can see the blue of the Salton Sea about 40 miles away. Mexico is just south on the other side of the Jacumba Mountains.

The Resources:
The Ocotillo desert is an integral part of the Yuha Basin, a large portion of which is designated as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) and managed for the protection of the rich Native American and geological resources. The Yuha ACEC protects the Yuha geoglyph, the De Anza Historic Trail, the Crucifixion Thorn Natural Area, and the Yuha Well. Over thousands of years, many Native American tribes have traveled through the Yuha Basin, leaving behind geoglyphs, ceremonial sites, cremation sites, and thousands of lithic and other artifacts.
The Ocotillo desert is a part of the larger Sonoran Desert with summer temperatures up to 120°F and with less than 3 inches of annual rainfall. Elevations range from approximately 1,500 ft above mean sea level to 300 ft, generally decreasing from the west to the east. The area closest to the mountains is a broad alluvial fan with an intricate system of drainages. Robust populations of smoke trees, cats claw, and desert willows reside in some of the long, deep washes. This desert has wonderful desert scrub assemblages, and in the spring, scores of species of desert annuals sprout. Colorful desert pavement coats the high places between washes. Most stunning are the expansive forests of ocotillo throughout the area. Several endangered or threatened species make this desert home as well.

The Problem:
Enter the U.S. government, climate change, the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, President Obama’s decision to subsidize renewable energy development across wide swaths of the American west, and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar’s plan to create a process for fast-tracking development of remote, industrial-scale energy projects on public lands.
Enter in 2009 the Pattern Energy Group LP (offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Houston, NY and Toronto). Pattern develops, constructs, owns and operates renewable energy, particularly wind projects and transmission lines in the U.S., Latin America, and Canada. As stated on their web site, their company’s full development pipeline exceeds 4,000 MW of renewable energy and transmission lines.

The Ocotillo Wind Energy Facility is a graphic example of what’s wrong with the federal government’s current policy of fast-tracking so-called renewable energy projects on public land.

According to the Final EIS/EIR, this project is inconsistent with the BLM Yuha Desert/West Mesa Visual Resource Class Three designation, which requires that a project or action partially retain the existing character of the landscape. This project would introduce structurally prominent industrial features into an otherwise natural landscape adversely affecting visitor experiences in the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park and adjacent real property. The project is inconsistent with Imperial County’s Conservation and Open Space Element. It is incompatible with the Ocotillo/Nomirage Community Plan, which is designed to protect the community resources including its sole source aquifer and the community quality of life from commercial and industrial development. The project is also inconsistent with the California Desert Conservation Area (CDCA) plan which designates the Ocotillo desert area as Class L Limited Use in order to provide for “lower-intensity, carefully controlled multiple use of resources, while ensuring that sensitive values are not significantly diminished.”
Despite these inconsistencies in land use planning, injustices to Native American sacred sites, injustices to the community of Ocotillo; despite thousands of pages of testimony and documentation of inadequacies in the draft and final EIS/EIR; despite formal protests of the final document and the CDCA Plan Amendment; and despite testimony from several tribes at public hearings; still Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar issued the Record of Decision on May 11 2012 approving the CDCA Plan Amendment and the final Environmental Impact Statement.

The Solution:
Pattern Energy’s massive industrial Ocotillo wind turbine project demonstrates the need for people who support renewable energy to work with local, state, and federal policy makers to shift tax credits, low cost loans, and other incentives from large, for-profit corporations to home and business owners. Rooftop solar and distributed generation in cities and towns provide a cleaner, cheaper, and faster solution to combating climate change. According to the California Public Utilities Commission, PG&E now pays less for moderate-sized rooftop solar power ($114/MWhr) than for wind energy ($118/MWhr).
Given the unreliability of the wind resource and the vast environmental and other costs of wind energy’s harmful impacts, it behooves us to press our policy makers for a reasonable system of feed-in-tariffs for local rooftop solar that sends energy into the grid. If we are to protect our southwest deserts from further taxpayer-supported corporate land appropriation for private profit, the Federal Production Tax Credits for large-scale wind projects must not be re-instituted in 2012.
Reprinted with permission from the Desert Report, a publication of the Sierra Club CNRCC Desert Committee, at t http://www.desertreport.org/ wp-content/uploads/2012/08/DR_ Fall2012.pdf which also features Paul Smith's "Death of the California Desert".
Terry Weiner is the Imperial County Conservation and Projects Coordinator for the Desert Protective Council. (www.protectdeserts.org), a co-founder of Solar Done Right (www.solardoneright.org), and Chair of the CNRCC ORV Issues Task Force and the Alliance for Responsible Recreation. Terry grew up in western Massachusetts, but has lived in San Diego since 1979 and spends as much time hiking, camping and botanizing in the southwest deserts as she can manage. She can be reached at terryweiner@sbcglobal.net; (619) 342-5524.