Renewable Energy
Desert Tortoise, Photo: Beth Jackson / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Solar, © Gray Watson / WikiCommons

Defenders in Action: Protecting Wildlife from Harmful Projects

Defenders of Wildlife has worked with many solar energy developers to reduce the potential impacts to wildlife and wild lands of some large-scale solar projects. Our efforts have helped move forward  the permitting of some 2,595 megawatts on public lands in California alone.

The Calico project, however, is an example of a project that is anything BUT “smart from the start .“ The project’s location threatens high-quality habitat for imperiled species such as desert tortoise, burrowing owls, golden eagles and more. The project area--four times larger than San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park--also goes against several key recommendations from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the California Energy Commission to reconfigure the site to include already degraded agricultural lands and brown fields. Finally, the developers and the Bureau of Land Management are relying on a strategy of relocating threatened desert tortoises, a strategy with historically low success rates.

Defenders has challenged this  badly designed project and notified the U.S. Department of the Interior and developer K-Road Power of our intent to sue to protect the wealth of threatened species that call this desert home should the project move forward.

More on Renewable Energy: Success Stories »

You may also be interested in:

Polar Bear, © Paul Nicklen / National Geographic Stock
Conservation Issue
Climate change is now one of the leading threats to wildlife. Find out what Defenders is doing to help animals around the country survive in a warming planet.
California Condor, Photo: Scott Frier / USFWS
Species at Risk
This bird once dominated the skies over the western U.S. But through habitat loss and toxins, humans have put the condor in a steep decline.
In the Magazine
Approaching solar energy “Smart from the Start” means we can fight climate change with fewer risks to wildlife.
Landscape, © Robbie George / National Geographic Stock
Conservation Issue
When habitats are threatened, so are the animals who live there.