For  Immediate Release, April 13, 2012 
            
    
            Controversial Wind Project Threatens  Endangered California  Condors, Golden Eagles 
            Conservation Groups Challenge    North Sky River Wind Project 
            SACRAMENTO, Calif.— A controversial wind-energy project  threatening endangered California condors and golden eagles in California is  the target of a federal lawsuit filed today by the Center for Biological  Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and the Sierra Club against the U.S.  Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management. 
            Before turning to the court, the conservation  groups met several times with the project’s developer, asking that the  100-turbine North Sky River  wind project be redesigned to avoid known environmentally sensitive areas in  the southern Sierra Nevadas and to include measures to reduce harm to at-risk  bird species. However, the project is proceeding without these necessary  changes. 
            Sprawling across more than 12,700 acres,  the project’s alarming potential for harm to rare and endangered species  prompted warnings from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the California  Department of Fish and Game in letters to Kern County supervisors, who approved  zoning changes to accommodate the project. The North Sky River project is sited next to  another wind farm — called Pine Tree — that has a history of bird kills,  including at least eight federally protected golden eagles in just more than two  years. The environmental review of the North Sky    River  project documented more than 50 golden eagle sightings and 14 nests within just  10 miles of the proposed site.  
            In August 2011, the Fish and Wildlife  Service wrote: “The first full year of fatality monitoring [for the Pine Tree wind  project] resulted in an estimated 1,595 fatalities per year, which — per  megawatt (11.8 fatalities/megawatt) — is among the highest fatality rates being  recorded in the nation . . . It’s reasonable to estimate that the proposed  [North Sky River] project would have avian fatality rates equal to or greater  than those observed at the adjacent Pine Tree wind facility.” 
            Additionally, the California Department of  Fish and Game said the “combination of highly suitable habitat features on  site, the known historic condor occurrences in the area and recent condor  activity nearby lead the Department to conclude that condors will utilize the project  area in the near future and be at risk from turbine strikes.”  
            The conservation groups are concerned that  the BLM discounted these dangers to rare and endangered species in granting the  developer, NextEra, permission to build a new transmission line and improve an  access road to the proposed site across public lands. The groups’ lawsuit  contends that the BLM violated federal law by focusing only on the threats from  the power line and road, while entirely ignoring the expected harm from the  massive wind development itself. The groups are asking  the court to stop the project and require the BLM to complete a thorough review  before allowing construction to move forward.  
            The groups have a successful track record  of working with renewable-energy developers to reduce threats to wildlife and  the environment, facilitating the permitting of some 2,600 megawatts of clean  energy since 2010. But unlike the many renewable energy developers who have  modified their projects to lessen harm to wildlife, NextEra has failed to  change the North    Sky River  project to sufficiently reduce the risk to condors, eagles and other bird  species.  
             Following are statements from representatives  of the conservation groups presenting the 
              lawsuit: 
            “NextEra  Energy and the Bureau of Land Management have thrown caution to the wind with  the North Sky  River project by ignoring the evidence  of high rates of bird kills at the  nearby Pine Tree wind energy project,” said Kim Delfino, California  program director for Defenders of Wildlife. “NextEra had the  opportunity to reconfigure the project to reduce the risk to endangered California condors and  golden eagles. We’ve been left with no  alternative but to resort to legal action to prevent further harm to one of  rarest animals in the country.” 
             “The BLM shirked its  responsibility to fully evaluate impacts on California  condors and other rare species from the North Sky River project,” said Ileene  Anderson, biologist with the Center for Biological Diversity. “Properly sited  and designed wind energy can be implemented without the unnecessarily killing  of rare birds and bats.” 
             “Building another poorly designed wind project  adjacent to one that’s under investigation for numerous eagle deaths just  doesn’t make sense,” said Barbara Boyle, Sierra Club senior representative in California. “This  project is right in the pathway of California condors moving back into  their historic range in California. There is a  better way — we need to locate these projects where they will pose fewer risks  and have a better chance for success.” 
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            Defenders of Wildlife is  dedicated to the protection of all native animals and plants in their natural  communities. With more than 1 million members and activists, Defenders of  Wildlife is a leading advocate for innovative solutions to safeguard our  wildlife heritage for generations to come. For more information, visit www.defenders.org. 
            The Center for Biological  Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than  350,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered  species and wild places. For more  information, visit www.biologicaldiversity.org. 
            The Sierra Club is America’s largest and most  influential grassroots environmental organization with more than 1.4 million members and supporters  nationwide. In addition to creating opportunities for people of all ages,  levels and locations to have meaningful outdoor experiences, the Sierra Club works to safeguard the  health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild  places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying and litigation.  For more information, visit www.sierraclub.org. 
            
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