On March 3rd Round Mountain Gold Corporation presented their 2021 annual report to the Nevada Division of Water Resources. The report describes groundwater conditions and overall water management associated with mining, milling and ancillary activities in Nye County, Nevada as required by the terms of their current water rights permits and their approved Monitoring Plan. RMGC operates in the Big Smoky Valley-North hydrographic basin (Basin No. 137b). Click here to read the report.
NDEP issues permit for lithium brine pilot plant in Clayton Valley
The Administrator of the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection has decided to issue new Water Pollution Control Permit NEV2020114 to Schlumberger Technology Corporation (STC). This Permit authorizes the construction, operation, and closure of approved mining facilities in Esmeralda
County, Nevada. The Division has been provided with sufficient information, in accordance with Nevada Administrative Code (NAC) 445A.350 through 445A.447, to assure that the waters of the State will not be degraded by this operation, and that public safety and health will be protected. The Permit will become effective 2 March 2022. The final determination of the Administrator may be appealed to the State Environmental Commission pursuant to Nevada Revised Statute (NRS) 445A.605 and NAC 445A.407. All requests for appeals must be filed by 5:00 PM, 25 February 2022.
For more information, contact Michelle Griffin at (775) 687-9405 or visit the Division public notice website at https://ndep.nv.gov/posts/category/land
Final Nevada 2020-2022 Water Quality Integrated Report submitted to EPA
The Nevada Division of Environmental Protection, Bureau of Water Quality Planning (BWQP) announced that the final Nevada 2020 – 2022 Water Quality Integrated Report, prepared in accordance with Clean Water Act sections 303(d), 305(b) and 314, was submitted to EPA for approval today. The report documents the methodology used and assessment results of Nevada’s surface waters for the seven-year period October 1, 2013 through September 30, 2020.
The Final 2020-2022 Water Quality Integrated Report has been modified based on feedback from public and EPA comments and further review of the report and data. BWQP included all pertinent information (solicitation of data, public comments with NDEP responses, etc.) into the FINAL Nevada 2020-2022 Water Quality Integrated Report document as attachments to keep all the information in one package with the hope of making the Integrated Report process more accessible to the public.
All documents and the web map (under development) for the Nevada 2020 – 2022 Water Quality Integrated Report are available online at: https://ndep.nv.gov/water/rivers-streams-lakes/water-quality-standards/303d-305b-water-quality-integrated-report
NRCS Offers New EQIP Conservation Incentive Contracts to Support Climate-Smart Agriculture and Drought Mitigation
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in Nevada is announcing its first-round funding signup for Conservation Incentive Contracts (CIC), a new option available through the Environmental Quality Incentive Program (EQIP). While applications for EQIP are accepted throughout the year, interested producers should submit applications to their local NRCS office by April 15, 2022, to be considered for the 2022 ranking funding period.
EQIP-CIC expands resource benefits for Nevada producers through incentive conservation practices such as cover crops, transition to resource conserving crop rotations, and precision agriculture technologies along with a similarly broad suite of incentive practices for ranchers and nonindustrial private forest operators. Additionally, EQIP-CIC allows producers to target priority resource concerns on their property by offering incentive payments for a five-year contract without needing to enroll the entire operation into the program.
EQIP-CIC is designed to be a stepping-stone between EQIP and the Conservation Stewardship Program, to help producers improve their level of conservation and earn benefits of longer-term conservation enhancements. For more information about conservation planning and programs to help treat natural resource issues on your land, visit www.nv.nrcs.usda.gov or call the Nevada NRCS Service Center at (775) 857-8500
Lawsuit Filed to Stop Geothermal Project From Destroying Nevada Springs
December 16, 2021
RENO, Nev.— The Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribe and Center for Biological Diversity sued the U.S. Bureau of Land Management Wednesday over its approval of the Dixie Meadows geothermal energy project, which could dry up nearby springs and harm an extremely rare amphibian, the Dixie Valley toad.Dixie Meadows, a verdant desert oasis formed by springs in central Nevada, is an enormous wetland ecosystem and a sacred site for the Tribe. It is also home to the Dixie Valley toad, found nowhere else on Earth.Geothermal energy has been shown to dry up or alter nearby surface water sources. This happened recently, just a few dozen miles away from Dixie Meadows, on a project from the same developer also approved by the BLM.“We strongly support renewable energy when it’s in the right place, but a project like this that threatens sacred sites and endangered species is definitely the wrong place,” said Patrick Donnelly, Nevada state director at the Center. “The BLM’s inadequate analysis of this project and its potential harms endangers the future of this beautiful wetland and the creatures and people who depend on it.”For generations the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribe has used the hot springs at Dixie Meadows, called Paumu, for healing and medicinal purposes. The springs are sacred in their undisturbed state. Allowing the project to move forward would irreversibly damage the Tribe’s connection to its culture and history, and risks consequences to the Tribe from the Creator.”The United States has repeatedly promised to honor and protect indigenous sacred sites, but then the BLM approved a major construction project nearly on top of our most sacred hot springs. It just feels like more empty words,” said Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribal Chairwoman Cathi Tuni. “This location has long been recognized as being of vital significant to the Tribe. There are geothermal plants elsewhere in Dixie Valley and the Great Basin that we have not opposed, but construction of this plant would build industrial power plants right next to a sacred place of healing and reflection, and risks damaging the water in the springs forever. We have a duty to protect the hot springs and its surroundings, and we will do so.”The Dixie Valley toad was described as a distinct species in 2017, around the time the geothermal project was first proposed.Recognizing the existential threat the project posed, the Center submitted a petition to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the toad under the Endangered Species Act. In 2018 it received a positive initial finding but has since languished. The Center sued to try to speed along the final endangered species determination.Documents obtained by the Center through the Freedom of Information Act show that other government agencies, including the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Nevada Department of Wildlife, expressed significant concern to BLM officials about the geothermal project. Government hydrologists warned of the potential for the springs to dry up, harming the toad and the rest of the wildlife that live there.“The BLM rammed through approval of this project over the objections of government scientists and a tribal nation,” said Donnelly. “We’re asking a judge to right those wrongs, save Dixie Meadows for the spiritual and cultural traditions of the Tribe, and preserve biodiversity.” | |
Governor Sisolak signs proclamation affirming that climate change threatens Nevada with aridification
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 15, 2021
LAS VEGAS, NV – Today, Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak signed a proclamation recognizing the significant threats to the economy of the Sagebrush State and the livelihoods of Nevadans from reduced water availability as the outcome of increasing temperatures.
“The fact higher temperatures would pose challenges to Nevada’s water availability is an inevitable consequence of the physics of climate. We are the driest state in the nation and while many stakeholders have done a tremendous job at improving efficiencies, we are all going to be dealing with less water,” said Governor Sisolak. “State agencies have been doing great work to address these challenges whether it is with our agricultural producers by the Department of Agriculture, wildfire fuel management projects by Division of Forestry or emergency water hauls by the Department of Wildlife to protect wildlife; the threat across the board is a changing climate.”
This year all seventeen counties have seen federal designations as drought disaster areas with approximately 90% of the state currently facing severe to exceptional drought. According to a report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the 2020-21 drought in the Southwest is the worst since 1895. In July, over 40% of the State was designated in a state of exceptional drought by the U.S. Drought Monitor. Since 2015, the Nevada Drought Forum has convened to develop strategies to address the impacts of drought across Nevada and the State and the University of Nevada support Extension’s Living with Drought website that connects Nevadans with resources to support preparation, response, and recovery from drought.
“Drought has become frequent across Nevada because of increasing temperatures. Less snow, drier landscapes, and changing water resources indicate a potential shift toward aridification,” said Dr. Kristen Averyt, Senior Climate Advisor. “It may snow and rain periodically, providing some relief, but our water budget is in the hole, and drought will come back.”
The impact of drought is evident across the state with multiple agencies having to respond to changing conditions. With many of Nevada’s 256 hydrographic basins and sub-basins over-appropriated, climate change is complicating the work of the State Engineer in resolving already difficult adjudications of rights based on documentation that dates to the State’s founding. To prevent population loss among bighorn sheep, the Nevada Department of Wildlife conducted emergency water hauls. The State Water plan is also being updated by the Division of Water Resources.
The proclamation coincides with the meeting of the Colorado River Water Users Association Conference taking place this week in Las Vegas. Recent modeling by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation that manages Lake Mead has triggered a federal declaration of a water shortage as the elevation of the lake has fallen to 1,075ft, the lowest since it was originally filled.
The proclamation can be found here.