Las Vegas Sun

April 23, 2024

GUEST COLUMN:

Permitting reform needed to speed along clean energy future

Over the past decade, Nevada has seen the reality of the climate crisis firsthand. Longer and more severe wildfire seasons have destroyed precious wildlife habitat and threatened Nevada’s natural crown jewels like Lake Tahoe and Mount Charleston. Atmospheric rivers have flooded our communities even as we face unprecedented droughts. And Lake Mead is lower than ever, endangering our long-term ability to provide water for Southern Nevada and clean and affordable power from Hoover Dam.

The climate crisis isn’t something in the distant future — it isn’t something that just our grandkids will face — it is happening right now, and it is getting worse by the year.

Thankfully, our U.S. senators, Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen, worked with President Joe Biden and their colleagues in the House and Senate to provide billions of dollars for the creation of clean energy projects that help Nevada and the nation transition to a net-zero carbon economy. Bringing these resources into our state and our community will create thousands of high-quality careers, reduce energy costs, and build a clean energy economy that protects our present and future.

However, there remains a major obstacle to actualizing these dollars into real-world clean energy projects: an outdated federal permitting process. Over 87% of all the land in Nevada is public and managed by the federal government. Most of our opportunities to produce clean energy and to grow and diversify our economy in this state are on these public lands.

The current permitting process for energy infrastructure projects is complex, lengthy and overly burdensome, leading to unnecessary delays and increased costs. Every delay in bringing clean energy online is additional carbon pollution emitted into our atmosphere, which makes combating climate change even harder. Moreover, these delays increase costs and hinder the development of critical energy projects, including renewable energy installations and transmission lines, which are essential for meeting our energy needs and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Reforming this permitting process is critical — and we have a successful record of doing that here in Nevada.

Since 2017, Arevia Power worked with the previous administration, the Bureau of Land Management (Department of Interior), the Moapa Band of Paiutes, as well as state officials and clean energy stakeholders to develop the Gemini Solar Project.

By bringing these stakeholders together and working collaboratively using the Fast 41 framework, Gemini received its environmental approvals in three years.

Fast 41 prioritizes infrastructure projects of national importance, emphasizes environmental protection and streamlines the permitting process by bringing all participating agencies involved in the process under one schedule.

Now, I’m working with Arevia Power to help bring this comprehensive approach to projects nationally.

By prioritizing environmental protection, streamlining the permitting process and improving collaboration between agencies, we can ensure that these critical projects can move forward in a timely and cost-effective manner. The time for action is now, and we must work together to implement permitting reform and transition our state and nation to a clean energy future. Our nation’s security and our state’s economy depend on it.

Former Nevada state Sen. Chris Brooks is executive vice president of external relations for Arevia Power and has over 30 years of experience in the energy and utility industry.