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Field Notes


Citizens have to raise $4 million before the end of the year to close deal on Hoback leases

Star-Tribune: ‘We hope the [effort] is successful’

Excerpts:

“The group still has to raise about half of the total purchase price by Dec. 31 for the deal to be completed. The trust has already raised $4.5 million in pledges and promises. Deborah Love, the Northern Rockies director of the Trust for Public Lands, told supporters in Jackson last Friday that she is confident the rest of the funds can be raised from private donors by the end of the year. . . .

. . . We hope the trust is successful in its fundraising campaign, for the sake of this special place in Wyoming and its use by future generations. While it was fair to current leaseholders that they be “grandfathered” in under the 2009 law, the sale will be the best possible result that could be obtained.”

Click here to read the entire Casper Star-Tribune editorial.

Details: $150 saves an acre

The Upper Hoback Basin, which for years has been threatened by the specter of industrial-scale oil and gas development, is on its way to permanent protection—but we still have to close the deal.

Plains Exploration and Production Company, the leaseholder and drilling proponent, has agreed to sell its oil and gas leases—covering 58,000 acres of national forest, private, and BLM land—to a conservation buyer, the Trust for Public Land.

The agreement was announced on Friday at a media event in Jackson, Wyoming, with Governor Matt Mead and about 100 local residents, including hunters, anglers, ranchers, and mineral industry workers.

“This is an outstanding outcome for the people of Wyoming—a true ‘win-win’ resolution. It respects both the wishes of local residents and the legal rights of leaseholders,” Governor Mead said during his address.

Thanks to the Wyoming Range Legacy Act, these leases underlying the Bridger-Teton National Forest can never be leased again, and we are working to ensure the few thousand acres outside the Legacy Act boundary are also protected.

About half of the $8.75 million purchase price has been raised so far. You can help save the Hoback by donating today at: tpl.org/savethehoback.

$150 saves an acre!

 

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Major Announcement: Agreement Struck, Citizens to Buy-Out Hoback Leases

Great video about the Upper Hoback: Too Special to Drill

Houston, we have a problem.

Opposition to Wyo Range drilling has ‘galvanized’

Hydraulic fracturing: what we’d like to achieve

Field Notes


Business of recreation: Advocating the economic benefits of Shoshone National Forest

From WyoFile, click here to read the original post

Horseback riding in Shoshone National Forest
A horseback rider crosses through Shoshone National Forest. As the forest revises its management plan, a coalition of Fremont County businesses and organizations are advocating for the forest’s recreational use. (Erin/Flickr — click to enlarge)


By Kelsey Dayton

The customers that walk into Wild Iris Mountain Sports come from all over the world. They stop in Lander on their trips from France or Canada or the eastern United States, drawn to the recreation opportunities the area offers. Sometimes they are snow machine enthusiasts. Some are skiers. Many are climbers. Almost all are headed to the Shoshone National Forest to recreate.

People pop into the shop for gear and the condition reports, but lately the store has also become a place where people can learn about the ongoing Shoshone National Forest management plan revision and get involved in shaping it.

At Wild Iris, for about a month, starting at the end of August, customers were asked if they received their free water bottle as they checked out. The catch? To get the bottle, they needed to write a comment letter to the forest about the Shoshone.

Hiking through Shoshone National Forest

Hikers cross a stream in Shoshone National Forest. The revision of the forest’s management plans could change where motorized vehicles are allowed to travel and what types of recreation are allowed in certain areas. (Greg Willis/Flickr — click to enlarge)

The effort is just an example of Fremont County businesses working to get people involved in the Shoshone National Forest’s Management Plan. This spring businesses and organizations banded together to form the Wind River Front, a group advocating the importance of recreation on the Shoshone as the forest moves forward in revising its management plan.

The forest is in process of revising its plan that will guide management of the 2.4 million acres of public land for the next 15 to 20 years. Management plans include rules about where energy development could be allowed, use of motorized transportation and quotas for timber harvest, as well as dictate what types of recreation are allowed in certain areas.

Formation of the group began this past spring because local businesses and residents worried that the Forest Service wasn’t hearing enough about the importance of recreation, whereas elected county commissioners and other existing groups seemed to have the ear of the agency. Wind River Front now has about 30 active members and an email list of about 90, said Tim Hudson, a spokesman for the group. They began as a loose group, meeting at local restaurants trying to figure out how they could best impress the importance of recreation on Fremont County’s economy to forest planners. With the guidance of conservation groups like the Wyoming Outdoor Council, they formed the Wind River Front.

Wind River Front officials say the group represents a broad range of interests. Some, like Wild Iris, are directly affected by recreation on the forest. Others, like Hudson’s  carpentry business, thrive in the area because people choose to live in Lander for the nearby recreational opportunities on the forest.

There’s no specific agenda the group is pushing due to the varying interests among recreationists, according to Hudson. For instance, some want less motorized use, while those who ride ATVs are looking for more trails. Some backcountry skiers want a section of Togwotee Pass closed to snowmobiling, whereas snowmobilers oppose such a ban. All of these interests are represented by Wind River Front.


Wyoming map of federal jurisdiction

A map detailing the jurisdiction of federal agencies in Wyoming. Conflicted interests are common among Wind River Front’s varied membership, so the group has chosen not to advocate one recreational agenda over another. (Wikimedia — click to enlarge)


Issues that are divisive among the group will be left out of the group’s official comments to the Forest Service, and individuals are encouraged to submit their own comments on the issues. As a result, while the group’s comments won’t oppose additional motorized use — including proposed connectors to create loops for ATVs — they will ask for better enforcement to keep motorized use on legal trails, Hudson said.

As a group, Wind River Front will submit some comments representing everyone in the network, but it will be more general, Hudson said. One thing everyone seems to agree on is that they want only a small area set aside for surface occupancy and oil and gas development.

“The fewer acres the better,” Hudson said.

One of the major goals of the group is to educate its members and others in the community about the forest planning process and help people comment — no matter their stance on the issues, Hudson said.

“It’s an intimidating process,” he said.

Up until recently Hudson himself didn’t know what government cooperators were and how input for the plan was gathered. Additionally, people don’t always realize how something like a forest plan might directly impact them.

“It’s a matter of education,” Hudson said. “If people knew, they’d become more active in these things.”

That was why Wild Iris started the free water bottle — and forest comment — efforts, Tilden said.

The store didn’t push what the letter had to say. Serving all kinds of outdoor enthusiasts, the staff avoided taking a stand on the types of recreation that deserve more consideration in the forest management plan, said Emily Tilden, assistant manager of Wild Iris. Instead it was about getting people to comment on what the forest means to them.

“We just want people to be heard, no matter their opinion,” Tilden said.

Too often those who are passionate about recreation — who use the forest and also patronize the store — don’t get involved in something as seemingly dry and technical as a forest plan she said..

“Wild Iris has been in business more than 20 years,” she said. “We’d like to be in business another 100 years.”

But it’s also a personal one for Tilden and employees at the store who choose to live in Lander because of the outdoor opportunities.

The store provided letterhead with instructions on how to write a letter, including who the author was, their relationship to the area — resident or visitor — and how and where they use the forest.

Tilden herself hasn’t studied the entire forest plan. But she knows she can make valuable comments on why the forest is important to her.

“I know with 100 percent certainty the things I’m passionate about and where I like to do them,” she said.

Those types of comments can be helpful, said Kristie Salzmann, public affairs officer with the Shoshone National Forest. Comments that simply say they don’t like something in one of the possible plans are not helpful, she said. The forest wants to know why, and what might be better, she said. They also want to know if things are great the way they are, so if someone writes a comment saying they climb, or ski, or hike, or snowmobile in a certain area and love it as is, that is helpful to planners.

Recreation has been a key point of discussion at public meetings the Forest Service held across the state, but there are varying opinions about recreation on the forest, especially when it comes to motorized use.

While the forest is known for its recreation offerings, no topic regarding the forest plan has yet emerged as the biggest issue for comment or discussion, Salzmann said.

That could change as public comments begin to come in before the Nov. 1 deadline.

Wild Iris gave out 65 water bottles in less than a month but some people wrote letters and didn’t take a bottle, Tilden said. She didn’t have an exact count on the letters.

Throughout the process the biggest thing Tilden learned was how people are represented by elected officials in something like a forest plan.

“That brings me to the next thing,” she said. “Go out and vote.”

To comment or learn more about the Shoshone National Forest visit http://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/shoshone/home/?cid=stelprdb5379153.

Kelsey Dayton is a freelance writer based in Lander. She has been a journalist in Wyoming for seven years, reporting for the Jackson Hole News & Guide, Casper Star-Tribune and the Gillette News-Record. Contact Kelsey at kelsey.dayton@gmail.com.

REPUBLISH THIS STORY: For details on how you can republish this story or other WyoFile content for free, click here.

WyoFile a non-partisan, non-profit news organization dedicated to in-depth reporting on Wyoming’s people, places and policy.

 

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Major Announcement: Agreement Struck, Citizens to Buy-Out Hoback Leases

One step on the path to solving climate change

New consensus recommendations could correct ozone problems in Pinedale

Field Notes


Major Announcement: Agreement Struck, Citizens to Buy-Out Hoback Leases

By Lisa McGee

DEAR MEMBERS AND SUPPORTERS,

I have fantastic news to share with you. The Upper Hoback Basin, which for years has been threatened by the specter of industrial-scale oil and gas development, is on its way to permanent protection.

Plains Exploration and Production Company, the leaseholder and drilling proponent, has agreed to sell its oil and gas leases—covering 58,000 acres of national forest, private, and BLM land—to a conservation buyer, the Trust for Public Land.

The agreement was announced this morning at a media event in Jackson, Wyoming, with Governor Matt Mead and about 100 local residents, including hunters, anglers, ranchers, and mineral industry workers.

“This is an outstanding outcome for the people of Wyoming—a true ‘win-win’ resolution. It respects both the wishes of local residents and the legal rights of leaseholders,” Governor Mead said during his address.

Thanks to the Wyoming Range Legacy Act, these leases underlying the Bridger-Teton National Forest can never be leased again, and we are working to ensure the few thousand acres outside the Legacy Act boundary are also protected.

Half of the $8.75 million purchase price has already been generously donated. I hope you’ll join with me today in celebration and consider a donation of any amount by visiting: tpl.org/savethehoback.

This agreement is a testament to the remarkable things regular citizens can do. Wyoming is a state characterized by few people and lots of public land. We are often described as a fiercely independent bunch, but I can attest that most everyone I’ve had the honor of working with these many long years has shown they will come together—despite significant differences on other issues—to do just about anything to defend the places they love.

This could not have happened without citizens who cared; this could not have happened without you.

You may think that the things the Wyoming Outdoor Council sometimes asks of you are insignificant or won’t make a difference. I hope this happy news convinces you that every email read, letter written, public meeting attended, bumper sticker affixed, petition signed, or donation made does in fact matter and it does make a difference.

How the deal came together

This is the solution we’ve been working toward for a very long time. The Wilderness Society, Citizens for the Wyoming Range, and the Wyoming Outdoor Council approached The Trust for Public Land many months ago in the hope that its experience and expertise with complex land conservation negotiations could result in a positive outcome for the Upper Hoback and for all stakeholders.

I am incredibly grateful to The Trust for Public Land for the amazing work it did to get us to this point and I commend PXP for agreeing to the sale.

This unique conservation agreement safeguards cherished public land now and for future generations. The Upper Hoback Basin is one of the most important wildlife migratory crossroads in the nation and the headwaters of the congressionally designated wild and scenic Hoback River. It provides recreational opportunities to myriad forest users, including hunters, horse packers, ranchers and hikers, and offers downstream fishing and boating experiences.

It was the last place Wyoming citizens wanted to see an industrial gas field.

I hope sometime this weekend you’ll raise a glass with friends or family to toast and celebrate this news. I hope you will also reflect on what we can accomplish in Wyoming when we work together. My sincere appreciation to you, to our conservation partners and everyone who has helped get us here—to this exciting day.

To learn more and to donate, please visit: tpl.org/savethehoback

 

Here are some images of the area, courtesy The Wilderness Society:

 

 

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Great video about the Upper Hoback: Too Special to Drill

Houston, we have a problem.

Bridger-Teton gas drilling proposal: Listen to the latest here

Opposition to Wyo Range drilling has ‘galvanized’

Hydraulic fracturing: what we’d like to achieve

UW hydraulic fracturing forum benefited from public involvement

NYT: Fracking has contaminated drinking water

NPR: Worries over water as fracking becomes pervasive

Why We’re Seeking Fracking Chemical Information

Groups seek better disclosure of fracking chemicals in Wyoming

Field Notes


New consensus recommendations could correct ozone problems in Pinedale

Western Wyoming Gasfield haze
Upper Green River Basin haze. Photo by Kyle Duba with LightHawk aerial support.

 

The goal: protecting public health as soon as possible

By Bruce Pendery

 

 

 

 

On September 19, the Upper Green River Basin Air Quality Citizens Advisory Task Force, which was established by the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality, made recommendations for ways to reduce the dangerous ozone pollution—sometimes called smog—that has plagued the Pinedale area for several years.

These consensus recommendations followed nine months of deliberations by the task force and six lengthy meetings.

Arriving at consensus recommendations was no mean feat for this group of 26 representatives of divergent interest groups—oil and gas industry, county government officials, city government officials, the Governor’s office, the U.S. Forest Service, the federal Bureau of Land Management, the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality, local citizens, and environmental groups.

I had the privilege of representing the Wyoming Outdoor Council and its members on this task force.

All told, the task force delivered 11 consensus recommendations to the Department of Environmental Quality.

These recommendations should guide the DEQ as it seeks, ultimately, to reduce ozone pollution and better protect the people that live and work in the Upper Green River Basin.

Exposure to ground-level ozone, even in relatively low concentrations, can cause serious health problems, including permanent damage to the lungs.

Air pollution principally from the oil and gas operations in the area has been shown to be the major contributor to ozone pollution in the Pinedale area, and therefore the task force recommendations appropriately focus on the oil and gas industry.

The recommendations call for the DEQ to take the following steps in the Upper Green River Basin:

  • Control air pollution from existing oil and gas stationary sources, including currently unregulated oil and gas industry air pollution sources.
  • Uniformly require contingency plans for oil and gas industry operations during high ozone pollution days.
  • Reduce nitrogen oxide air pollution (a key component in ozone formation) from all drilling rigs and completion/hydraulic fracturing operations. Develop leak detection and repair standards.
  • Analyze the emissions from evaporation and produced-water ponds and other pits and determine if better controls are needed.
  • Improve ozone monitoring, inventory, and air quality modeling and make this information available to the public.
  • Use incentives to accelerate emissions reductions and increase DEQ staffing levels to manage air quality issues in the Upper Green.

In many cases, there are recommendations that these provisions be accompanied by a phase-in period and that incentives be provided to accelerate emissions reductions. You can download a PDF of the full recommendations at the DEQ website by clicking here.

An environmental advocacy group like the Wyoming Outdoor Council could criticize some of these recommendations and seek stronger provisions. For example, the phase-in provisions in many of the recommendations could allow the DEQ to delay pollution controls for an unreasonable amount of time.

But, overall, these are strong recommendations, and we encourage the DEQ to implement them in an expeditious manner.

The fact that 26 disparate interest groups and individuals were able to reach consensus recommendations is somewhat remarkable. And industry representatives on the task force supported strong protections for air quality, which is significant.

What will happen next remains to be seen. The DEQ will evaluate the recommendations and we anticipate that within about two months it will report back to the task force—and to the public—on its plans for implementing, or not implementing, these recommendations.

I am hopeful that all of them will be adopted, in their strongest form possible, so that we can reduce the dangerous ozone pollution that has plagued the Upper Green River Basin. This is a public health issue that can and should be corrected as soon as possible.

Ozone is widely known to cause a host of respiratory problems, and it is a toxic air pollutant relatively low concentrations. The unhealthy ozone levels we have seen in the Upper Green River Basin in recent years must be reduced to ensure public health is protected.

If we can reduce the ozone pollution in the Pinedale area, not only will provide an important public health benefit, but it will also help reduce the smoggy haze that can ruin the stunning views of the landscapes in the area.

Moreover, now that the EPA has formally designated the Upper Green River Basin (Sublette County and portions of Sweetwater and Lincoln Counties) in nonattainment with the national ozone standard, if the state does not bring the area back into compliance with the ozone standard by the end of 2015, even more severe pollution controls could be required by the Clean Air Act, which is something the energy industry, and others in Wyoming, do not want to face.

These recommendations, therefore, which focus on controlling air pollution from the most significant pollution sources in the Upper Green River Valley (which are all related to industrial activities in the oil and gas fields), are important and they should be implemented by the state.

Contact: Bruce Pendery, program director, Wyoming Outdoor Council, bruce@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org or 435-752-2111.

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Western Wyoming residents demand action on ozone

Bleizeffer: Ozone spikes aren’t Mother Nature’s fault

A must-read series: ‘Pristine to Polluted’

Proposal would more than quadruple the size of the Jonah Field

Meet the new boom

 

 

Field Notes


Wyoming Outdoor Council end-of-summer party in Sheridan

Celebrate Wyoming with the Wyoming Outdoor Council!

Friday, September 14

Join us for an end-of-summer gathering at the Sheridan Inn.

Help us celebrate recent successes and the bright future of our state’s oldest conservation organization.

Everyone is invited and guests are welcome.

What: Conservation updates, friendly conversation, hors d’oeuvres, and cash bar

When: Friday, September 14; 5:30 – 8 p.m.

Where: Sheridan Inn, 856 Broadway, Sheridan, Wyoming

RSVP: Gary Wilmot, 307.332.7031, ext. 21, or gary@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org

Field Notes


One step on the path to solving climate change

By Richard Garrett, Jr.
Your voice for conservation at the Wyoming State Legislature

For the last year, and at the suggestion of our friends at Western Resource Advocates, I have worked on behalf of our members with a diverse group of stakeholders in the development of a national policy initiative for enhanced oil recovery using carbon dioxide.

The technique of enhanced oil recovery (you’ll see it abbreviated as EOR or CO2-EOR in this piece and elsewhere) via the injection of CO2 into an existing oil field, is a way to increase the amount of crude oil that can be extracted from the field—sometimes more than doubling the production from a field.

The technique can also allow production in otherwise inaccessible geological formations called residual oil zones, which are often adjacent to existing fields. A major ROZ is located in Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin.

The reason the Wyoming Outdoor Council is interested in participating in a national policy initiative for CO2-EOR is because we view this as a unique opportunity to help shape a public/private/nongovernmental organization process that might result in a market-based incentive to capture and store (the new term for sequester) one greenhouse gas, CO2, which is a major contributor to climate change.

In Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin it has been estimated that there might be as many as 10 billion barrels of oil in existing fields that is, as resource analysts say, “stranded.”

The prospect of further developing a domestic resource by largely reusing existing infrastructure with industrially produced CO2, which is then stored safely underground, is an enticing one.

It could help reduce the pressure to drill in new places and it could result in a net reduction in CO2 emissions, even if the oil that is brought up is burned and its CO2 is not captured.

As you will read below, this kind of technology is not without its challenges.

In my presentation to the 6th annual University of Wyoming Enhanced Oil Recovery conference in Casper, WY on July 11, 2012 I made our concerns clear.

These are the same concerns that the Council has articulated throughout our participation in the national policy initiative process.

Although there is a great deal of work yet to be done on the national policy initiative; we are cautiously optimistic that our environmental concerns will continue to be recognized and effectively addressed.

In fact, I heard from many people following my presentation that they agree with at least two of our essential tenets—CO2 used in the process must be a captured industrial byproduct (for example from coal-fired power plants) and that its permanent storage must be verifiably safe and secure.

What follows is the text of my presentation to the conference. As always I invite your comments and involvement, both of which the Council relies upon to make the right choices as we urge that energy development be done right.

My Address to the University of Wyoming Enhanced Oil Recovery conference in Casper, WY, July, 2012

Thank you.

I am pinch-hitting today for Brad Crabtree, the Policy Director with the Great Plains Institute who has ably led the national policy initiative about which I’ve been asked to speak. Brad is in D.C. advancing the goals of the initiative, and you can imagine how tough that duty is in July in Washington D.C.

By the way, I am aware of my vulnerable position as the last man standing between 200 people and lunch so I will try to be both concise and brief.

Disclosure—I walked here from where I left my gasoline-powered vehicle parked—in lot 9. FYI, I heat my home, indirectly, with coal. Try as I might, I cannot yet escape the grip and benefit of fossil fuels and maybe I never will.

I do, however, try to be mindful about their creation and conservative in my use of them. I suspect many, perhaps all of you, share that awareness and sense of conservation.

Thank you to those here today, and thank you as well to David Mohrbacher and Glen Murrell (of the University of Wyoming Enhanced Oil Recovery Institute) and to Mark Northam, Kelly Garvey, Mary Byrnes, and the University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources for this opportunity.

I also want to thank the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES), the Great Plains Institute, and especially Brad Crabtree for offering the Wyoming Outdoor Council the chance to contribute to the process of helping to conceptualize a national policy initiative [the National Enhanced Oil Recovery Initiative] for the broader use of CO2-EOR—I want to tell you more about the initiative, but first I want to tell you a little bit about the environmental organization that I work for, the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

We have just celebrated, along with some 1,500 members, our 45th anniversary. The Council was brought to life by our iconic founder (and still spiritual leader) Tom Bell. Tom was born and raised in Wyoming and like so many others of his generation went to fight for our country in World War II. Flying as a bombardier in a B-24, Tom lost an eye to enemy fire.

He returned home to his beloved Wyoming to recover and consider. He found comfort in the landscape, clear blue skies, wildlife, and clean water that his father and mother and generations before had left for him to enjoy and prosper from. Tom had—still has—a profound appreciation for all that is Wyoming, its people, places, and sheer untamed wildness.

Tom went on to build two of his first careers (there have been at least five by my count) in the next 20 years, first as a wildlife specialist for the Wyoming Game and Fish and then as a junior high school teacher. It was the latter experience perhaps that instilled more than ever in him the recognition that Wyoming was a gift given to him by those that came before and one that he should pay forward to future generations. It was this fundamental belief and commitment that inspired him to create the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

As you might imagine with any organization like ours that has been around for 45 years there have been an incredible number of challenges, some victories, and some setbacks.

Perhaps our finest victory, beyond simply building a sustainable and respected organization, is knowing that we have been working for 45 years to find a way to reach the goal that I suspect everyone in this room and certainly everyone in WY shares—to build a better place for our children and to leave it in even better shape than when it was given to us.

As for challenges, well we have seen Wyoming become the nation’s BTU leader—combined we create or participate in the creation of 1 out of every 6 BTUs that the nation consumes. I say challenge because this role is one that not unexpectedly creates conflicts.

The creation of energy brings economic prosperity—something we all enjoy—but at the same time it brings environmental risks to the Wyoming values that our members most cherish, those same things that Tom Bell recognized that as a good steward he must pass on to future generations.

So we, as an organization, work hard to encourage the state and its industrial citizens to do it right when it comes to energy development. We know development is going to happen, we recognize its many benefits. At the same time it’s all about place and pace and it is crucial that we find the right formula to fulfill our obligation to not only help meet the nation’s energy needs, but also its need for a wild and profoundly beautiful place like Wyoming.

So what is the formula? Well there are several, in all likelihood, but one certainly seems to be CO2-EOR. In many ways it appears to offer a unique opportunity to balance energy development while reducing environmental risks or imprints. But here is the rub, that is only true if it is done right.

That is where the National Enhanced Oil Recovery Initiative saw an opportunity. C2ES and the Great Plains Institute brought together a diverse universe of stakeholders including industry leaders, decision-makers, academics, regulators, and yes, even environmentalists. Some examples include Arch Coal, AFL-CIO, Tenaska Energy, state legislators (Texas and Montana for example), General Electric, the Clean Air Task Force, West Virginia Public Service Commission and of course the Wyoming Outdoor Council —and by the way, you can learn more about all of this including our accomplishments to date, white papers, and participants at www.neori.org.

The initiative kicked off in earnest last year about this time with an intense two day meeting in Washington D.C. There, we (about 40 folks), worked through the broad outline of what an initiative might look like and how in a polarized world we could work collaboratively to craft a policy which, if adopted on a national scale, would encourage the further development and deployment of CO2-EOR.

We identified these objectives:

  • Capture CO2 from industrial sources.
  • Ship the CO2 through an expanded infrastructure.
  • Use the CO2 to recover an otherwise stranded resource in existing brownfields.
  • Store —dare I say, sequester—the CO2 permanently.
  • And do all this with the creation of, for a limited time frame, a tax structure that could jump-start the opportunity.

Our organization (and perhaps other environmental organizations) was intrigued by this concept because it has the potential for helping us to advance our mission.
• We believe capturing CO2 from industrial sources is critical to our world’s ability to cope with climate change—climate change is the number one challenge to our mission.
• We believe that re-development of existing infrastructure and oil field developments (brownfields) reduces the demand to discover and develop new resources—we need to leave resources available to future generations.
• We must store CO2 in a way that is environmentally responsible and we need to make sure that it is in the ground, sealed for eternity.

The initiative’s participants have met two more times since that first meeting in D.C. and we have had weekly conference calls to continue to craft the policy initiative.

As you might imagine, there have been stumbles along the way, but we are glad to report that we have completed Phase I of the initiative and are now well underway with Phase II where we are at the point where key members of Congress—supporters of the initiative—almost/nearly/maybe/certainly will craft legislation that will support the public/private partnership that the initiative has championed.

Still to be fully fleshed out are 45Q tax issues, something that my fellow panelist Mike Moore referred to and not my realm of expertise but a crucial component for the success of the initiative.

As I close, I want to ask upon everyone here today one thing (much in the same way I embrace the many benefits of energy development). I ask that you embrace the value of our organization’s mission—namely, good stewardship with the goal of offering our children the same gift given to us. To me one of the key components of that will be to trust but verify the key components of the policy initiative, namely:

CO2-EOR must capture, use and store industrially produced CO2. I ask you to collaborate with us on these objectives. I pledge our organization’s continued involvement and point to an example of our good faith about which you may, or may not know.

First some background:

Wyoming is a big square state (I suspect you already know that). About half of our state is publicly owned and managed by either the federal or state government. At the Department of the Interior, the federal government divided our state into field offices (Lander, Rock Springs, Casper, Rawlins, etc).

The Bureau of Land Management manages these field offices and leases mineral, timber, and grazing resources within their boundaries while balancing them with recreational and conservation objectives under a concept known as multiple use. These field offices are required to create, with ample public input, 20-year plans called RMPs or resource management plans. Not too long ago, the combined Bighorn Basin RMP was made public. The RMP neglected, for whatever reason, to account for how an estimated 10 billion barrels of stranded oil could be recovered using CO2-EOR. Wyoming’s Governor Matt Mead together with key state legislators including Senator Eli Bebout and Representative Tom Lockhart (both of whom are here today) recognized this deficiency and reached out to the BLM and a variety of stakeholders for correction.

By joining in the policy initiative, and learning from its participants (people like Steve Melzer), our organization was able to endorse the governor’s successful call to the BLM for an amendment to the RMP which would account for the availability of the stranded resource using CO2-EOR.

I use this as an example of our members’ good faith in the process and its purpose. We are eager to continue to work collaboratively in ways that will make sure that Wyoming, as called upon, will continue to contribute our fair share to the nation’s BTU requirements. We are also pledged, above all, to our mission and the protection of our wild (and square) state’s environment.

There is reason for optimism. I will conclude by reading from an MIT Energy Initiative Study, published in 2011 (this study is available on the NEORI website):

“ . . . [A]n organized CO2-EOR program using anthropogenic CO2 could, with the appropriate CO2 transportation infrastructure, kick-start larger-scale sequestration in the [United States] and meet sequestration needs for a significant period if CO2 emissions pricing is introduced. Of course, this will depend on reaching a satisfactory understanding of the scale and permanence of CO2 storage in EOR.”

It appears that up to 3,500 GWe-years of CO2 from coal power plant generation could be accommodated in the EOR Main Pay Zones (MPZs).

This represents about 15 years of total output from all US coal plants, or equivalently about 60 years of output from 25 percent of the US coal fleet.

The combination of the high cost of integrated first-mover CCS projects, the benefits of enhanced domestic oil production, and the rough equivalence of CO2 needs for EOR and CO2 sequestration potential in the next two-to-three decades merits a serious look at scaling up CO2-EOR with government support.

However, in addition to the research needed to quantify storage performance, several other implementation issues need to be addressed.

There is reason for optimism, though. Another MIT study suggests that contrary to prevailing thought CCS is not prohibitively expensive and can become “a cost-effective mitigation pathway.”  The study found the following:

Carbon dioxide capture increases the busbar electricity cost (COE) from—

5.0 to 6.7 ¢/kWh at IGCC plants (integrated gasification combined cycle power plants)
4.4 to 7.7 ¢/kWh at PC plants (pulverized coal-fired power plants)
3.3 to 4.9 ¢/kWh at NGCC plants (natural gas combined cycle power plants)

Thank you. Again, I appreciate the invitation to speak to you today and to share our perspective on CO2-EOR.

 

Field Notes


Drilling plan for the Shoshone National Forest has been halted

By Lisa McGee

DEAR MEMBERS AND SUPPORTERS,

I have good news to share about the Shoshone National Forest. Last week we received a preliminary decision from the BLM, ensuring—at least for now—that there will be no new drilling on the Shoshone near Dubois.

In April, we filed a “request for state director review” of the BLM’s decision to allow a company to drill Scott Well #2, which would have been the first new well drilled on the forest in more than 20 years.

We echoed the concerns of more than 75 Dubois residents who signed a petition asking the BLM for greater assurances that drilling wouldn’t pollute the town’s drinking water supply.

In response, the BLM issued a stay, which halted surface disturbance that could have begun as early as July 1.

The agency will issue a final decision in the coming weeks or months.

We hope the BLM decides that citizens—especially the people of Dubois—deserve full disclosure of the company’s subsurface disturbance plans, a thorough analysis of the potential threats to drinking water supplies, and a commitment that if drilling operations proceed, there will be required safeguards and adequate oversight. These things were not included in the BLM’s prior analysis.

The area where the drilling would have taken place is a well-loved hunting and recreation area and important elk winter range and spring calving grounds, and is right in the middle of an elk migration route that links the forest to Yellowstone National Park.

We’ll keep you updated when we hear from BLM next. Thanks for your continued support of our national forests.

 

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Great video about the Upper Hoback: Too Special to Drill

Houston, we have a problem.

Bridger-Teton gas drilling proposal: Listen to the latest here

Opposition to Wyo Range drilling has ‘galvanized’

Hydraulic fracturing: what we’d like to achieve

UW hydraulic fracturing forum benefited from public involvement

NYT: Fracking has contaminated drinking water

NPR: Worries over water as fracking becomes pervasive

Why We’re Seeking Fracking Chemical Information

Groups seek better disclosure of fracking chemicals in Wyoming

Field Notes


Great video about the Upper Hoback: Too Special to Drill

Check out this powerful, poignant, and informative video about the proposed full-field gas development in the Upper Hoback area of the Bridger-Teton National Forest’s Wyoming Range.

 

 

 

Other posts you might want to see:

Houston, we have a problem.

Bridger-Teton gas drilling proposal: Listen to the latest here

Opposition to Wyo Range drilling has ‘galvanized’

Hydraulic fracturing: what we’d like to achieve

UW hydraulic fracturing forum benefited from public involvement

NYT: Fracking has contaminated drinking water

NPR: Worries over water as fracking becomes pervasive

Why We’re Seeking Fracking Chemical Information

Groups seek better disclosure of fracking chemicals in Wyoming

Field Notes


Samuel Western’s keynote address to the Wyoming Outdoor Council


Samuel Western, celebrated Wyoming author and poet.

 

How do conservation groups find the slower and deeper movements that really matter?

The following is the text of the keynote address given by Samuel Western at the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s 45th anniversary celebration, June 23rd, Lander, Wyoming.

 

IT IS A PROFOUND HONOR TO BE ASKED to speak at the WOC 45th anniversary dinner.  Thank you.

About a month ago I stared out a bus window at a landscape of juniper, pine, and snowcapped granitic mountains that could have been part of southcentral Colorado.

Yet a few hours later I swore I was in eastern Montana, circa 1970: rolling fields of wheat complete with short-stemmed sprinkler heads trying valiantly to shoot irrigation water of the top of the budding green heads; limestone outcrops poked out of ridges.

Venerable Ford 8N tractors chugged around fields towing faded New Holland bailers, gathering and binding the year’s first cutting.  Semis carrying big square bales roared past the bus. Then, shortly after, I could have been someplace south of Rawlins, again circa 1970.  Flocks of sheep tended by dogs and herders, some horseback, even, grazed the grass.

But I was not anywhere in the Rocky Mountains, I was on a 12-hour bus ride through central Turkey.

This is an ancient land, plowed, planted, and fought over by the Greeks, the Romans, the Ottomans. It’s been used pretty hard.

There were no deer or antelope grazing the edge of the alfalfa field. No covey of sharptail or their central Asian equivalent rose from the edge of the wheat. I kept looking for a squashed clump of white rabbit fur, so ubiquitous on Wyoming highways, but could see none. The animals are there, alright, especially wild boar, which is considered an agricultural scourge and a bit of a culinary problem for a Muslim nation that frowns on eating pig. Incidentally, I found out that the only firearm most locals are legally permitted to own is a shotgun. Imagine closing in on a highly irritated 300-pound boar at night equipped with a just a 12-guage. That’s an excellent reason to pray five times a day.

Although Turkey does enjoy a number of wild animals, including brown bear, most game has been driven up into the highlands or into preserves. The everyday co-existence with wild animals that we in Wyoming enjoy, even if it does mean a mountain lion on your back porch, is a rarity in Turkey.

You could also go miles without seeing a fence, even though there was plenty of livestock. But when labor is cheap, fences aren’t necessary, unlike the frontier west. In 1885, for the price of one month of cowboy wages, about $30.00/month, you could build six miles of barbed wire fence.

I watched herders guide a flock of about 100 sheep on 10-foot strip of grass between two wheat fields, an act of bravery that would induce any wheat farmer into a state of apoplexy.  Herdsmen tended herds of thin Holsteins along the easement and burrow ditches of heavily used four-lane highways.

Those cattle are there because every square meter of arable land in Turkey is harnessed for food production. If it’s not plowed, it’s planted with olives trees or grapes. If not fertile enough to grow anything, the Turks build a greenhouse and grow tomatoes and cucumber anyway. Ground producing bunch grass gets grazed. Not much left for wilderness.

Finally, stream conditions gave me the willies.  With precious few exceptions, streams were seen as a form of garbage disposal, littered with all nature of trash, especially plastics, and old building material.

I’m not here to cast aspersions of the nation of Turkey. It’s a remarkable place, surrounded by some of the politically hottest nations on earth, including, Iran, Syria, Armenia, and Georgia.  It’s country filled with people with big and generous hearts. It actually brought creatures, like the Anatolian red stag, back from brink of extinction. It’s got 254 people per square mile. Wyoming has just over five.  The trip was, however, another affirmation about how good we have it in Wyoming. And, the central question of every person in this room, some of you have made it a life-long question is: how can we keep it that way?

I was recently going through my old clip file and I came across an article I had written in 1985 for Northern Lights that wonderful magazine published by Deb Clow in Missoula that was obliged to put out it’s last issue in 2003.

I found this quote:  “There is going to be a crisis, an economic crisis, that is going to make it expedient to dismantle all the work we did in the 1970s.”

The person doing the talking was John Perry Barlow, a former president of the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

Now John, as we all know, has a fondness for hyperbole. He, himself, has admitted that there are times when he needs a hyperbolectomy.

Furthermore, I’m wary of the term “crisis.” It’s a word that often gets ginned up to rile emotions which then act as a handmaiden to serve someone’s specific agenda. The next thing you know, someone utters the ultimate loaded word, survive. It implies either death or victory. True, a finch without the right-shaped beak, does not survive long on the Galapagos. Yet such drama rarely obliges the dynamic of nations. It doesn’t mean things don’t get ugly or messy. You’ve noticed, however, that Egypt, despite its upheavals, is still a going concern. Only in scripture and Hollywood do things succumb to apocalyptic endings.

Every generation since the beginning of the industrial revolution has fretted how fast the world turns under their feet. In 1870, George Ticknor, a stalwart but well-traveled New Englander and a professor Spanish literature at Harvard concluded, “It does not seem to me as if I were living in the country in which I was born.”

Ticknor was born in 1791 and died in 1871. Think of the changes he saw.

Then how do we differentiate between crisis, like the 2004 Tsunami in the East Indian Ocean that cost over 250,000 lives or the equivalent roughly of half the population of Wyoming, and threatening events that, if not ameliorated, certainly impoverish our lives?

I recently read an interview with Bob Irvin, president of American Rivers. “Right now,” he said “there are the greatest number of bills threatening to roll back Clean Water Act protection in its 40-year history. Opponents of the Clean Water Act have gotten pretty smart. They’re introducing lots of individual bills that do things like prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers from protecting headwater streams and wetlands, both of which are critical to the health of rivers. Most Americans would be appalled at the idea that we are going to turn back the clock to a time when rivers were so polluted you couldn’t touch them or they were on fire.”

This worries me plenty, believe me. There’s now a whole generations of Americans that never witnessed a river outside Cleveland ablaze.

But Mr. Miller’s language also worries me. About eight years ago, two writers named Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus, wrote an article I imagine not a few of you in this room are familiar with, called “The Death of Environmentalism.”

In the article, these two men say, “The truth is that for the vast majority of Americans, the environment never makes it into their top ten list of things to worry about. Protecting the environment is indeed supported by a large majority — it’s just not supported very strongly. Once you understand this, it’s much easier to understand why it’s been so easy for anti-environmental interests to gut 30 years of environmental protections.”

There’s probably no better place to demonstrate this than Wyoming. In poll after poll, people evince a great love of open space, clean water, and protection of our really unique areas, like the Red Desert. Yet try to pass legislation protecting these areas, and you get stigmatized with the label of “job killer.”

Do you remember that sign that stood for years outside the old Parkway Plaza hotel in Casper: “Mindless Marxist Environmentalists Working for Russia?”

Or there’s this belief in Wyoming that, because, we need jobs so much, what’s good for industry is good for Wyoming.

A few years ago I was doing some research and came upon a 1975 AP story about the Wyoming Industrial Plant Siting bill, a piece of legislation that passed in no small measure due to some of the people in this room.  The article quotes Governor Ed Herschler, and you just hear the sense of bewilderment in Herschler’s voice when he talks about how cities and towns of Wyoming have been “conspicuously absent” during hearings about the bill. “I can’t understand it. This bill has great bearing on the growth of Wyoming cities and towns.”

Still, laws did get passed, and, again, many of them conceived and shepherded through the hallowed halls of Cheyenne by the people in this room or members, now far-flung, of the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

Furthermore, no person in the history of Wyoming or probably the Rocky Mountain west, ever acted as a more effective and persistent voice of conscience, that voice that struck bone in every coal and uranium miner, every logging company, lobbyist, and livestock producer – whether they would admit to this voice or not – that Wyoming was such a beautiful place that it deserves protection. That voice belonged Tom Bell, the founder of the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

As the saying goes: preservationists may be hell to live with but they make great ancestors.

*****

Milton Friedman, the father of modern free-market economic theory, once said, “Only a crisis—actual or perceived—produces real change.”

Well, OK. How bad does the crisis have to be before we consider change? Do have to wait until the Cuyahoga River, or its metaphorical equivalent, catches on fire again.

I think the answer is yes. It’s going to take something just like that. We live an age of intense anxiety about our economic future. Recall that those pieces of environmental legislation that you passed on a statewide level and that groups passed Washington were enacted in times of economic bounty. The Clean Air Act was Pass in 1970; the Clear Water Act in 1972. From 1961 from 1969 was one the greatest period of economic expansion in U.S. history.

I don’t know what the conflagration will look like, but I have a few ideas about how to battle the flames.

We’ve got to think differently about defending things, as in “Defenders of Wildlife,” etc. I think it’s ultimately a losing proposition.

Eventually all defenses, both physical structures and the idea of a defense dynamic, collapse.

Any military historian or tactician will tell you that being on the defensive is ultimately unsustainable. “Stationary defenses are monuments to the stupidity of mankind,” General George Patton famously quipped.

Besides, as the conservation biologist George Schaller told M.A. Sanjayan of the University of Montana, “There’s no such thing as winning the fight for nature, because all victories in this war are temporary. But,” said Schaller, “You never stop fighting.”

But then Sanjayan noted, “Schaller’s ethos — perpetual struggle — implies a perpetual problem for conservation. Successful movements and successful leaders in times of conflict — from Grant to Churchill to Gandhi — share two things: a clear articulation of what winning meant, and a clear understanding of who the enemy was.

“Conservationists have never had an understanding of what it means to win as a movement. Sure, we’ve done well on specific campaigns — clean this river, save those whales. But step back from the individual battles, and our articulation of success is wholly unintelligible.

Some would call this objection unfair. For these critics, victory means slowing down the train wreck that will inevitably come — saving pieces of the world so that, as our impact on the planet stabilizes in about 200 years, we can put it back together. This triage strategy may keep the patient alive — but it will never cure the disease.”

I don’t think we have to “win” or be so defensive if we (a) don’t fear change so much and (b) have an organization that has an active negative feedback loop, which is something I’ll talk about in a minute.

Actually, deep down inside, I think we don’t much fear change as we fear our inability to handle change or, parenthetically, we fear a certain watershed or a specific species, the grizzly or the wolverine, won’t be able to handle the change placed upon it by a growing population.

This fear of the inability to handle change has been a devastatingly effective tool employed by the current version of the Republican Party. They’ve a significant proportion of the American public convinced that we won’t be able to handle any change unless it’s a path chosen by a leader or member of congress who is a True Believer, or at least not by a Republican who has the audacity to think independently or a person who, God forbid, who calls themselves a Democrat.

That is their strength and that will be, eventually, their downfall.

Why? Because members of the current makeup of the Republican Party have a tendency to dismiss criticism not within their political purview. Try telling, for example, a True Believer Republican that part of this nation’s financial problems came about because Ronald Reagan tripled the American national debt to nearly $3 trillion. By the time he left office in 1989, Reagan more than equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history.

That idea gets very little play on Fox News or in Republican enclaves. This is because the current make up of the Republican Party lacks what’s called a negative feedback loop.

A negative feedback loop is a self-correction mechanism in any big system, be a social one, like a political party, or physical one, like an air traffic control system, that keeps things in balance.  It’s that voice that says, hey, uh, we might have a problem over here. Maybe we’re not dealing with reality.

The person who in large measure coined the phrase negative feedback loops was a professor at Dartmouth College named Donella Meadows. In talking about negative feedback loops, she mentioned that there is a segment of the population “trying to weaken the feedback power of market signals by twisting information in their favor. The REAL leverage here is to keep them from doing it.”

Hence the necessity, she said, “of anti-trust laws, truth-in-advertising laws, attempts to internalize costs (such as pollution taxes), the removal of perverse subsidies, and other ways of leveling market playing fields.  But, she said, negative feedback loops “depend upon the free, full, unbiased flow of information back and forth between electorate and leaders.

Then she said something that just killed me. “Billions of dollars are spent to limit and bias and dominate that flow. Give the people who want to distort market price signals the power to pay off government leaders, get the channels of communication to be self-interested corporate partners themselves, and none of the necessary negative feedbacks work well. Both market and democracy erode.”

If she hasn’t just described Citizens United, I’ll eat my triple-x Resistol.

However, in the long term, the party or entity who can self-correct will be the successful party.

I think the lack of negative feedback loops have likewise been a bug-a-boo for most environmental groups.

One of the reasons we’ve lost clout is because we’ve predicted things that did not come true: famine, marshal law, critical fuel shortages, etc., because we did not listen to that voice that said, in essence, “pshaw, that’s a projection.”

As Shellenberger and Nordhaus wrote in their article, “what was striking to us in our research was the high degree of consensus among environmental leaders about what the problems and solutions are. We came away from our interviews less concerned about internal divisions than the lack of feedback mechanisms. Engineers use a technical term to describe systems without (negative) feedback mechanisms: “stupid.”

I’m a fan of Stewart Brand, the founder of the Whole Earth catalog, who believes humans are highly adaptable creatures but endowed with the predilection to engage in apocalyptic thinking. “In 1973 I thought the energy crisis was so intolerable that we’d have police on the streets by Christmas. The times I’ve been wrong is when I assume there’s a brittleness in a complex system that turns out to be way more resilient than I thought.”

“Any time that people are forced to acknowledge publicly that they’re wrong, it’s really good for the commonwealth. I love to be busted for apocalyptic proclamations that turned out to be 180 degrees wrong.”

I, personally, was certainly wrong about a number of things, like the abundance of natural gas. I was one of those people who thought: we can’t drill our way out of the energy crisis.

I continue to think we can’t drill our way out of this crisis, not in the long term. I also think there are some serious consequences to shale gas production, or even regular gas production, like fracking or an ozone layer over what was the once the cleanest air in Wyoming. But I was not prepared for a new discovery of gas made possible, largely, through better technology, which I admit I don’t totally embrace.

Vinod Khosla, a remarkable venture capitalist, described shale gas a black swan, a high impact event that is a surprise to experts in the field. And, he says, “Black-swan technologies will show up again.”

That’s our challenge in Wyoming, because if it’s not fracking or cluster drilling like Pinedale, it’s going to be combined combustion coal gasification, or in-situ coal gasfication or oil shale. That’s the price we pay for being BTU central. As the technology changes, so will the challenges for the Wyoming Outdoor Council. And in each one of those developments, and the one thing we have to keep challenging is our assumptions.

As we challenge those assumptions, we need to keep in mind: what really matters? The dynamic here that Arnold Toynbee calls the “deeper, slower, movement.”

Here are the full quotes.

“The things that make good headlines attract our attention because they are on the surface of the stream of life, and they distract our attention from the slower, impalpable, imponderable movements that work below the surface and penetrate to the depths. But of course it is really these deeper, slower movements that, in the end, make history, and it is they that stand out huge in retrospect, when the sensational passing events have dwindled, in perspective, to their true proportions.”

I cannot over emphasize the importance of what groups like the Wyoming Outdoor Council do. A book that’s been deeply influential to me is Bill Bishop’s “Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America is Tearing Us Apart.”

Bishop makes the point that when, historically, the U.S. Congress stalls and become sclerotic, “people see no sense waiting for the national 50-50 to resolve itself…the current federal stalemate has touched off an eruption of activity by state and local government – federalism that doesn’t sleep.”

Again, conservative Republicans have done an excellent job of marshalling state legislatures. Anything from ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) which sends legislators to “schools” to learn about conservative political strategy, to limiting birth control, to stem cell research, to gun control…the hot zone these day are state legislatures. This includes environmental measures. Carbon Emission Standard and greenhouse gas, now being discussed on the Senate floor, got their legs in 2006 and 2007 in Sacramento, Salem, and Olympia.

This makes your job, as Wyoming’s premier conservation group, all the harder.

I want to return to the theme of wild animals which, to me, are so emblematic of country or state’s effort understanding that unfettered and wild areas are important.

Last year, after four years of trying, I pulled an area 68 antelope tag. This area goes from north of the Green Mountains up into southern Natrona County. It’s spectacular country, despite being pockmarked by a lot old uranium claims.

On the third day of the hunt, I was driving my ancient land cruiser somewhere southeast of the beaver rim. The tracks kept getting fainter and fainter until finally I was driving on two tawny ribbons going through the sage. I went through gate after gate. Finally, I stopped and watched two beautiful bucks chase a doe and disappear over a ridge.

I got out, grabbed my gun, binoculars and topo map, and headed out in the direction they ran. I was actually more curious about what the other side of the hill looked like than I was in shooting a goat right then. It was pretty hot.

What I saw when I got to the top of the ridge took my breath away. I was looking directly into the setting sun. But beneath those red rays, I could see, maybe a quarter mile way, a dozen pair of antelope bucks sparing. I could hear the clack of their horns and see the giant puffs of dust they kicked up as they tussled.

I sat on the ground in astonishment, unable to conceive the bounty and beauty that lay before my eyes. I unfolded the topo. Try as I might, I could not find any trace of the two track I had just come down. I then uttered the phrase that every person in his room has said at one time or another as they explore Wyoming: where the hell am I?

I hunted for two days and saw, literally, hundreds of antelope. But I did not see another person. But for the power line off in the distance and the occasional Black Angus, I knew I was looking at a scene unchanged for a millennium. It was a feeling of great exhilaration and gratitude. It was a moment brought to me, and to thousands of others, by people like the Wyoming Wildlife Association and the Wyoming Outdoor Council.

I, we, they owe you an unrepayable gift of gratitude. Thank you.

Field Notes


The Film Festival Schedule for Thursday and Friday in Lander

 Wild & Scenic Film Festival, June 21 in June 22, Lander

 

Here is the List of Films for Thursday, June 21 and Friday June 22

 

Thursday Films

1. Bhutan: Land of the Black-necked Crane
“Bhutan: Land of the Black-necked Crane” takes viewers on an exotic Journey to the small Buddhist kingdom high in the Himalayan mountains. See how a benevolent king promotes Gross Domestic Happiness for his citizens while fostering respect for the environment and natural resources.

2. Tuned In
From a young age, Steve McGreevy was fascinated by the natural world and by amateur radio. When he discovered that nature produced its own radio signals, he began a quest to capture these sounds – a quest that has taken him to the most remote parts of the continent.

3. Yelp: With Apologies to Allen Ginsberg’s Howl
Technology can be addictive. In a tribute to Allen Ginsberg’s classic 1956 poem, we created a short film lampooning the addictions of our generation.

4. Connecting the Gems
Follow two National Geographic Adventurers of the Year on a 520-mile trek through one of the Northern Rockies’ premiere wildlife corridors. The two hikers traverse the Yellowstone to Frank Church region, paying particular attention to large carnivores and the challenges they face as they journey between these two ecosystem ‘gems.’

5. The Majestic Plastic Bag
Follow a plastic bag from supermarket to its final migratory destination in the Pacific Ocean gyre. Jeremy Irons narrates this mock nature documentary.

6. The Craziest Idea
2011 was an historic year for rivers. The two dam removal projects that began as “crazy ideas” 30 years ago kicked off this year on the Elwha and White Salmon Rivers in Washington. These dam removal projects are the largest in history and represent a turning point in the effort to restore free flowing rivers.

7. A Liter of Light
The film documents a foundation’s project to light up a poor neighborhood through the efforts of a local man who works for them. He becomes a beacon of hope to his community when he installs hundreds of solar-powered light bulbs in his neighbor’s houses. The clever device is made from old plastic soda bottles.

8. Cold
For the past 26 years 16 expeditions have tried and failed to climb one of Pakistan’s 8,000 meter peaks in winter. On February 2, 2011 Simone Moro, Denis Urubko and Cory Richards became the first. Cory is now the only American to summit any 8,000 meter peak in winter. The journey nearly killed them.

 

Friday Films

1. Second Nature: The Biomimicry Evolution
Second Nature: The Biomimicry Evolution explores biomimicry, the science of emulating nature’s best ideas to solve human problems. Set in South Africa, the film follows Time magazine “Hero of the Environment” Janine Benyus as she illustrates how organisms in nature can teach us to be more sustainable engineers, chemists, architects, and business leaders.

2. Weed War
One man’s obsession to do his part for the environment using weed-eating goats to control noxious invaders in the Rocky Mountains. A profile on Mark Harbaugh, Patagonia fly fishing rep and goat rancher.

3. Eagle Among the Swarm
Thousands of Pacific Dunlin birds spend the winter in Boundary Bay, British Columbia. At the seasons peak, numbers can reach up to 20,000 birds at a time and the packs can be seen flocking in great numbers, while continuously evading hungry falcons.

4. The Wolf and the Medallion
Journeying to, and climbing in, an unexplored granite canyon on the border of China and Mongolia, Collins finds not only adventure with friends and the local nomads, but a moment of reflection. From that moment comes a letter home to his four year old son.

5. A Skier’s Journey: Friends of Shames
If your beloved ski hill ran out of money and had no choice but to close, what would you do? With time running out for majestic Shames Mountain in Northern BC, local skiers from Terrace, Prince Rupert, and Kitimat have decided to take matters into their own hands and buy the ski hill.

6. Chasing Water
Follow the Colorado River, source to sea, with photographer Pete McBride who takes an intimate look at the watershed as he attempts to follow the irrigation water that sustains his family’s Colorado ranch, down river to the sea. Traversing 1,500 miles and draining seven states, the Colorado River supports over 30 million people across the southwest.

 

All proceeds benefit the Wyoming Outdoor Council. Sponsored by Patagonia and Wild Iris.

The Wyoming Outdoor Council’s 45th Anniversary Celebration

Saturday, June 23, 2012, Lander, Wyoming

 

Join us at our 45th anniversary celebration in Lander, Wyoming, honoring four-and-a-half decades of protecting Wyoming’s environment and quality of life for future generations.

Enjoy a weekend of family friendly fun, education, and entertainment! The celebration will kick off with the Wild & Scenic Film Festival on Thursday, June 21 and Friday, June 22, and culminate on Saturday evening, June 23, with dinner, a keynote address, and live music.

Click here for more information and to register.