BLM Plan to Convert Nevada’s Pinyon Forests to Biomass Threatens Ancient Rituals

- by Lisa Gale Gar­rigues, Indi­an Coun­try Today Media Network

For cen­turies the piny­on trees of Neva­da have nour­ished the Shoshone, Paiute and oth­er peo­ples, giv­ing them pine nuts, ingre­di­ents for soup, milk and even a place to pray. Now it is about to become some­thing else: a prof­itable source of biomass.

The Piny­on-Juniper Part­ner­ship, a con­sor­tium backed by Sen­a­tor Har­ry Reid, D‑Nevada, plans to remove piny­on trees in Nevada’s arid Great Basin in a project it hopes will be a mod­el for the west­ern Unit­ed States. This spring, the part­ner­ship will begin using chain­saws, mas­ti­ca­tors and pre­scribed burns to thin piny­on and juniper on 300,000 acres in Lin­coln and White Pine Counties.

In addi­tion to the eco­nom­ic ben­e­fits of the project, the part­ner­ship (spear­head­ed by the Bureau of Land Man­age­ment [BLM], the U.S. For­est Ser­vice and the U.S. Depart­ment of Agri­cul­ture, and backed by groups that include New­mont Min­ing, the Neva­da chap­ter of the Rocky Moun­tain Elk Foun­da­tion and the Nature Con­ser­van­cy) also argues that replac­ing some piny­on in east­ern Nevada’s Humboldt–Toiyabe Nation­al For­est with sage­brush and oth­er veg­e­ta­tion will help pre­vent dan­ger­ous for­est fires, allow for more wildlife view­ing and hunt­ing, and devel­op a bio­mass indus­try in Neva­da that will con­vert wood chips to fuel and elec­tric­i­ty. It already has at least one poten­tial cus­tomer: A‑Power Ener­gy Gen­er­a­tion Sys­tems, a Chi­nese firm that is plan­ning to build a bio­mass-gen­er­at­ed elec­tri­cal plant in Lin­coln Coun­ty. (An iron­ic aside: Despite the abun­dance of piny­on in the west­ern Unit­ed States, the pine nuts on U.S. super­mar­ket shelves come, increas­ing­ly, from China.)

The plans to reduce piny­on could even­tu­al­ly result in 20 mil­lion to 60 mil­lion tons of piny­on-juniper bio­mass. Six mil­lion tons of bio­mass can result from “a real­ly light thin­ning” of a mil­lion acres, says Dusty Mohler, a forester and util­i­ties man­ag­er for the partnership.

Though some Native lead­ers wel­come piny­on bio­mass as a poten­tial source of income for tribes, many are wary of what the partnership’s plan will mean for land rights, tra­di­tion­al piny­on cer­e­monies and the envi­ron­ment. “This is our land,” says John­nie Bobb, the 60-year-old chief of the West­ern Shoshone Nation­al Coun­cil. “This is our sacred food.”

It takes 150 years for a piny­on tree to pro­duce healthy seeds.

The West­ern Shoshone ter­ri­to­ry over­laps much of Neva­da, which con­tains almost 10 mil­lion acres of piny­on pine. Despite a Unit­ed Nations deci­sion that the U.S. gov­ern­ment has vio­lat­ed West­ern Shoshone sov­er­eign­ty, the BLM con­sid­ers the ter­ri­to­ry pub­lic land and has opened it up to nuclear test­ing, min­ing and the extrac­tion of oth­er nat­ur­al resources. The BLM has gen­er­al­ly fol­lowed a pol­i­cy of deal­ing with the indi­vid­ual trib­al gov­ern­ments of reser­va­tions set up by the U.S. gov­ern­ment and not with the West­ern Shoshone Nation­al Coun­cil, which includes rep­re­sen­ta­tives from all of the West­ern Shoshone tribes.

No one on the Nation­al Coun­cil was informed about the project, though part­ner­ship rep­re­sen­ta­tives have met with the Ely Shoshone Tribe to dis­cuss thin­ning inva­sive juniper on their land. “I would like to see the BLM and the For­est Ser­vice lis­ten more to our elders, and not take advan­tage of our tribes,” says Bobb. “Thin the piny­on trees, but don’t burn them—you can’t go back­ward if you burn the piny­on trees up.” (It takes 150 years for a piny­on pine to start cre­at­ing healthy seeds, which it then does on about a five-year cycle, with the seeds only being viable for a short time.)

“What they call pub­lic land—which is real­ly treaty land—will be open to pri­va­ti­za­tion, just like the gold mines, with­out any ben­e­fit to the Indi­an peo­ple,” claims Bobb’s wife, cul­tur­al psy­chol­o­gist Bon­nie Eber­hardt Bobb. In addi­tion to the pos­si­bil­i­ty of deser­ti­fi­ca­tion and encroach­ment on sacred sites, she and West­ern Shoshone Nation­al Coun­cil sub-chief Allen Moss are con­cerned about soil radi­a­tion from the Neva­da Test Site in adja­cent Nye Coun­ty. “Lots of areas where they are plan­ning on cut­ting trees are part of the ‘down­winders,’?” says Moss, refer­ring to areas down-wind of nuclear blasts. “Back in 1955, when they were doing nuclear test­ing, a lot of the radi­a­tion fell through that coun­try. Once they remove the trees, there’s noth­ing to hold back that contamination.”

The West­ern Shoshone will not be the only tribe affect­ed by piny­on con­ver­sion to bio­mass. Ron John­ny, an attor­ney and the envi­ron­men­tal direc­tor for the Sum­mit Lake Paiutes, said the BLM should do more to con­tact tribes and fam­i­lies that trav­el to east­ern Neva­da for har­vest­ing and cer­e­monies. By law, he said, all fed­er­al­ly rec­og­nized tribes who may be affect­ed need to be contacted.

Shoshone har­vest­ing piny­on tree nuts for cer­e­monies must com­pete with deer, elk, ruffed grouse, cot­ton­tail rab­bits, jackrab­bits and blue jays, and are fur­ther hand­i­capped by fed­er­al reg­u­la­tions that allow them to col­lect only 25 pounds of piny­on nuts per per­son, per year, Bobb says. “Most of the mem­bers of our tribe who pick pine nuts have to sneak around. We feel bad that we have to do this on our own Shoshone land.”

Sarah Adler, a co-chair of the part­ner­ship and the USDA Neva­da state direc­tor of rur­al devel­op­ment, believes the partnership’s plan will be good for the land and for rur­al devel­op­ment in Neva­da. “What hap­pens on that land,” she says, “has to be to the ben­e­fit of the land. It won’t be dri­ven by an industry’s need for biomass.

“The idea of the part­ner­ship,” Addler adds, “is to have a wide num­ber of experts engaged; peo­ple who are range sci­en­tists, wildlife biol­o­gists, veg­e­ta­tion experts; peo­ple who are inside and out­side of the BLM and For­est Ser­vice…. The engage­ment would include the tribes.”

The part­ner­ship spon­sored at least one large out­reach pro­gram: its Las Vegas Sum­mit in Decem­ber 2010, which brought togeth­er rep­re­sen­ta­tives from 175 orga­ni­za­tions, but still left out many of the tribes that should be par­tic­i­pat­ing in this process. Tansey Smith, the trib­al state envi­ron­men­tal liai­son at the Inter-Trib­al Coun­cil of Neva­da was one of the few Native rep­re­sen­ta­tives who attend­ed. “The sum­mit was a place we had to trav­el to,” she explains. “Not a lot of tribes have fund­ing to make that trip. “There are a lot of peo­ple who weren’t able to make it.”

Not every­one believes the part­ner­ship is inten­tion­al­ly exclud­ing the tribes, nor that they are going to harm their inter­ests. “One of the things that’s going to hap­pen,” says Ger­ry Emm, fish­eries direc­tor for the Walk­er Riv­er Paiute tribe and a pre­sen­ter at the Las Vegas con­fer­ence, “is that there’s going to be a huge push to do an edu­ca­tion out­reach to the tribes. I think once that process starts it’ll set­tle a lot of people’s fears.”

Adler says two reser­va­tions will ini­tial­ly be affect­ed: the Goshutes near the Utah bor­der and the Ely Shoshone. Chair­man Alvin Mar­ques of the Ely Shoshone did not return phone calls for this arti­cle, but the Goshutes were sur­prised to get the news that they’re being tar­get­ed. “I have not heard any­thing about it,” said Ed Naran­jo, the trib­al admin­is­tra­tor for the Con­fed­er­at­ed Tribes of the Goshute Indi­an Reser­va­tion, when asked for com­ment. “The BLM came through here a cou­ple of years ago and asked where our sacred sites were, and that was the last I heard of it. I’m a lit­tle con­cerned because a lot of tribes come here for cer­e­mo­ni­al pur­pos­es, and I don’t have a lot of con­fi­dence in the BLM.”


Posted

in

by


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Our Network

Watch Us on YouTube