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Research indicates that oil and gas operations can affect sage-grouse in several ways:
Development activities may result in loss or fragmentation of sagebrush habitat.
Noise from operations can disrupt the birds’ behavior at certain points in their life cycle. More generally, the birds may start to avoid human activity and infrastructure.
When any parcel of public land is leased for oil & gas development, the BLM may apply three types of stipulations to the lease:
No surface occupancy
Controlled surface use, which in the case of sage-grouse conservation, take the form of limits, or caps, on the amount of surface disturbance allowed on the acres leased (See Table 2-7 in ch. 2 of the draft EIS.)
Timing limitations, which close the leased acres to development during specified time frames when activities would be most disruptive to sage-grouse.
All BLM resource management plans remain flexible by allowing waivers, exceptions, and modifications of stipulations on a project-specific basis, when warranted. Further flexibility in managing sage-grouse habitat comes with coordinating stipulations with laws and policies for the state in which a lease is located and collaborating with owners of adjacent lands. (See Table 2-9 in ch. 2 of the draft EIS.)
More than 100 meetings with key stakeholders, including state and local governments, resulted in the proposed alternatives analyzed in the draft EIS and data that supports the analysis.
Comments received during the recent 90-day public comment period and further coordination with state, local and Tribal partners will be used to finalize the environmental analysis and amendments to the 2015 plans.
The final EIS may revise or combine the alternatives presented in the draft EIS.