Biden officials make recommendations for protecting 30% of U.S. land,
water
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[May 07, 2021]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Biden administration
officials on Thursday took their first step toward carrying out the
president's campaign pledge to conserve 30% of U.S. land and water over
the next decade, outlining six categories for how land and water should
be used.
The report by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and White House Council on
Environmental Quality Chair Brenda Mallory calls on the administration
to back locally-led conservation projects across the country with
investments and focused policies.
“The President’s challenge is a call to action to support locally led
conservation and restoration efforts of all kinds and all over America,
wherever communities wish to safeguard the lands and waters they know
and love,” the officials wrote in a report to Biden's National Climate
Taskforce.
In one of his first executive orders, President Joe Biden set a goal to
protect 30% of land and water to safeguard sensitive lands and wildlife
from extraction and development by 2030 and directed cabinet members to
draft recommendations for carrying this out after his first 100 days in
office.
The report does not offer specifics about which areas could be set aside
for conservation or whether they would be protected from productive use
or resource extraction.
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Rep. Deb Haaland, D-NM, looks on during a Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources hearing on her nomination to be Interior
Secretary on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, U.S. February 23, 2021.
Graeme Jennings/Pool via REUTERS
It outlines six priority areas of focus for the
government for land that could ultimately get federal protection or
investment.
This includes: creating more parks and green space in
"nature-deprived communities," outdoor recreation access, preserving
fish and wildlife habitats and corridors, incentivizing voluntary
conservation efforts of fishers, ranchers, farmers, and forest
owners, supporting tribally-led conservation efforts and investing
in resilience and restoration projects, including a Civilian Climate
Corps.
The report also calls for a new interagency working group to develop
a conservation "atlas," which would establish a baseline of
information on lands and waters that have already been conserved or
restored to be able to track progress toward the 2030 goal.
Republican lawmakers oppose the so-called 30x30 goal. At an event
this week, Republicans on the House natural resources committee said
they were concerned that the government could designate strict
protections on some land that remained “productive.”
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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