The
new policy comes after years of lobbying from clean power
developers who argued that lease rates and fees for facilities
on federal lands were too high to draw investment.
In a statement, the Department of Interior said rents and fees
for solar and wind projects would fall by about 50%.
The administration also said it would boost the number of people
processing renewable energy environmental reviews and permit
applications through the creation of five coordinating offices
in Washington, Arizona, California, Nevada and Utah.
The offices are expected to improve coordination with other
federal agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and
the departments of agriculture, energy and defense.
Interior is seeking to meet a congressional mandate to permit 25
gigawatts of renewable energy on federal lands by 2025. That is
enough capacity to power about 4.75 million homes. The U.S.
Bureau of Land Management permitted 2.89 GW last year, up 35%
from the previous year.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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