The Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) promulgated its final Conservation and Landscape Health Rule on May 9, 2024 (“Rule”). The Rule will go into effect June 10, 2024. The Rule marks a significant turning point in BLM’s approach to management of its lands by expressly placing conservation, restoration, and preservation principles “on par” with historic uses in the BLM’s approach to resource management planning.
In the past, BLM has operated under its multiple use mandate by developing resource management plans that prioritize traditional elements of multiple use like grazing, timber harvest, recreation, and oil and gas extraction while effecting its conservation policies through the planning process by setting aside separate land use allocations for Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (“ACEC”) and designated wilderness areas. Now, under the Rule, the BLM is expanding its ability to designate and inventory ACEC lands for important natural, cultural, and scenic resources that have the additional benefit of protecting landscape intactness and habitat connectivity. The Rule further adopts a progressive approach to science, calling on the agency to use “high-quality information” like Indigenous Knowledge, and principles of ecosystem resilience and adaptive management.
Additionally, the BLM is adopting a novel mitigation and restoration leasing program through which a party may lease a portion of land for the express purpose of either restoring land or offsetting the impacts resulting from other land use authorizations. An interested party may lease the land for a period of time sufficient for the purpose of the restoration and, so long as the lease is in effect, no party may do anything with the tract of land that is inconsistent with the purpose of the lease.
The Rule also provides additional detail on BLM’s consultation with Tribes, requiring the agency to respect Indigenous Knowledge through exploring opportunities for co-stewardship of public lands, to work with Tribes to determine when Indigenous Knowledge can be used to inform alternatives, mitigation, and effects analysis, and to communicate to relevant Tribes post-decisionmaking to inform the Tribe how the agency used Indigenous Knowledge in its decisionmaking.
Finally, the Rule may breathe life into a relatively dormant provision of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, providing that the agency “shall…take any action necessary to prevent unnecessary or undue degradation of the lands.” 43 U.S.C. § 1732(b). This Rule provides a definition of “unnecessary or undue degradation” in the context of the Rule’s conservation goals, highlighting that the degradation can be either “unnecessary” or “undue,” and that the provision applies when either type of degradation is present. The Rule provides that BLM “must implement [the principles of ecosystem resilience] through…prevention of unnecessary or undue degradation.” Clients with hydroelectric or other renewable energy proposals on BLM lands should pay special attention to this provision as they navigate their environmental review through NEPA.