BLM limits development to protect Gunnison Sage Grouse

Courtesy of Dave Showalter
Gunnison sage-grouse males fighting, photographed on a lek (mating site) that’s on private land in a pasture near Gunnison.

Photo: Sibley illustration Gunnison Sage-Grouse CROPPEDThe Bureau of Land Managment has issued a moratorium blocking oil, gas and coal leasing on 800,000 acres of public land in southwestern Colorado and eastern Utah that is habitat for the imperiled Gunnison sage grouse.

The moratorium described in the BLM memo prevents agency officials from offering and selling new leases, and requires that land-use plans be updated.

BLM spokesman Steven Hall says it's aimed at improving habitat and increasing populations of the chicken-sized birds.

But energy industry officials say they'll fight the moratorium.

Western Energy Alliance vice president Kathleen Sgamma says the decision will have serious economic affects.

"BLM is talking about restrictions on energy development, on ranching, on economic activities in rural communities in Colorado and Utah without looking at the impact of those restrictions on local economies and on job creation," Sgamma says.

Environmentalists argue the Gunnison Sage Grouse is very close to extinction and needs these protections

These new rules from the BLM come down as a prelude to an expected ruling by the Fish and Wildlife Service to list the bird as an endangered species.

The Gunnison Sage Grouse is related to the greater sage grouse, which is the focus of a separate debate over federal protection.