
Working at the Landscape Scale: Lessons from the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Planning Process
The state of California has one of the most aggressive renewable energy portfolio standards in the
country with a goal of renewable energy sources supplying 50 percent of utility retail sales by 2030.
At the same time, the Department of Interior has a goal of producing 20,000 megawatts of clean
energy from public lands by 2020. The Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP) was a
22.5 million acre joint federal-state planning effort by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, California Energy Commission, and California Department of Fish and
Wildlife to streamline the permitting process for renewable energy projects proposed in the
California desert while allowing for the conservation and improvement of ecological and social
resources. Due to its geographic scale and level of governmental and stakeholder collaboration, the
DRECP was one of the most ambitious attempts at landscape-scale planning to date.
As a requirement for the University of Michigan’s School of Natural Resources and Environment
(SNRE) Capstone Master’s Project, four SNRE students performed an evaluation of the six-year
planning process that created the Draft DRECP. Drawing from data collected from over 60
interviews of individuals involved, this report analyzes the six-year process by which the Draft
DRECP was created to produce a series of lessons learned. These lessons are categorized by major
elements of the process, including (1) Governance Structure, (2) Science and Analysis, (3) Public
and Stakeholder Engagement, and (4) Tribal Consultation. The report concludes by making a series
of recommendations for future landscape-scale planning processes.
Bengtson, Anna
Cudmore, Alyssa
Fadie, Brian
Markowitz, David