(San Francisco, Calif. – September 1, 2011) Sustainable Conservation, in partnership with
Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental
Incentives, Protected Harvest and the Sierra Nevada Conservancy, has been awarded
a $372,000 Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) to develop a pilot program to measure environmental benefits
in California’s Mokelumne River Watershed. The program will attract funding to
pay farmers, ranchers and foresters to enhance nature’s benefits, including
water purification, erosion control and wildlife habitat.
“Typically farmers and ranchers are paid to grow crops and
raise livestock,” said Ashley Boren, executive director of Sustainable
Conservation. “But many of these individuals who manage their land responsibly
provide important services that benefit nature and human well-being. We need to
create ways to pay farmers and ranchers for these services.”
The pilot program will develop uniform standards and payment
mechanisms that allow private utilities, government agencies, communities,
foundations and nonprofits to pay landowners and land managers to enhance and
manage their land in ways that benefit people and the environment.
“This innovative pilot project will demonstrate that
a watershed-wide approach to compensate landowners for conservation actions is
the best way to achieve conservation goals that support local communities and
provide environmental benefits to people outside the watershed, by improving
water quality and water storage and increasing habitat for wildlife, said Belinda Morris, regional
director of the Working Lands Program for Environmental Defense Fund.
“This natural infrastructure will produce environmental benefits at a
much lower cost than building man-made infrastructure to achieve comparable
benefits.”
The Mokelumne River begins high in the Sierra Nevada, flows through
the foothills across the Central Valley and into the Sacramento-San Joaquin
Delta, and empties into the San Francisco Bay. This watershed provides numerous
environmental and economic benefits to the region. For example, the Mokelumne
River delivers water to 1.4 million people in the East Bay, and provides
agricultural water supply and storage to irrigate more than 800,000 acres of
vineyards and other crops. The river also provides recreational benefits
like whitewater rafting and popular trout fishing, and is home to a variety of
habitats that support numerous plants and animals. (See link to watershed map
at: http://www.suscon.org/images/Mokelumne_River_Map.JPG).
“Our forested watersheds provide multiple benefits to
downstream water users as well as to millions of other Californians by storing
and filtering water in the snowpack and meadows, by providing a sustainable
habitat for wildlife and plants, and through carbon sequestration,” said Sierra
Nevada Conservancy Executive Officer Jim Branham. “The issues in the Mokelumne
River Watershed are representative of other watersheds with headwaters in the
Sierra, so we look to this pilot program as one that will provide information
that is transferrable across the region.”
A scenic river, the Mokelumne faces multiple threats,
including: groundwater overdraft, degradation of some managed lands, increased danger
of uncharacteristically large fires, and climate change that reduces the
snowpack that supplies water for the region. Landowners and land managers
within the area are looking for ways to protect the existing natural resources
and restore many of the watershed functions. The pilot program will devise ways
to compensate the good land stewards.
This project, overseen by Sustainable Conservation, engages
more than a dozen organizations, including:
- Amador
Calaveras Consensus Group
- East
Bay Municipal Utility District
- Environmental
Defense Fund
- Environmental
Incentives
- Foothill
Conservancy
- Lower
Mokelumne River Watershed Stewardship Steering Committee
- Mokelumne
Watershed Stakeholder Working Group
- Protected
Harvest
- San
Joaquin County Resource Conservation District
- Sierra
Nevada Conservancy
- The
Nature Conservancy
- U.S.
Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region
- U.S.
Forest Service - Amador Ranger District, Eldorado National Forest
- U.S.
Forest Service - Calaveras Ranger District, Stanislaus National Forest
- Vino
Farms, LLC
Through CIGs, the USDA's Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) is investing nearly $22.5 million via 52 grants in 40 states to
support innovations that conserve and protect natural resources, while
enhancing agricultural productivity. A summary of all proposals selected for
2011 is available at: www.nrcs.usda.gov.
"The grants will help to spur creativity and problem-solving
to benefit conservation-minded farmers and ranchers,” said USDA NRCS Chief Dave
White. “Everyone who relies upon the
sustainability of our nation's natural resources for clean water, food and
fiber, or their way of life will benefit from these grants."
For more info, please visit www.suscon.org.
Watershed map: http://www.suscon.org/images/Mokelumne_River_Map.JPG
Contact:
Alex Karolyi
415-977-0380 x317
akarolyi@suscon.org
Or
Sean Crowley
202-550-6524-c
scrowley@edf.org
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