U.S. fights new deadline for rare plant protections in Nevada

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Reno, Nevada (AP)-- The Biden administration says that a U.S. judge exceeded his authority when he gave federal wildlife officials a May 21 deadline to decide whether to formally propose endangered species protections for a rare desert wildflower at the center of a fight over a proposed lithium mine in Nevada.

Lawyers for the Interior Department filed an emergency request in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas last week asking Judge James Mahan to reconsider his order regarding the fate of the only Tiehm’s buckwheat plants known to exist in the world-- about 220 miles southeast of Reno.

The department says that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services intends to comply with the order to reach a finding by May 21 on whether the flower should receive protections under the Endangered Species Act.

But it says that it will be impossible to decide by then whether to designate critical habitat that conservationists want for the plant in an area where Australian mining company Ioneer Ltd. wants to dig for lithium and boron. The mine would help feed growing demand for lithium driven primarily by electric car batteries.

The judge on Friday granted the government’s request to block his order until he can rule on the merits of the arguments. Mahan ordered the Center for Biological Diversity, which sued over the plant, to respond by Tuesday and the government to reply by Thursday. He expects to issue a formal ruling on May 17th.

The Fish and Wildlife Service was supposed to decide last October whether to list the plant as endangered. It had said that staff and budget constraints would prevent it from deciding until September 30, 2021. Environmentalists first petitioned for the listing in 2019.

Mahan said in his April ruling that “more than enough time has passed” to complete the required yearlong review.

“By its own admission, FWS has violated the ESA by failing to issue a timely 12-month finding as to whether it intends to list Tiehm’s buckwheat as an endangered species,” he wrote. “This court finds no reason to grant additional time for FWS to make its admittedly overdue finding.”

Patrick Donnelly, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Nevada director, said that the government’s emergency motion is its latest attempt to stall while it tries to reach a conservation agreement with Ioneer. He said that wildlife officials are “spending more energy fighting our litigation than they are protecting” the plant.

“They have the gall to claim that their appeal of ruling they consider unfavorable constitutes an emergency, while Tiehm’s buckwheat is out here hanging by a thread, with Ioneer’s destructive mine looming over it,” he said.

Government lawyers said in the emergency motion last week that Mahan’s order requires the Fish and Wildlife Service to effectively skip a step in the listing process-- the completion of a 12-month finding-- and immediately proceed to another step-- proposed rules-- without first determining whether it is warranted.

“Not only does this put the cart before the horse, but it also contains FWS’s discretion to only one substantive outcome at the 12-month finding stage-- i.e., listing is warranted,” the motion says.

Government attorneys said that while it is possible the Fish and Wildlife Service may ultimately reach that outcome “based on its review of the best available science,” the Endangered Species Act “provides for three possible outcomes” after the yearlong review and gives the agency the power to make that choice “based on its own expert judgment.”

Ioneer has been allowed to intervene in the case and has until Thursday to file any court documents. It insists the flower can coexist with the proposed mine.

“No matter how the courts rule, Ioneer has made clear our intention to provide support for the Tiehm’s buckwheat while we develop this critically important project that will provide enough lithium to power hundreds of thousands of electric vehicles every year,” board Chairman James Calaway said in a statement Monday to the Associated Press.

Story via Scott Sonner with AP