NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wildfi re Continued from Page A1 Scientists worried Some scientists have expressed concern that the buff er pool is not suffi ciently protected against fi re risks over the 100-year period, and hold up Warm Springs as an example. “The fact that the Warm Springs project has burned twice in a decade is a perfect example of the problem,” said Danny Cullenward, lecturer at Stanford Law School and pol- icy director of CarbonPlan, a nonprofi t that independently analyzes carbon removal opportunities based on science and data. “There is no way the protocol’s buff er pool holds up if that pattern is common in the program.” The wildfi re in 2020 wasn’t the fi rst time the project area burned. When the project was in the setup stage, a wildfi re burned around 2,000 acres of forest within the project boundaries, said Don Samp- son, who helped arrange the agreement when he was chief executive of Warm Springs Ventures, the tribe’s economic arm. Sampson worked for ventures from 2013 to 2016. When the project was in its early stages, said Sampson, a series of independent anal- yses took place to verify the amount and value of carbon that could be sequestered and off set. The entire process took 3½ years to complete, longer than fi rst anticipated due to some setbacks, including the wildfi re that burned around 2,000 acres of the forest. “They had to reassess the burned areas and how they would regenerate,” said Sampson. Carbon credits When the preparation work was complete, the Cal- ifornia Air Resources Board issued Warm Springs 2.15 million carbon off set credits. The off sets represented 2.15 million metric tons of veri- fi ed greenhouse gas emission reductions. Annual growth within the project boundary can be con- verted to additional carbon off sets that the tribes can sell. Wednesday, March 24, 2021 “THE FACT THAT THE WARM SPRINGS PROJECT HAS BURNED TWICE IN A DECADE IS A PERFECT EXAMPLE OF THE PROBLEM. THERE IS NO WAY THE PROTOCOL’S BUFFER POOL HOLDS UP IF THAT PATTERN IS COMMON IN THE PROGRAM.” Danny Cullenward, lecturer at Stanford Law School and policy director of CarbonPlan, Contributed photo/Oregon Department of Forestry The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs are evaluating a carbon sequester project after much of the project area burned last year. To date, more than 2.6 mil- lion Air Resources Board car- bon off set credits have been issued to Warm Springs. “There are about 20 proj- ects in the range of 1 mil- lion to 5 million off set cred- its upfront, and a handful that get as big as almost 15 mil- lion,” said Cullenward. “I would say Warm Springs is one of the large projects but not atypically large nor on the extreme end of the size distribution.” How are the off set cred- its used? In 2018, the tribes announced they had con- tracted with a third party to sell the credits over several years and that those credits would “provide revenue in the tens of millions of dol- lars for tribal operations, improved forest management and economic development initiatives.” The tribes declined to confi rm the specifi c amount received from the agreement. ‘Much-needed revenue’ Sampson said the tribes set aside some of the funds for forest thinning and for- est health projects, to pre- vent wildfi re and tree disease. “Overall it brought it much-needed reve- nue,” he said. “That was the biggest revenue source they had for quite a few years.” Funds were also set aside for a cannabis project, said Sampson. That project stalled during his tenure at Warm Springs but was later revived into a hemp project, which received federal approval last year. The decision to enter the program was timely, as it coincided with the winding down of the local sawmill, Warm Springs Forest Prod- ucts Industries, which was struggling to turn a profi t due to a lack of large logs. The program was also consis- tent with the tribe’s policy on generating revenue through environmentally conscious ventures. “Rather than take an extractive approach and cut- ting timber and selling logs off the reservation, (Tribal Council) wanted to transition to one that was more conser- vation-based and still make revenue for the tribe,” said Sampson. “So from that point of view, it was a successful project.” The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. www.eomediagroup.com EASTERN OREGON UNIVERSITY SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTER IS SEEKING A PART-TIME BUSINESS ADVISER RESPONSIBLE FOR COVERING ALL OF GRANT AND WHEELER COUNTY. Grant SWCD Weed Control Dept. 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S235168-1 A18 Thanks to the Grant County Court and Northeast Oregon Forests Resource Advisory Committee, Grant Weed Control is able to offer a 50% Cost Share Program for Noxious Weed Control on Private Grazing Lands, through a Title II funded Grant Project. This program will provide a maximum $5,000 of noxious weed control services with a $2,500 maximum landowner contribution to qualifying participants. To be eligible for participation, the treatment property must not be actively irrigated and must be primarily managed for livestock grazing, minimum of 20 acres in size, located within Grant County, and must contain weed species listed on the Grant County Noxious Weed List. Applications for this limited weed control assistance opportunity will be funded on a first come first serve basis. Applications due by April 16th. Contact the Grant Soil and Water Conservation District Office at (541) 575-1554 or visit 721 S. 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