For first time in months, BLM advances solar power project – E&E News by POLITICO

Full access to essential energy & environment news for professionals. Learn more


7-DAY UNLIMITED ACCESS

FREE TRIAL


7-DAY UNLIMITED ACCESS
By Scott Streater | 12/16/2025 04:24 PM EST
After the Bureau of Land Management signed off on changes to a Nevada solar farm approved during the Biden administration, construction may start next month.
Transmission towers are shown near solar panels from the 100-megawatt MGM Resorts Mega Solar Array after it was launched on June 28, 2021, in Dry Lake Valley, Nevada. Ethan Miller/AFP via Getty Images
The Trump administration for the first time in months is advancing a major solar power project.
The Bureau of Land Management on Monday issued a decision record authorizing a series of mostly minor revisions to the Libra Solar power project in southwestern Nevada that has been sitting in regulatory limbo for more than a year after its approval during the Biden administration.
The amended plan — the first move in months to advance one of the dozens of utility-scale solar power projects sitting in the permitting pipeline since President Donald Trump took office in January — means the project could begin construction next year, according to BLM.
It’s in stark contrast to Interior Department moves in the past six months. In July, the department announced that Interior Secretary Doug Burgum or other top leaders must sign off on each step of a wind or solar project on federal lands. A couple weeks later, Interior said agencies must consider the “capacity density” of energy projects, which observers said could disadvantage certain renewable energy projects.
Request a FREE trial to receive unlimited access to

The transformation of the energy sector.
Policy. Science. Business.
Congress. Legislation. Politics.
The leader in energy and environment news.
Late-breaking news.
© POLITICO, LLC

source

This entry was posted in Renewables. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply