RENO, Nev. (AP) โ Conservationists and a Native American tribe are suing the U.S. to try to block a Nevada lithium mine they say will drive an endangered desert wildflower to extinction, disrupt groundwater flows and threaten cultural resources.
The Center for Biological Diversity promised the court battle a week ago when the U.S. Interior Department approved Ioneer Ltd.โs Rhyolite Ridge lithium-boron mine at the only place Tiehmโs buckwheat is known to exist in the world, near the California line halfway between Reno and Las Vegas.
It is the latest in a series of legal fights over projects President Joe Bidenโs administration is pushing under his clean energy agenda intended to cut reliance on fossil fuels, in part by increasing the production of lithium to make electric vehicle batteries and solar panels.
The new lawsuit says the Interior Departmentโs approval of the mine marks a dramatic about-face by U.S wildlife experts who warned nearly two years ago that Tiehmโs buckwheat was โin danger of extinction nowโ when they listed it as an endangered species in December 2022.
โOne cannot save the planet from climate change while simultaneously destroying biodiversity,โ said Fermina Stevens, director of the Western Shoshone Defense Project, which joined the center in the lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court in Reno.
โThe use of minerals, whether for EVs or solar panels, does not justify this disregard for Indigenous cultural areas and keystone environmental laws,โ said John Hadder, director of the Great Basin Resource Watch, another co-plaintiff.
Rita Henderson, spokeswoman for Interiorโs Bureau of Land Management in Reno, said Friday the agency had no immediate comment.
Ioneer Vice President Chad Yeftich said the Australia-based mining company intends to intervene on behalf of the U.S. and โvigorously defendโ approval of the project, โwhich was based on its careful and thorough permitting process.โ
โWe are confident that the BLM will prevail,โ Yeftich said. He added that he doesnโt expect the lawsuit will postpone plans to begin construction next year.
The lawsuit says the mine will harm sites sacred to the Western Shoshone people. That includes Cave Spring, a natural spring less than a mile (1.6 kilometers) away described as โa site of intergenerational transmission of cultural and spiritual knowledge.โ
But it centers on alleged violations of the Endangered Species Act. It details the Fish and Wildlife Serviceโs departure from the dire picture it painted earlier of threats to the 6-inch-tall (15-centimeter-tall) wildflower with cream or yellow blooms bordering the open-pit mine Ioneer plans to dig three times as deep as the length of a football field.
The mineโs permit anticipates up to one-fifth of the nearly 1.5 square miles (3.6 square kilometers) the agency designated as critical habitat surrounding the plants โ home to various pollinators important to their survival โ would be lost for decades, some permanently.
When proposing protection of the 910 acres (368 hectares) of critical habitat, the service said โthis unit is essential to the conservation and recovery of Tiehmโs buckwheat.โ The agency formalized the designation when it listed the plant in December 2022, dismissing the alternative of less-stringent threatened status.
โWe find that a threatened species status is not appropriate because the threats are severe and imminent, and Tiehmโs buckwheat is in danger of extinction now, as opposed to likely to become endangered in the future,โ the agency concluded.
The lawsuit also discloses for the first time that the plantโs population, numbering fewer than 30,000 in the governmentโs latest estimates, has suffered additional losses since August that were not considered in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serviceโs biological opinion.
The damage is similar to what the bureau concluded was caused by rodents eating the plants in a 2020 incident that reduced the population as much as 60%, the lawsuit says.
The Fish and Wildlife Service said in its August biological opinion that while the project โwill result in the long-term disturbance (approximately 23 years) of 146 acres (59 hectares) of the plant community … and the permanent loss of 45 acres (18 hectares), we do not expect the adverse effects to appreciably diminish the value of critical habitat as a whole.โ