27.03.2008 14:30:00
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Reliant Energy Partners with Environmental Agencies to Restore 1,170 Acres of Columbia Bottomlands
Reliant Energy announced today that it has entered into an innovative
agreement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Fish and
Wildlife Foundation to preserve and restore 1,170 acres in the Columbia
Bottomlands forest in Brazoria County.
Reliant Energy is providing approximately $300,000 to assist the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service in its effort to preserve and protect the
Columbia Bottomlands. The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation is
matching Reliant’s funding, bringing the total
investment to almost $600,000.
These funds will be used to acquire additional land that will be
reforested, decreasing the impact of carbon emissions on the
environment. As the native hardwood trees on this land mature, they will
sequester, or hold, more than 154,400 tons of carbon, helping to reduce
greenhouse gases.
"Reliant Energy is committed to environmental
stewardship,” said Mark Jacobs, Reliant
Energy, president and chief executive officer. "This
project provides a great opportunity for us to demonstrate that
commitment. Through this innovative public-private partnership we are
able to help preserve a piece of this vital habitat and reduce
greenhouse gases.”
In addition to this benefit and the restoration of critical wildlife
habitat and biodiversity, the conversion of land cleared decades ago to
bottomland forest will improve water quality, enhance flood control and
provide recreation and wildlife habitat.
"This project will have a very positive impact
locally in Brazoria County, not only in conservation, but in the quality
of life for the people here,” said State Rep.
Dennis Bonnen, chair of the Environmental Regulations Committee. "There
will be many recreation and ecotourism benefits.”
The Columbia Bottomlands stretches across the coastal plain between the
Brazos, San Bernard and Colorado rivers. The area is vital to migrating
neo-tropical birds, as well as native wildlife and plant species. The
land, which was formerly used for agriculture, is being restored through
a combination of natural re-forestation and selected tree plantings.
The area is also home to the San Bernard Oak, the largest live oak in
Texas, and includes some of the largest remaining tracts of old-growth
bottomland forest in the southern U.S. It extends through four counties,
Brazoria, Matagorda, Fort Bend and Wharton. In the 1800s, it was a
forest of more than 1,000 square miles. Today less than 25 percent
remains in forests.
One unique element of this project is the carbon credits associated with
this property. Reliant’s agreement with the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service allows the company to purchase carbon
credits equal to the amount of carbon that is removed by the trees over
time.
"We hope that other businesses and
organizations will follow Reliant’s lead and
see this as an important model. While conserving and restoring forests
in the Columbia Bottomlands is important for wildlife and people
directly, it also helps decrease carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by
permanently storing carbon in the standing trees, roots and soil of the
forest,” says Mike Lange, wildlife biologist
with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "It
is critical to protect the land in perpetuity in order to allow forests
to be restored and carbon to be permanently removed from the atmosphere.
It is easy to plant a tree, but for carbon sequestration to work, the
land that tree is planted on must be protected permanently.”
In recent years, Reliant Energy’s
environmental staff has worked with more than 200 organizations to
restore and preserve habitat in Florida, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Texas,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and California. While Reliant is a
partner or owner in eight other re-forestation projects in the southern
U.S., the Columbia Bottomlands project represents the first that will
primarily incorporate natural forest re-growth as opposed to mass
planting of native bottomland hardwoods. This project accentuates the
importance of conservation as a key element in carbon sequestration.
Reliant also actively supports energy conservation with programs
including Smart Energy, providing pointers about saving energy at www.reliant.com/saveenergy
and environmental education through facilities such as the Education
Center being developed at Hudson Woods in the Columbia Bottomlands.
Reliant Energy, Inc. (NYSE:RRI), based in Houston, Texas, provides
electricity and energy services to retail and wholesale customers in the
United States. In Texas, the company provides service to more than 1.8
million retail electricity customers, including residential and small
business customers and commercial, industrial, governmental and
institutional customers. Reliant also serves commercial, industrial,
governmental and institutional customers in the PJM (Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and Maryland) market.
The company is one of the largest independent power producers in the
nation with approximately 16,000 megawatts of power generation capacity
across the United States. These strategically located generating assets
utilize natural gas, fuel oil and coal. For more information, visit www.reliant.com.
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