Forum on Conservation Finance Creative Approaches to Sustain Land and Water
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
FORUM ON CONSERVATION FINANCE Creative Approaches to Sustain Land and Water APRIL 2, 2013 CASPER, WYOMING Hosted by The University of Wyoming Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources The University of Wyoming Stroock Forum on Wyoming Lands and People The Wyoming Chapter of the Nature Conservancy FORUM ON CONSERVATION FINANCE Creative Solutions to Sustain Land and Water April 2–3, 2013 Casper, Wyoming Hosts University of Wyoming Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources University of Wyoming Stroock Forum on Wyoming Lands and People The Nature Conservancy, Wyoming Chapter Sponsors Encana Oil & Gas, Inc. Sweetwater River Conservancy University of Wyoming Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources University of Wyoming Stroock Forum on Wyoming Lands and People The Nature Conservancy, Wyoming Chapter APRIL 2 Setting the Stage: Why We Need Conservation Finance 8:00 a.m. Welcome and Purpose Jason Shogren, Stroock Professor, Department of Economics and Finance, University of Wyoming 8:10 a.m. Conservation Finance and the Governor’s Energy Strategy Nephi Cole, Policy Advisor, Office of Governor Matt Mead 8:30 a.m. A Global View: Common Themes, Common Issues Kenneth G. Lay, former Treasurer of the World Bank, Senior Managing Director at the Rock Creek Group The Basics: Conservation Finance Tools and Structures 9:00 a.m. Conservation Finance for Everyone Story Clark, Consultant 9:45 a.m. Break 10:00 a.m. Wildlife Habitat Exchanges: From practices to quantified outcomes Sara Brodnax, Environmental Defense Fund 10:30 a.m. Conservation/Mitigation Banking and Credit Trading Michael Fraley, Sweetwater River Conservancy 11:00 a.m. Leveraging state investment with public support Bob Budd, Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource Trust 11:30 a.m. Local-level Conservation Finance: The Sheridan County Ballot Initiative Brian Kuehl, Vela Environmental 3 FORUM ON CONSERVATION FINANCE Lunchtime Keynote Noon-12:45 Lunch provided 12:45 p.m. Lunchtime keynote: Mark Gordon, Wyoming State Treasurer Applied Examples of Market-based Approaches to Conservation Finance 1:30 p.m. Market Approaches to Water Management Cory Toye, Trout Unlimited 2:00 p.m. Preventative Mitigation and the Dunes Sagebrush Lizard Brian Hays, Texas A&M Institute of Renewable Natural Resources 2:30 p.m. The Upper Green River Conservation Exchange Kristi Hansen, UW Department of Agriculture & Applied Economics 3:00 p.m. Break Public-Private Partnerships: Lessons from Wyoming 3:30 p.m. Panel Discussion: Natural gas mitigation in southwest Wyoming (JIO-PAPO): Using private lands to offset impacts on public lands Panelists: Don Simpson, Bureau of Land Management, Wyoming Randy Teeuwen, energy industry Holly Copeland, The Nature Conservancy Matt Kauffman, U.S. Geological Survey and University of Wyoming Moderator: Kristi Hansen, UW Department of Agriculture & Applied Economics 4 Closing Remarks 4:50 p.m. Indy Burke, Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources Andrea Erickson-Quiroz, The Nature Conservancy 5:00 p.m. Reception – FireRock Steakhouse, 6100 E 2nd St, 82609 (Map and directions on page 6.) APRIL 3 Field trip to Pathfinder Ranch If you are signed up for the field trip, please meet at the Hampton Inn (1100 N Poplar St.) at 8:30 a.m. Transportation will be provided to the ranch. 8:30 a.m. Meet at Hampton Inn, 1100 N Poplar St Drive to Pathfinder Ranch 9:30 a.m. Implementing Mitigation and Conservation Banks Mark Sattelberg, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 10:15 a.m. The Pathfinder Ranch and Mitigation Sites Michael Fraley, Sweetwater River Conservancy 10:45 a.m. Field tour 11:30 a.m. Lunch 1:30 p.m. Arrive Casper 5 FORUM ON CONSERVATION FINANCE RECEPTION 5 p.m., Tuesday, April 2 FireRock Steakhouse 6100 E 2nd St, Casper 15-minute drive . From Casper College, turn Right on Casper Mountain Road (WY-251) . After 1.6 miles, turn Left on Wyoming Boulevard (WY-258) . After 4.6 miles, turn Right on Blackmore Road . After 1.0 mile, turn Right on 2nd St. FireRock steakhouse is on the left after 0.7 miles In your name tag, find two tickets redeemable for wine or beer at the reception. 6 SPEAKER BIOS Sara Brodnax Sara Brodnax bio to go here. Bob Budd is the Executive Director of the Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource Trust, a program established to enhance wildlife habitats and the natural resource heritage of Wyoming. Prior to helping launch the WWNRT program, Budd was manager of Red Canyon Ranch, and Director of Land Management for The Nature Conservancy in Wyoming. In his work there, he was credited with developing and maintaining large-scale ecological process, while maintaining economic production on a working cattle ranch. Before his tenure with TNC, Bob spent 15 years with the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, 10 as Executive Director. Bob Budd has a Master of Science degree in Range Management, and Bachelor of Science degrees in Agricultural Business and Animal Science, all from the University of Wyoming. He lives in Cheyenne. Bob Budd Bob Budd is the Executive Director of the Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource Trust, a program established to enhance wildlife habitats and the natural resource heritage of Wyoming. Prior to helping launch the WWNRT program, Budd was manager of Red Canyon Ranch, and Director of Land Management for The Nature Conservancy in Wyoming. In his work there, he was credited with developing and maintaining large-scale ecological process, while maintaining economic production on a working cattle ranch. Before his tenure with TNC, Bob spent 15 years with the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, 10 as Executive Director. Bob Budd has a Master of Science degree in Range Management, and Bachelor of Science degrees in Agricultural Business and Animal Science, all from the University of Wyoming. He lives in Cheyenne. 7 FORUM ON CONSERVATION FINANCE Indy Burke Dr. Ingrid “Indy” Burke is Director of the Haub School and Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources. She is a Wyoming Excellence Chair at the University of Wyoming and faculty member in the departments of Botany in the College of Arts and Sciences and Renewable Resources in the College of Agriculture. Prior to her current role, Burke was a professor in the Department of Forest, Rangeland and Watershed Stewardship at Colorado State University. In a career of more than 25 years, with a focus on the Rocky Mountain West, Burke has served as a member of several National Research Council committees and currently serves on the Science Advisory Board for the Environmental Protection Agency. She is an associate editor of Ecological Applications and has been on the editorial board of Ecosystems and Forest Ecology and Management. She is also a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Institute of Biological Sciences and the Ecological Society of America. Burke has been designated as a National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellow, a National Academy of Sciences Education Fellow in the Life Sciences, and was recently elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences. She received her Ph.D. in Botany at University of Wyoming, and her B.S. at Middlebury College. Story Clark Story Clark is a consultant specializing in land conservation strategy and finance, advising conservation organizations and foundations in the Rocky Mountain Region and elsewhere. She has worked in land conservation and land use planning for over 30 years in association with (among others) the Jackson Hole Land Trust, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, and as a county planner for Teton County, Wyoming. Clark currently serves on boards or advisory boards that include: the American Conservation Association, Conservation International, Ruckelshaus Institute for Environment and Natural Resources at the University of Wyoming, the Wyoming Stockgrowers Agricultural Land Trust, the Tuckernuck Land Trust, and the Lady Bird Johnson Award Jury. She recently retired from the boards of the Land Trust Alliance and the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke University. 8 Nephi Cole Prior to joining Governor Matt Mead’s staff as a policy advisor, Nephi Cole worked for the Natural Resources Conservation Service for 11 years. At the NRCS he was a soil scientist and the Watershed Coordinator and Partnership Liaison to the Wyoming Association of Conservation Districts. Cole has extensive experience with GIS technologies. He graduated from Utah State University with a Master’s Degree in Soil Science, following a Bachelor’s in Environmental Soil and Water Science with Geology and Agronomy minors. Cole also served in Sao Paulo, Brazil with a non-profit for two years. Holly Copeland Holly Copeland is a conservation scientist with The Nature Conservancy in Lander, Wyoming, where her research focuses on Western conservation issues such as forecasting the impacts of future energy development on wildlife and mitigation planning through the use of GIS and spatial modeling tools. Current projects include modeling the benefits of conservation easements and policy on greater sage- grouse and mule deer populations, regional wetlands monitoring and assessment, and predicting the vulnerability of Wyoming’s conservation areas to climate change, invasive species, and development. She holds a master’s degree in geography from the University of Wyoming and a bachelor’s degree in geography from the University of California, Davis. Andrea Erickson-Quiroz Andrea Erickson-Quiroz currently is the Wyoming State Director for The Nature Conservancy and leads programs of Wyoming, based in Lander. Since starting in this role, she has focused The Conservancy’s efforts on Wyoming’s grasslands, headwaters and the Greater Yellowstone, with an emphasis on collaborative efforts with agriculture, the energy industry and public agencies. Erickson-Quiroz and her team piloted mitigation planning projects, in partnership with energy companies, to guide $50M of mitigation investment in Wyoming.