Spoiled Parks
Rocky Mountain National Park
Background
Rocky Mountain National Park covers 415 square miles atop the Continental Divide in the Front Range mountains of Colorado. The park consists of a varied terrain of extremes, from wooded forests to mountain tundra, and has some of the highest altitudes of national parks in the nation, with Longs Peak rising up to 14,259 feet.
All this is within easy driving distance of the millions of residents of the Denver metropolitan area and Front Range communities. Rocky Mountain National Park is also integrally connected to the surrounding landscape and gateway communities along both its east and west entrances.
With over 4.5 million visitors every year, Rocky Mountain is one of the most visited parks within the National Park System. The majority of visitors pass through one of the two major gateways to the park: either Estes Park from the east or Grand Lake from the west. Recent statistics show that visitors to the park spend about $306 million annually in gateway regions, supporting over 4,300 jobs and creating a total economic output of $464 million for the region.
Spoiling Park Resources
Air pollution from drilling activities threaten the clean air and healthy ecosystems that draw visitors to the region. Just east of the park is Weld County, home to a dramatic boom in oil and gas production. This development has caused the park to fall out of compliance with the standards set under the Clean Air Act. Additionally, the BLM has offered a slew of lands to the oil and gas industry west of the park totaling more than 60,000 acres. These leases are directly in important wintering grounds for elk which migrate in and out of the park.
Analysis from the National Park Service and the Environmental Protection Agency shows Colorado’s already severely compromised air quality is worsening. The same sources of pollution harming health, wildlife and landscapes are also driving climate change, a grave threat in the arid west transforming ecosystems in sensitive alpine zones, including Rocky Mountain National Park. Climate change is facilitating the spread of invasive grasses in the park as well as pine bark beetles, which are killing millions of trees. These changes, combined with a hotter, drier climate, are in turn driving a significant increase in wildfires in the parks.
Resources Threatened
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Air quality
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Climate
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Wildlife
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Public health
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Outdoor recreation economy
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