Milky Way arching over dark desert sagebrush landscape for an article about Oregon Outback dark sky sanctuary

Oregon outback becomes world’s largest dark sky sanctuary at 2.5 million acres

A vast stretch of high desert in southeastern Oregon has just earned a title that stargazers and conservationists have long hoped for. The Oregon Outback International Dark Sky Sanctuary received official certification from DarkSky International this week, covering 2.5 million acres of Lake County and becoming the largest of 19 designated dark sky sanctuaries on Earth.

At a glance

  • Dark sky sanctuary: The Oregon Outback now holds the world’s largest designation of its kind, covering roughly half the land area of New Jersey in southeastern Oregon.
  • Light pollution protection: Almost 1.7 million of the 2.5 million acres are managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, with monitoring and lighting improvement commitments built into the certification.
  • Expansion potential: Organizers hope the sanctuary could eventually grow to cover more than 11 million acres of the surrounding region.

Why the Oregon Outback is so dark

The Oregon Outback sits at high elevation with almost no artificial light for miles in every direction. No power lines. Few buildings. Just sagebrush, rock, and open sky.

DarkSky International describes the region’s skies as already among the darkest in the world. Travel Southern Oregon notes that visitors often describe them as “inky or velvety black” — and that the sheer scale of the darkness tends to catch people off guard, even those who came specifically looking for it.

“It’s surprising sometimes to see that many stars all at once,” said Bob Hackett, executive director of Travel Southern Oregon and one of the people who helped facilitate the nomination. “It catches you and it makes you pause because you feel like you can touch it.”

More than a view

The high-desert landscape that makes this sanctuary possible is also ecologically rich. The region sits along the Pacific Flyway, a major migration route for birds traveling between North and South America. It supports bighorn sheep and sage grouse, two species that depend on intact, low-disturbance terrain.

The area also contains one of the oldest known human occupation sites in North America, a reminder that this land has held significance for people for a very long time.

Darkness itself matters for wildlife. Research from DarkSky International documents how artificial light disrupts migration patterns, feeding behavior, and reproduction across dozens of species. Protecting the night sky here isn’t just about human wonder — it keeps ecosystems functioning.

Years in the making

The certification didn’t come quickly. It required years of coordination among federal agencies, state officials, local governments, community members, and multiple legal jurisdictions. All parties had to agree to the plan, commit to ongoing sky monitoring, and implement lighting improvements where needed.

Dawn Nilson, the environmental consultant who wrote the area’s certification application, put it plainly: “As the population of Oregon and the trend of light pollution continue to rise, the unparalleled scale and quality of the outback’s dark skies will long serve as a starry refuge for people and wildlife alike.”

The Oregon Outback joins more than 200 protected dark-sky places worldwide, including Death Valley National Park in California, Exmoor National Park in the U.K., and Ainos National Park on the Greek island of Kefalonia. DarkSky International’s program has been running for more than two decades, built on a mix of lighting policy reform, community education, and formal designation.

A boost for local communities, too

Tourism officials are hopeful the sanctuary status will bring visitors — and economic benefit — to a region that doesn’t see a lot of either. Hackett described a vision where the designation drives development that communities themselves shape and choose.

“We are going to leave this landscape better for the work that we did and also drive community economic development in a way [communities] choose,” he said.

That said, the sanctuary’s remoteness is both its greatest asset and a real logistical challenge. Visitors need to plan carefully — there are no amenities waiting at the edge of 2.5 million acres of sagebrush. Whether the sanctuary can attract meaningful tourism without compromising the very darkness it protects remains an open question worth watching.

For now, the Oregon Outback offers something increasingly rare: a place where, as Hackett described it, the vastness of the cosmos above seems to pull people closer to whoever they’re standing with on the ground. “That’s right,” he said. “That’s the experience.”

The DarkSky International sanctuary program continues to accept applications from qualifying regions around the world.

Read more

For more on this story, see: The Guardian

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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