House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc
Hastings
August 15, 2012
PERMALINK
Hastings’ Hydro Bill Will Protect and Promote
Hydropower Dams
followed by
Hastings’ Opening Statement at Field Hearing on
Protecting and Promoting Hydropower
Witnesses Provide Laundry List of Hydropower
Benefits for Jobs, Economy and Environment
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
Today, the House Natural Resources Committee held a
legislative field hearing in Pasco, WA on H.R. 6247,
the Savings Our Dams and Hydropower Development
and Jobs Act of 2012. Introduced by Chairman Doc
Hastings (WA-04), the bill would protect America’s
dams and promote new clean, low-cost hydropower to
help create jobs and grow the economy. Hydropower
accounts for 70 percent of electricity generation in
Washington and is source of reliable renewable
energy for millions of American families across the
country. The legislation received strong support
from Subcommittee on Water and Power Chairman Tom
McClintock (CA-04) as well as from a witness panel
of local stakeholders, farmers, irrigators and
elected officials.
“Our current Northwest dam infrastructure cleanly
powers our industries, businesses, jobs and families
– and at low cost. But we must not be satisfied with
the status quo. With ongoing threats to these dams
and future development of hydropower as a renewable
resource, we simply cannot take the status quo for
granted,”
said Chairman
Hastings.
“The bill
I introduced two weeks ago shines a bright light on
the enormous benefits and potential of federal and
non-federal hydropower dams, both in the Northwest
and across the nation. The bill, as with all
legislation, is a starting point for discussion and
contains common sense actions to protect this
renewable energy source. The people of the
Pacific Northwest know that removal of the lower
Snake River Dams would be an extreme action that
would cost jobs, increase power rates, and harm the
region’s economy.”
Chairman Hastings’ bill contains simple, common
sense reforms that will preserve low-cost
hydroelectric bills for millions of Americans
families, provide water certainty to American
farmers who feed the world, and protect valuable
navigation to transport billions of dollars worth of
goods. The bill
protects and promotes hydropower resources by ending
practices that diminish existing hydropower, cutting
regulatory red-tape, generating new non-federal
funding for new projects and improving transparency.
“Some
people seem to have forgotten that before the era of
dam construction, an endless cycle of withering
droughts and violent floods constantly plagued our
watersheds. Our dams tamed these environmentally
devastating events, they assured abundant water in
dry years and protected against the ravages of flood
years. By conserving water that would otherwise have
been lost to the ocean, they turned deserts into
oases and laid the foundation for a century of
growth and prosperity for the American west,”
said Subcommittee Chairman McClintock.
“Mr. Chairman, I believe your bill, HR 6247 offers a
very different future for our nation: a new era of
clean, cheap and abundant hydro-electricity; great
new reservoirs to store water in wet years to
protect us from shortages in dry ones. It envisions
a future in which families can enjoy the prosperity
that plentiful water and electricity provides.”
At the hearing, a panel of witnesses highlighted the
benefits of hydropower and the need for H.R. 6247 to
help protect this valuable renewable resource.
Jack Heffling, President of the United Power Trades
Organization and labor union representative, cited
scientific studies stating, “Dam removal will not
increase fish survival and would have a significant
negative impact on our economy and environment by
eliminating about 1,020 average megawatts of
carbon-free energy, increasing greenhouse gasses…and
reducing navigation capacity.” Heffling added,
“H.R. 6247, by enacting funding prohibitions on
dam removal ensures that the focus of salmon and
steelhead recovery is on actions that actually work
and help fish.”
Tom Flint, Washington farmer, Grant County PUD
Commissioner, and Founder of Save Our Dams, noted
the importance of dams to the local economy,
“These valuable renewable resources support reliable
electricity delivery, clean air and significant
economic benefits for millions of families and
businesses throughout the Pacific Northwest.”
Flint also made clear that, “renewable hydropower
generation and environmental performance goes
hand-in-hand,” citing statistics that new “turbines
and generators will boost the projects generation
capacity by 12 percent, and has fish passage
survival rate of 97 percent.” Flint also
mentioned the construction of a $35 million fish
slide, “Which studies show a fish survival rate
of 99 percent for steelhead and salmon.”
Jim Sanders, General Manager for Benton PUD
testified that, “At times it is hard to believe
that we have to defend the economic and
environmental benefits of the dams – but we do.”
Sanders thanked Chairman Hastings for introducing
his legislation to protect “the overall quality
of life we enjoy in the Pacific Northwest,” and
said he was glad to “see legislation that is
trying to help resolve some of the many challenges
facing our hydropower system.”
Kara Rowe, Affairs and Outreach Director for the
Washington Association of Wheat Growers spoke about
the importance of dams to navigation and
transportation of agriculture products,
“Breaching dams would end barge navigation, and put
up to 700,000 more trucks on the highways and
increase greenhouse gas emissions.” Rowe said,
“hundreds of thousands of jobs are tied directly
to the river system’s activity, trade and commerce,”
and that “without barging along the Columbia
Snake River system, our American agricultural system
would suffer consequences affecting every American
citizen.”
Chris Voigt, Executive Director of the Washington
State Potato Commission and Advisory Board Member,
Family Farm Alliance argued for the importance of
increasing hydropower stating, “I believe it’s
naïve to think that we can feed an additional two
billion people and reduce our reliance on fossil
fuels without growing our portfolio of water storage
and hydropower.” Voigt argued that, “Dams
play a critical role in the production of food for
this country and for others who are unable to feed
themselves.”
Jim Yost, Northwest Power and Conservation Council
and current chairman of the Council’s Power
Committee boasted that, “Idaho has the third
lowest electrical rate as a result of hydropower.”
However, Yost added that government red-tape
will cause consumer rates to increase, “As the
costs of Biological Opinions, FERC relicensing,
regulatory requirements, [and] mitigation…continue
to increase and force additional operations
expenses, the rates and bills of consumers will go
up.”
Highlights of H.R. 6247, the Saving Our Dams and
New Hydropower Development and Jobs Act:
-
Declares that hydropower is a renewable energy
source.
-
Prohibits federal funding from being used to
remove, breach or study the removal or breaching
of any hydropower dam unless explicitly
authorized by Congress.
-
Prohibits federal funding to organizations that
have engaged in dam removal or
hydropower-decreasing litigation against the
federal government.
-
Prohibits federal funding for new activities
proposed in Energy Secretary Steven Chu’s March
16, 2012
memorandum
mandating new missions for the Power Marketing
Administrations until an agency report is
completed to justify such activities and
Congress authorizes the new activities. Over 160
bipartisan House members and Senators have
expressed concerns with these vague new
missions.
-
Prohibits the Bureau of Reclamation and other
federal agencies from bypassing hydropower
turbines (through spills or pulse flows) if a
state has declared a drought emergency or if
these actions would harm endangered fish.
-
Improves transparency by providing that each
Power Marketing Administration to estimate and
report costs related to federal fish and
wildlife acts, including costs relating to lost
power generation, to their power customers on a
monthly basis.
-
Advances new hydropower through new water
storage by allowing non-federal parties to
complete studies and finance projects.
-
Creates a new, innovative funding source to
build new water and power infrastructure.
-
Authorizes hydropower development on existing,
man-made Bureau of Reclamation water canals and
pipes. This provision is based legislation by
Rep. Scott Tipton (H.R. 2842), which
passed the House with bipartisan support.
-
Addresses burdensome costs and regulations
imposed by the Interior and Commerce Departments
on licensing and re-licensing non-federal
hydropower dams.
-
Protects electricity transmission lines from
catastrophic forest fires by allowing
electricity rights-of-way holders on federal
lands to remove insect-infested trees or other
hazardous fuels within 500-ft.
###
http://naturalresources.house.gov
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