What is the Klamath River
Renewal Corporation (KRRC)?
The KRRC is a 501(c)(3)
organization created by the
Klamath Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement (KHSA)
as amended in 2016 to
decommission four dams on
the Klamath River. These
dams have a combined
capacity of 163 megawatts,
but are not operated to
provide irrigation water or
storage for farmers. If the
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) approves
the dam decommissioning
proposal, the KRRC will take
over the dam licenses,
arrange for continued
operations until the dams
are decommissioned, oversee
removal of hydroelectric
infrastructure, and
undertake risk management
responsibility for the
project. See
About Us for more
information.
Who created the KRRC?
Parties to the amended
Klamath Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement (KHSA)
called for the creation of
the KRRC. The KHSA provides
the roadmap for Klamath
River restoration, which
begins with the
decommissioning and removal
of four hydroelectric dams
on a 373-mile reach of the
Klamath River. Under the
amended KHSA, the KRRC will
take title to the dams and
undertake the actual project
design and removal
activities. The Governors of
California and Oregon, the
Karuk and Yurok Tribes, and
conservation and fishing
groups that signed the
amended Agreement appointed
the KRRC’s Board of
Directors.
What is the KRRC's governance
structure?
The KRRC’s Board
of Directors is composed
of up to the following 15
members:
- Five members
appointed by the
Governor of California
- Four members
appointed by the
Governor of Oregon
- One member appointed
from each Tribe that has
signed the agreement
- Two members
appointed collectively
by conservation
groups (American Rivers,
California Trout,
Klamath Riverkeeper,
Northern California
Council – Federation of
Fly Fishers, Salmon
River Restoration
Council, Sustainable
Northwest, and Trout
Unlimited)
- One member appointed
by both the Institute
for Fisheries Resources
and the Pacific Coast
Federation of
Fishermen’s
Associations.
The Board has hired a
Technical Representative as
well as legal and technical
consultants. The Board has
also retained contract staff
to provide program
management, initial
staffing, and organizational
assistance. An Executive
Director was hired in June
2017.
Why is PacifiCorp supporting dam
decommissioning?
PacifiCorp supports
decommissioning of the four
dams under the KHSA because
it is in the best interest
of its customers. PacifiCorp
and the diverse parties to
the KHSA believe this the
best way to address the
expiration of PacifiCorp’s
Klamath dam license.
Additionally, in 2010 both
the Oregon and California
Public Utility Commissions
found dam decommissioning
under the KHSA was in the
best interest of
PacifiCorp’s customers.
Dam decommissioning will
produce multiple economic
and environmental
benefits. First, dam
decommissioning via
settlement limits cost and
risk for PacifiCorp’s
customers compared to
relicensing. Further, salmon
production is expected to
increase about 80%, which
will significantly grow the
commercial and recreational
fishing industry and enhance
tribal self-sufficiency. Dam
removal will also mitigate
the toxic blue-green algae
blooms that currently thrive
in the dams’ reservoirs and
impact human health and
recreation opportunities.
What is the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement
Agreement (KHSA)?
The
KHSA was amended in
April 2016 and requires
PacifiCorp and the KRRC to
seek approval from the
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) to
transfer ownership to KRRC
and decommission four dams
on the Klamath River. If
approved, the KHSA will lead
to one of the largest river
restoration efforts in the
nation, beginning with
decommissioning of four dams
in 2020. This agreement was
signed by federal, state,
and local governments, dam
owner PacifiCorp, two Tribal
nations, and
nine conservation and
fishing groups.
Who are the signatories of the
KHSA?
The amended 2016 Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement
Agreement (KHSA) was
signed on April 6, 2016 by
dam owner and operator
PacifiCorp, Humboldt County,
the Karuk and Yurok Tribes,
the states of California and
Oregon, the United States
Department of the Interior
and the Department of
Commerce, NOAA Fisheries,
American Rivers, California
Trout, Northern California
Council – Federation of Fly
Fishers, Salmon River
Restoration Council,
Sustainable Northwest, Trout
Unlimited, Institute for
Fisheries Resources, and the
Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations,
Klamath River Renewal
Corporation, and Upper
Klamath Water Users
Association.
When will the process begin?
If approved by the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC), physical removal of
the hydroelectric facilities
will begin in 2020. The KRRC
is actively taking steps
toward that end. The KRRC
met a major milestone on
September 23, 2016 when the
KRRC and PacifiCorp
jointly filed the License
Transfer Application and the
KRRC filed the License
Surrender Application with
FERC and related
documents with state
agencies.
Who will operate the dams until
they are decommissioned?
PacifiCorp currently owns
and operates the dams. After
FERC approves the license
transfer from PacifiCorp to
the KRRC, the KRRC will
enter into an agreement with
PacifiCorp to continue
operating and maintaining
the dams until they are
decommissioned. PacifiCorp
will pay all costs
associated with the
operations and assume all
liabilities associated with
those operations.
Why is a new organization
overseeing this process?
PacifiCorp and the other
KHSA parties determined that
creating a third party to
manage dam decommissioning
and river restoration was an
effective model for
protecting customers and
ensuring river restoration.
Where does the KRRC’s funding
come from?
The amended KHSA established
two sources of funding for a
total of $450 million
available for
decommissioning and removing
the hydroelectric facilities
and restoring the Klamath
River. Funding has been
allocated from the two
sources:
- Customer
Contributions – $200
million is being
collected by California
and Oregon Public
Utility Commissions
through PacifiCorp
customers in Oregon and
California and as
authorized by the Oregon
Legislature. However,
this represents
significant savings
compared to PacifiCorp’s
estimate of $400 million
to update and relicense
the dams.
- California Bond
Funding – California
voters approved
Proposition 1 in 2014
for water project
statewide; in 2015, the
California legislature
allocated $250 million
of the Proposition 1
bond money to fund the
difference between the
Customer Contribution
and the actual cost to
complete the Facilities
Removal.
The Bureau of Reclamation
developed a cost estimate of
approximately $292 million
for dam removal. This
estimate was derived through
a rigorous analytical
process and an independent
peer review process.
====================================================
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
section 107, any copyrighted material
herein is distributed without profit or
payment to those who have expressed a
prior interest in receiving this
information for non-profit research and
educational purposes only. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml |