Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Move things along when someone
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October 24, 2011 Viewpoints, Herald and News Irrigators on the Klamath Reclamation Project have had to get creative to deal with rapid increases in power rates after a 50-year rate agreement with Pacific Power ended in 2006. And they're doing it with soon-to-begin construction on a small hydroelectric project where the A Canal splits into the B and C canals southeast of Klamath Falls.
Earlier this month, the Bureau of
Reclamation produced a finding that the proposal by the
Klamath Irrigation District (KID) -- one of the
Project's four districts -- would have no significant
environmental impact. The decision wasn't unexpected,
but that doesn't diminish the good news.
A 1956 power agreement had kept power
rates low for irrigators largely in exchange for
steadier streamflows to make the most efficient use of
the generators on dams built on the Klamath River south
of Klamath Falls. The last one, Iron Gate, was completed
in 1962.
The dams and the availability of power
also encouraged people to settle in the area. That meant
more customers for the electrical utility involved --
which started out as Siskiyou Electric Power and Light
Company, and later became Copco Co., which was then
absorbed by Portland-based Pacific Power and Light Co.
After more ownership and other changes,
the four dams involved are now operated by PacifiCorp,
which is owned by Warren Buffet's MidAmerican Energy.
The new KID facility, which is expected
to be operating some time in 2012, would produce revenue
that could help irrigators offset a twelvefold increase
in power rates that has been phased in during the past
four years.
The project also required permission by
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), which
took several years to get -- a process which should be
streamlined.
Agriculture, beset as it is by legal
battles and always at the mercy of the weather, needs
ways to make it easier to stay in business, and small
generating facilities such as these surely should be
encouraged.
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Page Updated: Thursday October 27, 2011 01:39 AM Pacific
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