http://www.businessandmedia.org:80/specialreports/2007/mediamyth/BigDam/BigDamProblem.asp
Media Myth
America’s Big Dam
Problem
Networks
Ignore Eco-campaign
to Save the Salmon
and Turn Out the Lights
followed by
Something Fishy about Eco-Extremists' Power
Play
Uber-left would rather take out a dam than
give one about America's energy future.
By
Dan Gainor, The Boone Pickens Free Market
Fellow 2/28/07
While environmentalists claim to battle for
renewable energy, dams that provide renewable
power to 10 percent of the United States have
come under increasing attack.
-
Power from the people –
The three broadcast networks
had a news blackout on environmentalists’
campaign to tear down America’s dams. In 13
months of network coverage, not one story
touched on the topic. By comparison, the top
five newspapers did 65 stories on just one
of the possible dam tear-downs.
-
Other threats are important –
ABC, CBS and NBC agreed that
some dangers to the dams – overwhelming
storms, poor maintenance and terrorism –
were worthy of stories. Two-thirds of the
network stories about dams focused on such
threats.
- Dam
removal as government policy –
A $7-million analysis of the need to remove
O'Shaughnessy Dam near San Francisco was
included in the president’s most recent
budget, though the dam provides power and
water to a major city.
Now the world holds seven wonders that the
travelers always tell
Some gardens and some towers, I guess you know
them well.
But now the greatest wonder is in Uncle Sam's
fair land
It's the big Columbia River and the big Grand
Coulee dam.
– “The Grand Coulee Dam,” Woody Guthrie
By
Dan Gainor
The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow
America’s dams are in danger. Not just from
terrorists or the ravages of time, but from
the extreme fringe of the environmental
movement. Operating under a well-organized
national campaign, groups like Environmental
Defense, the Sierra Club and others are
systematically trying to tear down dams,
destroy hydroelectric facilities and prevent
new dams from being built.
In many cases, it’s simply to save fish,
especially salmon.
The battle is being fought by lawyers, lobbyists, volunteers and
eco-friendly scientists. In January 2007, the
U.S. Interior Department ruled power company
PacifiCorp must spend hundreds of millions of
dollars to build fish ladders across its
Klamath River dams or tear down those very
same dams, eliminating power for 70,000
people.
A May 2006 Supreme Court ruling sided
with “fish and kayakers” over hydroelectric
plants, saying “that state regulators may
require a steady flow of water over power
dams,” according to the May 16, 2006, Los
Angeles Times.
And the network news shows aren’t telling
viewers anything about it.
A Business & Media Institute analysis of broadcast news shows from
Jan. 1, 2006, to Jan. 31, 2007, revealed no
network stories on the issue. But it was a
topic that received extensive print news
coverage. The nation’s top five dailies – USA
Today, The Wall Street Journal, The New York
Times, The Washington Post and Los Angeles
Times – all covered the controversy during the
same time period.
In just the Klamath River case, those
daily newspapers covered the story 65 times
during the 13 months. The Los Angeles Times
led the pack with 39 stories, but each paper
wrote on the issue at least once.
That’s because big things are happening
in the environmental movement. Since 1999,
according to the Energy Information
Administration, hydropower facilities have
been decommissioned equaling more than 220
megawatts of power. In that same time period,
roughly 185 dams have been removed, reported
Time magazine, though not all were hydropower
facilities.
America’s more than 2,500 hydropower
facilities account for roughly 10 percent of
the U.S. energy supply or the equivalent of
500 million barrels of oil. However,
environmental extremists oppose “Big Hydro”
from dams – so much that they don’t even count
it as renewable energy.
The
Environmental Protection Agency still
considers hydropower “a renewable energy
resource because it uses the Earth's water
cycle to generate electricity.” But major
hydropower projects now face opposition years
after their construction.
According to the Los Angeles Times, Oct.
1, 2006: “by 2002, environmentalists had
persuaded state legislators to require that
California utilities get at least 20% of the
power they sell from renewable sources by
2017.”
Large hydroelectric plants like the
Hoover Dam were kept out of the definition of
renewable energy. Environmentalists don’t like
the large dams because they say “they harm
fish and cause the buildup of silt,” the Times
reported.
Three major battlegrounds pose even more
significant losses to the U.S. power grid.
Environmentalists won a huge victory with the
ruling on the Klamath River dams. There are
also active campaigns to remove hydropower
dams across the nation, including:
-
O'Shaughnessy Dam – This dam is 300 feet
above the floor of the Hetch Hetchy Valley
and provides water and power to much of San
Francisco. Its 400 megawatts of power
represent almost twice the total amount of
hydropower decommissioned from 1999-2005.
-
Snake River dams – The extreme left has been
trying for years to remove the dams along
eastern Washington’s lower Snake River.
According to a CNN.com report from July 19,
2000, “Supporters of the Snake River dams
say closing down the dams' hydroelectric
generators would eliminate about 5 percent
of the region's electricity.”
Dam Removal a Recent Problem
More than 600 dams were removed across
the United States during the 20th Century, but
those removals escalated in recent years. With
the decommissioning of Maine’s
power-generating Edwards Dam in 1999, removal
became an ongoing left-wing strategy. That
removal raised the stakes because “It was the
first hydroelectric dam in the United States
ordered breached by the government against the
dam owners' wishes,”
explained CNN.com in a July 19, 2000, story.
From that point on, pressure mounted for
more dam removals. In 2000, the four
hydroelectric dams on the Pacific Northwest’s
lower Snake River even factored in the
presidential campaign. Then-presidential
candidate George W. Bush criticized his
opponent Al Gore over the idea of removing the
dams. Bush defended the dams, but Gore took no
formal position. “Al Gore should take a stand.
I say we can use technology to save the
salmon, without leaving the door open to
destroying these dams,” Bush said, according
to CNN.com.
More dams were removed. Maine’s first
hydroelectric plant, the Smelt Hill Dam on the
Presumpscot River, was decommissioned in 2002,
110 years after its construction. The
million-dollar effort was mostly paid for by
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, according to
Waterpower Magazine. Other hydropower dams
were shut down in Georgia, Florida and
elsewhere.
But the big environmental push was out
West, and the targets had far more impact on
the power grid. The attacks on Klamath dams,
along the Oregon/California border, the ones
on the lower Snake River in eastern Washington
and California’s Hetch Hetchy conflict all
gained momentum.
Pressure to remove the Klamath dams was
brought to bear on its owners at PacifiCorp.
The company was given little choice between
building ladders for salmon to travel over the
dams and removing the dams altogether.
The March 30, 2006, Los Angeles Times
reported the ladders weren’t a practical
solution. “Construction of fish ladders over
the dams could prove formidable. The ladders
would have to step an exhausting 120 times to
top Iron Gate Dam and run for nearly two
miles. Biologists question if salmon and
steelhead trout would even use the ladders.”
A Jan. 31, 2007, follow-up story admitted
the ladders could cost $470 million, “as much
as $285 million more than the cost of removing
the dams and replacing the electricity for the
next 30 years, according to a government
study.”
Nevertheless, that was the choice ordered
early in 2007 – either the ridiculous cost for
the ladders or removing the dams.
Meanwhile, other environmentalists were
battling to dismantle the dam at Hetch Hetchy.
The July 20, 2006, Los Angeles Times included
a new report that dismantling the dam “could
range from $3 billion to nearly $10 billion.”
Opponents of removal criticized the
outrageous cost. Liberal Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.), the former mayor of San Francisco,
called the price estimate “indefensible” and
warned it would leave the state vulnerable to
“drought and blackout.”
But environmentalists were emboldened and
said the billions of dollars made removal
feasible. As the LA Times reported: “‘This is
a great start,’ said Jerry Cadagan, chairman
of Restore Hetch Hetchy, which champions
removal of the dam. ‘The state has declared
that this can be done. That’s something a lot
of people have been reluctant to admit for a
long time.’”
According to the Feb. 7, 2007, San
Francisco Chronicle, the issue was alive and
well in President Bush’s new budget. “The
president set aside $7 million within the
National Park Service budget to ‘support Hetch
Hetchy restoration studies’ that would explore
the environmental and recreational benefits of
draining a reservoir that provides water for
2.4 million Bay Area residents,” reported the
Chronicle.
Dam History
Dams have a long and useful history in
the United States for everything from
recreation and flood control to power
generation. At one time, liberals even
embraced them as signs of progress and a way
to create jobs. Democratic President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt made dam creation a
significant part of his presidency.
Author John Berlau recalled this fact in
his book “Eco-Freaks.” In the chapter titled
“Hurricane Katrina: Blame It On Dam
Environmentalists,” he reminded readers that
FDR dedicated the Hoover Dam in 1935. “This
morning I came, I saw, and I was conquered, as
everyone would be who sees for the first time
this great feat of mankind,” the book quoted
Roosevelt.
FDR’s efforts with the Tennessee Valley
Authority also involved dam construction. In
fact, the FDR Memorial in Washington, D.C.,
incorporates the theme of those water projects
into its construction.
Folk singer Woody Guthrie wrote fondly of
dams, especially the Grand Coulee Dam, which
he called “about the biggest thing that man
has ever done” in his song of the same name.
Gonzaga University professor of history Robert
C. Carriker described it as a genuine love of
the dam. “To Woody the dam stood as a monument
of working-class consciousness and
solidarity,” he wrote in 2001.
But the left-wing love affair with dams
is long gone. A 2002 report even blamed dams
for global warming. The International Rivers
Network report, “Flooding the Land, Warming
the Earth,” claimed dam reservoirs contribute
about 4 percent of the earth’s carbon dioxide
emissions. According to a June 12, 2002, story
by Inter Press Service, IRN's campaigns
director Patrick McCully argued, “In tropical
areas, hydropower reservoirs may be much worse
climate polluters than even coal power
plants.”
Now, environmental groups rarely comment
on hydropower as “renewable energy” and focus
mostly on wind or solar power. At the same
time, they are working actively to remove dams
and, in the case of hydropower facilities, the
power they provide.
One such group, American Rivers, says
that it “is aware of over 460 dams that have
been removed over the past 40 years in this
country.” The group’s Web site says more are
on the way – “and at least 100 more are either
committed for removal or under active
consideration for removal.”
American Rivers and its many allies use
everything in their arsenals to bring down the
dams, including lawsuits and sophisticated
marketing efforts.
In January 2007, Environmental Defense
amped up its own public relations campaign and
unveiled a project with actor Harrison Ford
narrating a “documentary film on restoring
this national treasure,” titled “Discover
Hetch Hetchy.”
Another group opposing the dams is
Earthjustice and its entire purpose is to sue
on behalf of the other groups. According to
its own Web site, “Earthjustice attorneys,
representing citizen groups, scientists, and
others, go to court to see that the laws are
obeyed and enforced.”
The other groups – Environmental Defense,
the Sierra Club and more – all figure
prominently in the left’s global warming
crusade, though that directly conflicts with
the removal of renewable energy from the power
grid.
Network Coverage Totally Ignores Issue
If they weren’t paying close attention,
viewers could easily think dams were important
to network reporters. When storms over-filled
dams in Maryland or Maine, the stories
received detailed attention. During the 13
months of the study, 68 percent of the stories
(45 out of 66) mentioned threats to the dams
such as storms, poor maintenance or terrorism.
But none of the stories even discussed
the plan to tear down the Klamath dams or the
Supreme Court ruling that gave
environmentalists more sway than power
companies.
The May 16 CBS “Evening News” gave the
network a chance to highlight multiple
dangers. Flooding in Massachusetts served as a
perfect backdrop for reporter Sharyn Alfonsi,
who said the water was so bad “they’re
rescuing the rescuers.” The reason? The
firefighter she interviewed “lives down river
from the Spigot Falls Dam,” which she warned
could collapse.
Alfonsi then transitioned to more threats
to America’s dams. She interviewed engineer
Scott Cahill, who “fixes dams for a living and
he figures to be busy for a long time.”
According to the report, a study from the
American Society of Civil Engineers “found the
nation’s dams are in disrepair and dangerous.”
The report didn’t mention anything about dam
removal.
At the same time, other threats from
terror or poor maintenance also gained network
notice. Reporters even acknowledged that
America’s dams were major achievements. The
Hoover Dam was considered one of the possible
choices for the Seven Modern Wonders of the
World on the Oct. 27, 2006, “Good Morning
America.”
CBS reporter Bill Geist highlighted the
Hoover Dam during a story about a major
convention in nearby Las Vegas. His Aug. 13,
2006, “Sunday Morning” story summed up the
importance of the dam: “where would Las Vegas
be without Hoover Dam to provide water?” While
he ignored the fact that the dam also provides
enough power for 1.3 million people in Nevada,
Arizona and California, that was as good as it
got for dams on the networks in 13 months.
Nearly all of the stories made no
connection between dams and power generation.
The few that did downplayed the significance.
ABC’s “Nightline” analyzed life in Aspen,
Colo., and how the resort town was coping with
the possibility of global warming. The June
30, 2006, story mentioned the various ways the
residents were changing their habits,
including restarting the old hydroelectric
plant “that was originally powering the entire
town,” according to one resident.
NBC ran two May 20, 2006, stories on
China’s new Three Gorges Dam that included
power generation as a major feature of the
facility. However, reporter Charles Sabine was
quick to downplay that on “Saturday Today.”
“But one of the biggest failings of the dam
is, ironically, China's phenomenal rate of
growth, so fast that by 2020 the dam will
supply less than 2 percent of its energy
needs.” Sabine treated 2 percent of a large
nation’s energy need as a minor thing.
Conclusion
The battle for power isn’t limited to one
or two countries. According to the August 6,
2006, New York Times, Chile faces similar
needs for energy – and similar
environmentalist obstacles.
Although the Times admitted Chile’s “weak
spot is a lack of domestic energy sources,”
environmental groups oppose new dams. “There
are so few places on earth with the qualities
of the Patagonia region of Chile that it’s
really criminal to try to foist this kind of
project on the Chilean people in the name of
avoiding impending blackouts and that sort of
thing,” said Glenn Swikes, Latin American
coordinator for the International Rivers
Network. Swikes vowed a protracted fight.
“This is going to be a long battle, in the
trenches, using every legal and political
tactic possible.”
New dams in the United States face a
similar fate. In separate reports a year
apart, the Los Angeles Times described new
dams being fought consistently. In the Feb. 5,
2006, story, the “conservation group American
Rivers” was battling a new dam on the Columbia
River despite widespread problems of drought.
On Feb. 1, 2007, it was the Sierra Club and
the Center for Biological Diversity opposing a
“reservoir, dam and hydroelectric facility in
the Santa Ana Mountains to provide power
during periods of peak energy use.”
Even left-wing politicians oppose dam
removal in the Hetch Hetchy Valley of
California's Yosemite National Park with an
enormous price tag of up to $10 billion, but
the battle continues. And the media aren’t
exactly on the sidelines. The Sacramento Bee's
Tom Philps won a Pulitzer Prize for a series
of editorials advocating the dam's removal.
But billions of dollars don’t matter to
eco-extremists. According to the March 31,
2006, USA Today, the Bonneville Power
Administration spent $8 billion in failed
attempts to help salmon travel in the Snake
and Columbia rivers. That’s just the
beginning.
All of this information is available –
but only in print. While America’s politicians
discuss “energy independence,” so-called
environmentalists are actively trying to
undermine the power grid – all in the name of
salmon.
This battle has all the elements of a
newsworthy story – it’s controversial; it
affects tens of thousands of people. Yet the
big three broadcast networks continue to
ignore the problem.
===========================================================
Commentary
Something Fishy about Eco-Extremists' Power
Play
Uber-left would rather take out a dam than
give one about America's energy future.
By Dan Gainor
The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow
Business & Media Institute
2/28/2007
If the Hoover Dam isn’t one of the
wonders of the modern world, it’s not for lack
of trying. Tens of thousands of people spent
years building this amazing mountain of
concrete.
But some on the crazy eco-left want to
tear it down – along with as many other dams
as they can get their hands on. They clearly
don’t care that those same dams provide power
to a country reliant on it.
I got a taste of this attitude several
years ago at the conclusion of a Hoover Dam
tour. After the guide detailed the dam’s
wonders and how it provides power and water to
several states, one of the dam crazies chimed
in. He asked if there were any plans to remove
the dam and restore the river back to nature.
The guide took it in stride, laughed it
off and said “no.” The rest of the tour was
stunned. Today, we should expect that
question. Since 1999, a loose coalition of
some of the nation’s most extreme
environmental groups has labored to remove the
same dams that hardworking Americans spent
years building.
And if you get your news from the big
three broadcast networks, you probably don’t
know anything about this. According to a
Business & Media Institute analysis of 13
months of network coverage of dams, ABC, CBS
and NBC never touched on the topic of dam
removal. Not once.
The only way you’d know this is happening
is reading a newspaper or maybe some blogs.
While the networks were skipping a national
controversy that included a major Supreme
Court ruling, print media remained interested
in the story. The top five newspapers wrote 65
articles about just one possible dam removal
on the Klamath River during the same time
period.
But network news can choose to focus on
or ignore a major national issue. And until
they do focus, it isn’t a story.
Sure, the networks report on dams.
They’re on the scene when it looks like a dam
might burst and send millions of gallons of
water downriver. Network journalists cover the
dangers of terrorism or poor maintenance. But
where are they when an organized leftist
effort threatens our dams and our power grid
and could cost us billions of dollars? The
media have the power to ignore the story and
get away with it.
It used to be the left supported the idea
of “power to the people.” Since 1999, the
opposite has been true. Beginning with the
decommissioning of Edwards Dam in Maine that
year, the extreme left has worked to remove
dams around the country. By one count, they’ve
gotten rid of more than 185 in that time, many
of them hydroelectric. Our power grid has lost
more than 220 megawatts.
But
they’ve only just begun.
A
recent Interior Department ruling will force
PacifiCorp to install fish ladders (yes,
ladders for fish to climb over the dams) on
four dams it operates along the Klamath River.
That would cost up to $470 million – which is
up to $285 million more than tearing down the
dams.
The company has little choice but to tear
down the dams, eliminating power for another
70,000 people. Elsewhere, eco-extremists are
trying to remove the O'Shaughnessy Dam near
San Francisco and dams along the lower Snake
River.
O'Shaughnessy looms above the Hetch
Hetchy Valley, providing water and power to
much of San Francisco. A recent California
study says it could cost between $3 billion
and $10 billion to take it down. Former San
Francisco mayor and now-Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.) has been one of the voices of
sanity, calling the estimate for removal of
the dam “indefensible” and warning it would
leave the state vulnerable to “drought and
blackout.”
Feinstein is no liberal slouch herself –
Americans for Democratic Action gave her a 90
out of 100 rating in 2006. So that shows how
far the dam busters have turned from the
conventional liberal ideals of people like
Woody Guthrie or FDR. Both understood that
dams really did mean power for the people. And
power meant jobs, economic growth and a better
life.
That’s what all forms of power still mean
to Americans. At a time when Congress and the
White House debate “energy independence,” the
eco-extremists busy themselves wrecking the
power grid to save a few fish.
The networks have the power to tell this
story and make sure Americans understand the
danger of chipping away at the 10 percent of
our energy that comes from hydropower. We’re
dammed if they do and, certainly, damned if
they don’t.
Dan
Gainor is The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow
and director of the Media Research Center’s
Business & Media Institute.
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