[2] Economists Flunk
Enviro Report On Economics Of Dam Breaching
A panel of independent economists that
provides reviews for the Northwest Power and
Conservation Council has thoroughly panned a
report that says the region could save money
by taking out the lower Snake dams.
The panel says the report, titled
Revenue Stream, underestimates
the cost of replacement power by so much
that it "invalidates" the report's
conclusion.
The Independent Economic Analysis Board
was asked by Council members to take a look
at the report, which was
released last November.
The panel submitted its scathing review
to the Council last week, noting that the
report was not the product of peer review or
an open public process, and that "many of
the sources of the report came from other
reports that were also not products of open
process and peer review.
The IEAB said the report contained
several other major methodological failures,
including not discounting future benefits
and costs of dam removal, and questionable
accuracy of agency fish budgets.
Perhaps its biggest flaw, the board said,
was reliance on a 2004 report by Idaho-based
economist Don Reading that estimated huge
benefits from a fully restored recreational
fishery.
The panel panned Reading's report in 2005
for his pie-in-the-sky estimates. It found
that Reading "had made a number of
methodological errors which seriously biased
his benefits upward." Reading had said
fishing benefits could top $500 million a
year.
The panel said the report's estimates of
benefits to commercial fishermen were open
to question as well, since they were not
peer-reviewed. The numbers came from the
Institute of Fisheries Resources, a group
associated with one of Revenue Stream's
sponsors, the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Association.
The economists said it might be time to
do a follow up to the Corps of Engineers'
EIS on impacts of removing the four lower
Snake dams that would fix weaknesses in that
huge analysis, and reflect the "many
changes" in the economy, transportation
systems, power generation and the state of
fish recovery efforts.
But the panel failed to mention the
misuse of a 2004 report commissioned by
American Rivers, one of Revenue Stream's
own sponsors, which was used to peg the
costs of upgrading railroads to be between
$18 million and $231 million. The consulting
firm that completed the study actually
estimated that costs of changing over from
barge transportation to rail could add up to
more than $1.4 billion. The consultants
complained at the time about their work
being misrepresented by their client.
Other cost estimates were lowballed as
well. BPA spokesman Scott Sims said the
lower Snake dams generate $400 million to
$550 million in power every year, which is
about three times the cost of replacement
power cited in Revenue Stream if the
dams were breached. BPA said when accurate
numbers were used in the calculation, net
benefits claimed in the report become a net
cost of $1.5 billion to $3.8 billion over 10
years.
The Revenue Stream estimate came
from a 2002 Rand report, and from numbers
developed by the Northwest Energy Coalition.
The panel said it was unclear whether the
report's estimate of replacement power
included transmission and ancillary costs,
which would likely be even higher than for
combined-cycle combustion.
In a Feb. 28 press release, Steve Weiss,
senior policy associate for the NW Energy
Coalition, said the IEAB made a "major
error" by assuming the hydropower would be
replaced by fossil-fueled gas turbines,
"something that never would be considered
given the high cost of natural gas relative
to efficiency and wind power."
In a footnote to Revenue Stream,
the authors said updated information from a
2000 NWEC report called "Going With the
Flow" was used to develop the upper limit of
their estimate of the cost to replace power
from the dams, with more that 80 percent
coming from conservation, and about 18
percent from wind power.
But the IEAB pointed to a 2002 review of
the earlier RAND report by NPPC staffer
Terry Morlan that found conservation and
renewables would not reduce the cost below
that of combined cycle generation. The board
said that upper bound in Revenue Stream
"appears to incorporate" some of the same
conservation cost assumptions from the RAND
report.
But Weiss neglected to mention that wind
power is notoriously unreliable and
generally needs some type of expensive
backup to ensure reliability. During last
year's heat wave in July, regional wind
power facilities barely generated 12-15
percent of their capacity simply because
there was no wind.
BPA said the lower Snake dams not only
produce more than 1,000 average megawatts a
year, up to 15 percent of its total power
supply, but they are also "helpful to fill
in behind intermittent sources of power such
as wind and provide the region with
electricity reserves that help maintain
overall system reliability."
-B. R.
The following links were mentioned in
this story:
Review of the SOS Revenue Stream Report,
Feb. 25, 2007
Revenue Stream
NW Fishletter 223, Nov. 20, 2006
NW Fishletter 224, Dec. 20, 2006