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Link River Dam at Klamath Falls,
Ore., is part of a hydropower system
PacifiCorps wants modified in 2006
relicensing. Klamath Water Users
Association makes continued discount
electricity rates a priority for 2006. |
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Power, water inextricably linked in Klamath
Tam Moore
Oregon Staff Writer
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. – From a system built on
gravity flow of water starting in 1905, the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Project
emerged a century later so tied to electricity
that farmers predict if a discount electrical
power deal goes away, the whole thing will
collapse.
“This won’t work with the projected power
rates,” Scott Seus, new chairman of the
Klamath Water User’s Association power
committee, said in a report to the membership
last week.
Seus said it’s not just the rates to
individual farmers like himself, it’s the cost
irrigation and drainage districts pay for the
elaborate network of electric pumps that move
water around. The existing rates – a half-cent
per kilowatt-hour inside project croplands and
0.75 cents per Kwh beyond but inside the
larger Klamath Project boundaries – are part
of the federal license and a sidebar 50-year
contract made with PacifiCorp, the hydro
system operator.
The whole package vanishes in April 2006
unless the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission decides to again make it part of
license renewal terms, or PacifiCorp changes
its position. The utility wants to bump rates
up to the same agricultural pumping charges
paid by similar customers in Northern
California and Oregon service areas.
Seus, a second-generation farmer from
Tulelake, Calif., told the water users they
are paying a lot to keep power rates low. Six
consulting lawyers are at work on parts of the
deal, including Paul Simmons, the Sacramento
lawyer who is primary legal adviser to KWUA.
Tariffs proposed by PacifiCorp, said Seus,
would increase power costs as much as 2,500
percent for some classes of project users.
If that happens, he predicted, the federal
government’s $75 million investment with
farmers in water conservation in the past four
years will sit idle. So, he said, would the
drainage pumps around which the project was
built. It reclaimed over 200,000 acres of
former lakebed and wetlands over a 50-year
period. Most of the reclaimed land is farmed
or part of national wildlife refuges.
“If 100 years (of the project) is a milestone,
then power is the cornerstone of our success,”
said Seus.
Most irrigators know little more than public
statements about how KWUA is doing in the
battle to retain “a justifiably low-cost power
rate.” That’s because the association and its
power committee are part of PacifiCorp’s
closed-door negotiations to wrap up Klamath
issues in settlement agreements that become
part of the FERC license. Parties are sworn to
silence until there’s a deal.
PacifiCorp has indicated based on past
relicensing experience that those agreements
need to be reached a month or two before
actual license renewal dates. FERC began
formal study of the Klamath renewal
application 15 months ago.
Steve Kandra, the grain and hay farmer who
serves as KWUA president, told members that
directors feel preserving power rates is
equally important with assuring there’s a
dependable water supply as the project starts
its second century.
The PacifiCorp license renewal application
proposes distancing the company from BuRec
water operations. Under the present contract,
the power company operates the dam that
creates the main project irrigation diversion,
running two generators at the Link River Dam
site here. It also operates a regulating dam
at Keno, downstream from where project return
flows rejoin the river.
The primary electrical power generation comes
from a large plant in the Klamath River Canyon
near the state line and from turbines
installed at three dams in California. All
operate primarily with water released by the
Klamath Project.
It’s that tie, Seus has argued, that links
power rates with water. Elsewhere in the West,
BuRec owns the turbines at most projects and
sells electricity to reduce project costs.
Rural electric cooperatives around projects
get discount rates to pass on to irrigators.
At Klamath, the first deal put generation with
California Oregon Power Co., PacifiCorp’s
predecessor, with the FERC contract term
delivering a similar benefit.
Tam Moore is based in Medford, Ore. His e-mail
address is
tmoore@capitalpress.com.
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