KWUA
perspective on the 2002 and 2003 National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) reviews
posted July 12, 2004
_________________________________
KWUA Home
KWUA Perspective on the 2002
Interim National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
Review of Klamath Basin Biological Opinions
The Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA)
and its members in 2001 strongly advocated for
an independent peer review of the 2001 Klamath
Project Biological Opinions, the underlying
science, and the related overall scientific
process. The 2002 interim report from the
National Research Council (NRC) Committee on
Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath
Basin represented a critical step towards
ensuring proper assessment and maintenance of
healthy fish populations.
The 2002 National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) Interim Report is a Commendable
Effort
- The panel successfully completed an
objective, unbiased initial review of the
information used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS) and NOAA Fisheries to
formulate the agencies’ two 2001 Biological
Opinions (BOs).
- The evidence and arguments presented in
the NAS report are sound and the report was
fully responsive to their study objectives.
- Despite varying interpretations of the
data used by the USFWS and NOAA Fisheries in
the BOs, it is especially noteworthy that the
NAS panel achieved consensus on the Interim
Report’s conclusions for not just one, but
both BOs.
- The report’s conclusions were adequately
supported by the available evidence and
analyses used by USFWS and NOAA Fisheries.
- It was particularly evident that the NAS
report was fair and impartial, essential
attributes that have been sorely lacking in
Klamath basin issues to date.
The Interim NAS Report Did Not Suggest That
"Bad Science" Was Used in 2001
Despite some attacks on the NAS Interim
Report by certain advocacy groups, the Report
does not, in the opinion of KWUA, reflect the
use of "bad science" by the USFWS and NOAA
Fisheries in their respective 2001 BOs. To the
contrary, the independent scientific panel of
national experts used the same information as
USFWS and NOAA Fisheries but simply derived
different conclusions concerning the scientific
rationale for higher or lower than historical
Upper Klamath Lake levels and flows in the
Klamath River. The NAS report concluded that
there was insufficient scientific evidence used
by USFWS and NOAA Fisheries in 2001 to support
changing the recent historical water operations
of the Klamath Project. KWUA agrees with the NAS
report’s conclusions that higher or lower than
recent historical lake levels or Klamath River
flows are not scientifically justified based on
the available information used by the USFWS and
NOAA Fisheries.
KWUA Perspective on the 2003
Final National Research Council Report:
Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath
River Basin
The final 2003 report from the National
Research Council (NRC) Committee on Endangered
and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath Basin
represents a critical step towards ensuring
proper assessment and maintenance of healthy
fish populations. The final NRC report is
important to local farmers and ranchers for
several key reasons:
- The report clearly indicates that recovery
of endangered suckers and threatened coho
salmon in the Klamath Basin cannot be achieved
by actions that are exclusively or primarily
focused on operation of the Klamath Project.
- The committee also reconfirmed its
findings from an earlier report that found no
evidence of a causal connection between Upper
Klamath Lake water levels and sucker health,
or that higher flows on the Klamath River
mainstem help coho salmon.
- The NRC committee did not accept arguments
that the operation of the Klamath Project
caused the 2002 fish die-off or that changes
in the operation of the Project at the time
would not have prevented it.
Despite the final conclusions, some
environmentalists and many in the media continue
to maintain the sensational but unsupported
position that the Klamath Project was
responsible for the 2002 fish mortality that
occurred over 200 miles from the Klamath
Project.
The NRC report is consistent with what Upper
Basin interests have been saying for years: the
Klamath Project cannot solely bear the burden
for species recovery in this basin. A
watershed-wide approach to species recovery –
one that addresses all the stressors to fish –
is essential to improving our environment and
saving our local economy. We share the NRC
report’s vision that increased knowledge,
improved management, and cohesive community
action will promote recovery of the fishes. At
the same time, as discussed below, we remain
extremely concerned that the "business as usual"
approach - regulation of the Klamath Project –
remains the dominant aspect of ESA biological
opinions and advocacy of Project opponents.
The NRC report clearly shows that the Klamath
Project alone cannot solve the problems of the
entire watershed. With that said, water users
want to avoid pointing the finger at other parts
of the watershed in an attempt to shift blame.
Rather, we encourage other areas to take action
towards solving the problem, and we believe that
farmers and ranchers throughout the watershed
have already clearly demonstrated that actions
speak louder than words.
The NAS final report can be downloaded at:
www.nationalacademies.org/morenews/
Klamath Water Users
Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |