Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Klamath Dam
removal: A model for the future?
by Ty Beaver,
Herald and News 11/20/09
AP
photo - The J.C.
Boyle dam is one of four that would
be removed under
the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement
Agreement.
James
Honey of Sustainable Northwest says the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement isn’t a model for a dam
removal, but a model for dealing with complex problems.projects.
Tom Mallams,
an irrigator off the Klamath Reclamation Project
disagrees, calling it a precedent-setting event that will
create more problems.
Others
say that while a Klamath River dam removal is not meant
to be a model for dam removal, people are likely to
apply elements of it to other places where groups may be
pushing to remove dams.
Really? Other parts of the country aren’t looking at the
Klamath River dam removal agreement as a system for
removing dams?
Greg
Addington, executive director of Klamath Water Users
Association, and Kirk Miller, deputy secretary and
general counsel for California Natural Resources Agency,
said they wouldn’t be surprised if some groups see
Klamath River dam removal as the beginning of a trend.
At the
same time, though, they point out the unique
circumstances surrounding dam removal in the Basin and
the unique circumstances facing other
hydroelectric projects.
“I can’t
say this is a cookie cutter model,” Miller said.
Addington
said he expects comparisons to be drawn with dams in the
Snake River along the Idaho-Oregon border, but he says the
scenarios aren’t the same.
The Snake
River dams are bigger, produce more power, aid irrigation,
provide navigation for barges and are owned by the federal
government. Those differences don’t always matter to
people, though.
“I’m going
to argue with anybody who wants to do (dam removal)
somewhere else,” he said. “I’m going to say it’s apples
and oranges, but I’m not going to be able to stop them.”
Mallams
said dam removal was a precedent some stakeholders pushed
for, and any statement that it is only a means of solving
complex problems is spin.
James
Honey said the dams were a centerpiece of natural resource
issues facing the Basin and were a large reason why their
removal was called for. It’s
not an approach he expects to be easily applied anywhere
else.
Dean
Brockbank, vice president and general counsel for
PacifiCorp Energy, agreed.
“PacifiCorp continues to invest in its hydroelectric
facilities and just last year received a new 50-year
license for its 510-megawatt Lewis River Hydroelectric
Project in Washington state,” Brockbank said in an e-mail.
U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock,
R-Calif., said it’s “insanity” to get rid of the cheapest
power available when Californians are already paying some
of the highest energy prices in the country.
Kirk
Miller, deputy secretary and general counsel for
California Natural Resources Agency, said the state
seriously considered the impact the loss of carbon-free
power from the dams would have on people and the energy
industry.
At the
same time, the state also had to consider the negative
impacts the dams were having on the Klamath River and its
ecosystem, and the ability to replace the lost power in
the coming decade.
“We
believe it’s worth the exchange for the river and the
salmon fishery,” Miller said.
Greg
Addington, executive director of Klamath Water Users
Association, said dam removal was a tough choice but the
unique circumstances in the Basin made it a feasible move.
Siskiyou
County Supervisor Jim Cook disagrees with dam removal,
especially because it would result in the loss of clean
power.
“I think
that’s terrible public policy,” he said.
McClintock discounted statements that the negatives of dam removal are outweighed by the benefits.
“That is
ideological claptrap from the lunatic fringe of the
environmental left,” he said.
There are
other measures possible to improve fisheries, such as
building and funding hatcheries, the congressman said.
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Page Updated: Saturday November 21, 2009 01:34 AM Pacific
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