Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Dam removal: Making the decision
Team of
scientists gathering information for Secretary of the
Interior
(KBC NOTE: National Academy of Science professor William Lewis, in 2004 workship, " When asked if it would work to control the significant part of the ph load, Lewis responded that the lake is 140 square miles...that is not feasible to change."
By JILL AHO
Herald and News 2/9/10
United States Secretary
of the Interior Ken Salazar will decide whether removing
four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River is in the best
interest of U.S. citizens.
Teams of scientists and
others are already working furiously to provide the
information the secretary will need to make that decision,
possibly as soon as November 2011. The Klamath Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement, if implemented, calls for the
secretary to make a decision on dam removal by March 31,
2012.
Dennis Lynch of the U.S.
Geological Survey is coordinating efforts to present all
relevant information to the secretary. He headed a panel of
scientists at the Klamath Basin Science Conference in
Medford last week and discussed how they would determine the
information — much of it unknown — the secretary
will
need.
“This is a very large
environmental question being asked,” Lynch said. “These
agreements as written are non-severable and must be
implemented together and in their entirety.”
Dam removal is part of
two settlement agreements — the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement, which allocates water among stakeholders in the
Klamath River Basin; and the Klamath Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement, which OKs a study to determine
feasibility of removing the Iron Gate, Copco 1, Copco 2 and
J.C. Boyle dams.
Lynch said the questions
the teams must answer include:
Should the dams
be removed?
If they are removed,
should restoration be done?
Would implementation of
the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement and the
hydroelectric agreement advance f ish populations? Is
implementation in the public interest?
Can dam removal and site
restoration be done inside the cost cap of $450 million?
What liabilities and
risks may the dam removal entity have to deal with?
Not dealt with at the
science conference were the economic, tribal and cultural,
agricultural, commercial fishery or recreation impacts.
Lynch said information about those impacts also would be
presented to Salazar, but weren’t within the scope of the
conference.
Most of the studies
being conducted on the effects of dam removal compare dam
removal with doing nothing. The studies will look at effects
50 years beyond the 2020 removal date. Environmental Impact
Statements and Environmental
Impact Reports, which go through public review processes,
will also be conducted prior to dam removal, Lynch said.
Engineering
The overall goal is to
determine the actual cost of dam removal and restoration
activities called for by the two settlements, said Tom
Hepler of the Bureau of Reclamation.
Studies will look at the
physical activity of removing the dams, reservoir
restoration, and modifications of Keno dam to allow for
additional fish passage. Hepler said Keno dam’s fish ladder
does not meet the current standards, but the one on the Link
River dam does.
Hepler is currently
estimating the amount of material that must be removed to
take out the dams entirely, and will compare that cost
estimate with removal to the point where fish may pass
freely.
His assessment will
encompass temporary roads that will be constructed,
engineering costs, landfill costs, revegetation and slope
stabilization, as well as plans for recreational
opportunities.
Hepler said his biggest
challenge is the time frame called for in the agreements.
“ We must go from power
plant to free-flowing river in a 12-month period,” he said.
“It will require intensive activity by contractors.”
Hepler said he will
present the most probable high
and low cost estimates to the secretary.
Climate change
Extensive modeling
will be
used to find out how water will move through the river
without the dams in place, and how climate change is
expected to affect river flows, said Nancy Parker of the U.
S. Bureau of Reclamation.
Parker’s models will be
used by others in the determination process to estimate what
will happen to sediment and fish after dam removal.
“Our focus is on flows
at Keno dam all the way down to the ocean,” she said.
Parker will develop 50
different scenarios of what could happen to future f lows
based on climate change models and current flows from Keno
dam. She also will include scenarios that use Agency Lake
and Barnes Ranch areas for additional
storage.
Sediment
transport
Sediment trapped behind
the Klamath River dams will be released if the dams are
removed. The Bureau of Reclamation is expecting most of the
sediment load to be washed downstream in the first year
after dam removal, said Blair Greimann.
Greimann’s focus will be
on modeling how much sediment will be released and how long
it will take to flush out of the river.
Greimann also will try
to determine impact to users of reservoirs and ground and
surface water.
Chauncey Anderson, a
hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said samples of
the sediment have been taken behind
all four dams to compile
a comprehensive list of contaminants present. Although
Anderson said the list is extensive, no algal toxins were
identified in the 32 samples.
Anderson will attempt to
answer whether the sediment will impact the amount of oxygen
in the water available to fish.
“At some point, we
assume a relatively stable (river) bed,” Anderson said.
However, the effect of
Upper Klamath Lake in the equation is the “600-pound
gorilla,” Anderson said.
The hope is that restoration activity impacting the nutrient
load into the lake will reduce the amount of nutrients
exported down river.
Impact on
wildlife part of decision
Biologists have
identified fall and spring Chinook and coho salmon,
steelhead, lamprey, sturgeon and other river fish, along
with some marine species, as having significance in
discussion of dam removal, said biologist Jim Simondet.
Other species
potentially impacted are the Lost River and shortnose
sucker, red band and other trout species, blacktailed deer
and spotted owl.
“This is an initial
list,” Simondet said.
The biologists’ task is
to determine population viability with and without dam
removal. The analysis will include the 10 years between now
and the 2020 dam removal deadline.
Simondet said it is
estimated there are 420 miles of usable habitat above Iron
Gate dam and another 60 miles could be restored. Little data
has been collected about the fish populations except for
fall and spring Chinook, Simondet said. The rest of the
information will be filled in by panels of experts, he said.
Information about the listed suckers will come from those
who study them. Bass and perch currently living in the
reservoirs are expected to be lost through dam removal, but
suckers trapped in the reservoirs will be captured and
relocated, he said.
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Page Updated: Monday March 15, 2010 11:22 PM Pacific
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