Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Federal funds go to dam study
$840,000 will be used to research the impacts
of dam removal
By TY BEAVER, Herald
and News 2/12/10
More than $ 840,000 in
federal stimulus money will go toward studies investigating
removal of four Klamath River hydroelectric dams.
Dam removal is a key
aspect of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, which aims
to resolve water disputes along the watershed. U.S. Sen. Jeff
Merkley, D-Ore., on Thursday publicly voiced his support of
the landmark document, the first of Oregon’s federal lawmakers
to do so.
The U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation awarded the dam study contract to Research
Triangle Institute, based in North Carolina. The company will
investigate the “economic potential for advancing fisheries
restoration by removing the four dams, and whether it is in
the public interest to do so,” according to a press release.
Pete Lucero, a spokesman
for the federal agency, said the study is just one of many the
federal government will conduct to determine the feasibility
of dam removal.
“That’s going to be very
helpful,” he said of the federal stimulus funding.
In his endorsement of the
restoration and dam removal agreements, Merkley called them
“more than a resolution of one water dispute, it is a strategy
for improving the economic and environmental future of an
entire region.”
State and federal
officials worked with dam owner PacifiCorp to develop a dam
removal agreement that sets the year 2020 as the latest
removal can begin, assuming feasibility studies deem it
favorable.
The Bureau of Reclamation
already has requested $5 million in its latest budget proposal
to study dam removal. According to those budget documents,
that requested funding would fund studies considering “the
liabilities, environmental risks, and effects on downstream
resources resulting from dam removal. This includes studying
and determining how to manage the content and volume of
sediment trapped behind the dams …”
Lucero said the study
being conducted by Research Triangle Institute could
eventually be part of that budget request but emphasized that
a number of studies will have to be conducted.
“This is one aspect,” he said.
Side Bar
What is the KBRA?
Stakeholders have worked on a final draft of the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement since early 2008.
The 369-page document is
supposed to resolve disputes over water in the Klamath River
watershed. It would cost
an estimated $1 billion
over 10 years to implement, with about $400 million of that
needing to be new spending.
People can access the restoration agreement and the related
dam removal agreement at
www.edsheets.com
|
Page Updated: Saturday February 13, 2010 03:33 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2010, All Rights Reserved