Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Klamath River pollution limits approved
New rules for Oregon,
California likely would be costly for city, agriculture
followed by: Pollution plan under review
by Sara Hottman,
Herald and News 1/5/11
The federal
Environmental Protection Agency last week gave final
approval to a pollution reduction plan for the California
portion of the river, meeting a court-ordered deadline.
A nearly identical plan
by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality is
expected to receive EPA approval
by Jan. 20.
The plans are mandated
by the federal Clean Water Act and aim to improve water
quality, restore fish habitats and remove toxins from the
river.
The Klamath River
stretches 255 miles from Upper Klamath Lake to the Pacific
Ocean in northern California.
The EPA’s pollution
reduction plan impacts communities along the river,
including Klamath Falls, as well as farmers, ranchers and
others in the river’s watershed.
Advocates of the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement, a document that
advocates removal of four dams if studies indicate it’s
feasible, say dam removal would help ease pollution
reduction requirements by allowing the river to flow freely
and removing sources of temperature and algae pollution.
But opponents say
removing dams won’t
California’s Klamath
River pollution plan is “agnostic in regard to dam removal,”
said Gail Louis, environmental protection specialist, EPA
water division.
“If the dams come out,
there are certain pieces (of the plan) that would be more
quickly resolved,” Louis said, but the plan doesn’t depend
on or expect dam removal.
Pollution reduction
plans are called total maximum daily loads, or TMDLs, and
regulate
New regulations
California’s TMDL
requires stakeholders to annually reduce phosphorous loads
in the Klamath River by 22,000 pounds and nitrogen levels
120,000 pounds.
A court ordered final
EPA approval by the end of 2010. That approval launched a
60-day countdown for California stakeholders to write plans
on how they ’ll reduce their pollution loads by the required
amounts: phosphorous
by 57 percent, nitrogen
by 32 percent, carbonaceous biochemical oxygen demand by 16
percent.
The most substantial
reductions are required from the Oregon-California border
through the Klamath Hydroelectric Project that includes dams
in Klamath and Siskiyou counties. That area also must reduce
temperature and algae associated with the dams.
“The potential for dam
removal could be a significant catalyst (to reduce
pollutants),” said Sue Keydel, environmental scientist, EPA
water division. “But it’s not going to instantaneously
fix them all.”
Dams produce heat that
increases water temperature and hurts aquatic life, she
said, and reservoirs behind dams are breeding grounds for
algae that suck oxygen from the water and can be toxic to
mammals.
But Upper Klamath Lake,
which has had a TMDL since 2002, has a blue-green algae
problem and “significant loads” flow downstream to the
Klamath River, impacting its TMDLs in both Oregon and
California, Keydel said.
According to the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement, dam owner PacifiCorp
would remove four dams along the Klamath River, paid for in
part by a surcharge on power customers’ bills. Over 10
years, California customers will pay $250 million and Oregon
customers will pay $100 million.
The settlement is
associated with the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement,
which seeks to establish sustainable water supplies and
affordable power rates for irrigators, help the Klamath
Tribes acquire 92,000 acres of timberland, and fund habitat
restoration and economic development in the region.
==============================================
Pollution plan under review
Oregon’s plan for Klamath River submitted
to EPA
Oregon DEQ last week
submitted the final plan for the Klamath River to the
federal Environmental Protection Agency for approval,
expected by Jan. 20.
DEQ officials during
public meetings and in written responses said they
understood the cost burden, but had to fulfill federal
requirements in the Clean Water Act.
Downstream
first
The EPA approved
California’s plan last week.
Klamath Falls city
officials told federal officials that establishing
downstream pollution loads first forced the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality to reduce upstream
loads to nearly unattainable levels.
The plans, called
total maximum daily loads, or TMDLs, regulate how much
pollution sources like municipal wastewater treatment
facilities can release into water bodies each day.
Reducing
pollution
Oregon’s Klamath
River TMDL regulates phosphorous , nitrogen, biological
oxygen demand and temperature. The biggest problem for
stakeholders is the phosphorous allocation; the order
requires a 91 percent reduction from the current level.
Stakeholders say it
naturally exists in Upper Klamath Lake — 76 percent of
the total load comes from the lake, compared to 3
percent from the city — so filtering it to the mandated
degree is impossible.
The city already meets biological oxygen
demand requirements and can meet nitrogen and
temperature requirements once it finishes planned
improvements to the wastewater treatment facility.
|
Page Updated: Thursday January 06, 2011 04:04 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2010, All Rights Reserved