
Booming
growth raises idea of dams
By
Nicholas K. Geranios
The
Associated Press
March 2, 2008
SPOKANE
— The era of massive dam
construction in the West — which tamed rivers, swallowed towns and
created irrigated agriculture, cheap hydropower and persistent
environmental problems — effectively ended in 1966 with the completion
of Glen Canyon Dam in
Arizona
.
But a booming population
and growing fears about climate change have governments once again
studying dams, this time to create huge reservoirs to capture more
winter rain and spring snowmelt for use in dry summer months.
New dams are being
studied in Washington, California, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, Nevada and
other states, even as dams are being torn down across the country over
environmental concerns — worries that will likely pose big obstacles
to new dams.
"The West and the
Northwest are increasing in population growth like never before,"
said John Redding, regional spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
in
Boise
. "How do you quench
the thirst of the hungry masses?"
Wealth of ideas
There are lots of ideas
for increasing water supplies in the West. They include conservation,
storage of water in natural underground aquifers, pipelines to carry
water from the mountains, desalination plants to make drinking water
from the ocean, small dams to serve local areas.
Most of those ideas are
much more popular than big new dams.
Gov. Christine Gregoire
put together a coalition of business, government and environmental
groups to create the Columbia River Management Plan, which calls for
spending $200 million to study various proposals to find more water for
arid
Eastern Washington
.
Jay Manning, director of
the state Department of Ecology, thinks massive new dams on the main
stems of rivers are unlikely. But it is quite possible that tributaries
will be dammed, and reservoirs pumped full of river water.
"It is inevitable we
will take steps to increase water supply," Manning said.
"Storage is part of that solution."
Pressure
increasing
Demand for water from
growing cities, industry, agriculture and struggling fish runs is
already high. Increasing the pressure are fears that climate change will
cause rain instead of snow to fall in winter, reducing the snowpack that
provides water in summer months.
Gregoire's plan drew the
support of many environmentalists by including many ideas they prefer,
including conservation measures and metering more uses of water.
But the state is also
studying dams, drawing opposition from some environmentalists,
particularly a group called the Center for Environmental Law and Policy.
"Our water future
doesn't lie with new dams," said Dr. John Osborn, a
Spokane
physician and chairman of
the Sierra Club chapter in
Spokane
. "It's water conservation."
Osborn contends dam
boosters have run a well-orchestrated, under-the-table campaign to push
for new dams for the benefit of business, underplaying the costs and
environmental destruction and ignoring the benefits of improving
water-conservation programs.
But other environmental
groups have signed on to the state's bill, although they're leery of the
dams. A big reason is that one-third of any new water would be dedicated
to survival of endangered salmon.
"What we're trying
to do is make sure that before going down that path, and instead of
going down that path, we understand what alternatives there are in
conservation and water markets and aquifer storage," said Michael
Garrity, of the Seattle office of American Rivers.
Washington
's water crisis is centered
on the
Columbia
River basin
and the adjacent
Yakima
River Basin
— which produce a bounty
of crops, including apples, cherries, hops for beer and wine grapes.
Groundwater wells in the
region are being emptied to sustain millions of acres of irrigated
agriculture, prompting ongoing studies of new dams.
A major barrier to new
dams is the cost, running in the billions, Manning said.
A recent study of the
Black Rock dam proposal in the Yakima River basin concludes the
600-foot-tall dam would cost $6.7 billion to build and operate, but
would return just 16 cents for every dollar spent to build and operate.
The explosive growth of
the West in recent decades is in part a product of an earlier binge in
dam construction that provided plentiful water and cheap electricity.
The U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation built more than 472 dams to capture, store and deliver
water, including Shasta Dam in
California
, Bonneville Dam on the
Oregon-Washington border, Fort Peck Dam in
Montana
and Grand Coulee Dam in
Washington
.
The construction of Glen
Canyon Dam on the Arizona-Utah border, dedicated in 1966, galvanized the
rising environmental movement because the resulting creation of
Lake
Powell
inundated a huge swath of
scenic land.
But the population of the
Western states grew nearly 20 percent in the 1990s, to more than 64
million, and continues to swell even as climate change poses new threats
to the water supply.
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Source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2004254401_dams02.html
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