
Condit
Dam removal could hurt fish downstream, state says
By
The Associated Press
Seattle
Times
November 25, 2005
VANCOUVER
,
Wash.
— Fish advocates see the
plan to demolish Condit Dam on the White Salmon River as good news for
salmon everywhere, but the state Ecology Department says the project
could hurt fish downstream and might violate the federal Endangered
Species Act.
Demolition of the
125-foot-high hydroelectric dam, owned by Portland-based PacifiCorp, is
proposed for October 2008. The project would open 33 miles of steelhead
habitat and 14 miles of salmon habitat in the area of the river blocked
by the dam since 1913.
The river forms a portion
of the boundary between Klickitat and Skamania counties along the
Columbia Gorge.
After years of
negotiations and talks with regulators and environmental groups,
PacifiCorp has begun filing permit applications to remove the dam that
generates 14.7 megawatts, enough power for about 7,800 homes.
PacifiCorp proposes to
tunnel and blast a 12- by 18-foot hole near the dam's base, drain
Northwestern Lake
and release more than 2
million yards of sediment that has built up behind the dam.
The sediment plume could
kill fish and other aquatic species below Condit Dam and displace fish
in the
Columbia River
downstream to Bonneville
Dam, according to Ecology's draft environmental-impact statement.
Officials also fear the
sediment could wipe out a population of endangered chum salmon for as
long as four or five generations. PacifiCorp has proposed lessening the
overall impact by capturing returning fall chinook salmon before the dam
is breached and transporting them to a hatchery for harvest of their
eggs and milt to preserve the 2008 run.
But the statement said
"it is probably not feasible to trap [chum] for hatchery
rearing," and that species' spawning gravels likely would remain
buried under silt the following year.
Few chum spawn above
Bonneville Dam because the fish have difficulty navigating its fish
ladders, said Carl Dugger, a biologist with the state Department of Fish
and Wildlife. He said scientists did find a few chum spawning in the
White Salmon River a few years ago, but added those fish were probably
just strays.
The impact statement
questions whether the fish population would be able to recover from the
additional impacts of the sediment release. Environmentalists are
optimistic.
"There's no question
that removing a big dam is going to impact fish and water quality, but
in the long term, the benefits are going to radically outweigh the
short-term costs," said Brent Foster of Columbia Riverkeeper, one
of a dozen environmental groups to formally endorse the project.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.fwee.org/news/getStory?story=1415
|