
Adding
dams
More
dams along NW rivers considered
Attorney
Rachael Osborn of the Center for Environmental Law & Policy stands
by the Monroe Street Dam last month, in
Spokane
,
Wash.
Osborn, a
water attorney, contends dam boosters have run a well-orchestrated,
under-the-table campaign to push for new dams for the benefit of
business.
By
NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS
Associated Press Writer
March 9, 2008
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.
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 state, 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?”
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.
In
Washington
state, Democratic 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
Washington
state Department of
Ecology, believes that 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.
Action is
inevitable
“It is inevitable we will take steps to increase
water supply,” Manning said. “Storage is part of that solution.”
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 slow-melting snowpack that provides
water in dry 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 lies 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.
On the
Columbia
In
Washington
, the 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 costs, which run in the
billions, Manning said. It’s unclear how much the federal government
would be willing to pay.
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
and Grand Coulee Dam in
Washington
.
An
overview of the Grand Coulee Dam, about 70 miles west of
Spokane
, in north
central
Washington
.
Grand
Coulee
was one of
the huge dams built by the federal government during the dam building
binge from the 1920s to the 1960s. Now, population growth and global
warming have people studying building such dams again to provide more
water in the summer.
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. The uproar essentially ended the era of giant dams.
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.
This month, researchers at San Diego’s Scripps
Institution of Oceanography said climate change and a growing demand for
Colorado River water could drain Lake Mead and Lake Powell — two of
the nation’s largest manmade reservoirs — within 13 years. Critics
called the study absurd, but both lakes have been hit hard by a regional
drought and are half full. The
Colorado River
provides water for about 27
million people in seven states.
At the same time new dams are being studied, there are
efforts to remove old dams.
In
Oregon
, a deal has been proposed
that would remove four dams on the
Klamath River
to restore struggling salmon runs. Fish advocates have been using
similar arguments for years in their bid to remove four dams on the
Snake River
in eastern
Washington
. The dams generate
electricity and allow cargo barges to move from hundreds of miles
upriver.
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