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Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement requests that PacifiCorp
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A long-awaited agreement among farmers, fishermen, Indian tribes,
conservationists and the federal government to manage water in the
The plan, announced Jan. 15, comes with an estimated $985 million
10-year price tag - which would be paid for with both public and
non-governmental funds. That doesn't include include the cost of
removing the dams, which would fall on PacifiCorp, the electric utility
that owns and operates them.
PacifiCorp estimates the cost could reach $4 billion, not counting the
investment required to replace lost power-generating capacity.
"You don't just go up there with a sledgehammer," said Paul
Vogel, spokesman for the company, referring to the complexity of dam
removal.
The agreement basically boils down to special interest groups asking for
money, said Vogel.
Although PacifiCorp initiated the settlement talks as part of the dam
re-licensing process, it has been excluded for the past several months,
he said.
"It sure can't be a comprehensive plan for Klamath Basin-wide
issues, because the several hundred thousand customers we represent
weren't in the room," he said. "Our customers should not have
to pay for the unreasonable cost of removing these things to further
these interests."
Not unanimous
Support for the settlement agreement also isn't unanimous among
agricultural, environmental or tribal interests. Some farmers outside
the Klamath Irrigation Project worry the plan doesn't offer enough
protection for agriculture, while some environmental groups believe it
leaves fish at the mercy of irrigators.
Despite these misgivings, the groups that drafted the agreement say
they've all had to make equal concessions.
"It would be hard to argue that we have not staked out a massive
amount of common ground," said Greg Addington, executive director
of the Klamath Water Users Association, during a joint telephone press
conference with tribes, conservation groups and federal representatives
on Jan. 15.
"There's not a party on this phone call that hasn't had to
compromise," he said.
Main goals
When Klamath Irrigation Project farmers entered into the settlement
talks 2 1/2 years ago, they had three main goals, including a reliable
source of water for irrigation, affordable power for pumping and
assurance that growers wouldn't be negatively affected by Endangered
Species Act regulations if salmon returned to previously shut-off
habitat, said Luther Horsley, president of the Klamath Water Users
Association.
"We believe the agreement achieves those objectives," he said.
Water diversions limited
Under the agreement, the amount of water diverted for irrigation would
be limited per guidelines developed by a "joint powers entity
comprised of irrigation districts" known as the Klamath Water and
Power Agency, said Steve Kandra, farmer and board member of the Klamath
Water Users Association.
Irrigators would receive water according to an "allocation
curve" that depends on how much surface water is available overall,
Kandra explained.
In times of severe drought, water diversion would be curtailed by
roughly 100,000 acre feet, or about 25 percent of irrigators' total
demand in very dry years, he said.
Growers would offset the reduced diversion by conserving water, forgoing
irrigation and pumping groundwater, Kandra said.
When water is more abundant, the amount available for irrigation would
increase correspondingly with the conditions. However, growers don't
need as much water for irrigation in wet years, he said.
"We're not going to bring water in just to bring water in," he
said.
Ground pumping statistics
Based on the statistical probability of having a dry versus a wet year,
irrigators would only need to pump ground water about 50 percent of the
time, rather than every year, as they generally do now, Kandra said.
Also, when the dams are removed or additional storage is built, 10,000
acre feet would be added to the 330,000 acre foot baseline amount that
could be diverted for irrigation, he said.
As for compliance with the Endangered Species Act, "we'd still be
looking at environmental responsibilities," Kandra said.
But by abiding by the allocation curve and proceeding in good faith with
habitat conservation projects, on-project irrigators would basically be
protected from ESA enforcement, he said.
Sticking to standards
As long as on-project irrigators stick to the standards outlined in the
settlement agreement, biological opinions issued by the National Marine
Fisheries Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would
categorize irrigation as a "non-jeopardy" to fish, said
Kandra.
For off-project irrigators to gain the same level of protection, on the
other hand, individuals and groups will need to voluntarily satisfy
performance standards, which may include forgoing irrigation and
undertaking conservation projects, he said.
Controversial arrangement
Kandra admitted this arrangement is controversial, since some
off-project irrigators would question the value of protection compared
to the cost of performance standards.
"Individuals will need to control their fates on that issue,"
he said. "People are going to have to be making some
decisions."
However, protection from regulation may be offered as an
"umbrella" to groups that cooperatively satisfy performance
standards, Kandra said.
"You're certainly hoping watersheds would be working
together," he said. "Some of the things will meld right into
activities already taking place."
Renewable energy
Both on-project and off-project irrigators will be able to join the
Klamath Water and Power Agency to enjoy stable electricity prices; the
agency would reduce rates through renewable energy projects, such as
wind turbines and solar panels, Kandra said.
"The money generated by the enterprise will come back as a credit
to people who participate in the program," he said.
Unrealistic plan?
The Klamath Off-Project Water Users, one of the negotiators in the
settlement, believes that the energy plan is unrealistic, which is one
of several reasons the group opposes the overall agreement, said Edward
Bartell, farmer and president of the group.
"We think it's going to absolutely devastate this community,"
he said.
The $33 million allocated for renewable energy development in the
agreement doesn't come with any funding assurances, he said. Even if it
did, the plan wouldn't produce enough revenue to contain rates at 3
cents per kilowatt-hour, the prescribed goal, Bartell said.
"It's off by an order of magnitude to be able to do that,"
said Bartell.
Legal assurances
The agreement also doesn't provide any concrete, legal assurances that
farmers would actually be protected from ESA enforcement or future
irrigation water shut-offs, he said.
"We think it's just an empty promise in the settlement," said
Bartell. "Everybody seems to have back-pedaled on everything, as
far as assurances for agriculture."
Water rights
Bartell is also troubled by the settlement's recognition of tribes'
"time immemorial" water rights.
"We think it's extremely risky to grant a water right like
that," he said.
The agreement also contains a provision that would have the federal
government buy out 30,000 acre feet of water rights from off-project
irrigators, he said.
"We see it as a huge threat," said Bartell.
Two environmental groups that withdrew from the settlement talks,
WaterWatch of Oregon and Oregon Wild, also see the agreement as
dangerous. From their perspective, though, the settlement bows to
pressure from "politically powerful agribusiness interests,"
according to Oregon Wild.
Tribe opposition
The Hoopa Valley tribe, which remained in the talks but does not support
the settlement, opposes a provision that would have tribes waive legal
claims against the U.S. government if they disagree with the plan's
implementation, said Mike Orcutt, fisheries director for the tribe.
"There's not enough assurances that fish populations would be
protected," he said.
While the agreement does specify minimal irrigation diversions, it does
not set up similar minimum flow levels for fish, said John DeVoe,
executive director of WaterWatch. The solution to environmental issues
in the settlement is based on political convenience, not actual science,
he said.
"It's a fantasy to think this agreement is going to solve those
problems," DeVoe said.
The settlement agreement does contain sacrifices that unsettle every
party involved in the talks, so it's easy to "cherry pick"
provisions that make entire 256-page document seem unpalatable to any
one group, said Kandra.
When taken as a whole, however, the settlement takes everybody's
fundamental interests into account, he said.
"It's like when people read the Bible. You can take a verse and
either take it in or out of context as it relates to the book,"
said Kandra. "It makes it a very complex organism... Everybody is
going to look at it and interpret it differently."
Staff writer Mateusz Perkowski is based in
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