
Clean
energy vs. whales: how to choose?
Northwest's
dams are a source of clean energy. But scientists say they endanger
salmon and orcas.
By Brad
Knickerbocker
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Ashland
,
Ore.
November 28, 2007
It's an environmental
conundrum: As states try to meet their clean-energy goals, must
endangered species pay a price? That's the question facing
Washington
and
Oregon
– and the endangered
orcas living in
Puget Sound
.
Dams in the
Columbia
River Basin
have been a major cause of
plummeting salmon populations in the
Pacific Northwest
for decades. It's a problem that costly government programs
so far have failed to solve, despite continual federal court orders.
Scientists and
policymakers now realize the situation could become worse as climate
change looms and other iconic ocean species are affected as well – a
classic tale about the interconnectedness of environmental challenges
and their solutions.
Six prominent scientists
recently warned that the survival of endangered orcas in
Puget Sound
, which rely on salmon for
sustenance, could rest on the removal of four major dams along the
basin.
But thanks largely to
hydropower operations on the
Columbia
and
Snake
Rivers
, the region is relatively
green in terms of climate-changing gas emissions compared with other
parts of the
US
. How to reduce the effects,
if not the risk, of global warming while also protecting endangered
species is the problem.
Both wild salmon and
orcas (also known as killer whales) are listed under the federal
Endangered Species Act, which means government agencies must find ways
to recover dwindling numbers.
"Their futures are
intricately linked," says Rich Osborne, research associate with the
Whale
Museum
in
Friday Harbor
,
Wash.
, and one of the six orca
scientists who recently wrote to members of Congress from the Northwest
and the regional administrator for the National Marine Fisheries
Service.
Puget Sound
orcas, grouped into three
family units, now number in the 80s – a drop of at least one-third
from historic levels.
Columbia
Basin
salmon runs today are no
more than 10 percent of pre-dam times, when millions traveled between
the
Pacific Ocean
and upstream spawning
grounds.
"The science is
clear that removing four federal dams on the lower
Snake River
is needed to avert
extinction of the Snake's four unique salmon populations," the
scientists wrote.
Removing the dams would
restore 140 miles of the
Snake River
to a more natural,
free-flowing state, they wrote, substantially increasing both spawning
habitat for salmon and a critical food source for killer whales, which
can consume some 500 pounds of salmon a day.
Dam removal also would
help avert extinction of the salmon species that are most likely to
survive global warming. Salmon rely on cool water, and their spawning
streams in the upper reaches of the Columbia/Snake river system will
warm the least. "Climate change effects are a key factor in the
survival of species such as salmon and killer whales," the
scientists wrote.
Oregon Gov. Ted
Kulongoski (D) and Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire (D) both want to
reduce greenhouse-gas emissions in their states to 1990 levels or below.
Even for these relatively green states, that's a tall order.
The
Pacific Northwest
emitted about 44 million
tons of CO2 in 1990, a figure that rose to 67 million tons in 2005,
according to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, which was
created by Congress in 1980 to deal with energy and environmental issues
related to the region's dams. Even with more renewable energy sources
– such as wind power and biomass, both of which are growing in the
region – greenhouse-gas emissions are likely to rise due to an
expanding population and economy, the NPCC reported earlier this month.
In planning energy needs
for the next several decades, the council warns against breaching the
Snake River
dams."Given the
difficulty of reducing CO2 emissions, discarding existing CO2-free power
sources has to be considered counterproductive," the council wrote.
Meanwhile, the legal
battle continues over endangered salmon (and their predators, endangered
orcas).
Breaching major
hydropower dams, which is opposed by developers, industry groups,
irrigators, and most elected officials, is off the table as far as the
Bush administration is concerned. But federal courts rejected proposed
plans for salmon recovery as too little, too late.
Another plan was offered
last month. It involves what the National Marine Fisheries Service calls
"an aggressive and comprehensive series of hydropower system
improvements, hatchery reforms, and habitat enhancements." Once
again, federal courts will determine whether that's sufficient.
Environmentalists are
watching closely. Says Ken Balcomb, executive director of the Center for
Whale Research, who signed the recent letter: "History will not be
very forgiving of the resource managers who failed in their
responsibilities to these icons of the
Pacific Northwest
."
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Source:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/1128/p03s01-usgn.html |