|







|
Become a friend of
the Klamath Bucket
Brigade
Send
Donations Here
All donations are tax
deductible
|
|
This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
|
|
|

The Beautiful and the Dammed
How
the West Got Flooded
by Jeffrey
St. Clair
May 17th, 2007
From the foreword to Dam
Nation: Dispatches from the Water Underground edited by Cleo Woelfle-Erskin, July Oskar Cole and Laura Allen. (Softskull
Press, 2007)
More than 700 feet below
the surreal steel span of
Glen
Canyon
Bridge
, the
Colorado River
bursts loose from the
spillways of Glen Canyon Dam. The current of this once mud-red river is
now a strange cartoon-blue, deathly cold, as it courses through the last
17 miles of
Glen
Canyon
. Now, it is a river in name
only, its every minute fluctuation controlled by hydroengineers and
water bureaucrats. The
Colorado
is finally loose, but it is
not free.
To the north stands the
implacable concrete plug of Glen Canyon Dam: smooth, white, indifferent.
Behind the blond wall stretches a dead lagoon of stagnant water 200
miles long, burying one of the most glorious canyons on Earth. Knowing
that the one-armed explorer John Wesley Powell was something of a heroic
figure to the conservation movement aligned against the Colorado dams,
Floyd Dominy, chief hydro-imperialist and then-head of the Bureau of
Reclamation, impishly decided to name Glen Canyon’s watery grave Lake
Powell, Jewel of the Colorado.
Radical
environmentalists, such Edward Abbey and David Brower, viewed the naming
as kind of final sacrilege. But sticking Powell’s name on the
reservoir is probably apt. The big hydro dams clotting the rivers of the
world have always been pushed by progressives under the false promise of
tamed rivers, cheap water for irrigation, and cheap power. Native
ecosystems and native peoples be damned. Even Powell, a humane man by
most accounts, thought this way. He would have dammed every river in the
American West. Does it matter that he would have done so in the name of
democracy?
In 1869 John Wesley
Powell began his first venture down the Green and
Colorado
Rivers
. This wasn’t an Army
expedition. It didn’t enjoy the backing of the federal government.
Powell wasn’t the hired errand boy of an
eastern-industrialist-turned-philanthropist. He wasn’t searching for
gold or oil. He was merely a largely self-educated teacher at a small
college in rural
Illinois
with a consuming interest
in geology. His expedition to the Colorado Plateau consisted of four
small boats and a crew of nine other men: hunters, drifters, friends,
and shell-shocked Civil War vets. It was financed by the Illinois
Natural History Society he headed. Powell had neither the educational
pedigree of Clarence Dutton nor the imperial ambitions of John Fremont.
Powell was the oddball on
the roster of explorers of the American outback. His trip was as close
to pure science as the West had yet seen. His conclusions from that
trip, and his subsequent career, highlight the dangerous impurities
bundled into that science, and the blind spots Powell shared with his
cohorts. He presents us with a parable of intrusiveness*, heedlessness,
and self-aggrandizement that often escapes the notice of an
environmental movement more willing to iconize him for relative virtue
than analyze his ultimately disastrous failures.
The trip took Powell and
company through some of the world’s deepest and most beautiful
canyons-including Lodore, Desolation, Labyrinth, Cataract, and the
Grand-and over vicious rapids and through sizzling uncharted deserts and
Indian country to the Colorado’s confluence with the Virgin River, at
Grand Wash in southeastern Utah, 1,000 miles downstream. In 1875 after a
second, federally-funded expedition crewed by geologists, photographers,
and painters-and rooted on by the booster press and Congress-Powell
produced his self-glorifying bestseller Exploration of the
Colorado River
. Three years later his
Report on the Lands of the Arid Region of the
United States
called for a reorganization
of the development of the West under the auspices of a new government
agency-which he, of course, would lead. Powell got to head the US
Geological Survey; but the West’s fate ended up in the hands of the
Bureaus of Reclamation and Land Management.
However awed he might
have been by the landscapes he traversed, Powell never shared
Thoreau’s belief in the redemptive power of wilderness and of wild,
untamed rivers. Rather, he knew that the arid wasteland itself must be
“redeemed”: by the judicious application of irrigation principles.
Mid-life, the amateur geologist who collected seashells on the banks of
the
Mississippi
became a technocrat
fascinated with harnessing the water of the West. Like
Jefferson
, Powell held that
democratic values flourished from small farms and ranches. An
appropriately irrigated West, Powell believed, would keep the interior
reaches of the country from falling into the hands of monopolists and
robber barons.
Powell dreamed of
capturing the river’s power for utilitarian service. At various turns
he could be called a progressive, a realist, a technocrat; under any
label he was consistently ready to re-engineer nature and western
society, an advocate of centralized planning on a vast scale. Powell was
one of the first apostles of scarcity. Laudably, he would reject
Jefferson
’s gridded township system
for political boundaries contoured to hydrographic basins. Still he was
willing to impound nearly every drop of the
Colorado River
’s water behind dams–built high in the mountains in order to
minimize evaporation. “All the waters of all the arid lands will
eventually be taken from their natural channels,” he wrote. Note the
double “all”.
Powell advocated this
gargantuan water-impoundment even though he estimated that all of that
water would yield viable crops or pasture on less than 3 percent of the
arid Western lands. He sought to rationalize and control the development
of these irrigation lands by reserving them in the public estate, making
most of the West a kind of federal commons interspersed with homesteads
and small communities.
“I early recognized
that ultimately these natural features would present conditions which
would control the institutional or legal problems,” Powell wrote in
his Report on the Arid Lands. That is, the harsh terrain would form a
natural safeguard against over-population and economic exploitation. He
was wrong, of course. Soon he saw the power elite capture the government
and use it to redesign the plumbing of the West-training the spigots to
their own enterprises, irrigating the vast plantations of the Imperial,
San Joaquin, and Sacramento valleys, worked by the West’s equivalent
of slave labor. Irrigation led to servitude, not liberation; to cartels,
not small-scale democracies; and the centralized water bureaucracy was a
servant of the hydro-imperialists, not an honest broker of the public
interest.
Powell began to see the
shape of the future, and objected. He engaged in fierce congressional
combat with Senator William Stewart of
Nevada
, the Ted Stevens of his
time. Powell was one of the first whistleblowers and he met the fate
assured most of his kind: he was chased out of office, running from
trumped-up charges of corruption and financial malfeasance.
Was this disaster of
water control the perversion of Powell’s vision, as he thought? It was
different from anything the maverick explorer and politician had wanted
or worked for. But it was in another way the culmination of his
vision-of his deeper vision, which differed not at all from that of
those he fought. The vision characterized enterprises of the era, from
rail-laying, to buffalo-killing, to dam-building, to homesteading
promotion, to forced relocation and outright massacres of Native
peoples. It is the vision of Manifest Destiny.
When the Manifestly
Destined looked out over the land, they saw deficiency: an incongruity
between what was there and what was familiarly usable. The reflex
thought after such vision is always, how to clear the slate and close
that gap. Pre-existing human relationships to the land-honed over
millennia of necessity, of error, of success-was invisible to the
various explorers’ eyes. The functioning commons, the dynamic
equilibrium of fire-managed forests and prairies, the intricate
stewardship and sharing of a river’s salmon runs between dozens of
autonomous peoples: rejected as impossible, these had to be denied and
if necessary eradicated, with the plow, the canal, the cattle ranch, the
grid of 160 acre wheat farms. As the
US
runs up against its
borders, it begins to recognize the magnitude of loss incurred in its
expansionist rampages. This book is a primer in that destruction and the
possibilities of recovery.
Dam Nation begins with
the
Colorado
, presenting a bleak
portrait of the West’s greatest river in decline. The annual floods of
the Green, Grand, and
Colorado
Rivers
have been neutered, as
upstream dams straight-jacket the flow of the rivers. The river channel
is narrowing. The seasonal wetlands are vanishing. Springs and seeps are
drying up. Beaches are disappearing. The water table is dropping. The
cottonwood groves are dying off, and so are the sand and coyote willows,
squeezed out by tamarisk. The river is losing its organic nutrients, as
driftwood and other debris are entombed behind the dams. Endemic species
of fish, like the humpback chub, which evolved only in the
Colorado
Basin
, are sliding toward
oblivion, replaced by catfish and carp. The water behind the dams is
evaporating, turning saline, loading up with pesticides, petrochemicals,
and fecal matter. The reservoirs are silting up, losing storage capacity
and electrical generating capability.
On the
Klamath River
, the decline has reached
bottom, giving us a glimpse of the
Colorado
’s near-certain future. The salmon of the
Klamath River
, once one of the mightiest
runs on earth, have been for decades in a slow, steady slide toward
extinction. Then, in 2002, 30,000 salmon died as they ascended the
broiling river, deprived of water by the political antics of farmers in
the
Upper
Basin
who demanded full
deliveries in a drought year. The gory front-page photos of mass death
suggested a sudden catastrophic event, a singular tragic mistake. In
fact, the salmon of the Klamath, which flows some 200 miles from
southern
Oregon
to the northern
California
coast, are the victims of a
system that has conspired against them since the 1940s at least.
Industrial agriculture, backed by the federal government, has free reign
to de-water the
Klamath River
to irrigate alfalfa,
potatoes, and onions.
That the Yurok, Hoopa,
Karuk, and Klamath tribes enjoy treaty rights to the river’s salmon
and depend on those fish for food, income, and ceremonial rites has
meant nothing to the irrigators’ agribusiness backers. The salmon are
a looming impediment to their increasingly frail economic hold. Once the
fish provided leverage for legal threats-via tribal lawsuits and the
Endangered Species Act-the masters of the river plotted their final
doom. With the troublesome fish out of the way, they believed that their
precious waterworks would be safe.
In the wake of the fish
kill, the
Klamath River
tribes stepped up their
campaign against PacifiCorp’s relicensing of the four hydroelectric
dams. The implausible latest addition to the alliance of tribes,
environmentalists, fishermen, and
Pacific Northwest
ratepayers is the
ultra-conservative Klamath Basin Water Users Association. The farmers,
many of whom lost contracts after the 2001 water shutoffs, say that they
have finally joined with the tribes because removing the dams would pull
the basin back from the brink of crisis. (The alliance is praiseworthy,
powerful, and barely precedented, but it must be noted: Farmers
irrigating this dry cold land, trying to save their way of life, still
ride in the same wooden boat going over the waterfall with John Wesley
Powell.)
In the face of such
united pressure, PacifiCorp has agreed to discuss dam removal. Those
dams coming down would make the Klamath conflict-until now considered a
hopeless battle-a turning point in the water wars. We already see
farmers in the
Deschutes
basin heeding the
Klamath’s terrible warning.
Deranged models of
U.S.
water control have been
cloned across the developing world, always with the same bottom line:
drowned riverine ecosystems, displaced communities, flooded sacred
sites, extinctions, and resource privatization.
Third World
nations buying the hydro-power rap must hock their futures to the
merciless cadre of global bankers, submitting to the neoliberal
stricture of the IMF and World Bank. Water and power must be privatized,
jacking up the price for basic necessities. The dams are vulnerable to
catastrophic breaches and terrorist attacks-and I don’t mean
terminally ill river-rats with a houseboat and 17 beer coolers packed
with C-4 explosives. Object to the dictates of your imperial overlords
and your brand-new dam might well become an inviting target for cruise
missiles.
Worldwide, threatened
river systems are crying out for a new generation of whistleblowers, for
government biologists, hydrologists, and geologists willing to risk
their own careers to save river ecosystems on the brink of collapse.
Like Dai Qing in
China
, they will, almost
certainly, be vilified, ridiculed, investigated, and threatened by the
international cliques profiteering on the waters’ demise. In the
U.S.
, the Bush administration,
in collusion with its stacked Supreme Court, is axing the last frail
protections federal whistleblowers enjoy. These scientists, should they
ever step into the public spotlight, will need cover and protection. Can
they look to Gang Green-the big DC enviro groups like the Sierra Club
and the Wilderness Society-the ones that gave you Glen Canyon Dam (and
so many more)? Fat chance.
But we must leave these
brave whistleblowers to their fates for the moment. Their alarms alone
will never be enough. We learn from the example of John Wesley Powell
that science, vision, and conscience will not suffice against the
Leviathan’s momentum and might. Nor can any Bureau of Reclamation
fish-saving compromise truly threaten the hegemony of the megadammers,
wherein any water that makes it to the sea is water wasted, and no
trickle goes unlevied. In just the same way, the hero model favored even
by many eco-warriors actually perpetuates the mega-dam mindset. Those
who would save the rivers must take the rivers for their heroes, and the
salmon and chub, and look not to iconized individuals for leadership but
to one another and to the earth itself for partnership. The
Klamath River
tribes, like the
Mun
River
protesters and
Cochabamba
’s “Defenders of Water
and Life” win more lasting victories than Gang Green. It will take a
network of river consensus and the forging of a new water culture to
bust the dams and to scour away their poisoned silts.
Dam Nation
is a clarion call for a new global movement of resistance to the
hydro-imperialists: a movement to stop new dams, decommission existing
ones and restore wild rivers. This is a real reclamation movement whose
compelling mantra is: Let the rivers flow and the river peoples be. Join
it.
Moab
, 2006.
Jeffrey
St. Clair is the co-editor, along with Alexander Cockburn, of CounterPunch. He is the author of many books, most recently End
Times: The Death of the Fourth Estate. Read
other articles by Jeffrey,
or visit
Jeffrey's website.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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.dissidentvoice.org/2007/05/the-beautiful-and-the-dammed/
|