Alternative
needed before tearing out Klamath dams
By
PAT REITEN
Guest
writer
Herald and News
December 23, 2007
Pat
Reiten is president of Pacific Power. Pacific Power and
PacifiCorp Energy
are part of PacifiCorp, owned by MidAmerian Energy Holdings
Company. PacifiCorp Energy operates
PacifiCorp’s power generation facilities and Pacific Power is
a regulated utility serving more than 700,000 customers in
Oregon and parts of Washington and California.
The recent flood closure of Interstate 5 along our most vital
transportation artery between Portland and Seattle provided a
startling dose of reality. What if authorities chose to
permanently remove the water-damaged portion of I-5 without
offering up a proven alternative route?
As ridiculous as that sounds, that’s exactly what hundreds of
thousands of Pacific Power customers face as various special
interests clamor for attention in Southern Oregon, advocating an
abrupt end to renewable hydropower along the Klamath River.
Setting aside the obvious fact that hydropower is one of the most
abundant sources of renewable energy we have on our planet and its
historic role as a critical low-cost economic catalyst for the
Pacific Northwest, we need to ask ourselves: What is the proven
alternative “route” and
then who will pay the price?
Scientists can’t agree on an answer to the first part, but they
do agree on the need to utilize high-quality science to guide
critical policy decisions. They admit that, at this time, there is
a
distinct shortage of scientific analysis of the consequences of
removing hydropower dams along the Klamath River. Lacking that
scientific knowledge, predicting the full economic impact is pure
guesswork.
Speaking
for customers
We don’t believe this is a debate of people vs. fish. Reasonable
science and experience proves that people and fish can co-exist,
even on the Klamath. However, in the larger debate about the
future of the Klamath River system, we do need to speak on behalf
of our hundreds of thousands of customers; home and business
owners; schools and seniors; farmers and families. The company has
to, and will look after its customers and the communities we
proudly serve.
When interest groups call for tearing out the Klamath dams without
regard to local environmental impacts, we will speak up for our
customers and affected communities. When settlement
parties file billion-dollar lawsuits outside of the negotiations,
constructive conversation gets understandably stifled. And when
special interests demand that all costs and all future liabilities
be borne by our customers, we have to say “no.”
PacifiCorp initiated the settlement process with all the key local
stakeholders in the Klamath region to address the questions around
continued operation of the hydro project. We originally brought
stakeholders together to balance multiple interests and find
solutions to very complicated issues on a highly complex water
system. Years later, one simple truth remains: Our customers have
a voice in this vital decision making process, which we have a
responsibility to provide.
Steep
price to pay
PacifiCorp and our parent company are among the most aggressive
renewable and wind-energy developers in the nation. We believe in
renewable energy; we a committed to it. These
renewable and carbon-free resources are a key part of that
commitment.
We strongly believe that finding agreement on the multitude of
non-power issues in the Klamath Basin is better for all concerned,
but there is a steep price to pay for meeting everyone’s agenda.
We don’t think special interests can be allowed to hijack the
hydro license settlement process for their own more diverse
agendas, nor write a blank check and force our customers to cover
it.
If appropriate governmental entities, based on careful, complete
science and good public policy, ultimately dictate removal of the
Klamath dams rather than proscribing fish passage structures or
other alternate measures, they also must deal with the consequent
financial and risk elements. Our customers should not literally
pay the price. That reality must be part of any settlement
discussion and any settlement agreement.