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Water storage
options
The
Long Lake basin holds promise for area
By JILL AHO
H&N Staff Writer
In the 1800s, when U.S.
Geological Survey crews came to the
Klamath Basin to map the terrain,
surveyors found water in a shallow,
closed basin west of Upper Klamath Lake.
They called the body of water Long Lake.
By the time they returned, no water
remained there.
“It was the end of the little ice age,”
said Bureau of Reclamation planning
division chief Jon Hicks. “There was
more snow and moisture and water then.”
But the fact that Long Lake once held
water means that more than a century
later when Bureau of Reclamation
officials began exploring ways to store
water in the Klamath Basin, it remained
a viable option. Today, it is the front
runner.
The Bureau would like to create a water
savings account that would take water
from winter runoff in years of high
precipitation and store it for years of
drought.
Top picks
When the Bureau first began studying
water storage options in the Basin, it
looked at 96 possibilities, which were
then narrowed to 24, then narrowed to
six. Of these six, Long Lake is the most
appealing, officials say.
But Stan Mattingly, a water conservation
specialist, said Bureau officials are
continuing to explore other options.
“You don’t want to overlook other
possibilities,” he said.
The runner-up to Long Lake is Whiteline
Reservoir, to the east of Upper Klamath
Lake.
It would take the front position if Long
Lake proves to be cost prohibitive or
has other issues. Questions remain about
the cost of pumping water to the lake,
which does not have a stream nearby, and
whether the lake’s basin leaks.
“You’ve got to keep all (options) open
without wasting time,” Hicks said. “If
you find some show stoppers at Long
Lake, then you might move back to
Whiteline.”
Klamath Water Users Association
Executive Director Greg Addington said a
water storage project has long been a
priority for the group.
“Long Lake has emerged as the most
logical location,” Addington said. “You
wouldn’t have to build a huge new dam,
and it’s off-stream.”
Steep sides
Long Lake is appealing because it is in
a naturally closed basin with steep
sides and a narrow, small surface area,
which means less evaporation. It has the
projected ability to store 300,000 to
500,000 acre-feet of water.
Through studies, the Bureau found that
storing groundwater isn’t a viable
option.
“All the groundwater moves in the same
direction,” Hicks said. “It doesn’t stay
where you put it. You can’t get it back
later.”
Other considerations, such as Round Lake
or Agency Lake, while feasible, are less
appealing because they are shallow and
have such large surface areas that
evaporation becomes a factor. They also
would have high pumping costs because
they are farther away from Upper Klamath
Lake.
Bureau researchers also wonder if there
will be excess water to store.
The Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement
and water right adjudication have the
potential to determine what is “excess”
and who has a claim to that excess.
“This is premised on having water,”
Hicks said. “We’re trying to determine a
firm, fixed water supply.”
Addington said during KBRA negotiations,
the subject of water storage was
broached.
“We asked those other parties to support
additional off-stream storage, which is
a big step,” Addington said.
Purpose of storage
Hicks said the exact purpose for storing
water is yet to be determined.
“This may be a valuable asset whether
there’s an agreement, or there isn’t an
agreement,” he said, adding that stored
water could be used for multiple
purposes, not just feeding irrigation
supply lines for farming within the
Klamath Project boundaries.
“Since we don’t have a firm answer to
the purpose,” Mattingly added, “then (we
don’t have an) answer for how is it paid
for.”
Bureau officials say they are hesitant
to speculate on the cost of any
potential storage project because too
many variables remain in play. In the
last few years, the Bureau has spent
about $4 million on research, Hicks
said.
The Bureau also isn’t at a point where
considerations such as fish screens and
environmental impact statements come
into the forefront.
Addington said KWUA remains a supporter
of the Bureau’s research and maintains
that continued funding is a high
priority.
“The frustrating part is you look around
the state of Oregon and name the last
water storage that was built,” Addington
said. “It’s a problem West-wide.”
Many questions remain, and several years
of study are ahead, Hicks said, but Long
Lake, as an off-stream storage option,
could be one of the first of its kind.
“We may be in the forefront of
off-stream storage,” he said. “It’s
pretty vital to keeping the project
operating.”
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