Resources
Committee passes
Endangered Species Compliance
and
Transparency Act
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July
19, 2006
Jill
Strait
(Rep. McMorris) (202) 225-5006
Andrew Whelan (Resources Committee) (202) 226-9019
WASHINGTON
- The House Resources Committee today voted 17-10 to support
the Endangered Species Compliance and
Transparency Act. This bipartisan legislation, sponsored by Rep.
Cathy McMorris (R-Wash.), requires Power Marketing Administrations to list
direct and indirect cost estimates associated with Endangered Species Act
(ESA) compliance.
"Today marks a victory
for electricity ratepayers in the
Pacific Northwest
," said McMorris.
"This bill is the first step in ensuring more transparency for our energy
consumers. Most people are unaware that ESA related costs, such as salmon
recovery, contribute to higher energy prices. Our goal is to foster better
communication and collaboration so consumers have better access and
understanding of information related to their energy rates."
"There is no more
unpredictable regulatory cost to western electricity ratepayers than ESA
compliance," Resources Committee
Chairman Richard W. Pombo (R-Calif.) said. "Some folks may get
their bill and say, 'A quarter of my bill to ESA costs is too much.' Others
may say, 'It's not enough.' Either way, consumers deserve to know where their
money is going. I thank Rep. McMorris for her steadfast leadership on this
issue."
In the
Pacific Northwest
, communities depend on dams to provide low cost renewable power. Yet ESA
costs related to endangered salmon have risen considerably over the last
several years due to federal court-mandates and other compliance programs. In
2004, one mandated spill cost the federal government $75 million in lost
hydropower generation in the
Pacific Northwest
. Another spill this year helped make the Bonneville Power
Administration the federal agency with the highest ESA compliance costs in the
nation. These added costs are passed directly on to the consumer, whether the
fish efforts they fund are cost-effective or not. According to the Washington
Post, a 2004 mandated summer spill amounted to spending $3.85 million for each
Chinook salmon it saved.
The majority of consumers
do not know the amount they pay for salmon recovery. In a May 2005 poll,
Northwest River Partners found that more than 70 percent of ratepayers either
do not know how much they pay or believe that less than 5 percent of their
monthly bills go to salmon recovery in the Northwest. In addition, the group
found that "almost six in ten (consumers) are not aware or do not believe
that they pay higher rates to protect salmon."
The legislation has 21
co-sponsors and is supported by the American Farm Bureau, National Rural
Electric Cooperative Association, American Public Power Association, National
Water Resources Association, Family Farm Alliance, and National Endangered
Species Act Reform Coalition.
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