
Environmentalists
Want
N. California
Dams Torn Down
Claim
They've Created Fish Kills
By David Louie
Apr. 26 - KGO - Warren Buffett is one of the world's richest men. He's used to
building wealth. But a group of environmentalists and Indian tribes want
him to tear down some assets he bought just a year ago -- three
hydroelectric dams along the
Klamath River
, a meandering stream in the
far northeastern corner of
California
. It's a battle that pits
clean energy against a clean river.
These are the three dams
along the
lower Klamath
River
, shown in video shot by dam
opponents. They're in far northwest
California
and generate hydroelectric
power for nearly 200,000 people.
The company that operates
them is owned by billionaire Warren Buffett. He's getting visitors next
week who want him to tear them down.
Kelly Catlett, Friends of
the River: "We're not going to criticize Warren Buffett or to rain
on their parade. We're going to educate."
Kelly Catlett, along with
other critics, say the dams have created massive fish kills and have
created growth of toxic algae.
Frankie Joe Myers, a
member of the Yurok Tribe, would like to see the river return to the
state his father saw.
Frankie Joe Myers, Yurok
tribe member: "He was able to, as a young boy, as a young man, was
able to go down to the creek where we live and actually scoop the salmon
directly out of the creek for fresh meat and for smoked salmon."
It's not too late to save
the river, according to commercial fishermen who count on the Klamath's
spawning grounds to supply wild salmon.
Mike Hudson, Half Moon
Bay fisherman: "The real renewable resource of the
Klamath River
is our salmon, and the
salmon will come back once the dams are down."
To give you a sense of
the magnitude of the problem, tribal leaders and environmentalists say
the
Klamath River
used to have up to a
million salmon in a good year, but that population has dropped to about
35,000.
PacifiCorp, the dam's
operators, says meetings are ongoing with 26 concerned groups.
PacifiCorp is in the processing of applying to re-license the dams.
U.S.
interior secretary Dirk
Kempthorne says the issue is clean water versus clean energy -- a
difficult choice.
Dirk
Kempthorne
,
U.S.
interior secretary:
"Time and time again, I've seen where we've had tough issues, but
having people sit down, leave the rhetoric outside and discuss them
openly and honestly, that you get to results."
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Source:
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=state&id=5249490
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