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Removing
4
Klamath River
dams may save money, report finds
The
federal study says pulling the plug could cost $100 million less than
keeping them.
By Eric
Bailey, Times Staff Writer
December 2, 2006
SACRAMENTO
— Setting the stage for a knockdown fight over the fate of
four towering
Klamath River
dams accused of hammering
salmon stocks and the West Coast fishing industry, a new government
study released Friday has found that decommissioning the dams could cost
$100 million less than operating them for another generation.
The economic analysis, ordered by the California Energy Commission in
cooperation with the U.S. Department of the Interior, should provide
ammunition for Indian tribes, environmentalists and commercial fishermen
eager to see the hydropower dams demolished to reopen more than 300
miles of river that have been blocked to migrating salmon for more than
half a century.
"It's now official: The Klamath hydro project is an economic
loser," said Steve Rothert of the group American Rivers.
But officials with the owner of the dams, billionaire Warren E.
Buffett's Portland-based PacifiCorp, say they will seek dam license
renewal from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which is
scheduled to rule on a new permit early next year. On Friday, the firm
released its own plan, listing several ways the dams could be modified
to ease concerns about salmon.
Bill
Fehrman, president of PacifiCorp Energy, said in a statement that the
company's proposal probably wouldn't mollify its critics, but that it
would prove the firm's desire to be "environmental stewards"
while allowing the dams to continue generating "clean, reliable
power."
That goal stands in contrast to the conclusion of the 92-page study that
California
officials released Friday.
The report, produced by a private consulting firm and the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation's Technical Services Center, found that the cost of
demolishing the dams and buying market-rate electricity to offset the
lost hydropower over the next three decades would be far less than
installing the vast infrastructure and improvements expected to be
needed for the dams to win license renewal.
Though the hydro project historically has been able to cheaply deliver
enough power for about 70,000 homes, new environmental rules would limit
the project's unfettered operation, reducing electricity generation by
23%, the study found.
The cost of erecting fish ladders and other projects to help salmon get
past the dams and cure water-quality problems would boost the 30-year
cost of the project to between $230 million and $470 million, according
to the report.
Removing the dams and buying replacement electricity over the next three
decades would cost between $152 million and $277 million, the report
said. Depending on the price of power in the future, dam removal could
save PacifiCorp ratepayers up to $285 million during that period, with a
"midline scenario" forecasting a savings of $101 million.
Decommissioning the dams "would create net economic benefits for
PacifiCorp's ratepayers" while also offering the potential for
"restoring salmon runs to one of the most important remaining
salmon rivers on the West Coast," the study concluded.
Howard McConnell, chairman of the Yurok Tribe, concluded that the dams
represent "weapons of genocide," hurting the fish that the
tribe for generations has depended on for food and spiritual health.
Officials with PacifiCorp objected to several of the study's findings,
most notably the cost of removing the dams and the potential negative
effects of releasing the huge load of sediment trapped behind them.
Dave Kvamme, a company spokesman, said nobody really knows what it would
cost to remove the dams, and added that efforts by PacifiCorp to
demolish a far smaller dam on
Washington
state's White Salmon River had run into numerous roadblocks
that have delayed removal for more than six years and driven up the
price.
"We're generally skeptical of these sorts of assumptions on
complicated matters," Kvamme said of the new study. "There are
tremendous risks in taking out dams, and those haven't been factored
into any of the costs for that alternative."
In addition, removal of the dams could expose the river to even
poorer-quality water pouring out of
Upper Klamath Lake
, Kvamme said. The lake is loaded with nutrients that can
pose problems for fish, and the dams act as settling ponds before
releasing water downriver, he said.
But the company left open the possibility of a negotiated solution with
dam critics. For more than a year, PacifiCorp representatives have been
meeting with dam opponents and government officials. Fehrman said they
continue to believe "a better, long-term solution" to the
river's salmon woes can be achieved through those talks.
This year, troubles with salmon stocks prompted federal officials to
dramatically limit commercial fishing on the West Coast.
Efforts to win more than $60 million in disaster funding for troubled
fishing fleets have run aground this year — and time is running out.
Republicans have balked despite a plea by U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos
Gutierrez.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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
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research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-
klamath2dec02,1,689067.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california |