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North
Coast Environmental Center Rejects Klamath Agreement
by Dan
Bacher
March 3, 2008
The
North Coast Environmental Center Board has rejected the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement as it is currently written, according to today's
news release issued by NEC.
News
Release
NEC
Rejects Klamath Agreement
Top scientists say Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement is flawed, and
could prevent fish recovery, without guaranteed downstream flows
Contact: Greg King, Executive Director
Northcoast Environmental Center
707-822-6918
Science Contacts:
Dr. Bill Trush: 707-826-7794 x. 12
Dr. Thomas Hardy: 435-797-2824
Greg Kamman: 415-491-9600
March 3, 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Arcata, CA — The Northcoast Environmental Center (NEC) will not
support the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement as it is currently
written, the NEC’s Board of Directors decided in late February. The
NEC, which has worked for 37 years to protect the
Klamath River
and its fishery, is
concerned that the Agreement does not contain a guarantee of water for
fish nor even a goal for fish recovery. Yet the Agreement would give
farmers in the upper Klamath basin an unprecedented guaranteed allotment
of water for irrigation.
The decision not to support the Restoration Agreement (also known as the
Settlement Agreement) is based on scientific analyses provided by three
of the West’s most respected river flow analysts, who concur that as a
“plan for a plan” — even with the removal of four dams — the
Agreement could result in Klamath River flows so sparse at crucial times
that endangered salmon may not be able to recover from what are now
critically low numbers.
“We want nothing more than to support a workable agreement that would
result in decommissioning of four mainstem Klamath dams and provide fish
with the water they need to avoid extinction,” Greg King, Executive
Director of the Northcoast Environmental Center, said Monday. “The
independent scientists we have commissioned and consulted, who are among
the most respected river analysts in the west, tell us this deal won’t
do that. This Agreement would lock us in to supporting water allocations
for agriculture, as well as state and federal legislation, that could
result in stream flows so low as to cause extinction. We can’t do
that.”
The NEC is one of 26 parties to the Klamath Basin Agreement. Last year
the organization contracted with hydrologist Greg Kamman, of Kamman
Hydrology in
San Rafael
, and fisheries biologist
Dr. Bill Trush, of McBain and Trush in Arcata, to analyze the scientific
modeling and conclusions contained in the Restoration Agreement. In
their reports (available at http://yournec.org) both scientists concluded that the Agreement could lock into
place water allocations that would harm salmon.
Last week Trush completed an alternative plan for evaluating the needs
of
Klamath River
fish prior to approval of
the Restoration Agreement. That plan (attached) would have to be well
under way, or completed, before the NEC will support the Basin
Agreement.
In his alternative plan, Trush wrote, “The Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement relegates salmon and the
Klamath River
ecosystem to the status of junior water users, while
Upper
Basin
irrigators become the
senior water users. This premise squarely places onto the salmon and the
river ecosystem any risk inherent in the conclusion that flows contained
in the Agreement will actually provide enough water for recovery of the
species. Nowhere is this clearer than in the future allocation of water.
… Quantitative goals for fish and the river ecosystem, conspicuously
missing from the Settlement Agreement, are necessary to establish how
much improvement (benefit) is required for restoration. … The NEC
shouldn’t support the Settlement Agreement until these specific
concerns are addressed quantitatively.”
In addition to Trush and Kamman, another river scientist, Dr. Thomas
Hardy, has expressed trepidations about the Basin Agreement. Hardy is
the Associate Director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory at
Utah
State
University
. Many consider his studies
of
Klamath River
hydrology to be the “best
available science” for evaluating the river’s fishery. Last year the
National Research Council utilized much of Hardy’s work in its
definitive text, Hydrology, Ecology, and Fishes of the
Klamath
River Basin
. In February 2008 Hardy
told the NEC Board of Directors that in the Restoration Agreement,
“Agriculture gets all the guarantees, and everything related to the
environment is left to somewhat vague processes and committees.”
Hardy said that in dry years agriculture in the upper basin will be
“taking too much water from the system,” with flow models
demonstrating that the river will probably go well below 1,000 cubic
feet per second (cfs) in late summer and early fall. “I’m just
scared to death any time the flows get below 1,000 cfs,” said Hardy.
Such low flows, he said, “double the risk to the system.” Flows that
resulted in the 2002 fish kill, which killed nearly 70,000 adult Chinook
salmon, were between 600 and 700 cfs.
Hardy said that an acceptable Agreement would “guarantee flows for
fish first, then other water uses.”
In his hydrological report, Kamman said, “I am concerned that the
successful implementation of the Settlement Agreement hinges on a
conceptual plan which has no guarantees of being achieved within a
specified amount of time – time does not appear to be on the side of
Klamath River
salmonids.”
Under the Agreement, water in the mainstem will be reduced from
September to February, “and this reduction in flow may prove
detrimental to
Klamath River
salmonids,” said Kamman.
“These flow conditions further emphasize the imbalance in flow and
likely, in turn, salmonid habitat quality between the winter and spring
periods (a time of salmonid immigration and spawning).”
Kamman also reports that the flows recommended in the Basin Agreement
will draw too much water from
Upper Klamath Lake
, part of the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex,
one of the most important habitats in
North America
for migrating waterfowl.
Kamman said water use projected in the Basin Agreement could result in
“lower total annual lake storage than was experienced historically.”
The NEC is also concerned that Settlement parties are being asked to
support the Basin Agreement without seeing a dam removal agreement from
PacifiCorp, owner of the four mainstem
Klamath River
dams whose relicensing process was the catalyst that brought the
26 Settlement parties together nearly three years ago. The PacifiCorp
deal has been marred from the start by the company’s intransigence and
occasional fits of economic hubris.
“Tearing down these dams would be the best thing to happen to an
American river since dams started going up in the first place,” said
the NEC’s Greg King. “You’d think that in facing the best
opportunity in history to save precious salmon from extinction the folks
at PacifiCorp would declare a ‘no-brainer’ and just go ahead and do
it.”
PacifiCorp ratepayers, said King, would also save $114 million if the
company tore down the dams, as opposed to building the more expensive
fish ladders required by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/03/03/18483168.php
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