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| Jim
Wilson/The New York Times - Geese over an irrigation
canal near the |
By
William Yardley
New York Times
April 23, 2007
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| The New York Times - The clean-energy argument has entered a debate over dams. |
But the American Indians,
fishermen and environmentalists who want the dams removed point to what
has happened since the first one was built nearly 90 years ago:
endangered salmon have been blocked from migrating, Indian livelihoods
have been threatened, and, more recently, the commercial fishing
industry off the Oregon
and California coasts has been devastated. They say the dams are
anything but clean. They say the river is a mess.
“Should we have to
sacrifice water quality for air quality?” said Craig Tucker, who is
coordinating efforts by the Karuk tribe of
Whether the power
company, PacifiCorp, wants to keep the dams because they improve air
quality or simply because they are inexpensive to operate is not clear.
But emphasizing an environmental argument that touches on climate
change has
added a new wrinkle to the longstanding debate over dam removal in the
The Klamath dams provide
enough power to serve about 70,000 homes, a small fraction of
PacifiCorp’s 1.6 million customers, which span six Western states. But
the company says only coal or natural gas are likely to be reliable
enough to replace the river, which hits hydroelectric turbines four
times on its way to the sea from east of the snow-capped Cascade Range.
Those who support
removing the dams largely dismiss the clean-energy argument, saying the
benefits outweigh losing a relatively small source of hydropower. They
note that PacifiCorp’s increased interest in the environment comes as
recent rulings by judges and federal fisheries agencies have given new
momentum for removal. The company’s federal license to run the dams
expired last year, and the government has said PacifiCorp must build
fish ladders over the four dams to get a new license, a proposition that
could cost $300 million and reduce the power the dams generate,
potentially making removal a less costly choice.
Yet whatever is spent to
restore salmon, and whether the solution is fish ladders or dam removal,
the company has said that its customers will bear the cost, and the
carbon.
“It’s a conundrum in
many ways,” said Dave Kvamme, a spokesman for PacifiCorp. “Taking
away a very useful resource like the Klamath puts more pressure on us to
build something else or buy it on the market.”
The Klamath runs more
than 250 miles from southwest
Both governors have said
removing the Klamath dams should be an option, but they have not taken
firm positions. Earlier this year, Mr. Schwarzenegger proposed spending
about $4 billion to build two dams on the
The Northwest, where more
than 80 percent of the power generated comes from hydroelectricity, has
long had some of the lowest electricity rates in the nation. It has also
been the setting for epic environmental fights that reflect the tension
across the region’s topographic and demographic divides.
“We think of ourselves
as ahead of the curve, as eco-topia, when it comes to saving endangered
species, like the spotted owl,” said John M. Findlay, a history
professor at the University
of Washington.
“But these things are much more complicated when we try to actually
solve them.”
Mr. Findlay said the
region’s identity as an environmental leader was rooted in cities like
“They’re the most
sympathetic to taking down the dams,” he said of big-city residents.
“But they’re also the people who are kind of taking cheap power for
granted. If you’re in a city and you have the power just piped in over
wires it’s too easy to not recognize where that comes from, and not to
realize that people and economies are all connected to that.”
The Klamath dams are
among the most controversial in a much broader dam removal effort led by
environmentalists, American Indians and commercial fishermen.
In the next several
years, dams on the Elwha and
More fish could be saved by removing the bigger dams, but more power would be lost, too.
Supporters of removal say
conservation measures and new sources of energy like wind and sun can
replace lost hydroelectric power. Some also say the fact that snowpack
is decreasing could reduce the amount of electricity dams generate. Dam
owners in the region, including private utilities and the federal
government, say the new sources of clean energy cannot replace dams. The
use of wind power is expanding quickly, but its effectiveness depends in
part on having dams or another steady energy source during lulls in the
breeze.
In a written statement
last month, Bill Fehrman, the president of PacifiCorp, said replacing
power from the Klamath would “cost our customers more money, and
potentially a lot more money” and “could result in adding combustion
emissions to the environment.”
PacifiCorp has said it is
not opposed to removal, but it would need approval from regulating
commissions in six states before it could pass on costs of dam removal
to its customers. Blending the cost and climate change arguments could
strengthen its case.
“We have to demonstrate
to our commissions that we’ve done what we can to protect their
interest,” said Mr. Kvamme, the spokesman.
Salmon and air quality
are not all that is at risk. The river and its dams support an elaborate
irrigation system started by the federal government more than a century
ago. Water from the river provides for about 240,000 acres of cattle
pastures, alfalfa fields and other farming. It also flows through a
wildlife preserve.
When Edward Bartell and
his family moved to southwest
Mr. Bartell shook his
head when asked if families who moved here to farm because of the
available irrigation knew such a knot could one day develop, that the
dams might not last forever.
“It was unthinkable,”
Mr. Bartell said. “Obviously, nobody would have come.”
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