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Klamath
Science
Summit
raises more questions than it
answers
Felice
Pace
May 23, 2008
No
sooner had the much anticipated “science summit” on the
proposed Klamath Water Agreement
been completed than proponents of the proposed billion dollar Deal
were in the public arena claiming that the objections of scientists who
had previously expressed concerns about the Agreement’s impact on
Klamath River salmon had been resolved. A careful reading of letters
issued by reviewing scientists, however, reveals that once again the
spin meisters are misrepresenting what actually took place.
In
fact, the science summit now appears not to have been only about
clarifying scientific questions but rather an event orchestrated to
convince skeptical scientists to swallow their concerns and rely instead
on their colleagues in the federal agencies to do right by the river and
the salmon.
This
reliance on trust is necessary because, as the Hoopa Tribal Fisheries
Department pointed out in their report on the meeting, “no
enforceable flow assurances are provided through the (proposed)
Agreement.” What this means is that all claims being made about
benefits that will accrue to the environment if the proposed Deal is
implemented depend on the good will of the federal bureaucrats who will
be in charge of water management if it is adopted. For example, we are
being asked to trust that the federal government will provide the
funding required to implement the proposed Deal. However, as the
Hoopa Tribe has already pointed out, funding which under the proposed Agreement
was supposed to come in 2008 has so far not materialized. Already the
proposed Agreement is failing to deliver what it has promised.
One
of the scientists who has now retracted his concerns about the proposed Deal
is Dr. Thomas Hardy, the scientist who has been under contract to the
Department of Interior for many years to model
Klamath River
flow needs. One of the
concerns Dr. Hardy had expressed was about the still unwritten
“drought plan” which we are told will supply the missing water
needed to meet the proposed Deal’s flow targets during very dry
years. But in his post-summit letter Doctor Hardy indicates that he is
now convinced that the still-unwritten drought plan will be adequate.
Hardy
also had concerns about groundwater impacts which he says have now been
addressed. But careful reading of the summit’s meeting notes
indicates that Dr. Hardy was not given complete information about
potential groundwater impacts. Specifically, Hardy was given the
impression that
Oregon
law was sufficient to
protect groundwater; he was not informed that
California
law is radically different,
i.e. that pumping on the
California
side of the border is totally unregulated. In this regard it
should be noted that the vast majority of the water supplied to the
Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Water Bank has come from wells in the
California
portion of the
Lost
River
Sub-basin
. Doctor Hardy was
apparently not informed about the complete absence from the Agreement of
any groundwater monitoring in that sub-basin. But this is precisely
where most of the water for the unwritten drought plan will likely come
and it is also where the USGS has declared that groundwater pumping
levels are “unsustainable”.
It
is unfortunate that – because participation in the “science
summit” and its agenda were strictly controlled - Dr. Hardy and other
participants did not have the opportunity to learn “the rest of the
story” including information like that provided above about
groundwater impacts. Nevertheless, Deal proponents now have
convinced him to support their position.
Another
scientists who had expressed concerns about the proposed Deal’s
impacts is hydrologist Greg Kamman. From Mr. Kamman’s post-summit
letter it is obvious that he was persuaded to drop his concerns and
instead rely on federal managers to do the right thing. Here, for
example, is how Mr. Kammen reports his change of heart on one of his
prior recommendations:
Prior
recommendation: “Develop
more detailed, verifiable and enforceable drought emergency response and
adaptive management plan language for the Settlement Agreement. Ensure
that there are triggers in place that allow participants to revisit and
modify operations if egregious allocations result during droughts or
other situations.
New
position: Section
18 of Draft 11 of the SA appears to have evolved along these lines, at
least to the best as possible until the Drought and Emergency Response
Plans and Climate Change Assessment are initiated.”
Apparently
Mr. Kammen is now convinced that we can rely on the unwritten “drought
plan” and yet-to-be-initiated “climate change assessment” to take
care of salmon during the driest years. Like Doctor Hardy, Mr. Kammen is
suggesting that all we need to do is trust the federal managers to
complete these missing pieces and then do the right thing!
Kammen
goes on in his letter to conclude:
“It
is my opinion that as it is currently written, there is an imbalance in
stated goals in Draft 11 of the SA, such that a layperson reading it
could perceive that there are more benefits and guarantees being
provided to irrigators versus fish. Having attended the Klamath Science
meeting, I’ve been fortunate to learn more about the history, study
focus and commitment of resource managers to improve fish
habitat. A lay person reading the Agreement for the first time, however,
will not gain this perspective. Therefore, I believe that stating more
definitive goals for fish habitat improvement will benefit the Agreement
and address the perceived imbalance. If asked if I would support the
Settlement Agreement as currently written, I would do so.” (emphasis
added)
It
appears that Mr. Kammen has been persuaded to support the proposed Agreement
because of the “commitment of resource managers.” The “commitment
of (Klamath) resource managers” is not a scientific concept and would
not be a key topic at a true science meeting. It is also a topic about
which Mr. Kammen has no history or specific expertise on which to base a
judgment.
While
what is reported above raises grave concerns about the integrity of
Klamath science – especially as practiced by federal agency scientists
– of even greater concern is the fact that the “summit’ ignored
the best independent science available on Klamath River fish and water
conditions. The two National Research Council reports on Klamath science
were not even discussed; as a result the fact that the proposed Deal ignores
the recommendations of the nation’s most prestigious science body
never came up! The approach taken at the summit appears to have
been: when the best science contradicts what you want to see just act
like that science doesn’t exist!
The
summit also apparently failed to adequately investigate what may
be the most critical science question associated with the proposed Deal
– the accuracy of the models government scientists are using to
project or estimate “benefits” to the environment which will likely
result from implementing the Deal. One key question that was not
asked is about the “sensitivity” of the models. Model sensitivity is
a mathematical concept. Basically, the greater the number of factors in
the model for which values must be estimated the greater the possibility
that the “answer” which the model spits out might be wildly off
base. Sensitivity analysis does not tell us whether a model is
“right’ or “wrong” but rather how much potential a model has to
generate errors. In very complex models like those used on the Klamath,
small errors in multiple factors can combine to produce a large error in
the model’s result. Sensitivity is a measure of the potential for this
sort of cumulative error. (You can learn more about model sensitivity at
Wikipedia).
The
manner in which the science summit was controlled and manipulated
strongly indicates that
Klamath River
science has now become
highly politicized. Science is supposed to be an open process of
inquiry. But on the Klamath – like everything else – it is now
conducted behind closed doors with the public excluded and with
invitations and agendas tightly controlled. In the opinion of KlamBlog
this kind of behavior is an example of how the Bush Administration’s
Interior Department throughout its tenure has scorned open, democratic
process and sought to manipulate science for political purposes. The Klamath
Science Summit was just another in a long list of Bush
Administration outrages.
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Source:
http://klamblog.blogspot.com/2008/05/klamath-science-summit-raises-more.html
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