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Big Dam Fight

The Legislature may end a long-festering dispute affecting one billionaire, a half-million Oregonians and more fish than you can count.

http://wweek.com/photos/3504/large/11929.jpg

IMAGE: waltonportfolio.com
BY NIGEL JAQUISS | njaquiss at wweek dot com
December 3, 2008

When the Legislature meets next month, its to-watch list will include a fight pitting the world’s richest man against several of the state’s biggest companies in a dispute affecting 550,000 Oregonians and uncounted numbers of salmon.

Multibillionaire investor Warren Buffett, who owns PacifiCorp, will send a team to the Capitol to ratify a tentative deal his utility struck last month with the feds and the states of Oregon and California to demolish four dams the utility owns on the Klamath River in 2020.

Standing in the way of the Legislature approving the proposed deal are some of Oregon’s biggest employers, represented by the group Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities. Among those employers: Georgia Pacific, Weyerhaeuser and Intel.

Art Sasse, a PacifiCorp spokesman, says the agreement caps ratepayer costs for removing the dams at $200 million, a limit he says is good news for the utility’s 550,000 Oregon customers.

And Sasse calls the deal a cheaper, simpler alternative than relicensing the dams. The dams have been a flashpoint for more than a decade between farmers in southern Oregon, who want the water, and fish advocates, who say the dams kill fish with low water levels and poor water quality. He says PacifiCorp reversed its earlier reluctance to remove the dams when the opposition became overwhelming.

The dams proposal has divided environmental groups. Some, such as Oregon Wild and WaterWatch, say the deal provides insufficient water and habitat for fish. Yet some California groups favor ratification of the proposal.

“Opponents of the dams made it clear that they would make it as uneconomic as possible to keep them” by requiring $300 million worth of fish ladders, Sasse says. “And the states and the feds made it clear that they wanted the dams out.”

ICNU attorney Melinda Davison, however, says Oregon ratepayers will bear a disproportionate share of the cost.

“There’s not enough time in the day to describe how badly Oregonians are getting abused in this deal,” Davison says.

Historically, she says, costs and benefits of capital projects such as dam removals are spread proportionately across PacifiCorp’s six-state system.

But in the case of dam removal, Oregon customers could bear 90 percent of the $200 million cost, even though Oregon accounts for only about 26 percent of PacifiCorp’s system.

Bob Jenks, director of the Citizens Utility Board of Oregon, which represents individual ratepayers, agrees with ICNU’s Davison.


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