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Salmon and Energy:

Salmon and Energy:. Do We Have Enough Power to Remove the Dams? by Katherine Hausrath khausrath@kentlaw.edu. www.britishenergy.com/environment/BE/school/. http://www.bluefish.org/opendams.htm. Thank you .

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Salmon and Energy:

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  1. Salmon and Energy: Do We Have Enough Power to Remove the Dams? by Katherine Hausrath khausrath@kentlaw.edu www.britishenergy.com/environment/BE/school/ http://www.bluefish.org/opendams.htm

  2. Thank you • Reed Burkholder, a long-time advocate of the salmon, who pointed me towards the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers websites and other information.

  3. Scope of My Presentation • Background • Dams • Salmon • Why are the dams a problem? • Scientific issues • Legal issues • Energy issues

  4. Where are the dams? • On the lower Snake River • West of Lewiston, Idaho • In southeastern Washington http://www.sci.wsu.edu/idea/Salmon/salmon.html

  5. The lower Snake River http://protophoto.com/picture.html?pic=2807

  6. The four dams • Lower Granite – constructed in 1975 • Little Goose - constructed in 1970 • Lower Monumental - constructed in 1969 • Ice Harbor - constructed in 1962

  7. Lower Granite Dam http://crunch.tec.army.mil/nid/webpages/nidviewpictures.cfm?ID=100607&ACC=1

  8. Lower Monumental Dam http://crunch.tec.army.mil/nid/webpages/nidviewpictures.cfm?ID=100599&ACC=1

  9. Ice Harbor Dam http://crunch.tec.army.mil/nid/webpages/nidviewpictures.cfm?ID=100605&ACC=1

  10. Who owns the dams? • The US Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation own and operate the 31 dams on the Snake and Columbia Rivers. • The Army Corps of Engineers owns the four dams at issue. Bonneville Power Administration, Who Are We? (April 7, 2004), at http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/About_BPA/.

  11. Bonneville Power Administration • Part of the Department of Energy, but not tax-supported. • Markets the electricity from the dams to the Pacific Northwest’s public and private utilities. Bonneville Power Administration, Who Are We? (April 7, 2004), at http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/About_BPA/.

  12. Why were the dams built? • Irrigation • Creating an inland port • Hydropower

  13. Irrigation • Only Ice Harbor provides irrigation. • Only provides water to 35,000 acres on 24 farms. Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition, The Columbia & Snake Rivers Interactive Map, at http://www.removedams.org/interactive%5Fmap (last visited April 5, 2004);See alsoMichael C. Blumm, et al., Symposium on Water Law: Saving Snake River Water and Salmon Simultaneously: The Biological, Economic and Legal Case for Breaching the Lower Snake River Dams, Lowering the JohnDay Reservoir, and Restoring Natural River Flows, 28 Envtl. L. 997, 1024 (1998) (hereinafter Blumm). http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/irsprayhigh.html

  14. Idaho’s Inland Port • The chief economic benefit is navigation. • The dams allow Lewiston, Idaho, 465 miles upriver from the Pacific ocean, to be a “seaport.” Blumm at 1024. http://www.idahofuturetravel.info/PortTrns.asp

  15. Hydropower • The dams produce about 5% of the Northwest’s power. • I will discuss this in much greater detail later. Blumm at 1024.

  16. NOT Flood Control • None of the four lower Snake River dams are authorized for flood control. Blumm at note 155 (citing U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Columbia River System Operation Review, Final Environmental Impact Statement 3-3 (1995)).

  17. Salmon • Anadromous – which means they spend time in fresh water and the ocean. • 4-5 year life span. • Five species: • Sockeye (pictured) • Chinook • Chum • Coho • Pink. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, What’s a Salmon?,athttp://salmonofthewest.fws.gov/default.htm (Mar. 24, 2004). http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1salmon/salmesa/mapswitc.htm

  18. Why are the dams a problem? • The Dams’ Impact on Salmon • Importance of Protecting Salmon • Endangered Species Act • Native American treaties • Salmon’s role in the ecosystem

  19. Negative Impacts of the Dams • Salmon need fast-moving, cold water. • Dams create slow-moving, warm pools of water ideal for predators of salmon. • Dams block/impede salmon migration. City of Seattle, Habitat Salmon Needs at Each Stage of the Life Cycle, (last visited April 8, 2004), at http://www.cityofseattle.net/salmon/needs.htm

  20. Salmon only have a short time period to move between fresh and salt water • When baby salmon (smolts) begin to move toward the sea, they only have a set amount of time before their bodies can no longer tolerate fresh water. • In reverse, when adults come back to spawn, they only have a set amount of time before they die. City of Seattle, Habitat Salmon Needs at Each Stage of the Life Cycle, (last visited April 8, 2004), at http://www.cityofseattle.net/salmon/needs.htm

  21. Scientific Opinion • NMFS attributes 80% of the decline in the salmon populations directly to the Snake River dams. • The Army Corps of Engineers found that the dams have raised the aggregate mortality of juvenile salmon in the 330 miles of continuous reservoir created by the four Snake River Dams from 33-75%. Chris Garrett, The Political Symbolism of Dams, (1999) (citing United States Army Corps of Engineers, Lower Snake River Juvenile Salmon Migration Feasibility Study, (1997)) at http://www.whitman.edu/environmental_studies/WWRB/damsymbol.htm

  22. Endangered Species Act • Congress enacted the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”) in 1973. • The ESA’s purpose is to conserve and recover “listed” species as well as the ecosystems upon which these species depend. Endangered Species Act, § 1531(b).

  23. National Marine Fisheries Service • NMFS – responsible for ESA-listed salmon and steelhead (a type of salmonid) - as well as all other marine species. • NMFS has listed 26 populations of salmon and steelhead in the Columbia and Snake Rivers as endangered, threatened, or candidate species. National Marine Fisheries Service, Endangered Species Act Status of West Coast Salmon and Steelhead, at http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1salmon/salmesa/pubs/1pgr.pdf (Mar. 25, 2004).

  24. Listed Populations of Salmon • Sockeye – one endangered and one threatened population. • Chinook – two endangered, seven threatened, one candidate populations. • Coho – two threatened populations, three candidate populations. • Chum – two threatened populations. • Pink – none presently listed. • Steelhead– two endangered, eight threatened and one candidate species. National Marine Fisheries Service, Endangered Species Act Status of West Coast Salmon and Steelhead, at tp://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1salmon/salmesa/pubs/1pgr.pdf (Mar. 25, 2004)

  25. ESA Jeopardy Decisions • § 7 - Agencies whose actions may affect listed species of anadromous fish must “consult” with NMFS. • NMFS decided that the federal Columbia Basin dam operations would jeopardize the continued existence of listed salmon and steelhead. • NMFS must then discuss the availability of reasonable alternatives that it can take to avoid jeopardy.

  26. NMFS decided that dam-breaching is not a “reasonable alternative.” • NMFS is currently attempting to protect the salmon through methods besides breaching the dams.

  27. Methods Besides Dam-breaching • Barging has been the most common on the four dams at issue. • Smolts (juvenile salmon) are collected at the dams, loaded on trucks or barges, and are released below the dams. • This is not effective. See Blumm. http://www.taxpayer.net/snake/GAOfactsheet.pdf

  28. Other Ineffective Methods • Fish ladders (pictured) • Spilling water at dams over the spillway. • Spilling water over the dams is somewhat effective, but is not done if the water gets low. • None of these options are as effective as dam-breaching. See Blumm. http://www.steinborn.org/jim/gifs/alaska2/bonneville-fish-ladder.JPG ,

  29. Breaching the Dams is the best scientific option • Scientists agree that breaching the dam is the best option, scientifically, for recovering the salmon. • Idaho Department of Fish and Game has said the “natural river option is the best biological choice for recovering salmon and steelhead in Idaho...with the highest certainty of success and lowest risk of failure, and is consistent with the preponderance of scientific data.” Blumm at 1012 (quoting Idaho Dep't of Fish & Game, Report to the Director, Idaho's Anadromous Fish Stocks: Their Status and Recovery Options 16 (1998)).

  30. The controversy, and the reason for NMFS’ decision was mainly political. • I will address economic issues surrounding the breaching of the dams later.

  31. Native American Treaty Rights http://www.watershed-watch.org/ww/Photos/dipnetting.html

  32. The Tribes • The Nez Perce Tribe • The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation • The Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon • The Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian Nation Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Treaties, (April 4, 2004), athttp://www.critfc.org/text/treaties.html

  33. The Land • In 1855, the tribes signed four treaties that ceded over 35 million acres of the Columbia River basin to the United States in exchange for… Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Treaties, (April 4, 2004), athttp://www.critfc.org/text/treaties.html

  34. The Treaty Text • “The exclusive right of taking fish in the streams running through and bordering said reservation is hereby secured to said Indians; and at all other usual and accustomed stations, in common with citizens of the United States, and of erecting suitable houses for curing the same; also the privilege of hunting, gathering roots and berries, and pasturing their stock on unclaimed lands, in common with citizens, is secured to them.” Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Treaties, (April 4, 2004), athttp://www.critfc.org/text/treaties.html (emphasis added).

  35. Supreme Court Decisions • 1905 - Treaties are to be interpreted the way the Indians understood them. U.S. v. Winans. • 1979 - The tribes were entitled to a “fair share” of the fish, which was interpreted as 50% of the harvestable fish destined for the tribes’ usual and accustomed fishing places. U.S. v. Washington. U.S. v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 371 (1905); U.S. v. Washington, 444 U.S. 816, 816 (1979).

  36. Salmon’s Role in the Ecosystem • Many species depend upon salmon for food, including bears. http://www.wildlifewebsite.com/bear/alaskan-brown-bear-with-salmon-97.html

  37. Salmon Replenish Nutrients • Salmon carcasses contribute significantly to the nitrogen capital in freshwater systems. • One study found that 18% of the nitrogen in riparian plants along a coho salmon spawning stream was of marine origin. Robert E. Bilby & Peter A. Bisson, Nutrient Enrichment of Riparian Areas by Spawning Salmon, (1997), (citing Bilby, et al.), athttp://www.onrc.washington.edu/research/pnw/1997/NutrientEnrichmentofRiparianAreasbySpawningSalmon.htm

  38. How to Breach the Dams • Slowly lower reservoir levels to prevent erosion; • Remove the earthen embankment, and leave the concrete locks and powerhouses dry. • Breaching all four lower Snake dams would take about 4-7 years. Blumm at note 32 (citing Bill Loftus, How To Breach A Dam, Lewiston Morning Trib., June 7, 1998, at 1D).

  39. Breaching Ice Harbor Dam Before After http://www.wildsalmon.org/about/partially.htm

  40. Energy Issues: How much power do the dams actually produce? Picture of the generator room at Lower Monumental http://www.theslowlane.com/91tripb/gen.html

  41. The Terms: • Watts - measure instantaneous use of power – for example, a 100-watt light bulb uses 100 watts per hour. • Megawatt – one million watts. • Megawatt hours (MWH)– the actual output of megawatts for a period of time. • Average megawatt hours (aMW) – the average output of a power source per hour. • For example, on March 1 Lower Granite produced 5,880 MWH, so 5,880/24 = 245 aMW. Bob Bellemare, What is a Megawatt? (June 24, 2003), athttp://www.utilipoint.com/issuealert/print.asp?id=1728

  42. Energy Production of the Lower Snake Dams: March, 2004 (note, this is near-peak production time for these dams)

  43. Lower Granite • MWH for all of March – 228,304 • aMW – 307 (to calculate this, take the MWH for the whole month and divide by 31 days and then divide by 24 hours). Lower Granite – U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Energy Production of Lower Granite Dam, (Mar. 2004), at http:// www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/ftppub/project_data/daily/lwg.txt

  44. Little Goose • MWH for March – 225,374 • aMW - 303 Little Goose - U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Energy Production of Little Goose Dam, (Mar. 2004), athttp://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/ftppub/project_data/daily/lgs.txt

  45. Lower Monumental • MWH for March – 239,406 • aMW - 322 Lower Monumental - U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Energy Production of Lower Monumental Dam, (Mar. 2004), athttp://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/ftppub/project_data/daily/lmn.txt

  46. Ice Harbor • MWH for March – 232,540 • aMW – 313 Ice Harbor - U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Energy Production of Ice Harbor Dam, (Mar. 2004), athttp://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/ftppub/project_data/daily/ihr.txt

  47. How does this compare to all of the power produced in the Northwest?

  48. What is the relevant total power produced? • Bonneville Power Administration (the federal agency that sells power to the utilities) serves most of Idaho, Oregon, Washington and part of Montana and Canada.      Bonneville Power Administration, Who Are We? (April 7, 2004), at http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/About_BPA/ http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/About_BPA/

  49. Idaho • Electric generation for all of 2002: 9,786,933 MWH • 1117 aMW (I calculated this by taking 9,786,933 divided by 365 days and then divided by 24 hours). Energy Information Administration, State Electricity Profiles, 2002, (Dec. 2002), athttp://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/st_profiles/idaho.pdf

  50. Washington • Electric Generation for all of 2002: 102,765,048 MWH • 11,731 aMW Energy Information Administration, State Electricity Profiles, 2002, (Dec. 2002), athttp://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/st_profiles/washington.pdf

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