1 / 10

USFWS Perspectives on Hydro ESA Consultation

USFWS Perspectives on Hydro ESA Consultation. Strategies for Effective, Timely Section 7 Consultation Doug Young Energy Program Manager, FWS, Oregon. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Regions. Pacific Region. FWS Hydro ESA Issues in NW. Fish and critical habitat: bull trout

Download Presentation

USFWS Perspectives on Hydro ESA Consultation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USFWS Perspectives on Hydro ESA Consultation Strategies for Effective, Timely Section 7 Consultation Doug Young Energy Program Manager, FWS, Oregon

  2. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Regions

  3. Pacific Region

  4. FWS Hydro ESA Issues in NW Fish and critical habitat: • bull trout • (Pacific lamprey) Wildlife and plants and critical habitat : • Northern spotted owl

  5. Pending FERC Applications in NW Original Licenses: • 5 in Idaho, 4 in Washington, 6 in Oregon • 9 ILP, 6 TLP • Limited complex ESA section 7 consultations anticipated • Many go away before ESA Relicense: • 1 in Idaho, 2 in Washington, 3 in Oregon • 3 ILP, 3 TLP • Complex ESA consultations likely…

  6. When ESA (and other) complexity is anticipated… • Get started early with good planning, team building, studies and communication (informal) • Make your choice: ILP or TLP • But make informed choice!

  7. Integrated Licensing Process Upsides: • Faster • More FERC involvement • Might be able to build some collaboration into rapid, intense process Downsides: • Challenging timeframes and milestones are disincentive for collaborative engagement – and FWS has limited staff capacity to achieve ILP and collaborative process • Higher likelihood of applying other FPA authorities if the ESA Proposed Action doesn’t meet expectations = less certainty of outcome • Lost opportunities to reach “elegant solutions”

  8. Benefits of TLP Collaboration: Examples from Oregon • “Mutual interests lead to solutions that otherwise are foregone” Julie Keil, PGE Clackamas: • Looked at entire project, not piecemeal • Investments focused in best locations • Modeling and studies to determine iteratively when compliance is reached • Regulatory agencies not forced into using all regulatory tools Willamette Falls: • Negotiated performance-based survival criteria • Avoided multiple, extremely costly screens

  9. Recommendations • Ask FERC to be the Nonfederal Representative for ESA • Use TLP, or a more collaborative version of ILP • Collaborate: engage early, communicate, frontload, build mutual interests, share risk • Seek agreements that satisfy ESA as well as FPA (4e, 10j, 18) • Understand that FWS doesn’t have too many bodies –engagement where project appears viable, process is collaborative, conservation opportunities exist • Consider providing 3rd party contractor support

  10. Will it be J.A.M or Collaboration?

More Related