FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FERC Ignores Science on Klamath Dams
Agency Tells Salmon To Hitch a Ride in the Back of a Truck
Ignoring the scientific recommendations of federal fish biologists, federal dam relicensing commission recommendation would shut door on effective Klamath salmon restoration.
Portland, Ore Nov 16, 2007Ignoring mandatory requirements issued from federal fish and wildlife agencies,
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) today recommended trapping and
hauling struggling salmon populations some 80 miles around four Klamath River
dams. The release of the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) is part of
the relicensing process for the PacifiCorp owned dams that block salmon habitat
and degrade water quality in the river. The FEIS comes over a year after fish
passage requirements issued by NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service clearly stated that hauling fish by truck was inadequate and that dam
removal was the best alternative for restoring salmon in the Klamath
River.
"Federal biologists have said that fish passage over these dams is
the minimum that needs to be done to restore salmon runs and their
recommendations have been tested and upheld in court," said Jim McCarthy,
Klamath Wildlife Advocate with Oregon Wild. "FERC apparently has no interest in
heeding science and the law and would rather maintain the status quo, where
salmon die and water quality gets worse."
In the statement, FERC
acknowledged that its recommended trap and haul plan contradicts the "mandatory"
fishway prescriptions outlined by fish and wildlife agencies under Section 18 of
the Federal Power Act (FEIS, Executive Summary xxxv-xxxvi). NOAA Fisheries
dismissed trapping and hauling as a viable option for salmon recovery and
required construction of fish ladders over the dams, while noting that removal
of all four dams was indeed the best option.
"Herding fish in trucks,
driving for 80 miles and then dumping them back into the river has never worked
anywhere it has been tried," said Steve Pedery, Conservation Director of Oregon
Wild. "It is time that FERC acknowledged that dam removal is cheaper for
ratepayers, better for water quality, and more likely to restore
salmon."
The FEIS did include an analysis of the removal of all four dams
as one alternative. In this analysis FERC concluded that dam removal would cost
$7 million less per year than operating the dams with mandatory fish passage.
The financial case supporting dam removal has also been bolstered by a recent
joint state-federal study that showed dam removal to be cheaper than
relicensing.
The FEIS findings highlight the need for a serious
negotiation with PacifCorp regarding dam removal. Its release comes as a
Bush-administration sponsored "settlement" group meets in Redding, CA to discuss
Klamath Basin issues.
While this group has been advertised as discussing
the possible removal of Klamath River dams, Pacificorp is not currently a party
to the Bush-sponsored
talks, nor are Oregon conservation groups. Since early 2007, the
administration has sought to use these discussions as a forum for advancing
controversial anti-environmental
initiatives on Endangered Species Act enforcement in the Klamath Basin,
commercial agricultural development on the areas National Wildlife Refuges, and
reduced water flows in the Klamath River.
Oregon Wild and other
conservation advocates believe that a negotiated settlement is desperately
needed, but to be successful, it must start with an agreement with PacifiCorp on
the removal of the lower four Klamath River dams. It should also include a
voluntary program to buy back water rights from Klamath irrigation interests and
retire them, so that more of this precious resource can be used to support fish
and wildlife. Finally, a settlement must include a large-scale wetlands
restoration program, starting with ending commercial agricultural development on
Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge.
"No strategy for restoring salmon in
the Klamath Basin can succeed unless it addresses dams, the amount of water
being drained from the river, and the agricultural wastes flowing into it,"
concluded Pedery. "We have an historic opportunity to remove the lower four
dams from the Klamath River, and we should not allow the Bush administration to
tie it to anti-environmental initiatives that hurt fish and wildlife."
###