[env-trinity] SJ Mercury-Salazar: Klamath dam removal will cost far less
Tom Stokely
tstokely at att.net
Tue Sep 20 14:18:15 PDT 2011
http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_18929674
Salazar: Klamath dam
removal will cost far less
By MARCUS WOHLSEN Associated Press
Posted: 09/19/2011 12:37:46 PM PDT
Updated: 09/19/2011 04:01:30 PM PDT
SAN FRANCISCO—The cost of removing four dams
on the Klamath River in California and Oregon will
be far less than first believed, Interior Secretary Ken
Salazar said Monday as he worked to rally support
for several massive federal water projects.
An environmental report to be released Thursday
will show that the proposed removal project will
cost about $290 million, not $450 million as
initially estimated, Salazar told an audience at the
Commonwealth Club in San Francisco.
"We today have real hope for a healthier basin and
stronger economy on the Klamath," Salazar said.
The dam removal proposed for 2020 is part of an
agreement to restore historic salmon runs while
maintaining irrigation for the region's farmers by
dismantling the hydroelectric dams. Three of the
dams are in Northern California and the fourth in
Southern Oregon.
More than 550,000 Oregon customers of Portland-
based dam owner PacifiCorp are paying an extra 2
percent per month on their electric bills to cover the
cost of dam removal. The utility's 40,000 California
customers will soon start to see the same surcharge.
The drastically lower cost will not mean lower utility
bills for those customers, since PacifiCorp is on the
hook for the first $200 million the removal will cost
under the terms of the removal agreement, said Bob
Gravely, a company spokesman.
The state of California has agreed to cover any costs
above the first $200 million.
The dams generate
enough electricity to power about 70,000 homes.
PacifiCorp was confident alternate sources to make
up for the loss power could be found by 2020,
Gravely said.
The draft environmental impact statement will show
that removing the dams will cost about 50 jobs, all
tied to generating electricity at the dams, Salazar
said. Removing the dams would create about 4,600
jobs, including about 1,400 for the dam removal
itself and between 70 and 695 farm jobs owing to a
more reliable water supply, he said.
An advocacy group for the region's farmers said
they believed the number of farm jobs created by the
dam removal would be even higher.
"We believe that the draft EIS numbers underestimate
the jobs and gross income that farming and
ranching provides to the (Klamath) Basin," said
farmer Steve Kandra in a statement issued by the
group, Partnership to Restore Stability and
Prosperity to the Region.
The report will show that Coho salmon will reclaim
nearly 70 miles of historical habitat and steelhead
420 miles, Salazar said.
The secretary said he planned to make a final
decision by March 2012 on how to proceed with the
dam removal plan.
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