Court ruling favors salmon over more electricity from Columbia River dams
The Seattle Times --Jul. 29--PORTLAND, Ore.
A U.S. District Court judge yesterday barred the federal government from a first-ever attempt to reduce the summer spill that improves passage of young salmon past dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers.
Young salmon migrate from freshwater spawning grounds out to ocean feeding
grounds. Biologists have said flushing the salmon over spillways rather than
through turbines can improve their survival rates.
U.S. District Court Judge James Redden's ruling was a strong rebuke to the
National Marine Fisheries Service, which had concluded that spill could be
reduced beginning Aug. 1 without harming the recovery prospects for an
endangered fall run of Snake River chinook salmon.
And the ruling was a significant judicial affirmation of the power of the
Endangered Species Act, which has propelled a multibillion-dollar effort to
restore wild salmon runs around the region.
"I don't want anyone to walk out of here thinking I ignored the public
interest in terms of ratepayer dollars," Redden said after announcing his
ruling to a courtroom packed with attorneys and representatives of federal
agencies, Northwest Indian tribes and conservation groups. "It's a
difficult case, but my job is to consider the Endangered Species Act and the
fate of juvenile salmon."
The National Marine Fisheries Service on July 1 signed off on a BPA plan to
forgo the summer spill in favor of less costly measures to help the salmon. The
result would have been an estimated five to 40 fewer adult endangered salmon,
which since 1989 have varied from a low of 78 returning adult spawners to more
than 1,000 last year. It also would mean up to 12,000 fewer fish from runs not
under federal protection, according to a federal analysis.
But a coalition of tribes, conservation groups, sport fishermen and the state
of Oregon challenged the federal analysis, saying that alternate measures would
not offer the same level of protection to salmon. Redden agreed, calling the
plan "arbitrary and capricious." And, he said that the benefits of the
spill to the long-term environmental health of the region outweighed the
short-term economic benefits of increased hydroelectricity production this
summer.
The Columbia and Snake dams are operated by the Army Corps of Engineers. The
dams have been a significant cause of the decline of Northwest wild salmon,
which are now outnumbered by the millions of hatchery fish that make their way
down rivers each year in Washington, Oregon and Idaho. Despite an upsurge in
numbers in recent years, the wild fish remain far below historical peaks.
Spilling water is costly, sacrificing power generation at a time when the BPA
could sell the electricity to California to reduce debt and at least put a dent
in the need for Northwest rate increases.
The BPA provides wholesale power to 130 Northwest public utilities, including
Seattle City Light, Tacoma Power and the Snohomish County Public Utility
District. In October, the BPA will announce its next wholesale rate move, which
could range anywhere from a 7 percent decrease to a 7 percent rate increase,
according to Ed Mosley, an agency spokesman.
The plan struck down by Redden would have reduced spill next month at the Ice
Harbor and John Day dams on the Snake River, and the Bonneville and The Dalles
dams on the Columbia.
Conservationists called the ruling an important, historic victory.
"I think the people in this region understand that wild salmon in their
rivers are more valuable than a nickel or a dime on their electric bills,"
said Todd True, attorney for Earthjustice, one of the environmental groups that
filed the lawsuit.
Kathryn Brigham, spokeswoman for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla
Reservation, called the ruling a victory for both ratepayers and tribes.
"All of us have to accept responsibility, and we need to figure out how to
address it cooperatively," Brigham said of salmon-recovery efforts.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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