Fish killed at power plant may exceed $30M a year:
Court values bass alone at $50 apiece
Jun 5 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Tom Henry The Blade, Toledo,
Ohio
If $30 million worth of fish sounds like a lot for northwest Ohio's
economy to sacrifice each year for electricity generated by Oregon's Bay
Shore power plant, consider this: The real impact might be a lot
greater.
On Wednesday, as a number of nonprofit groups were releasing what is
believed to be the region's first-ever report to quantify the annual
loss of 60 million fish in dollars, Magistrate Lou Wargo of Ottawa
County Municipal Court in Port Clinton issued a court order that put the
value of smallmouth bass at $50 a fish on behalf of the state of Ohio.
The figure is almost triple the $16.77 value placed on smallmouth bass
in a report released to the public that same day by activist and outdoor
groups. The lower figure was included in a report compiled by Gentner
Consulting Group of Silver Spring, Md., and issued by the Western Lake
Erie Waterkeeper Association, the Sierra Club, the Ohio Environmental
Council, the Lake Erie Charter Boat Association, the Izaak Walton League
of America, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and Ohio Citizen
Action.
It claimed that FirstEnergy Corp.'s failure to modernize its coal-fired
Bay Shore power plant with effective fish barriers has been costing the
region $30 million annually for years.
The report, which cost the groups $25,000 and took four months
to produce, listed values for fish species between 24 cents per fish for
freshwater drum and carp to $20.38 per fish for walleye.
"We're finding out now our report was extremely conservative," the
Sierra Club of Ohio's Nachy Kanfer said on a boat tour of the plant's
intake channel hosted for reporters yesterday by Sandy Bihn of the
Western Lake Erie Waterkeeper Association.
Mr. Kanfer was referring to an order issued against three Tennessee men
and three Georgia men for illegally taking 141 smallmouth bass from Lake
Erie in April. According to a news release issued Thursday by the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, the men pleaded guilty May 3 to 30
poaching charges and were ordered by the magistrate to pay $16,290 in
fines, court costs, and restitution.
The restitution, according to the state agency's news release, included
$50 "for each fish taken illegally in accordance with legislation that
places a value on wild animals unlawfully held, taken, bought, sold, or
possessed."
Mr. Kanfer said the state's value of smallmouth bass is further evidence
that FirstEnergy's damage to the region's coveted fishing industry isn't
exaggerated.
Ellen Raines, FirstEnergy spokesman, said the utility has no interest in
reading the report or debating its credence. "It's not going to have any
impact on the decisions we make," she said.
The estimate of an annual loss of 60 million fish -- 46 million adults
and 14 million juveniles -- came from a FirstEnergy consultant for a
permit request now before the Ohio EPA.
"We think those numbers are low. They're the company's own numbers," Mr.
Kanfer said.
Those losses include an estimated 4,445 smallmouth bass, according to
the report by FirstEnergy's consultant, Toronto-based Kinectrics Inc.
The state agency has said it likely will allow the utility to do a pilot
study with barriers known as reverse louvers instead of requiring a
cooling tower.
The latter would save 95 percent of the fish and reduce the thermal
impact of the plant's outfall on Maumee Bay but cost $100 million or
more. The louvers would cost about $500,000 to be put across the intake.
Ms. Bihn, who lives along the bay, said Bay Shore's discharge is so hot
that water along the shoreline between the plant and Maumee Bay State
Park rarely freezes, even when deeper water in the lake's western basin
has frozen over.
The 55-year-old power station lies smack in the middle of one of the
Great Lakes region's most important fish nurseries, a site that Ohio EPA
officials have said would not be authorized if the power plant was being
built today. Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland recently said he is personally
aware of the problem, though adding that he does not plan to intervene
with whatever the Ohio EPA decides.
Contact Tom Henry at:
thenry@theblade.com
or 419-724-6079.
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