Hydropower bills energize environmental debate over dams
Aug 12 - McClatchy Washington Bureau
Hydropower dams would get a boost, while their skeptics would get
punished, under a controversial new bill backed by Western conservatives
in Congress.
In a bit of tit for tat, the legislation introduced this month would
strip federal funding from environmental groups that have challenged
hydropower facilities in court over the past decade. The bill further
would block federal money from being used to study or undertake dam
removals, save for the rare occasion when Congress has authorized the
action.
"This bill would ... help eliminate government roadblocks and
frivolous litigation that stifle development," Rep. Doc Hastings,
R-Wash., said in a statement when he introduced it.
The chairman of the House of Representatives Natural Resources
Committee, Hastings has convened a panel hearing for Wednesday in Pasco,
Wash., that will be stacked with hydropower supporters, providing a hint
of legislative momentum.
But with little time left in a Congress now mostly focused on
campaign season, and with the 17-page Hastings bill poisonous to
prominent environmental groups, the legislation appears fated for now to
serve primarily as debate provocation.
"This is incredibly extreme," said Jim Bradley, the senior director
of government relations for American Rivers. "I haven't seen anything
quite like this. It's a little bit shocking for a member of Congress to
create this kind of blacklist."
American Rivers, the National Wildlife Federation and Trout Unlimited
are among the organizations that could be cut off from federal grant
funding under the bill; each has been party to a suit potentially
challenging hydropower generation, and each has received federal money.
"We're very concerned about it," said Steve Moyer, Trout Unlimited's
vice president for government affairs.
It's all a reminder that hydropower, however fresh it sounds, can
generate political heat as well as occasional cooperation.
In June, for instance, a sharply divided House passed a bill by Rep.
Jeff Denham, R-Calif., that would permit California's Merced Irrigation
District to raise the spillways on the district's New Exchequer Dam.
That would increase power production and water storage, but it also
would temporarily inundate part of a protected Wild and Scenic River.
The Obama administration opposes the Denham bill, which faces an
uncertain future in the Senate.
Hydropower rhetoric, too, can get heavy. At a hydropower hearing last
year, Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., the chairman of the House Water and
Power Subcommittee, denounced American Rivers, which advocates for
protecting river habitat nationwide, as an "extremist organization."
Last year, on a closely divided vote, McClintock won House approval
for an amendment blocking the removal of what he called "four perfectly
good hydroelectric dams" in the Klamath River Basin of Oregon and
Northern California. Congress later dropped the amendment; but, as with
the new Hasting bill, a point had been made about an important part of
the nation's energy mix.
In a more collaborative vein, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash.,
won unanimous House support in July for a bipartisan bill that
streamlines licensing for small hydropower projects. The legislation
would exempt from federal licensing requirements the nation's 1,100-plus
hydro projects that aren't operated by the federal government and that
generate less than 10 megawatts of electricity; the current exemption is
limited to projects that generate less than 5 megawatts.
"Notwithstanding all of (the) benefits, the regulatory approval
process for hydropower development, especially for smaller projects, can
be unnecessarily slow, costly and cumbersome," Rodgers said during House
debate.
Her bill awaits Senate action.
Hydropower accounts for about 8 percent of all electrical production
nationwide. California has more hydropower facilities than any other
state, while Washington state leads in overall power production.
Lawsuits periodically have challenged these dam operations, directly or
indirectly, and supporters of Hastings' bill say the litigation slows
energy development and increases consumer costs.
Groups that file lawsuits that "if successful would result in" a
reduction in hydropower generation would be covered by the federal grant
cutoff, under the new bill. Attorneys for such groups likewise would be
cut off. Spencer Pederson, a spokesman for the House Natural Resources
Committee, said the panel didn't have a list of which organizations
might be affected.
"It is a policy statement about the importance of hydropower and how
taxpayer dollars shouldn't be used to destroy that resource," Pederson
said of the bill.
Court and federal grant records show that American Rivers would be
affected because the group has litigated and it's received federal
funding, including a $1 million National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration grant last year. The 110,000-member Trout Unlimited
likewise has sued and has received federal grants, including a $350,000
habitat conservation grant last year, federal records show, while the
significantly larger National Wildlife Federation has sued and received
a variety of habitat conservation grants last year.
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