News

  • CBB: Steps Taken To Cool Warming Lower Snake, Reduce Thermal Blocks As Large Basin Sockeye Return Heads Upstream (2)

    500px-USACE Lower Monumental DamFriday, July 1, 2016

    As a larger than predicted run of sockeye salmon head up the Columbia and Snake rivers ˆ some 400,000 fish -- the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took steps this week to cool water in the lower Snake River.

    At least 1,900 Snake River sockeye, listed under the Endangered Species Act, are predicted to move into the Snake River during this year‚s return.

    Beginning Monday, the Corps increased the outflow at Dworshak Dam on the North Fork of the Clearwater River -- the additional water from the dam cools flows further downstream.

    The Technical Management Team, an interagency panel that guides hydro operations throughout the basin, and the Corps are trying to keep water in the tailwater at Lower Granite Dam at a targeted 67 degrees Fahrenheit and no higher than 68 degrees.

    In addition, TMT at its meeting Wednesday directed the Corps to close the surface spillway weir and modify spill at the dam, which has been an aid to juvenile fish passage. The largest chunk of juvenile yearling chinook salmon migrating out of the Snake River has already passed the dam as have nearly all of the juvenile sockeye salmon. TMT fisheries managers are uncertain what the impact will be for migrating subyearling chinook.

    However, with the surface temperature of the water in the dam‚s reservoir already hitting 77 degrees F (25 degrees Centigrade) on an hourly basis, TMT fisheries managers worried that spilling the warm water would begin to create a thermal block below the dam, which is what happened in 2015 as the few sockeye that made it to the dam were stymied by the warm water and had to be trapped and hauled to Eagle Hatchery in Idaho.

    The RSW draws water from the surface waters and passes that water downstream of the project.  The goal for the adult sockeye migration is to maintain the water below the dam as cool as possible, according to Paul Wagner of NOAA Fisheries.  The fisheries managers agreed to close the surface weir and transfer that volume of spill to the deeper spill bays that draw water from a depth of 50 feet which is much cooler at 67 degrees (19.5C) than the surface weir location.  

    While it is not certain where the subyearlings pass the project during these warm periods, the volume of spill passing the project will not change, Wagner said.  

    It‚s been warm in the lower Snake River basin and is predicted to be even warmer, according to Steve Hall, the Corps‚ Walla Walla District reservoir manager, at TMT‚s meeting.

    After a weekend of relatively low flowsˆ set at about 2,400 cubic feet per second ˆ from the now full Dworshak Reservoir, the Corps increased flows Monday to help cool Lower Granite water. The release of water does not have an immediate affect at Lower Granite and so releases from Dworshak must be timed in order to keep water temperatures within the acceptable range at the Snake River dam.

    "It takes about three days for cold-water releases from Dworshak to reach the downstream side of Lower Granite Dam, where the target temperature gauges are located. So, we have to plan well ahead and make adjustments at Dworshak that will be effective at the time we'll need them further down the river," Hall said. "We are required to maintain water temperatures at Lower Granite below 68 degrees, if possible, using available reservoir-system management methods."

    Hall said that over the weekend the Corps was conserving water and ensuring the reservoir was as full as possible. Prior to Monday‚s release, the reservoir was at an elevation of about 1,600 feet, which is considered full.

    The Corps gradually ramped up flow Monday and about 2 pm it reached what it calls full powerhouse, generally a discharge of 9.8 kcfs, but Hall said full powerhouse currently is closer to 9.4 kcfs. Water elevation in the Clearwater River downstream of the dam also increased by about one-half to two-thirds feet at the North Fork confluence.

    One of the factors that is warming the lower Snake River is discharges at Idaho Power‚s Hells Canyon Dam as the power company generates electricity for air conditioning in the region.

    Based on modeling, the higher outflow at Dworshak Dam will lower the reservoir level by about 10 inches per day. Still, the reservoir will be within 5 to 7 feet of full over this holiday weekend.

    According to Corps information, NOAA Fisheries Columbia River System Biological Opinion requires the Corps to meet several objectives to enhance ESA-listed fish survival, including maintaining minimum water flows for resident fish and salmon, and releasing Dworshak Reservoir water to maintain lower Snake River water temperatures and help speed juvenile fish downriver to the ocean.

    "With such hot weather forecasted to continue, water temperature at Lower Granite could soon exceed 68 degrees if not regulated, creating conditions in the reservoir system that are unhealthy for ESA-listed fish," Hall said. "Dworshak's 43-degree outflows make a big difference in water temperature there and further down the Snake River."

    Snake River sockeye salmon are listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act. There is growing evidence that summer sockeye are the most vulnerable to harm from warm water, compared with other salmon runs.

    The sockeye run this year was predicted by the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee in its pre-season forecast to be 101,600 fish, far fewer fish than the 512,500 sockeye that returned in 2015 and below the 10-year average of 290,200. However, 284,345 sockeye had already passed Bonneville Dam as of Thursday this week. The 10-year average on this date is 193,277 (see www.fpc.org for fish passage information).

    TAC updated its predicted run size of sockeye Monday, increasing its estimate to 400,000 sockeye.

    As of yesterday, 231,012 of the sockeye have reached The Dalles Dam, 226,807 the John Day Dam, 190,670 McNary Dam, and some fish are already in the lower Snake River with 275 over Ice Harbor Dam, 240 over Lower Monumental Dam, 110 at Little Goose Dam and 57 at Lower Granite Dam. Last year at this time, 67 sockeye had passed Lower Granite. The 10-year average at Lower Granite is 37 as of July 30.

    Last year at this time, 357,363 sockeye had passed Bonneville Dam, 290,982 at The Dalles, 252,225 at John Day, 183,687 at McNary, 372 at Ice Harbor, 313 at Lower Monumental, 150 at Little Goose, and 75 sockeye at Lower Granite.

    In 2015, low flow conditions, coupled with extremely high air temperatures and warm water in the major tributaries in the lower Snake and Columbia rivers from mid-June to mid-July, resulted in the highest mainstem temperatures recorded in the Columbia River.
     
    At 68 degrees F sockeye salmon begin to die and most of the fish passed Bonneville Dam in 2015 after the water temperature had hit 73 degrees.

    For  background, see CBB, April 15, 2016, „NW Power/Conservation Council Hears ŒLessons Learned‚ Report On High Mortality For 2015 Sockeye Run,‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/436491.aspx
     
    Some 99 percent of Snake River sockeye that were counted crossing Bonneville Dam died before they reached the upper Salmon River‚s Sawtooth Valley where the salmon spawn. Just 56 adult sockeye salmon made it on their own to the Sawtooth Valley and another 51 were transported from a trap at Lower Granite Dam to the Eagle Hatchery in Idaho.
     
    And only 3 percent to 4.5 percent of the fish heading up the Columbia River and into the Okanagan River ever made it to the spawning grounds. Some 10 percent to 15 percent made it to the Wenatchee River to spawn, the passage report said.

    Since last year, the Corps has installed a permanent adult fish ladder water cooling system that pulls cold water from deep in the Lower Granite forebay into the fish ladder.

    A similar device at Little Goose Dam is set to be in operation this week. It pumps water from 60 feet in the Little Goose reservoir, where there is 63 degree water, into the dam‚s fish ladder. Surface water highs at the dam are in the 70s, according to the Corps.
     
    (See Corps information on the project at http://www.nww.usace.army.mil/Missions/Fish-Programs/Lower-Granite-Fish-Ladder-Temperature-Improvement/

    and CBB, June 17, 2016, „Corps Moves Forward On Fish Passage Improvements At Lower Granite Dam, Includes Fish Ladder Cooling,‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/436933.aspx)

    For more information, see:

    --CBB, June 24, 2016, „Columbia Basin Salmon/Hydro Managers Gear Up For Another Hot Summer: Will Sockeye Get Slammed Again?‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/436997.aspx

    --CBB, April 1, 2016, „Corps Report On 2015 Columbia/Snake Warm Water, Fish Die-Off Will Discuss Actions To Avoid Repeat,‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/436358.aspx
     
    -- CBB, December 4, 2015, „Post-Mortem 2015 Snake River Sockeye Run; 90 Percent Of Fish Dead Before Reaching Ice Harbor Dam,‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/435642.aspx
     
    -- CBB, November 6, 2015, „Report Analyzes Impacts, Causes Of This Year‚s Warm Fish-Killing Water In Columbia/Snake,‰ http://www.cbbulletin.com/435505.aspx

  • CBB: Treaty Fishing To Begin For Summer Chinook, Sockeye; Run Forecasts Down From Last Year’s Actual Returns

    June 12, 2019

    gillnetterTreaty platform fishing and commercial treaty gillnetting will begin this month for summer chinook and sockeye salmon. Tribes had not had a commercial gillnet fishery during the spring chinook run. Preseason forecasts for these fish are predicted to be lower than actual returns in 2018 and that is reflected in the lower allocation for summer chinook (6,450) and sockeye (6,608) allowed for all treaty summer fisheries. Only steelhead are forecasted to return at a slightly higher rate than last year, with a preseason estimate of 126,950 fish. Last year the actual count for the fish, which includes both the earlier Skamania stock and the upriver A- and B-Index run, was 100,483. The two-state Columbia River Compact met Wednesday, June 12, to put their seal of approval on the treaty fishing. Commercial hook and line platform fishing upstream of Bonneville Dam will begin June 24 and continue through the end of the summer season, July 31. Commercial hook and line platform fishing downstream of the dam follows the same schedule. Commercial gillnetting also will begin 6 am, Monday, June 24 and continue for 2.5 days to 6 pm, Wednesday, June 26. The Yakama Nation Zone 6 commercial fishery will begin June 24 and will continue until further notice at Drano Lake, and the Wind and Klickitat rivers. Some 66,668 spring chinook have passed Bonneville as of June 12, or about one-third the 10-year average. The summer season begins June 16, according to the Compact Summer Fact Sheet No. 1. The latest U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which sets preseason forecasts and adjusts those forecasts in-season, recently downgraded its preseason forecast of spring chinook from 99,300 to 75,000. The TAC forecast for summer chinook is 36,300 fish and for sockeye the forecast is 94,400, both to the Columbia River mouth. Last year’s actual run of summer chinook was 42,120 and the preseason forecast was 67,300. The actual run of sockeye last year was 210,915, while the forecast was just 99,000. This year, the Wenatchee River can expect 18,300 sockeye, down slightly from last year’s 18,887. The forecast for the Okanagan River is 74,500, down considerably from last year’s 190,304. Some 1,300 are forecasted for the Yakima River, down slightly from last year’s 1,338. 100 sockeye are expected in the Deschutes River, up from last year’s actual of 89 fish, and the Snake River sockeye, listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act, is forecasted at 200 fish, down from last year’s 297. The Skamania steelhead run is expected to reach 8,750 fish (of those, 3,250 will be wild), up from last year’s actual run of 6,483 (2,595 wild). The A-Index run is expected to be 110,200 (33,900 wild), up considerably from last year’s 69,338 (21,725 wild). The B-Index run is forecasted at 8,000 fish (950 wild). Last year the run of the generally larger B-run was 24,662 (2,382 wild). Steelhead over Bonneville Dam as of June 12 was 2,467 (1,159 wild). The 10-year average for that date is 6,728 fish (2,046 wild). Based on the 10-year average timing, the total run would normally be about 30 percent complete and the unclipped run would be about 26 percent complete at Bonneville on June 10. While TAC has not yet reviewed the Skamania run size, the total run and unclipped run are tracking less than forecast based on average timing, the Fact Sheet says. There is no specific harvest rate limit for steelhead in summer season treaty fisheries, but harvest of steelhead is low in the summer and is expected to remain within recent average rates.  TAC will begin to update run sizes in late June or early July. Actual allowed fishery impacts are based on actual not forecast run sizes. Actual allowed catches will be determined in-season. 

  • CBB: Two More Days Of Spring Chinook Fishing, But Harvest Managers Wonder If Looking At ‘Really Poor Run’

    April 11, 2019

    salmon.steelheadThough Oregon and Washington added two more days of fishing for spring chinook in the lower Columbia River -- Saturday and Sunday, April 13 and 14 -- there are signs of a lower than forecasted return of spring chinook.

    Just 184 fish have crossed Bonneville Dam, 9 percent of the 10-year average of 2,027 fish and the eighth lowest return on that date in the past ten years. There has also been a drop in test fishing results.

    That had Bill Tweit, at a two-state Columbia River Compact hearing Wednesday (April 10), wondering if spring chinook angling should stop until biologists had more certainty that the forecasted chinook return materializes.

    Tweit represents Director Kelly Susewind for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife at the Compact.

    Others, including lower Columbia River tribes, recreational advisors and some guides said angling should stop for at least a week to see if the forecasted run of 99,300 upriver spring chinook materializes. That forecast is 86 percent of last year’s actual run of 115,081 fish and half the 10-year average of 198,200 fish.

    Bruce Jim, chair of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Indians’ Fish and Wildlife Committee, urged Oregon and Washington to allow more chinook to pass Bonneville Dam before reopening fishing downstream of the dam. Otherwise, he said, the tribes may need to limit their fishing in the near future if the fish are not allowed over the dam now.

    “I hope the states will delay this fishery so we can see what will be available for our ceremonial fishing,” said Casey Mitchell of the Nez Perce Tribe. “There is no way to count the number of fish below Bonneville Dam and so that leaves all the conservation efforts on the tribes.”

    Fishing conditions are poor. With recent rains and runoff, the Columbia River at the Vancouver, Wash. gauge is nearing flood level of 16 feet today and, according to some guides, water is murky, with visibility about two feet. Catch rates this week have been low, with no fish checked in at Camas, Wash. or at Bonneville, April 9, according to Harry Barber, a Columbia River recreational advisor.

    “I’ve taken a poll of guides,” said guide Bill Monroe Jr. “They are saying that maybe we should step back, give it a week, then fish the weekend of April 19 to 21 or April 26 to 28. We don’t need to rush this with the dirty water.”

    Rick Stillwater from the upper Columbia River urged a conservative approach, as well, warning that the Leavenworth Hatchery in the upper Columbia “just barely made its broodstock goals last year.”

    Fishing for spring chinook has been allowed since March 1 and ended yesterday, April 10, but only in the Columbia from Warrior Rock at St. Helens, Ore. upstream roughly to Bonneville Dam. The lower river boundary was established to allow broodstock to reach hatcheries in the Cowlitz and Lewis rivers, both in Washington.

    The estimated catch of chinook through April 7 was 1,282 kept fish, with 238 released from 21,442 angler trips. Some 16 steelhead had been released during this period. The Compact staff estimated total catch through April 10 would rise to 1,800 from about 25,700 angler trips.

    Upriver mortalities through April 10, according to the April 10 Winter Fact Sheet No. 10 https://www.dfw.state.or.us/fish/OSCRP/CRM/FS/19/19_04_10wf10.pdf, is 1,661 chinook, or 45 percent of the 3,689 mortalities available to this fishery prior to a run update.

    According to Geoff Whisler, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and lead for the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee which forecasts Columbia River fish runs, TAC would not likely consider a run update until early May. Typically, half the run crosses the dam by May 8.

    “Given the significant balance on the pre-season buffered allocation of upriver spring Chinook (2,028 fish remain available), there is potential for additional angling opportunity,” the staff wrote in Fact Sheet No. 10. “Considering the limited in-season information available regarding the upriver spring Chinook run, staff recommends a conservative approach moving forward with this fishery, including shifting to a limited days-per-week structure for any additional fishery openings. This will provide additional recreational opportunity while allowing staff the time to closely monitor the run and harvest.”

    Tweit worried that either the run forecast is wrong or the fisheries agencies have overestimated the daily harvest rate. “If it’s the former (the forecast), then we’re looking at a really poor run that’s not correctable” if we continue taking fish now. “My preference is to shut down and wait,” he said.

    Tucker Jones of ODFW, representing Director Curt Melcher, thought the Compact staff recommendation based on the 30 percent buffer was conservative and that fishing conditions are poor anyway, approving of the three day extension. As a compromise, he agreed to add the two days of fishing over the weekend beginning Saturday, rather than the three days proposed by staff, which would have begun Friday.

    The open area remains unchanged from earlier this season, which is the Columbia River mainstem from the Warrior Rock deadline upstream to Beacon Rock, for both boat and bank angling, plus bank angling only from Beacon Rock upstream to the Bonneville Dam deadline.

    The states also decided to close the recreational white sturgeon fishery in Bonneville Pool effective 12:01 a.m. Saturday April 13. Catch projections indicate harvest will be approaching the annual guideline for this reservoir by then, according to an ODFW news release. Retention seasons in The Dalles and John Day pools closed earlier this year. Catch and release angling will remain open in all three pools except in designated sturgeon sanctuaries that are in effect during May-July.

    For more information, see the April 10 Joint State Action Notice at https://www.dfw.state.or.us/fish/OSCRP/CRM/CAN/19/190410_notice.pdf

    Oregon also rescinded a total of eight hours of commercial gillnet fishing in the Youngs Bay Select Area in the lower Columbia River estuary. The new regulation rescinds four hours of fishing April 11 – 12, and four hours April 18. See the April 10 Oregon State Action Notice at https://www.dfw.state.or.us/fish/OSCRP/CRM/CAN/19/190409_notice.pdf

    In addition, Oregon set a spring chinook fishery on the Hood River April 15 through June 30. The Hood River flows into the Columbia in the Bonneville pool. Fishery managers are predicting a return of 1,200 hatchery fish to the river, slightly less than last year’s strong return, ODFW said. For details, see the ODFW news release at https://www.dfw.state.or.us/news/2019/04_Apr/041019b.asp

    There will not be a spring salmon season on the Deschutes River this year due to predicted poor returns of both hatchery and wild fish.

  • CBB: Two More Days Of Spring Chinook Fishing, But Harvest Managers Wonder If Looking At ‘Really Poor Run’ 

    April 11, 2019

    Salmon.ChinookThough Oregon and Washington added two more days of fishing for spring chinook in the lower Columbia River -- Saturday and Sunday, April 13 and 14 -- there are signs of a lower than forecasted return of spring chinook.

    Just 184 fish have crossed Bonneville Dam, 9 percent of the 10-year average of 2,027 fish and the eighth lowest return on that date in the past ten years. There has also been a drop in test fishing results.

    That had Bill Tweit, at a two-state Columbia River Compact hearing Wednesday (April 10), wondering if spring chinook angling should stop until biologists had more certainty that the forecasted chinook return materializes.

    Tweit represents Director Kelly Susewind for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife at the Compact.

    Others, including lower Columbia River tribes, recreational advisors and some guides said angling should stop for at least a week to see if the forecasted run of 99,300 upriver spring chinook materializes. That forecast is 86 percent of last year’s actual run of 115,081 fish and half the 10-year average of 198,200 fish.

    Bruce Jim, chair of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Indians’ Fish and Wildlife Committee, urged Oregon and Washington to allow more chinook to pass Bonneville Dam before reopening fishing downstream of the dam. Otherwise, he said, the tribes may need to limit their fishing in the near future if the fish are not allowed over the dam now.

    “I hope the states will delay this fishery so we can see what will be available for our ceremonial fishing,” said Casey Mitchell of the Nez Perce Tribe. “There is no way to count the number of fish below Bonneville Dam and so that leaves all the conservation efforts on the tribes.”

    Fishing conditions are poor. With recent rains and runoff, the Columbia River at the Vancouver, Wash. gauge is nearing flood level of 16 feet today and, according to some guides, water is murky, with visibility about two feet. Catch rates this week have been low, with no fish checked in at Camas, Wash. or at Bonneville, April 9, according to Harry Barber, a Columbia River recreational advisor.

    “I’ve taken a poll of guides,” said guide Bill Monroe Jr. “They are saying that maybe we should step back, give it a week, then fish the weekend of April 19 to 21 or April 26 to 28. We don’t need to rush this with the dirty water.”

    Rick Stillwater from the upper Columbia River urged a conservative approach, as well, warning that the Leavenworth Hatchery in the upper Columbia “just barely made its broodstock goals last year.”

    Fishing for spring chinook has been allowed since March 1 and ended yesterday, April 10, but only in the Columbia from Warrior Rock at St. Helens, Ore. upstream roughly to Bonneville Dam. The lower river boundary was established to allow broodstock to reach hatcheries in the Cowlitz and Lewis rivers, both in Washington.

    The estimated catch of chinook through April 7 was 1,282 kept fish, with 238 released from 21,442 angler trips. Some 16 steelhead had been released during this period. The Compact staff estimated total catch through April 10 would rise to 1,800 from about 25,700 angler trips.

    Upriver mortalities through April 10, according to the April 10 Winter Fact Sheet No. 10 is 1,661 chinook, or 45 percent of the 3,689 mortalities available to this fishery prior to a run update.

    According to Geoff Whisler, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and lead for the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee which forecasts Columbia River fish runs, TAC would not likely consider a run update until early May. Typically, half the run crosses the dam by May 8.

    “Given the significant balance on the pre-season buffered allocation of upriver spring Chinook (2,028 fish remain available), there is potential for additional angling opportunity,” the staff wrote in Fact Sheet No. 10. “Considering the limited in-season information available regarding the upriver spring Chinook run, staff recommends a conservative approach moving forward with this fishery, including shifting to a limited days-per-week structure for any additional fishery openings. This will provide additional recreational opportunity while allowing staff the time to closely monitor the run and harvest.”

    Tweit worried that either the run forecast is wrong or the fisheries agencies have overestimated the daily harvest rate. “If it’s the former (the forecast), then we’re looking at a really poor run that’s not correctable” if we continue taking fish now. “My preference is to shut down and wait,” he said.

    Tucker Jones of ODFW, representing Director Curt Melcher, thought the Compact staff recommendation based on the 30 percent buffer was conservative and that fishing conditions are poor anyway, approving of the three day extension. As a compromise, he agreed to add the two days of fishing over the weekend beginning Saturday, rather than the three days proposed by staff, which would have begun Friday.

    The open area remains unchanged from earlier this season, which is the Columbia River mainstem from the Warrior Rock deadline upstream to Beacon Rock, for both boat and bank angling, plus bank angling only from Beacon Rock upstream to the Bonneville Dam deadline.

    The states also decided to close the recreational white sturgeon fishery in Bonneville Pool effective 12:01 a.m. Saturday April 13. Catch projections indicate harvest will be approaching the annual guideline for this reservoir by then, according to an ODFW news release. Retention seasons in The Dalles and John Day pools closed earlier this year. Catch and release angling will remain open in all three pools except in designated sturgeon sanctuaries that are in effect during May-July.

      

    In addition, Oregon set a spring chinook fishery on the Hood River April 15 through June 30. The Hood River flows into the Columbia in the Bonneville pool. Fishery managers are predicting a return of 1,200 hatchery fish to the river, slightly less than last year’s strong return, ODFW said.

    There will not be a spring salmon season on the Deschutes River this year due to predicted poor returns of both hatchery and wild fish.

  • CBB: U.S. State Department Picks New Columbia River Treaty Negotiator

    Friday, October 27, 2017

    state.deptThe U.S. State Department last week announced that Jill Smail will be the new Columbia River Treaty negotiator for the department, replacing Brian Doherty.

    “I am delighted to announce the arrival of our new Columbia River Treaty negotiator Jill Smail, replacing CRT negotiator Brian Doherty,” said Cindy Kierscht, the state department’s Director, Office of Canadian Affairs, in an e-mail last week to parties involved in the CRT.

    Smail “comes to us from the State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs where she previously served as the Senior Water advisor. She has extensive experience in negotiating transboundary water issues in the Middle East and has represented the U.S. Government on water issues in various bilateral and multilateral fora. We are delighted to have her to join our team in the Office of Canadian Affairs to work on this important issue.

    “We expect she will first conduct internal consultations, but will soon be reaching out to all relevant stakeholders in Washington, DC and in the region to hear your interests and concerns. We also hope to get Jill out to the region to coincide with the Collaborative Modeling Working Group that we understand will be held in early November.

    “We look forward to working with you all closely in the weeks ahead as we work to modernize the CRT treaty,” Kierscht said.

    Smail joined the Office of Canadian Affairs as the Columbia River Treaty Negotiator this month. From 2009-September 2017, she served as the Senior Advisor in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs for Environment, Science, Technology, and Health, with a focus on Middle East water negotiations and programs. She worked with Middle East negotiating teams on water issues related to a final status agreement and managed programs to facilitate greater cooperation among the parties in watershed management, research, desalination, infrastructure development, and agriculture.

    Smail’s previous assignments at the U.S. Department of State include serving on a Provincial Reconstruction Team in Afghanistan and negotiating small arms and light weapons destruction projects in post-conflict regions in Southeast Europe, Africa, and Asia. She joined the U.S. Department of State in 2001.

    Smail is a native of Groesbeck, Texas. She received a Bachelor of Science in Sociology and a Master of Science in Government and Public Service from Texas A&M University. She also earned a Master of Science in National Resource Strategy from the National Defense University.

    The CRT, a trans-boundary water management agreement, was signed in 1961 and ratified in 1964.

    The treaty has no specified expiration date. Either Canada or the United States can unilaterally terminate the Columbia River Treaty any time after Sept. 16, 2024, provided written notice is filed at least 10 years in advance.

    This suggests a “notice date” of Sept 16, 2014, but notice could have been done earlier and can be done later.

    Both British Columbia and the United States are considering options to determine whether or not to give notice. Regardless, Assured Annual Flood Control expires automatically in 2024 and converts in 2024 to a Called Upon operation of Canadian storage space as may be needed by the United States for flood risk management

    The treaty optimizes flood management and power generation, requiring coordinated operations of reservoirs and water flows for the Columbia River and Kootenay River on both sides of the border.

    As a direct result of the treaty, four storage dams were built: Mica, Arrow and Duncan dams in British Columbia, Canada; and Libby Dam in Montana. The Columbia’s headwaters are in British Columbia. The river flows south into Washington, then west along the Oregon-Washington border to the Pacific. Tributaries from British Columbia, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming feed the Columbia-Snake river system.

    These four projects more than doubled the storage capacity of the Columbia River system, increased control of the river flow, thereby decreasing the risk of major flooding events downstream, and provided opportunities for releasing water at times needed for power generation and other downstream benefits such as fisheries and water supply.

  • CBB: Upriver Steelhead Forecasts Down, B-Run 24 Percent Of Average; Idaho Considers Extending Fall Chinook Fishing Areas In Clearwater

    August 8, 2019

    salmon.steelheadForecasts for upriver steelhead, those that pass Bonneville Dam with many heading to the Snake River, are lower this year and less than 50 percent of the 10-year average. Meanwhile, the anticipated return of fall chinook is slightly higher at 349,600 fish to the mouth of the Columbia River than last year’s actual return of 293,424 fish. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game is asking anglers how it can extend fishing areas in the Clearwater River for the slightly higher run of fall chinook without also interfering with catch-and-release steelhead fishing during the same time, setting an August 18 deadline for public input. Although steelhead passing the dam from April through October each year are labeled summer steelhead, fish that pass during July through October are categorized as A-Index or B-Index based on their fork length. A-Index, or A-run, are less than 78 centimeters (about 31 inches), and B-Index, or B-run, are longer. Most of the B-run fish are headed to Snake River tributaries in Idaho, while A-run fish are distributed throughout the Columbia and Snake river basins, according to the two-state Columbia River Compact Fall Fact Sheet No. 1, released July 30.  The forecast for the combined run is 118,000 fish over Bonneville, with 40,450 wild fish (unclipped). But the A-run makes up the vast majority of the fish with a forecast of 110,200 fish, of which 33,900 are wild. That’s 46 percent of the 10-year average. Last year’s A-run forecast was 158,000 and the actual run was less than half the forecast at 69,338. Last year’s combined forecast was 182,400 fish, but the actual return to the river was far lower at 94,000 fish. The B-run makes up a small percentage of the total adult steelhead migration, with 8,000 fish (950 wild) forecasted, which is just 24 percent of the 10-year forecast. The 2018 forecast was 24,400 fish and the actual size of the run was very close at 24,662. As for steelhead returning to Idaho, IDFG expects 60,700 steelhead to return at least as far as Lower Granite Dam this fall. The anticipated makeup of the return is 55,100 A-run steelhead, but only 5,600 of the larger B-run fish that spend two years in the ocean before returning. The only fish available for harvest are A-run hatchery steelhead, about 35,950 fish that have clipped adipose fins, as well as 2,250 unclipped hatchery fish, according to Alan Byrne, IDFG biologist. That leaves about 16,950 wild A-run fish not available for harvest.  Out of 5,600 B-run fish that will enter Idaho waters this year, just 4,130 will have clipped adipose fins and will be available for harvest. Another 770 will be unclipped hatchery fish and only 665 wild B-run fish are anticipated. The B-run is likely to be similar to returns in 2017, when the agency put rules in place to restrict the harvest of bigger steelhead, Byrne said in a July 28 Idaho Statesman article. If the modest prediction for the A-run return proves overly optimistic, it will be a tough year for anglers, he said. IDFG is considering expanding fall chinook salmon fishing in the Clearwater River and is having discussions about how to provide such a fishery without negatively impacting the experience of catch-and-release steelheading in the same timeframe (September through October 14). Public comment is due Aug. 18 at 6 pm MDT. In the past, fall chinook fishing has been limited to the Clearwater River downstream of Memorial Bridge, partly because only about 15 percent of Clearwater fish had clipped adipose fins, and IDFG did not have a permit from NOAA Fisheries to harvest unmarked hatchery or wild fish.  However, the states of Idaho, Washington, and Oregon have recently submitted a Fisheries Management and Evaluation Plan to NOAA Fisheries that outlines a strategy to allow harvest of wild and unmarked hatchery fall chinook dependent on the size of the run. The FMEP is currently out for public review and may be approved by early September, which would allow the Idaho Fish and Game Commission to consider expanded options for setting a fall chinook season. The 2019 fall chinook run to Idaho is projected to be around 5,400 natural and 10,000 hatchery fish with about 15 percent of the run marked with an adipose fin-clip. The proposal would allow about 1,200 adipose-intact and 2,000 adipose-clipped fall chinook available to be harvested. About half of the harvest would be allocated to the Clearwater River, IDFG said. If it proceeds, this trial fishery would be carefully monitored to estimate angler effort, harvest and overall satisfaction of both steelhead and chinook salmon anglers.

  • CBB: Very Low Spring Chinook Forecasted Return Prompts Limits on Recreational Fishing 

     

    February 22, 2019

    recreational anglerJust half the average number of upriver spring chinook salmon are forecasted to enter the Columbia River this year, a decline in abundance that will limit spring recreational angling.

    The two-state Columbia River Compact met this week to determine how much recreational fishing will be allowed given the paltry preseason forecasted return of just 99,300 spring chinook, 14 percent less than last year’s actual return of 115,081 fish and 50 percent under the 10-year average of 198,200 (2009 – 2018), according to the February 20, Compact Fact Sheet No. 4.

    Limiting fishing areas in the lower Columbia River is a low expected return of fish to the Cowlitz and Lewis rivers in southwest Washington.

    According to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, the spring chinook run to the Cowlitz River is projected to be just 11 percent of the 10-year average.

    The number will fall short of meeting hatchery production goals, WDFW says. The Cowlitz goal is 1,337 fish and the Lewis goal is 1,380 fish.

    Ryan Lothrop, Columbia River policy coordinator for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, said the forecast for upriver fish is the lowest since 2007, but still higher than 1995 when just 12,800 fish returned. He added that this year’s low return is largely the result of poor ocean conditions, which have complicated fisheries management in recent years.

    "Experience has shown that warm-water ocean conditions present a challenge to salmon survival," Lothrop said. "As in the 1990s, we have observed that cyclical warming effect during the past few years with similar results. During these times, we have to be especially cautious in how we manage the fishery."

    Generally, spring chinook fishing opens March 1 in the lower Columbia from Buoy 10 near Astoria to Bonneville Dam. However, to meet the Cowlitz and Lewis escapement goals, the Columbia River will be closed downstream of the confluence of the Lewis and Columbia rivers beginning March 1. The mouth of the Lewis is about 68 river miles from the well-known, popular Buoy 10 recreational fishery.

    At the Compact meeting, Wednesday, Feb 20 in Portland, WDFW’s Bill Tweit, special assistant, said the state would likely close the two Columbia tributaries to fishing for spring chinook, which it did that afternoon, closing both rivers to spring chinook fishing, effective March 1. However, the agency left the rivers open to hatchery steelhead angling.

    In public testimony, fishing guide Bill Monroe Jr. suggested that Washington also consider closing the Kalama River to protect both spring chinook and steelhead. He said that as some popular rivers are closed, others, such as the Kalama (upstream of Bonneville Dam), could be fished fairly heavily. WDFW, instead, reduced the daily limit of chinook to one fish, but left open fishing for steelhead.

    Along with new area restrictions in the lower Columbia, fishery managers also reduced initial harvest limits for upriver spring chinook returning to the upper Columbia and Snake rivers. If those fish return as projected, anglers in the Columbia and Snake rivers will be limited to 4,548 fish, compared to 9,052 last year, prior to a run size updated in May.

    Geoff Whisler, this year’s lead of the US v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which develops the preseason forecasts and will update the forecast sometime in May, said that the 10-year average for 50 percent of the run to pass Bonneville Dam is May 8. However, for the past two years the date has slipped. In 2017, about one-half had passed by May 16, and it was May 17 in 2018. TAC will usually wait to provide a run update until it determines about half of the run has passed the dam.

    Warning not to overharvest chinook early in the season and to spread out harvest over the run (the spring chinook run is considered chinook passing Bonneville between March 1 and June 15, according to the Fact Sheet), Bruce Jim, Jr. of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Indians, said the below average forecast is due to “inhospitable ocean and river conditions.”

    “With just 4,900 fish available, the tribes expect cautious management,” he said. “We’re concerned about concentrating fishing in the early season.”

    With only 8,200 wild spring chinook forecasted for the Snake River, Lance Hebdon of Idaho Fish and Game said “We appreciate that you manage around the Lewis and Cowlitz rivers, but we have the same concern. As forecasted, we will not meet our broodstock goals this year.”

    He asked the Compact not to “front-load” harvest downstream this year and leave fish in the river for Snake River harvest.

    The treaty fishing harvest impact on Endangered Species Act-listed wild spring chinook with the current run forecast is 7.4 percent, according to Stuart Ellis of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission and a member of TAC. The non-tribal impact on ESA fish is 1.6 percent of the wild spring chinook.

    “So, if the forecast (at the run update for the Idaho wild fish) drops by the equivalent of one fish, those impacts will drop to 7 percent and 1.5 percent,” he said. “However, right now the non-treaty allocation is buffered by 30 percent and that could capture a potential reduction in Snake River fish.”

    The fishery below Bonneville Dam will be managed for a harvest guideline of 3,689 upriver chinook prior to the run update. Above Bonneville Dam, the pre-update harvest guideline is 492 fish.

    On the Willamette River, chinook salmon and steelhead seasons will continue as planned under Oregon sport fishing rules, according to an Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife news release. This year, ODFW fishery managers are forecasting a return to the Willamette of 40,200 adult chinook, which is up from last year’s actual return of 37,441 adults. The Sandy and Clackamas rivers are also open year-around for retention of hatchery chinook, steelhead and coho.

    "Anglers will still find some good fishing opportunities in the Columbia River Basin this spring, but conservation has to be our first concern," Lothrop said. "We have a responsibility to protect salmon runs listed under the federal Endangered Species Act and get enough fish back to the spawning grounds and hatcheries to support future runs."

    In the Columbia below Bonneville Dam, the modified recreational spring chinook season begins Friday, March 1 and is approved through Wednesday, April 10.

    What’s different this year is the area that will be open to angling: from Warrior Rock (St. Helens) upstream to Beacon Rock for both boat and bank fishing, plus bank angling only from Beacon Rock upstream to the Bonneville Dam deadline.

    The Compact also ruled on angling upstream of the dam. Fishing will open Monday, April 1 and be open through Sunday, May 5. The open area for both boat and bank anglers is from the Tower Island power lines approximately six miles below The Dalles Dam upstream to the Oregon/Washington border. From the Tower Island power lines downstream to Bonneville Dam, only bank angling is allowed.

    The daily bag limit for areas above and below the dam is two adult chinook or steelhead per day, of which only one may be a chinook, and only adipose fin-clipped (hatchery) fish may be kept. Shad may also be kept.

    For the area from the Warrior Rock line downstream to Buoy 10, angling for and retention of chinook salmon, steelhead, and shad will close effective March 1 in order to help protect the Cowlitz and Lewis river stocks of spring chinook. The Warrior Rock line runs from the Warrior Rock lighthouse on the Oregon shore to red USCG buoy #4, then to the piling dolphin on the lower end of Bachelor Island.

  • CBB: Who sets water temperature standards for Columbia/Snake Rivers? Arguments heard in ninth circuit

    August 27, 2019

    John Day Dam fish ladderOpposing sides argued before a three-judge panel at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Seattle whether the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency should complete regulations for temperature, known as Total Maximum Daily Load, for the Snake and Columbia rivers, or whether completing the TMDL is the responsibility of Oregon and Washington.

    The attorney representing the EPA said in the appeals court Monday, Aug. 26, that the federal Clean Water Act simply does not impose a duty on the EPA to complete the temperature TMDL: that is a state’s duty.

    “There’s no date, no deadline and no duty” for the EPA to complete the TMDL, said Jonathan Brightbill of the Department of Justice, challenged a legal theory developed by a judge, not by statute, known as constructive submission as a faulty way of thinking about this case.

    The Western Washington U.S. District Court in Seattle ruled Oct. 17, 2018 that the EPA is violating the federal Clean Water Act by not completing the temperature TMDL in Oregon and Washington waters of the Snake and Columbia rivers and ordered the federal agency to complete one within 30 days of the ruling. Instead, the EPA challenged District Court Judge Ricardo S. Martinez’ Order on Motions for Summary Judgement to the appeals court February 6.

    The Circuit Court judges hearing the appeal were Michael Daly Hawkins, M. Margaret McKeown and Jay Bybee.

    The original lower court case was filed by Columbia Riverkeeper, Snake River Waterkeeper, Idaho Rivers United, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, and the Institute for Fisheries Resources in February 23, 2017.

    In a joint statement this week, the groups said: “Dams in the lower Columbia and Snake rivers create large, shallow reservoirs that trap the sun’s heat and warm the water. Research by EPA shows that the dams cause the Columbia and Snake rivers to become dangerously hot for salmon and steelhead. We’re pressing EPA for action to help salmon and steelhead survive and recover.”

    They say the lawsuit “was sparked by record-high water temperatures in recent summers, including an incident in 2015 when 250,000 adult sockeye salmon died because the Columbia and Snake rivers became too warm. Warm water, caused by large, shallow reservoirs and intensifying climate change, poses and increasingly serious threat to Columbia and Snake rivers’ already imperiled salmon and steelhead.”

    The temperature TMDL is a federal Clean Water Act pollution budget designed to protect salmon from hot water in rivers. According to the order, the presence of high temperatures in the Columbia and Snake rivers led Washington and Oregon – both for the first time in 1996 – to place both rivers on their CWA Sec. 303(d) lists of impaired waters.

    Washington’s current standards require that temperatures must stay below 60.8-68° Fahrenheit depending upon the time of year, location and fish present. Oregon’s ranges from 55.4° F for some fish spawning areas from the months of October to April, to 68° F year-round.

    Martinez in his order outlined past actions by the EPA and states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, as well as Columbia River tribes, that resulted in a memorandum of understanding Oct. 16, 2000 that said the EPA would produce a temperature TMDL while the states would be responsible for a TMDL for total dissolved gas in the rivers.

    The EPA released a draft TMDL for temperature in 2003, but abandoned the effort (it had 30 days after the draft and comment period to release a final) after “disagreements” with other federal agencies over the TMDL.

    The constructive submission doctrine was first posed last year by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, ruling that if a state, in that case West Virginia, had not submitted a TMDL, then the EPA must step up and provide one.

    First, it does recognize that the responsibility for promulgating TMDLs in the first place belongs to the states, according to the online journal Law and the Environment . Once a state submits a TMDL, then the EPA must approve or disapprove it within 30 days. “The constructive submission doctrine was developed to prevent states from avoiding EPA’s displeasure by simply never submitting a list of TMDLs,” the journal says.

    “Thus, under the doctrine, a court may interpret a lengthy failure of a state to submit TMDLs as in fact being a ‘constructive submission’ of a list of no TMDLs. If the failure to act is treated as an affirmative act, then EPA’s review clock is triggered and its failure to make a decision on the ‘no’ list is subject to judicial review.”

    The problem, the journal says, is that it leaves some gaps that aren’t answered by the statute, precisely because the doctrine doesn’t exist in the statute. The “issue is that no one really knows how little must the state in question do before a court will find that it has made a decision not to submit TMDLs.”

    This is an argument made by Brightbill, the Justice Department attorney.

    However, Bryan Hurlbutt, Staff Attorney with Advocates for the West, who argued the case before the Ninth Circuit for the plaintiffs, said that the EPA has not been able to point to a single case that rejected constructive submission.

    Regardless, he said, the state has not submitted a TMDL and the CWA requires one for every water body and for every pollutant.

    “Without the TMDL there have been significant consequences in the Columbia and Snake rivers,” he said, citing 2015 as the year with the highest water temperatures and a year when just 4 percent of Snake River sockeye salmon, listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act, returned to the river. “The EPA has no credible plan to correct this.”

    The judges gave no indication how they would rule or when.

  • CBB: With Few Snake River Sockeye Making It To Sawtooth Basin, Endangered Fish Hang On With Captive Breeding, Outplanting Adults Into Lakes

    September 30, 2021

    Sockeye.returnsSo far just 42 sockeye salmon this year have completed the 900-mile swim through eight dams from the Pacific Ocean to Idaho’s Sawtooth Basin, an even lower return of the endangered fish to the basin than in 2015 when warm water in the Columbia and Snake rivers killed 90 percent of the run before they arrived at Ice Harbor Dam.

    Still, according to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, 2,750 sockeye are available to spawn in Redfish and Pettit lakes, or to be artificially spawned in hatcheries. Where did they come from?

    In addition to the 42 sockeye trapped at Redfish Lake, some 201 sockeye were trapped at Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River and transported to IDFG’s Eagle Fish Hatchery near Boise (16 were identified as upper Columbia River sockeye and culled, leaving 185 Redfish Lake sockeye), 5 were trapped at the Sawtooth Hatchery on the Salmon River, for a total return of 232 Snake River sockeye. The rest of the 2,750 fish available for spawning are fish raised in hatcheries and captive broodstock. Trapping is ongoing.

    It’s all part of a “spread the risk” strategy IDFG has used since the 1990s, the state agency said in a news release . That strategy includes sockeye raised in the wild that naturally swim to the ocean and return. But it also includes fish raised in hatcheries and released in the spring, also to migrate to the ocean. In addition, there are captive broodstock — sockeye raised in hatcheries to adults as an insurance policy if none – or only a few fish – return from the ocean.

    “Having natural and captive broodstock means biologists can hatch, raise and send the next generation of young fish to the ocean, and if conditions fall in their favor, later welcome back hundreds, or potentially thousands, of adults returning from the ocean,” IDFG said.

    The 2021 sockeye run faced a number of challenges this year, IDFG said. It began with poor ocean conditions and then a June heat wave that warmed the Columbia and Snake rivers to near the potentially lethal limit of 68 degrees Fahrenheit as the fish migrated towards their destination. That triggered the trap and haul operation at Lower Granite Dam. The trapped fish were transported to IDFG’s Eagle Hatchery to ensure some of the fish would be available for spawning. The 2015 heat wave also triggered a trap and haul operation at Lower Granite.

    See CBB, December 4, 2015, “Post-Mortem 2015 Snake River Sockeye Run; 90 Percent Of Fish Dead Before Reaching Ice Harbor Dam,”

    — CBB, Oct. 15, 2020, NOAA FISHERIES STUDY WARNS CLIMATE CHANGE POSES ‘CATASTROPHIC’ THREAT TO SURVIVAL OF ENDANGERED SNAKE RIVER SOCKEYE

    Only 6.7 percent of the fish that had been tagged as juveniles made the complete journey as adults from Lower Granite Dam to Redfish Lake this year, whereas about 50 percent generally reach the Sawtooth Basin from Lower Granite in a normal year, IDFG said.

    “Our preference would have been to allow those fish to complete the last leg of their journey on their own, because from a genetic perspective, sockeye that make it back to the Sawtooth Basin have a level of fitness that we want in our captive breeding program,” said Lance Hebdon, Fisheries Bureau Chief. “But based on river conditions, trucking fish from Lower Granite Dam to Eagle was a necessary tradeoff to increase survival.”

    Sockeye trapping also takes place at two locations in the Sawtooth Basin and then fish transferred to Eagle Fish Hatchery for temporary holding, according to Eagle Fish Hatchery Manager Dan Baker. Genetic information from each fish is analyzed to determine which fish to keep for broodstock and which to release to spawn in the lakes. Baker said traps in the Sawtooth Basin are at:

    — The Redfish Lake Creek trap intercepts sockeye returning to Redfish Lake;

    — The Sawtooth Fish Hatchery trap intercepts sockeye on the Salmon River (smolts released to the Salmon River), Alturas and Pettit lakes;

    “Currently, Redfish and Pettit lakes are the focus for releases,” he said. “Alturas Lake is the third lake in the Sawtooth Basin that is a part of Idaho’s Sockeye Program.”

    Sockeye are captive reared at IDFG’s Eagle Fish Hatchery and at NOAA Fisheries’ Burley Creek Fish Hatchery in Washington’s Kitsap County on the West side of the Cascade Mountains. Each program begins with 1,500 eyed eggs that are hatched and reared to maturity and mature as three- or four-year old fish, Baker said.

    “About 1,500 adults from both programs are needed for captive broodstock to produce eggs for the smolt production program at IDFG’s Springfield Fish Hatchery,” Baker said. “Adults not needed to meet broodstock are available to be released to Sawtooth Basin lakes. Anadromous adults returning to the basin are incorporated into the captive broodstock or released.”

    During September, IDFG biologists and other agency partners released 477 adults from the Eagle Hatchery’s captive broodstock program into Redfish Lake. They also released into the Sawtooth basin lakes sockeye that had returned from the ocean: 49 in Redfish Lake and 3 in Pettit Lake. In addition, IDFG transferred and released additional captive broodstock from a safety net program operated by NOAA Fisheries in Washington, which brought the total number of adults released for spawning to 1,112 in Redfish Lake and 99 in Pettit Lake.

    IDFG also has about 700 captive-reared adults and another 150 adults that returned from the ocean, along with 680 captive adults from NOAA, which are all available for spawning and replenishing hatcheries.

    The goals for the Eagle and NOAA hatcheries combined is to produce around 1.1 million eggs to replenish the captive broodstocks and transfer and rear at IDFG’s Springfield Hatchery, which is expected to grow about 1 million young sockeye to be released to migrate to the ocean in the future, the agency said.

    Snake River sockeye were listed as endangered in 1991 under the federal Endangered Species Act when only four adult sockeye returned to the Sawtooth Basin. The total number of sockeye that returned between 1991 and 1999 was just 23 fish, including two years when no sockeye returned.

    During 2015’s heat wave, 50 sockeye were trapped at Redfish Lake, 6 at the Sawtooth Hatchery and 35 at Lower Granite, with a total run size that year of 91 fish. This year 42 were trapped at Redfish Lake, 5 fish were trapped at the Sawtooth Hatchery and 201 (culled it was 185), for a total run size of 232, according to information provided this week by Baker.

    The largest run since 1991 was in 2014 when the total run size was 1,579 sockeye (1,479 trapped at Redfish Lake, 34 at the Sawtooth Hatchery and no fish were trapped at Lower Granite). The second best total run was 1,355 in 2010 and the third best run was in 2011 with 1,117 fish.

    After a run of 596 sockeye in 2016, run sizes have dropped to 176 in 2017, 115 in 2018, 17 in 2019, 152 in 2020 and then 232 this year.

  • CBB: With steelhead forecasted return dropping 27 percent, states extend ban on retention in lower mainstem Columbia River

    August 29, 2019

    salmon.steelheadWith a reduction in the upriver steelhead forecast by 27.2 percent, the two-state Columbia River Compact at its hearing yesterday, Aug. 28, extended the states’ ban on steelhead retention in the mainstem Columbia River that began in August to Sept. 30. The ban on retention is from Buoy 10 in the lower river estuary upstream to The Dalles Dam. The area upstream of The Dalles Dam to the John Day Dam is already closed to steelhead retention.

    A review of the 2019 steelhead returns to the river by the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which met Aug. 26, resulted in a reduction in the TAC steelhead forecast that pass Bonneville Dam. The preseason estimate was 118,200 fish, but TAC’s in-season forecast was dropped to 86,000. In doing so, TAC also reduced the expected passage of unclipped A-run and B-run fish to 38,000, a slight reduction from the preseason forecast of 40,250.

    “The majority of the downgrade is due to the clipped hatchery-origin A-Index component tracking lower than forecast,” the Compact’s Fall Fact Sheet No. 4 says.

    The ban on steelhead retention is for both hatchery and wild fish.

    With the low numbers of steelhead, Tucker Jones, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, said that the states would keep a close eye out for further changes. Hatchery steelhead are needed for brood stock and biologists are concerned there won’t be enough fish returning to fill hatchery needs.

    This action expands on regulations adopted earlier this year to help reduce impacts to upriver steelhead which included area-specific retention closures, a reduced bag limit (one fish when open), and a no-fishing sanctuary at the Deschutes River mouth, according to an ODFW news release.

    In addition, release of both hatchery and wild steelhead are required from the John Day Dam upstream to McNary Dam: Sep 1 – Oct 31, and from McNary Dam upstream to the OR/WA Border (upstream of McNary Dam) Oct 1 – Nov 30.

    There was little disagreement about closing steelhead retention among the public who testified by telephone at the hearing, although The Conservation Angler in comments sent after the hearing thought the Compact should take additional steps to protect steelhead.

    “The State Action closing ‘steelhead retention’ does not close steelhead fishing, nor does it close steelhead fishing in the cold water refugia (CWR) along the mainstem Columbia in places like the Wind River, Drano Lake (aka known as the Little White Salmon) and the Big White Salmon,” The Conservation Angler said.

    The conservation group also pointed out that more wild steelhead have passed Bonneville Dam than hatchery steelhead (26,992 wild and 22,358 hatchery) and the same holds true for passage at The Dalles Dam (10,491 wild and 7,009 hatchery).

    The Compact also rescinded a fall commercial mainstem fishery scheduled for Aug. 28 and 29 as the gillnetters are reaching their allocation of upriver bright fall chinook.

    Through August 28, a total of 35,096 adult fall chinook and 6,999 jacks have passed Bonneville Dam which is similar to expectations, the Fact Sheet says. The 10-year average for adults is 64,866, almost twice this year’s passage on this date, and for jacks 10,619. Some 349,600 fall chinook are expected, based on the preseason forecast. Over the last 10 years, the average 50 percent complete date has been September 9.

    Also at Bonneville through August 28 counts of early stock coho salmon – coho passing the dam prior to October 1 – is 4,889 adults, which is consistent with expectations, and 549 jacks. The 10-year average on this date is 5,585 adults and 534 jacks. Some 611,300 coho are forecasted this year. Passage of upriver early stock coho is typically 50 percent complete by September 10.

    In other recreational fisheries, Buoy 10 was open to chinook retention August 1-20 as planned preseason and remains open to retention of hatchery coho with a two-fish daily bag limit. Total chinook and upriver bright mortalities remained within preseason expectations for the retention season. Chinook handle since the retention season closed has been tracking higher than expected, according to the Fact Sheet.

    An issue raised at the hearing was that the Buoy 10 coho fishing has not resulted in many marked keepers. Most of the coho have been wild, while lots of chinook have been getting handled. Anglers have been catching plenty of fish in the Buoy 10 fishery, but have to release many of those caught.

    The recreational salmon fishery from Puget Island upstream to Warrior Rock, near St. Helens, was open to chinook retention August 1 – 27 and chinook retention from Tongue Point to Puget Island was open concurrent with the Buoy 10 fishery. This fishery is currently open to retention of hatchery coho with a two-fish daily bag limit. Total chinook and upriver bright mortalities are projected to exceed preseason expectations for the retention period. Additional chinook mortalities will be accrued during the chinook non-retention period, the Fact Sheet says.

    Chinook retention will remain open through Sept. 8 from Warrior Rock upstream to Bonneville Dam. Through Aug. 25, the chinook catch is tracking ahead of preseason expectations.

    Recreational angling from Bonneville Dam upstream to McNary Dam is ongoing and is currently open for chinook and coho with a one salmonid daily bag limit. The fishery was planned to be managed in-season based on actual catches and the upriver bright run size. Through Aug. 25, an estimated 36 adult chinook have been kept from approximately 800 angler trips.

  • CBC News: Sinixt want a say in Columbia River Treaty renegotiations

    Nov. 9, 2023

    While First Nations in British Columbia's southern Interior have a seat at the renegotiation tables for the Columbia River Treaty between Canada and the United States, the Sinixt — whose territory was directly affected by the original treaty negotiation — do not.

    Watch the video here: https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/2281056323613

  • CBC: Orca baby boom: 7th calf born to endangered southern resident population

    New calf is believed to be the first offspring of 12-year-old orca L-103

    Dec 05, 2015

    orca-calf-1L-123 is the seventh calf born the endangered southern resident whale population. (Photo: Mark Malleson)

    The Center for Whale Research says yet another orca calf has been spotted swimming with the southern resident killer whale population.

    This is the seventh new calf born to the endangered population of cetaceans in the last 12 months.

    L123 is the first calf born to 12-year-old L103. (Mark Malleson)

    The young orca was photographed in November, but due to poor visibility and unfavourable sea conditions, it took several weeks to confirm that there was indeed a new calf in L pod.

    It has been designated L-123 and is believed to be the first offspring of 12-year-old orca L-103.
    While researchers hope this year's apparent baby boom represents a turnaround for local killer whale populations, experts acknowledge baby orcas only have a 50 per cent survival rate.

    orca-calf

  • CBCNews: Indigenous groups in Alberta, N.W.T. say they've borne 'enormous costs' from B.C. dams, call for end to Site C

    Treaty.siteCLetter from 14 Metis and First Nations communities comes as B.C. cabinet meets with energy experts

    By Andrew Kurjata, CBC News Posted: Nov 30, 2017

    A coalition of 14 First Nations and Metis communities in Alberta and the Northwest Territories called on B.C. Premier John Horgan to cancel the Site C dam on the same day provincial cabinet ministers consulted with energy experts to help decide the fate of the controversial project.

    "History has shown that downstream indigenous communities bear enormous costs when BC Hydro puts the Peace River and downstream waters at risk," the signatories of an open letter to Horgan write.

    "For generations, we have witnessed negative changes to our lands, waters and resources from BC Hydro's regulations of the Peace River."

    The Peace River, which is already host to the W.A.C. Bennet Dam and Peace Canyon Dam, flows northeastward from B.C. into Alberta, ultimately connecting to the Mackenzie River in the N.W.T.

    Dams on the Peace River in B.C. and tar sands in Alberta threaten the health of Wood Buffalo National park, says UNESCO. (UNESCO) Both the United Nations agency UNESCO and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature have raised alarms about the impact existing hydroelectric projects on the Peace River in B.C. have had on Alberta's Wood Buffalo National Park.

    In July 2017, UNESCO warned the health of Wood Buffalo, which is Canada's largest national park, was being threatened by industrial developments, including existing dams in B.C. Among its 17 recommendations was a directive for the government of Canada to conduct "an environmental and social impact assessment of the Site C project."

    UN committee directs Canada to protect Wood Buffalo National Park — or else

    In a response to UNESCO concerns, BC Hydro said it had "commissioned studies from leading experts to evaluate the potential downstream effects of Site C. In all cases, the studies concluded that the project would have no notable impact."

    However, the letter signatories write, "As indigenous communities located downstream of the Site C project, we are deeply concerned that our rights and cultures are threatened by Site C."
    Independent experts meeting with cabinet

    The letter was sent the same day Horgan and B.C. cabinet ministers were meeting with a group of independent experts to discuss the possibility of alternatives to the Site C dam project.
    Horgan said the goal of the meeting was to hear more about the "disruptive technologies, and new innovative ways to generate electricity."

    The construction of Site C would flood 5,500 hectares of the Peace River Valley and provide energy to power the equivalent of around 500,000 homes. At last count, its construction employed roughly 2,000 people. (Jonathon Hayward/The Canadian Press)

    A report from the independent B.C. Utilities Commission did not recommend whether Site C should proceed or be cancelled, but did suggest alternative forms of energy such as wind and geothermal could meet the province's electricity needs while costing the same or less than completing its construction.

    The NDP government has committed to deciding on the project's future by the end of 2017.

    Read the full article and letter from the 14 Indigenous communities to Premier Horgan here:
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/site-c-mackenzie-basin-delta-indigenous-communities-1.4427481

  • CBS News: Pregnant killer whale J-32 was starving, necropsy reveals

    CBS News, December 15, 2014

    Death of killer whale J-32 troubling, say scientists

    orca eating salmon CFWRQuestions remain after a necropsy revealed a young female orca in the endangered southern resident population was malnourished when she died before giving birth to a full-term calf.

    Preliminary necropsy results released by the Center for Whale Research indicate that J-32 had a thin layer of blubber and had not been feeding adequately for an extended period of time.
        
    But the report also concluded the 19-year-old female likely died because she could not expel a nearly full-term fetus from her body, and that the fetus might have been dead for some time.

    "The question is why did the fetus die, and why are we having so much trouble with reproductive success in this population?" said Kenneth Balcomb, the executive director of the center.

    J-32,  also known as Rapsody, died near Nanaimo earlier this month. Her body was towed to a beach near Comox, where experts from several agencies conducted an necropsy.

    Parts of the whale were removed for further analysis by officials with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The results of that analysis have yet to be released.

    J-32 was one of only 12 reproductive-viable females in the endangered population.

    Swimming in toxins

    Southern resident orcas are thought to be the most contaminated marine mammals in the world, and tests have shown their blubber contains high levels of contaminants such as PCBs.

    Now Balcomb is asking if that pollution contributed to the death of J-32 and her unborn calf.

    "It's when they have a ripple effect, like not enough salmon, that they start metabolizing those body fats that are storing all the toxins and that's what's given the whammies to the babies, to the development of the fetuses," he said on Friday.

    J-32 was the fourth member of the endangered southern resident population to die this year, leaving only 77 whales in the population.

    That is in sharp contrast to the other populations of transient and northern resident populations that are getting stronger.

    "We don't know, is it development in southern areas? It may or may not be something to do with the salmon runs. If we knew the answer to that, we could probably help solve their problems," said Balcomb.

    Restoring a plentiful food source must be a priority, he said.

    "They need fish, they need salmon, they need Chinook salmon restoration as quickly as possible."

    Tests continue on J-32 and the fetus to determine the causes of their deaths.

    To view story with photos go here.

  • Chinook Observer: Animal roundup: Baby orca leads a parade of returning species

    orca.calf.2Orcas, great white sharks, sea lions and more turn local waters into a spectacle of vibrant spring life

    Katie Wilson
    March 3, 2015

    As spring Chinook salmon moved into the Lower Columbia River last week, they encountered busy waters in river and ocean alike.

    Salmon-loving orcas roamed the Oregon and Washington coasts — to the delight of NOAA researchers who say they have been having great success observing and tracking these relatives of dolphins on the outer coast for the past two weeks.

    Most recently, the L pod, as this particular family of orcas is known, were spotted in waters directly off the Long Beach Peninsula Feb. 26, not long after being photographed at the mouth of Grays Harbor earlier that day.

    “I keep thinking we have probably used all our luck up but things keep falling into place,” said Brad Hanson, lead researcher on the Southern Resident killer whale survey team. “By yesterday afternoon [Wednesday] we were down to one day’s fuel supply for the Zodiac. The whales have been all over the coasts of Washington and Oregon in the past two weeks but they managed to conveniently be in the vicinity of the entrance to Grays Harbor this morning [Thursday] allowing us to go in and quickly refuel.”

    In photos the researchers took later, it is possible to see the calf’s fetal folds, indicating that it is likely only a few days old.

    The orcas spent the afternoon foraging off the Long Beach Peninsula, and were observed by NOAA for weeks at various places between Neah Bay and Monterey. In addition to last Thursday, they were tracked in the immediate vicinity of the Long Beach Peninsula on Feb. 19, 20 and 25. They also spent several days off the North Coast of Oregon in the last week of February.

    NOAA has been tracking the movements of Puget Sound-based orcas via satellite tags since 2009, finding they often spend extended amounts of time foraging up and down the outer coast in the winter, with the Columbia River’s biologically rich plume being a particular attraction.

    Gray whales, white sharks

    But orcas weren’t the only things on the move.

    On the horizon, gray whales are cruising by on their way to feeding grounds off the coast of Alaska. Puffs of water and air blown from their blowholes look like plumes of smoke over the water and mark their progress miles offshore.

    Earlier in the month, on Feb, 19, there were reports of a possible 18-foot-long great white shark chowing down on harbor seals off the southwest Washington coast. This was determined after the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, in consultation with NOAA shark experts, performed a necropsy on a female seal, bitten in half, that had been found on a beach near Ocean Shores, about 20 miles north of the Long Beach Peninsula.

    Surfers near Cannon Beach and Seaside in Oregon often encounter sharks of all shapes and sizes. They have reported various sightings and possible sightings in recent weeks.

    Meanwhile, in the Columbia River, sea lions continued to take over Astoria’s East Mooring Basin, home to a number of commercial and pleasure boats. One day’s count records approximately 1,700 individual sea lions on the docks.
    “Every bit of that amount and certainly more,” said Port of Astoria Executive Director Jim Knight.

    Earlier in February, dozens of sea lions at a time could be seen bobbing in the river near the Washington side of the Astoria-Megler Bridge, feasting on runs of fish, possibly a healthy run of smelt. There are so many smelt that substantial number of dead ones are washing up on area shorelines. Like Pacific salmon species, smelt die after spawning. “This is a consequence of a healthy population, or a healthy return,” Jessica Sall, a spokeswoman for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, said.

    At the Astoria marina, the port has had some success keeping docks where tenants are anchored free of the massive sea lions, taping off the docks with construction tape and bright pennant flags. Now Knight says they are thinking about how to slowly regain territory on the docks the sea lions have claimed, perhaps taping off all of those docks or portions.

    But success could be complicated.

    “If we are successful, they’re going to go somewhere else,” Knight said. He hopes they would go to the jetties, but they could also very well head to other mooring areas.

    “That’s the part we just don’t know about,” Knight said.

    Birds have also returned in great numbers: Caspian Terns and cormorants, many of them returning to colonies on East Sand Island near Chinook. Pelicans will likely make an appearance soon as well. Last year, they appeared on East Sand Island — a migration stopover for them — earlier than usual, due mostly, researchers reasoned, because of lack of food farther south. But the large birds have also been staying north longer than usual and have even been observed nesting on the island — an expansion of their breeding range that researchers on the island believe could be due to climate change.

    http://www.chinookobserver.com/co/outdoors/20150303/animal-roundup-baby-orca-leads-a-parade-of-returning-species

     

  • Chinook Observer: Baby orca in the Columbia River plume this week

    orca.calfIconic Pacific Northwest whales make annual pilgrimage to the Columbia River plume

    LONG BEACH — The satellite-tagging program that tracks movements of orcas in Pacific Northwest waters has been monitoring a killer whale pod swimming in the vicinity of the Long Beach Peninsula this week.
    The iconic marine mammals were first tracked via satellite in this area in 2013. Last year, the tag became detached early in the season and the pod’s southward migration couldn’t be observed in detail. But this year, tagging was again successful and the researchers from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have been posting regular updates at tinyurl.com/pcstao6.

    Most excitingly this year, a newborn orca calf is traveling with its mother, and has been photographed in the ocean west of Westport and northwest of the Long Beach Peninsula’s northern tip.

    According to NOAA’s latest blog post:
    “25 February update — We were about 15 miles west of Westport this morning when we relighted the whales and observed a new calf — L94 appears to be the mother. To recap since our previous posting, on 23 February we were off Cape Lookout, Oregon following the whales north. Yesterday, we continued following the whales north past the mouth to the Columbia River. Since L84 was tagged a week ago we have been with all of K pod but only part of L pod. On 23 February Jon Scordino with Makah Fisheries sent us photos taken on 20 February of L25 off Cape Flattery, which indicated another part of L pod was in the general area. This morning, shortly after we launched our Zodiac we observed L41, part of the group that includes L25, indicating that another group of L pod had joined up overnight — this is first time we have documented pods reuniting on the outer coast. Fortunately the whales were very grouped up and within a few minutes we observed the new calf — with its unique orange-ish color on the white areas. The calf looked very energetic. We have five more days on the cruise and look forward to additional observations of the calf and collecting additional prey and fecal samples.”

    The Chinook Observer will have more on this story in our March 4 edition.

    http://www.chinookobserver.com/co/local-news/20150227/baby-orca-in-the-columbia-river-plume-this-week

  • Clearing Up: Northwest Delegation Sends Another Letter Urging U.S. CRT Action

    August 12, 2016

    Frustrated that the State Department has yet to take action on the Columbia River Treaty, 22 members of the Northwest congressional delegation on Aug. 11 sent another letter—the third—to Secretary of State John Kerry urging action. “We write to express concern about the U.S. Department of State’s slow progress toward modernizing” the treaty, stated the letter, which was coordinated through the office of Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.).

    It’s been more than two-and-half-years since BPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, after a multiyear collaboration with the Sovereign Review Team, finalized the nine principles in the Northwest’s Regional Recommendation on the future of the treaty. Since then, the delegation has sent two letters—one in April 2014 and another in April 2015—unsuccessfully asking the administration to open negotiations with Canada. Regional officials were encouraged in fall 2015 when State appointed Brian Doherty, a senior foreign service officer, as chief negotiator for modernization of the treaty. Doherty made a number of initial contacts with regional officials late last year and reportedly made a good impression on them.

    Doherty also toured treaty-related sites, and has continued to organize nearly monthly technical meetings with tribes, power groups and even some Canadians. However, he has held no public meetings, and State has repeatedly declined formal requests by Clearing Up to interview Doherty.

    Northwest officials worry that the longer it takes to begin negotiations, the longer the region will continue with coordinated river operations of limited value and an obligation to return to Canada a share of power generated in the U.S., which under treaty terms comes to about 450 aMW of energy and 1,300 MW of capacity, while the actual current value is estimated by BPA to be 90 aMW and zero MW of capacity.

    According to the latest letter, State promised to begin negotiations in 2016. “Unfortunately, more than seven months into 2016 the negotiating parameters that are a prerequisite for formal negotiations still have not been approved by the U.S. Department of State. We have been told for many months that this document, known as a Circular 175, is almost complete.”

    However, a related press release noted that while State “has insisted for months” the process “was nearly complete, there have been no indications” that it “is close to approving the document.” In previous letters, the Northwest congressional delegation asked the administration to begin negotiations with Canada in 2015.

    In the current letter, the delegation asked Kerry to “conclude the review process, approve the Circular 175 immediately, and press Canada to appoint a lead negotiator and engage in negotiations,” all of which must take place before negotiations can begin. They also want to meet in person with Kerry to discuss his progress, after Congress returns in September.

    The press release notes that time “is running out” for the Obama administration. While there is regional sentiment that the impending change in administrations will inevitably slow down State’s progress, some feel the work is sufficiently deep within the bureaucracy that it will not be seriously impacted.

    Meanwhile, BPA appears to have lowered its expectations about how fast work on the treaty will take place. “We are aware that the State Department continues to work to get the formal engagement with Canada underway,” BPA Administrator Elliot Mainzer said in a statement to Clearing Up. “This is taking more time than folks anticipated.”

    Cantwell is reported to be especially frustrated not only with State, but with Canada as well. Last March, she obtained a commitment from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Foreign Minister Stéphane Dion to appoint a Canadian negotiator (CU No. 1739 [14]), but no one has been named so far. The topic also came up in June, when Cantwell met with Canadian Ambassador to
    the U.S. David MacMaughton.

    Jim Heffernan, policy analyst with the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission (CRITFC), said, “Everyone in the basin is in agreement that we wish the Circular 175 process had been completed last year. So, we’re a little frustrated with that.” But he thinks the new letter “will go a long way to shaking the tree at the State Department.”

    Canadian officials have indicated to him it won’t take them anywhere near as long to get rolling once the Americans say they’re ready, and that they can get authority to negotiate in a couple of months. Heffernan also said the most critical deadline is September 2024, when treaty flood-control provisions expire. The annual assured operating plans that determine benefits are initiated six years in advance, and an agreement to set those benefits through 2024 is in place.

    However, he said, “the tribes want to see the region engage in a collaborative modeling approach that integrates flood-control management, ecosystem-based function and a reliable, sustainable power system before we get to 2024 so we can avoid a situation” in which flood-control provisions automatically default to so-called “effective use” and “called upon” protocols. The delays put a timely collaboration at risk, he said.

    Heffernan said tribal leaders have also been frustrated because they have not been able to arrange a “principals” meeting with members of the Columbia River Treaty Power Group since late in 2013. If they’d done so by now, “we could have pushed State harder to get the Circular 175 done.”

    Although staffs have met, and another principals meeting nearly came together in early 2015, logistical issues arose, and since then the power group has asked for a “pause” on plans for a meeting. Heffernan said tribal leaders are anxious to get together so they can talk about an agenda on how to work together to advance the Regional Recommendation before negotiations start.

    Jessica Matlock, Snohomish PUD governmental relations director and spokesperson for the Columbia River Treaty Power Group—which includes 85 Northwest utilities—said the delay has been “disappointing,” adding, “Our ratepayers lose money every day without having this resolved.” She said the group had been hopeful “we could get this started before the new administration starts.”

    As for CRITFC tribal leaders’ desire to meet with Power Group principals, Matlock said its refusal to set a meeting is not for any lack of respect for the tribes’ positions and co-management of the river. Rather, she said, “There are so many electric utilities working together that we want to make sure we are comfortable with our positions as well, and we want to focus on the number one priority: getting Canada at the table with the State Department to start negotiations.”

    Matlock noted the group has assigned a liaison who has met regularly with the tribes, but “we don’t want to talk details because we are still running our own analyses internally to figure out what scenarios are correct for our ratepayers and the Columbia River system.”

    The delegation emphasized these and other extensive impacts of delaying treaty negotiations. “Treaty modernization and negotiations with Canada directly affect the economy, environment, and flood control needs of communities we represent in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana along over 1,200 miles of the Columbia River and its tributaries,” the delegation told Kerry. The Columbia River “plays a critical role in the economy and culture of each of our states, and potential management changes initiated through the Treaty could have major impacts far into the future.”

    Besides Cantwell, other Washington delegation members signing the letter were Sen. Patty Murray and Reps. Adam Smith, Dennis Heck, Jim McDermott, Cathy McMorris-Rodgers, Jaime Herrera Beutler, Suzan DelBene, Dan Newhouse, Dave Reichert, Derek Kilmer and Rick Larsen.

    From Oregon were Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, and Reps. Earl Blumenauer, Suzanne Bonamici, Peter DeFazio, Kurt Schrader and Greg Walden. Montana signatories were Sen. Jon Tester and Rep. Ryan Zinke. Rep. Mike Simpson, from Idaho, also signed

    [Ben Tansey].

  • Climate Change Prevention and Care

    torepairtheworldFrom the desk of Pat Ford, SOS executive director. May 10, 2013

    For some years I have been seeking simple, evocative ways to communicate a core SOS conviction as we all confront climate change: that work to stop or slow it, and work to weather or respond to it, must be done each in concert with the other, in strategic and task unison. I won’t outline here the many reasons this is so, but I can if requested.

    I just found my newest candidates for the simplest, most evocative way so far, in a book by Dr. Paul Farmer called To Repair the World. He is the amazing co-founder and leader of Partners in Health, the group begun in Haiti but now working in nations across earth to bring health care, education and clean water to the poorest of people. His book is a group of his speeches to graduating classes of many kinds. I recommend it; this is a man to listen to.

    Partners in Health has a basic principle in its work: integrate prevention and care. This is something we, and other conservationists, and leaders of all kinds, must do with climate change. We must integrate work to prevent it and to care for those afflicted by it, a group that includes all of us and the web of life of which we are part. But, as Dr. Farmer reminds and re-reminds us, those first in being afflicted by climate chaos will primarily be the voiceless: poor people and the web of life minus us. (That’s quite a phrase: the web of life minus us. It describes a way we tend to think that is not the way it is.)

    Prevention and care. This captures pretty well our moral and civic obligations, to both people and our part of the earth, as we talk and work with others on climate change.

  • Clip of Commercial & Sport Fishing Ad in Oregonian

    May 26th, 2009
    Commercial and Sport Fisherman post ad in Oregonian calling for Obama’s leadership on Columbia & Snake River salmon and steelhead recovery.

    Here's their message to the President...

    0509.NSIA.PCFFAObamaLetter
  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: 2018 Comparative Survival Report Offers Latest Numbers On Smolt-To-Adult Returns For Basin Salmonids Columbia Basin Bulletin: 2018 Comparative Survival Report Offers Latest Numbers On Smolt-To-Adult Returns For Basin Salmonids 

    February 08, 2019

    seattletimessockeyeOverall smolt-to-adult return information for both transported and in-river chinook salmon and wild steelhead transiting the federal hydropower system in the Columbia and Snake rivers was consistent in 2018 with past year’s findings, according to the Fish Passage Center’s 23rd annual comparative survival study.

    The first of the CSS studies was in 1996. Its objective was, and continues to be, to establish a “long-term data set of annual estimates of the survival probability of generations of salmon from their outmigration as smolts to their return to freshwater as adults to spawn (smolt-to-adult return rate; SAR),” the study says.

    None of the juvenile passage routes – in-river or by barge – resulted during the year in meeting the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s SAR objectives set in its 2014 Fish and Wildlife Program for Snake River wild spring/summer chinook and steelhead, which is a range of 2 percent to 6 percent, the study says.

    However, PIT-tag SARs for middle Columbia River wild spring chinook and wild steelhead generally did fall within the Council’s 2 to 6 percent range. Yet, the overall SARs for upper Columbia River and Snake River populations of salmon and steelhead are not meeting this regional goal, while middle Columbia River populations are meeting the SARs goals in most years.

    Council targets are set with an assumption of what the historical levels of productivity were prior to 1970 when the Snake River dams were set in place. The Council is currently in a year-long process to update its Fish and Wildlife Program.

    Looking back a year, the results of the 2017 analysis showed that for all three salmonid species – Snake River summer chinook, sockeye and steelhead – the upstream survival for adult fish that were transported as juveniles were lower than fish that had migrated in-river as juveniles.

    Furthermore in the 2017 analysis, upstream survival of fish transported as juveniles started to decrease at lower temperatures compared to fish that had migrated in-river, the report says.

    “The 2018 analysis is an expansion and refinement of earlier analyses of upstream migration success,” the study says. “Observations from the 2018 study were consistent with historic analyses: all species in this analysis showed a decreasing upstream conversion probability in warm water temperatures greater than 18 (degrees Celsius), and fish that were transported as juveniles had a lower conversion probability overall and a higher portion of strays compared to fish that migrated in-river.”

    The FPC published its final “Comparative Survival Study of PIT-tagged Spring/Summer/Fall Chinook, Summer Steelhead, and Sockeye 2018 Annual Report” in December. It can be found at http://www.fpc.org/documents/CSS/2018_Final_CSS.pdf. All CSS Annual Reports are at http://www.fpc.org/documents/CSS.html.

    The question the study addresses each year is whether collecting juvenile salmon at lower Snake River dams and transporting them downstream of Bonneville Dam where they are released, compensates for the effects of the Federal Columbia River Power System on “the survival of Snake Basin spring/summer Chinook salmon that migrate through the hydrosystem,” the report says.

    The 2018 study was prepared by the Comparative Survival Study Oversight Committee and the Fish Passage Center (www.fpc.org). The committee includes Jerry McCann, Brandon Chockley, Erin Cooper and Bobby Hsu, all of the Fish Passage Center; Steve Haeseker, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Robert Lessard, Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission; Charlie Petrosky and Tim Copeland, Idaho Department of Fish and Game; Eric Tinus and Adam Storch, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife; and Dan Rawding, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    The CSS is a long-term study within the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program and is funded by the Bonneville Power Administration. The Fish Passage Center coordinates the PIT-tagging efforts, data management and preparation, and CSSOC work. All draft and final written work products are subject to regional technical and public review.

    The overall objective of the annual report is to provide a historical reference for each year to provide a basis for future fish passage mitigation discussions, and a base reference for future analysis of adult returns, the report says. It is the beginning of a longer-term effort, which will need to incorporate effects of density dependence on observed productivity to evaluate population responses relative to SAR rates.

    The study says it includes 23 years of SAR data for wild Snake River spring/summer chinook (1994–2016), 20 years of SAR data for Snake River hatchery spring/summer chinook (1997–2016), 19 years of SAR data for Snake River wild and hatchery steelhead (1997–2015), and eight years of SAR data for Snake River sockeye (2009–2016).

    There are eight years of SAR data for Snake River hatchery fall chinook (2006–2012 and 2015). For mid-Columbia and upper-Columbia fall chinook there are varying numbers of years available. There are 15 years of SAR data for Hanford Reach wild fall chinook (2000–2015), five years of SAR data for wild Deschutes River fall chinook (2011–2015), and eight years of SAR data for both Spring Creek National Fish Hatchery and Little White Salmon NFH fall chinook (2008–2015).

    Spring and summer chinook and sockeye returns from outmigration year 2016 should be considered preliminary, as they include only 2-salt returns and may change with the addition of 3-salt returns next year, the study says. Similarly, 2015 migration year fall chinook returns include only 2-salt adults.

    The over 800 page detailed report contains:

    Chapter 1: Introduction

    Chapter 2: Life Cycle Evaluation of Upper Columbia Spring Chinook

    Chapter 3: Effects of the in-river environment on juvenile travel time, instantaneous mortality rates and survival

    Chapter 4: Patterns in Annual Overall SARs

    Chapter 5: SARs AND productivity

    Chapter 6: Estimation of SARs, TIRs and D for Snake River Subyearling Fall Chinook

    Chapter 7: CSS chapter for adult salmon and steelhead upstream migration

    Chapter 8: Comparative analysis of smolt-to-adult return rates for Carson National Fish Hatchery spring Chinook salmon using passive integrated transponder and coded wire tags

    Chapter 9: Preliminary Development of an Approach to Estimate Daily Detection Probability and Total Passage of Spring Migrant Yearling Chinook Salmon at Bonneville Dam

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: All Four Lower Klamath River Dams Removed, Several Years Work Ahead To Restore Formerly Submerged Lands

    2 chinook salmon

    October 8, 2024

    All four lower Klamath River hydropower dams have been removed. Kiewit, the dam removal contractor hired by the Klamath River Renewal Corporation to complete the construction elements of the project, finished all work this month in the river.

    Following the cofferdam breaches last month, a portion of the Iron Gate cofferdam and a temporary river crossing at Copco No. 1 were left in place to provide access to the far side of the river in order to remove diversion infrastructure. With all the diversion infrastructure, temporary bridges, and dam materials now fully removed from the river, the dam removal portion of the Klamath River Renewal Project is now complete.

    Restoration and recovery of the river will continue for the coming years.

    Together, Copco No. 1, Copco No. 2, J.C. Boyle, and Iron Gate Dams had blocked fish passage and impaired water quality for more than a century. All four were hydroelectric dams that did not provide irrigation or drinking water and were not operated for flood control.

    Following decades of advocacy, led by area tribes and supported by conservation advocates, commercial fishing organizations, and the States of California and Oregon, federal regulators approved the removal of the dams in November 2022. Ownership of the project was then transferred to the Klamath River Renewal Corporation, the organization that was created to oversee the removal of the dams and related restoration of the previously submerged lands.

    Copco No. 2, the smallest dam, was removed in the summer of 2023. In January of 2024 the Copco No. 1, JC Boyle, and Iron Gate reservoirs were drained, and deconstruction began in the spring. Massive amounts of concrete, earth, rocks and clay was removed from the river channel as part of the dam removal process.

    With these obstructions now cleared from the mainstem river, fish once again have access to more than 400 stream miles, including in tributary creeks and streams, of habitat in the upper Klamath Basin.

    While the dam removal portion of the project is now complete, work will continue for several years restoring the 2,200 acres of formerly submerged lands. As the reservoirs drained in January, native seed mix was applied to the reservoir footprints. This initial round of seeding was intended to stabilize sediments and improve soil composition.

    This fall, restoration crews will turn their attention to amending soil conditions and will then perform another round of seeding and planting. Restoration crews will be onsite until vegetation success meets predetermined performance metrics. Restoration work is likely to continue for at least the next several years.

    To learn more about the project, see klamathrenewal.org.

    “These final dam removal steps set the stage for salmon to return to reclaimed habitat and expand their population recovery,” said Jim Simondet, NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region Klamath Branch Supervisor.

    NOAA Fisheries analyzed the impacts of dam removal on Endangered Species Act-listed species in a biological opinion. That analysis found that the short-term impacts, such as the potential effects of sediment in the water on salmon, would be outweighed by the much greater long-term benefits as river ecosystem processes return at a landscape scale.

    Before the final removal steps, NOAA Fisheries convened a forum called the Fisheries Coordination Team to discuss how to best protect fish and water quality. It included experts from tribes, states, and other federal agencies. The team provided technical recommendations to manage water quality impacts, such as those observed earlier in the year when the reservoirs were initially drained. Crews used a strategy of releasing sediment and organic material that muddied the river but avoided a decline in dissolved oxygen that could have otherwise harmed fish.

    “The network of water quality monitoring sites managed by the tribes are providing real-time data to the Fisheries Coordination Team, allowing them to manage sediment inputs and adaptively manage fisheries needs during the final removal process,” said Toz Soto, Fisheries Program Manager for the Karuk Tribe.

    The KRRC followed the recommendation to remove sediment and organic material from behind the cofferdam before the dam was fully removed. That resulted in a slower release of the material. The Fisheries Coordination Team will hold weekly check-ins to track extensive water quality monitoring up and down the river.

    “Our goal was to provide a forum that allowed for transparent sharing of information, collection of observations, and recommendations from experts who live and work on the river,” said Shari Witmore, a fisheries biologist in NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region’s Klamath Branch. “Leaning on the advice of our partners, we were able to minimize impacts to fish in the Klamath River during the final step of dam removal.”

    “Given all the complexities and details necessary to remove the four dams, the work has gone pretty smoothly and commensurate with our expectations,” Simondet said. “That is a testament to the hard work and expertise of the KRRC and its contractors and the planning we all contributed to ahead of time to get this right.”

    Also see:

    –CBB, Sept. 13, 2024, With Klamath Dams Breached, California Issues ‘Klamath River Anadromous Fishery Reintroduction and Restoration Monitoring Plan’ 

    –CBB, August 9, 2024, Klamath River Dam Removal: Salmon Scientists Design Monitoring Program To Track Fish Returns, When And Where They Go

    Columbia Basin Bulletin: All Four Lower Klamath River Dams Removed, Several Years Work Ahead To Restore Formerly Submerged Lands

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: As Expiration Date Nears, U.S., Canada Pushing To Finish Columbia River Treaty Negotiations By June; Uncertainty Over Future Operations A Motivator

    crt.photo.copyApril 20, 2023

    Lead U.S. government negotiators vowed to intensify their work to conclude a new Columbia River Treaty with Canada by early summer as they held a public listening session this week. The two countries have been in negotiations for over four years and a new agreement to upgrade or modernize the Treaty must be reached by the end of summer 2024.

    In their three minutes of allowed speaking time, commenters mostly called on U.S. Treaty negotiators to ensure that “ecosystem function” is included with the other two purposes of the existing Treaty – flood risk management and recalculations of the Canadian entitlement. Commenters were from environmental groups, public utilities and one was from the Port of Kalama.

    The final Treaty must be ratified by Canada and the U.S. no later than September 2024, lead negotiator Jill Smail of the U.S. Department of State told those listening in on a conference call Wednesday, April 19. Without a final agreement, she added, the U.S. “will lose access to preplanned flood risk space in Canadian reservoirs. Twenty of the 40 million acre feet that the Corps (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) now relies on (for flood control) are in Canada.” Access to that flood risk space would then be on an on-call basis, rather than on a predictable basis, she said.

    That could profoundly affect the Northwest’s economy and environment downstream of Canada and also impact salmon and steelhead recovery in the Columbia River basin.

    “Resolving the remaining sticking points by June is ambitious, but the United States believes it is achievable,” U.S. State Department negotiator Jill Smail said. “We have made significant progress. Although we still have tough issues to work through, we believe the uncertainty facing both countries in 2024 will continue to motivate both countries’ teams to reach timely agreement.”

    Currently the two countries operate the reservoirs and dams under Assured Operations Plans. Without AOPs management would resort to uncertain “called upon” operations.

    The most recent round of negotiations with Canada was March 22 – 23 in Washington, D.C. After that meeting President Joe Biden and Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau affirmed that “the Columbia River is a vital shared resource that underpins many lives and industries on both sides of the border and the watershed requires our attention and prompt coordination.”

    The March session was the 16th negotiating session since Treaty talks began four years ago.

    In the March negotiating session, the two delegations discussed managing flood risks after the Treaty regime changes in September 2024, strengthening cooperation to support aquatic life and the biodiversity of the Columbia River Basin, ongoing salmon reintroduction studies, and the interface between hydropower operations and Canada’s desire for greater flexibility in Treaty dam operations, the State Department said.

    For more information on the March negotiations, see — CBB, April 7, 2023, CANADA, U.S. MEET FOR 16TH ROUND OF COLUMBIA RIVER TREATY NEGOTIATIONS; BIDEN, TRUDEAU ISSUE STATEMENT

    The next round of negotiations is set for May 16 – 17 in British Columbia. That will be followed by another listening session.

    This week’s listening session accommodated about 25 speakers, far fewer than those who had signed up for the one-and-a-half hour session, according to Roland Springer of the Bureau of Reclamation. Springer is the lead negotiator for the Bureau and he served as the moderator for the listening session.

    Most of those who commented urged the panel to include ecosystem function as the third function of the Treaty, as well as to include reintroduction of salmon into the upper reaches of the Columbia basin above Grand Coulee Dam, and to account for climate change impacts on the hydro system and on the river’s health.

    Ecosystem function includes strengthening flows to support salmon migration through a long-term agreement, instead of yearly renegotiations, Smail said.

    “The old treaty is woefully out of date and shows little understanding of climate change and salmon,” said Joseph Bogaard of the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition. “The Treaty must be able to respond to climate change. A healthy river is not a cost, it is a benefit.”

    He also called for the reestablishment of fish passage into the upper Columbia River.

    “Renegotiations will have a profound impact on the river,” said Miles Johnson, legal director with Columbia RiverKeeper. “The amount of water and its timing coming out of Canada will impact the lower river.

    “The inclusion of a voice for this river is important,” he continued. “BPA and the Corps are very effective running the hydro system, but not in recovering salmon. Put someone else in charge instead of those who have been so ineffective.”

    Also commenting were representatives from Washington and Oregon public utilities who urged the negotiating team to “rebalance the Canadian electricity entitlement.” Suzanne Grassell of the Chelan County Public Utility District said that imbalance is costing U.S. electricity ratepayers as much as $300 million a year, an amount that is causing higher than necessary costs for her utility.

    The Canadian electricity entitlement is the power benefit the U.S. sends to Canada, according to Smail. The original agreement favored Canada, and “this imbalance has become greater over time,” she said.

    George Caan, Washington Public Utility District Association, said that according to a recent report by the Washington Department of Commerce, some 20 percent of utility customers are paying more than 6 percent of their income for electricity. “It’s important to look at the impact of power costs of the entitlement on low income customers,” Caan said.

    Scott Simms, CEO of the Public Power Council, supported changes in the power exchange agreement and flood control. He said adding ecosystem function complicates the Treaty and, although his organization doesn’t oppose adding it as the third function of the Treaty, he did say that taxpayers, not ratepayers should pay for it.

    “BPA and the mid-Columbia utilities already fund the largest salmon recovery program in the world,” he said. “Any ecosystem function must recognize this and must be paid by taxpayers.”

    Michelle Adams representing Temco, a grain export terminal at the Port of Kalama, encouraged the negotiators to come to an agreement that had few changes to current river operations as possible. “We rely on predictable river flows,” she said, adding that some 51 million tons of product are transported by barge on the Columbia River every year.

    “The changes that have been proposed, especially those relating to higher high flows in the spring and lower low flows in the fall, could significantly impact vessel handling and cargo movement,” she said, adding that higher flows reduce navigation safety. Lower flows could also put draft restrictions on some ships.

    Jennifer Savage, Department of State, concluded saying that there wasn’t enough time to get to everyone who wanted to talk, but that they or any other person can still submit comments to Columbiarivertreaty@state.gov

    The U.S. Department of State leads a negotiating team consisting of representatives from the Bonneville Power Administration, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Northwestern Division, the U.S. Department of the Interior, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The U.S. delegation also included expert-advisors from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, and the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho.

    As has been the case since 2019, the Canadian negotiation delegation in March included representatives of the Government of Canada, the Province of B.C. and the Ktunaxa, Secwepemc and Syilx Okanagan Nations. In addition to federal agencies, the American delegation included expert-advisors from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, and the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Bonneville Power Looking At Spending Reductions In Columbia Basin Fish/Wildlife Spending

    Friday, June 15 2018BPA Logo 2015

    The Columbia River basin fish and wildlife budget funded by the Bonneville Power Administration will likely see as much as a 10 percent cut in fiscal year 2019, according to Bryan Mercier, executive director of BPA’s fish and wildlife division.
     
    Mercier broke the news to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council at its meeting in Portland June 12, saying that the agency is seeking to reduce the slightly more than $300 million budget, which includes both capital and direct expenses, by $30 million next fiscal year.
     
    Bonneville funds regional fish and wildlife projects associated with the four-state Council’s Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife program. For more information about the Council, its regional fish and wildlife program and program projects go to https://www.nwcouncil.org/fish-and-wildlife.
     
    In a June 5 Council memorandum, Tony Grover, the Council’s fish and wildlife director, said that the fiscal year Start of Year (SOY) budget planning process “is an important milestone every year because it sets expectations regarding Bonneville funding for projects and contracts that will be developed in the upcoming fiscal year.”
     
    He went on to say that Bonneville is approaching this process differently than it has in the past “to accommodate the fiscal uncertainty that it faces and to ensure the Fish and Wildlife Program has sustainable funding levels.”
     
    See the memorandum at https://www.nwcouncil.org/sites/default/files/2018_0612_4.pdf
     
    BPA Administrator, Elliot Mainzer, introducing Mercier as well as Lorri Bodi, BPA vice president of environment, fish and wildlife, said the agency is making an effort to keep programmatic costs at or below the rate of inflation over the next ten years.
     
    “If we meet our public responsibilities, we need to do so as a commercial business,” Mainzer said, while still doing the “valuable, important and moral work on fish and wildlife. It’s important to me to sustain the good work.”
     
    Bodi, who is retiring soon, said that the Council and BPA have actually been finding cost savings and has operated the fish and wildlife program at below the rate of inflation for the past eight years.
     
    “We will shrink the amount we spend on research, monitoring and evaluation and put more money in on-the-ground programs,” she said of BPA expenditures on fish and wildlife programs this coming year. “We’re looking for more bang for the buck.”
     
    Mercier reiterated that BPA’s strategic direction includes strengthening the agency’s financial health and maintaining costs at or below inflation.  He also said that for fish and wildlife there are areas of uncertainty, pointing out a proposed $10 million surcharge on court-ordered spill to total dissolved gas limits (Bonneville initially estimated the cost of the additional spill to be $40 million), the 2018 NOAA biological opinion for salmon and steelhead and its proposed actions and costs, and changes to the 2008 Columbia Basin Fish Accords https://www.salmonrecovery.gov/Partners/FishAccords.aspx.
     
    Indeed, capital and direct expenses for the fish and wildlife program climbed from about $150 million in 2000 to more than $310 million in 2012 and has been dropping since then to about $260 million in 2017, the last year of actual expenses. However, the projection for FY2018 is for capital and direct expenses to hit $325 million.
     
    The full cost of the program is much more and includes such items as $5 million for Council expenses in FY2016-2017, $27 million for the Lower Snake Compensation Plan paid to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, $48 million to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, $7 million to the Bureau of Reclamation, $58 million for foregone revenue and power purchases caused by fish and wildlife operations and $135 million for depreciation and interest. The total cost for the complete package in FY2016-2017 was $535 million.
     
    Before reductions, the final cost is expected to rise to $698 million in FY2018-2019. That includes $6 million for the Council, $34 million to the Service, $50 million to the Corps, $7 million to BOR, $195 million for lost revenue and power purchases and $129 million for depreciation and interest.
     
    As it reviews programs for FY2019, Mercier said BPA will strive to improve program implementation performance and seek better biological effectiveness. It will eliminate redundancy, prioritize on-the-ground work and encourage cost-sharing with other entities (“attract other sources of capital” to programs, Mercier said).
     
    One area that will see cuts is RM&E, Bodi said. “We’re looking for research that contributes to management decisions. We at Bonneville don’t need information good enough for scientific publication: we need info for operating.” She added that there’s a “good deal of duplication” in RM&E.
     
    Some $8 million of reductions will occur in what BPA is calling Partner Portfolios, such as with tribes, states, soil and water conservation districts and watershed councils. Another $18 million will come from programs and $4 million will come out of BPA’s overhead and internal costs, according to Mercier.
     
    The preliminary budget rollout is this week, Mercier said, and contract negotiations with quarter 1 contracts (those that begin at the beginning of the fiscal year) also begin this week. Negotiations will be unique and iterative with each partner, he said. Those contracts will be issued mid-July. Quarter 2 contract negotiations follow, beginning in mid- to late-August. BPA and the Council will consult throughout the timeline.

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440947.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Canada, U.S. Meet For 16th Round Of Columbia River Treaty Negotiations; Biden, Trudeau Issue Statement

    22.1 . . . creates the Bush River that flows into Kinbasket Lake the end of the free flowing ColumbiaApril 7, 2023

    The 16th round of Canada-U.S. negotiations to modernize the Columbia River Treaty took place on March 22 and 23, in Washington, D.C.

    During this latest session, conversations between Canadian and American negotiators focused on strengthening co-operation to support aquatic life and biodiversity in the Columbia River Basin, ongoing studies regarding salmon reintroduction, flood-risk management, and the connection between hydropower operations and Canada’s desire for greater flexibility in how its treaty dams are operated.

    The treaty plays a significant role in shaping river flows and dam operations across the basin as more than a third of the Columbia’s water comes from Canada.

    The two countries have been in negotiations to update – ‘modernize’ – the Columbia River Treaty for over four years. If a new agreement is not reached within two years, the terms of the current Treaty will shift responsibility for flood control south of the border from Canada to the U.S., potentially forcing major operational changes at eight dams and reservoirs located in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana.

    Currently the two countries operate the reservoirs and dams under Assured Operations Plans. Without AOPs management would resort to uncertain “called upon” operations.

    As has been the case since 2019, the Canadian negotiation delegation in March included representatives of the Government of Canada, the Province of B.C. and the Ktunaxa, Secwepemc and Syilx Okanagan Nations. In addition to federal agencies, the American delegation included expert-advisors from the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, and the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho.

    Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Joe Biden issued a joint statement on March 24:

    “Canada and the United States will intensify their work over the coming months toward agreement on a modernized treaty regime that will support a healthy and prosperous Columbia River Basin. We will focus on flood risk management, power generation, and environmental benefits that are shared equitably by both countries and the Indigenous peoples and Tribal nations, communities, and stakeholders in this watershed. The Columbia River is a vital shared resource that underpins many lives and industries on both sides of the border and the watershed requires our attention and prompt coordination.”

    A letter signed by all members of the Northwest congressional delegation sent to Biden just before his meeting with Trudeau said, “While there has been some progress, the United States and Canada are entering a critical period and need to conclude Treaty negotiations to avoid significant and widespread impacts to the region. Without an agreement, both countries will have to prepare for unwelcome volatility and strains on Columbia River Basin operations, including increased flood risks and economic uncertainty in the United States.”

    The next round of negotiations will be held on May 16 and 17 in British Columbia.

    Encouraging advancements for Columbia River Treaty negotiations Apr 5, 2023

    This week, the British Columbia province issued the following update on treaty negotiations:

    The past year has seen an encouraging shift in discussions between Canada and the U.S. about modernizing the Columbia River Treaty.

    When reflecting on activities in 2022, Katrine Conroy, Minister Responsible for the Columbia River Treaty, described “the most promising advancements since discussions about the Treaty’s future began in 2018.” Minister Conroy was referring to substantial progress made over three formal rounds of negotiation meetings and a series of technical sessions that kept Canadian and American negotiators busy throughout the year.

    Three months into 2023, they show no signs of slowing down. The negotiating teams met in Vancouver, B.C., on January 25 and 26 and, following a series of intersessional meetings, reconvened for the 16th round of negotiations on March 22 and 23 in Washington D.C.

    The countries have now exchanged several proposals outlining what a modernized Treaty might include, and are working hard to find common ground. Conversations have been constructive and, at times, challenging, as both sides strive to meet the needs of their respective regions. They are advancing views on hydropower co-ordination and flood-risk management and are moving closer to alignment on aspects of ecosystem co-operation, flexibility for how Canada operates its Treaty dams, and collaborative engagement on Libby Dam operations.

    Flexibility is especially important to the Canadian negotiating team, which includes Canada, B.C. and the Ktunaxa, Secwepemc and Syilx Okanagan Nations. It would allow B.C. to adjust Treaty operations to enhance ecosystems and Indigenous cultural values, adapt to the impacts of climate change, and address social and economic interests. Canada’s Negotiation Advisory Team is examining different ways of operating the dams to meet these goals while continuing the Treaty’s original purpose of increasing power generation and preventing damaging floods. To inform these discussions, Indigenous Nations are leading research to develop objectives for ecosystems and Indigenous cultural values, and the Columbia River Treaty Local Governments Committee is developing objectives for socio-economic interests.

    While there is no deadline for modernizing the Treaty, Canada, B.C., and Indigenous Nations remain committed to working with the U.S. to reach a fair agreement that shares benefits equitably between countries.

    “Although there are still outstanding issues to be resolved,” Minister Conroy said in a statement following the January round of talks, “there is cause for optimism as the negotiating teams move closer to a consensus on some of the main issues. Canada and the U.S. are working together to reach an agreement-in-principle that will protect and support people in the Columbia River Basin and the region’s ecosystems.”

    Before any agreement on a modernized Treaty is finalized, the Province will engage with Basin residents to explain what is being proposed and provide the opportunity for feedback. While there is currently no timeline for when that could happen, what’s certain is that 2023 is shaping up to be another busy year at the Columbia River Treaty negotiating table.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Corps Awards $321 Million Contract To Design, Build, Install 14 Turbines At McNary Dam

    Friday, March 23, 2018

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Walla Walla District on Wednesday awarded a $321.3 million contract to Alstom Renewable US LLC to design, manufacture and install 14 turbines at the McNary Lock and Dam, near Umatilla, Oregon.

    The “award culminates three years of research, planning, design and acquisition to replace the existing turbine runners and associated ancillary equipment. The goals of this re-capitalization and modernization effort include increasing: fish survival, hydraulic capacity, turbine efficiency operational flexibility and improving turbine operations reliability,” said the Corps in a press release.  

    McNary Dam, a multi-purpose project authorized by the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1945, was commissioned in 1954. The powerhouse consists of fourteen 70,000-kilowatt hydroelectric generator units, providing 980-megawatts of powerhouse capacity. One megawatt serves approximately 700 homes. At full capacity, McNary’s powerhouse can supply enough power for about 686,000 homes.

    The 14 main unit turbines have been in operation for more than 62 years. They are projected to continue to operate on average for another seven years until the new turbines are manufactured and installed.

    This requirement is fully funded with non-appropriated funding provided by the Bonneville Power Administration. Re-capitalization projects such the McNary turbines are a capital investment for the Administration, as they receive power sales revenue from the generation of power by the McNary hydropower facility. These revenues from McNary Dam range from $150 million to over $300 million per year depending upon rates and water flow, which equates to an average per unit revenue generation of just over $16 million per year.

    “This Contract Award is a significant accomplishment for our district and the region,” said Walla Walla District Commander Lt. Col. Damon Delarosa. “The re-capitalization effort at McNary Lock and Dam is one of my top priorities for 2018. The team responsible for reaching this milestone spanned multiple federal agencies; their professionalism and dedication were evident in all they have accomplished to date and I'm sure will continue as they begin the design efforts for the new turbines.

    “Once completed, the improvements recognized from this project for reliability, operational flexibility and fish passage will be substantial and measurable. We look forward to working with Alstom Renewable Energy on this critical infrastructure effort in the coming months and years,” he said.

    Alstom Renewable US LLC, a General Electric Company, is no stranger to hydropower modernization, bringing worldwide experience in the design, manufacture and installation of hydropower turbines. Their most recent work in the Pacific Northwest includes replacing turbine runners at Chief Joseph Dam for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is nearing completion.

    “Alstom will work collaboratively with the Corps of Engineers through an iterative design process to develop the new runners and associated equipment,” said Corps Project Manager Shawn Nelson. “Engineers and biologists from the Walla Walla District, the Corps of Engineer’s Hydro-Electric Design Center in Portland, Oregon, and the Corps’ Engineer Research and Development Center in Vicksburg, Mississippi, will support this design process, progressing from computer-based models to physical modeling. After the design is completed, the turbine components will be manufactured and then installed two units at a time over the course of seven to eight years.

    “The contract is expected to be completed in approximately 14 years,” he said.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Corps’ Second Spill Report To Court Details Impacts Of High Flows, Involuntary Spill In May 

    Posted on Friday, June 29, 2018Lower Granite Spill

    Flows in the lower Snake and Columbia rivers during May were well above average and so was spill and levels of total dissolved gas in the tailwaters of dams, as well as in dams’ forebays, according to a second report on court-ordered spill.
     
    The report was compiled by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Northwest Division Office and delivered, as required to the U.S. District Court in Oregon June 15. The Corps will provide one more spring spill report to cover the period through June 20, when court-ordered spring spill to TDG limits ended.
     
    Spring spill to aid juvenile salmon and steelhead passage that began in the Snake River April 3 and on the Columbia River April 10 was ordered by Judge Michael H. Simon in an April 2017 decision.
     
    The report describes spill operations by the Corps at four lower Snake River and four lower Columbia River dams during May.
     
    A previous report covered the month of April. (see CBB, June 8, 2018, “NOAA Fisheries Delivers First Court-Ordered Spring Spill For Fish Report; Shows Complex Operations”).
     
    Additional spring spill up to the maximum total dissolved gas levels allowed by state water quality rules, called gas caps, was ordered by the court one year ago. However, its implementation was delayed a year by the court to allow time for federal agencies to develop a spill plan.
     
    The Bonneville Power Administration last week reported the power cost for the additional spring spill to be $10.2 million for fiscal year 2018. Those costs are largely the value of lost revenue if it was able to use the additional spill to generate electricity. BPA released its final costs June 21, 2018.
     
    Total dissolved gas limits are intended to protect young fish from gas bubble trauma in the dams’ tailraces during spill.
     
    “The month of May was characterized by well above average flows for the lower Snake and lower Columbia rivers along with above average air temperatures and widely varying precipitation across the Columbia Basin,” the June 15 report says.
     
    It goes on to say that May precipitation was 96 percent of average on the Snake River above Ice Harbor and 78 percent of average on the Columbia River above The Dalles Dam.
     
    However, runoff in the two rivers was far above normal, with the Northwest River Forecast Center runoff summary for May showing higher than average runoff. The Snake River at Lower Granite Dam was 149 percent of the 30-year average (1981-2010) with a volume of 10.3 million acre feet, while May runoff for the Columbia River at The Dalles Dam was 176 percent of the 30-year average, with a volume of 44.6 MAF.
     
    Simon’s court order calls for the Corps to strive for spill at gas cap levels of 120 percent TDG at all eight dam tailwaters and at 115 percent in the forebays of each of the dams, which are limits set by the states of Oregon and Washington. However, during May gas caps were exceeded much of the time, particularly in dams’ forebays, when high flows caused spill higher than spill targets developed by the Corps.
      
    The Corps said the spill cap operation this year is a more complex operation than in previous years.
     
    “In its implementation of the 2018 Spring FOP (fish operations plan) in May, the Corps evaluated conditions every day to establish spill caps at a level that was estimated to meet, but not exceed, the gas cap in the tailrace and the next downstream forebay,” the Corps’ second report says. “This evaluation considered: environmental conditions (e.g., river flow, wind, water temperature, barometric pressure, incoming TDG from upstream, and water travel time) and project operations (e.g., spill level, spill pattern, tailwater elevation, proportion of flow through the turbines, and project configuration). For the month of May 2018, conditions constraining the spill cap at Bonneville and The Dalles dams did not occur.”
     
    A disagreement on how “spill to the gas cap” should be interpreted occurred at the June 13 meeting of the interagency Technical Management Team. At that meeting, Julie Ammann of the Corps said that “We need to meet, not exceed, state water quality standards.” However, fisheries managers thought the Corps should be more aggressive by shooting for an average cap of 120 percent in the tailwater and 115 percent in the downstream forebay.
     

    At Lower Granite Dam spill exceeded the Corps’ target spill (about 36,000 to 38,000 cubic feet per second) on all but about seven days in May, with flows at one point exceeding 180 kcfs and actual spill hitting 80 kcfs. Tailwater TDG percentage at Granite rose to the mid- to low-120s at the end of the month.
     
    Downstream, the Little Goose forebay saw TDG over 115 percent about half the month. Little Goose Dam tailwater TDG was over 120 percent 18 days.
     
    Lower Monumental Dam forebay exceeded the 115 percent gas cap all but one day in May, reaching as high as 126 percent. The dam’s tailwater exceeded the gas cap 20 days in May.
     
    The Ice Harbor Dam forebay exceeded the gas cap of 115 percent every day in the month. Flows at Ice Harbor approached 200 kcfs May 27, with spill at 140 kcfs (target spill was 80 kcfs). Ice Harbor tailwater exceeded the gas cap 22 of 31 days.
     
    Spill on the Columbia River followed a similar pattern. McNary Dam flow hovered around the 500 kcfs mark for much of the middle and late parts of May. Spill hit 380 kcfs May 17, while the spill target was 150 kcfs. The McNary forebay exceeded the gas cap on all but three days in May. Tailwater TDG at McNary exceeded the gas cap all but five days in May.
     
    John Day, The Dalles and Bonneville dams followed a similar pattern of flow and spill, but with fewer spikes in actual spill (the spill targets at John Day and The Dalles was about 95 kcfs, and about 125 kcfs at Bonneville).
     
    The John Day forebay TDG exceeded the gas cap on all but four days in May (the first four days). The John Day tailwater exceeded the gas cap on all but the first four days of the month, reaching 134 percent TDG on two of the days.
     
    The Dalles forebay exceeded the gas cap on all but the first four days of May and the tailwater exceeded the gas cap on all but four days, but the days were dispersed throughout the month.
     
    The Bonneville Dam exceeded gas cap limits in the forebay and tailwater every day of the month (the sensor in the tailwater was out of commission the last half of the month).
     
    There were some breaks in the spill protocol at Lower Granite, Little Goose and The Dalles dams. On May 2 at Lower Granite all generating units were out during the day while transmission repairs were underway. The Corps spilled as much water as possible during the outage, while controlling TDG as best as it could, and it stored water behind the dam in order to control the amount of water spilled.
     
    Passage delays of adult chinook salmon caused TMT to ask for controlled spill of 30 kcfs during the day at Little Goose Dam May 30 to June 2. To do that, the Corps stored water and released it overnight.
     
    On the afternoon of May 31 the Corps shut down all spill at The Dalles Dam for 25 minutes for an emergency rescue of a boat caught in the spillway.
     
    The request for injunctive relief for more spill was enjoined with an earlier case argued in District Court. The initial case, heard by Simon, resulted in a May 2016 remand of the federal Columbia River power system biological opinion for salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act.
     
    The spill plea was initiated in January 2017 by plaintiffs in the original case, the National Wildlife Federation and the State of Oregon, among others, asking the court to begin ordering spill to maximum total dissolved gas levels as set by the states beginning April 3, 2017 and to continue for each year of the BiOp remand.
     
    Simon agreed that more spring spill would benefit ESA-listed fish but delayed the action until 2018 while federal agencies completed a spill plan for the dams. The plan is for additional spill only during the spring of 2018 to TDG caps, as well as for earlier PIT-tag monitoring of juvenile salmon.
     
    NOAA Fisheries, Northwest RiverPartners, the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, the states of Idaho and Montana, and the Inland Ports and Navigation Group appealed Simon’s spill injunction in early June 2017 to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. However a three-judge panel of the appeals court ruled April 2 in favor of Simon’s spill ruling.
     
    Bonneville released the Administrator’s Decision, Implementation of the FY 2018 Spill Surcharge (FY 2018 Spill Surcharge Decision), memorializing the final decision to implement the Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 Spill Surcharge in an amount of $10.2 million for FY 2018, according to BPA. The regional utility will apply a rate of 0.71 mills per kilowatt-hour for June–September 2018; and an Annual rate of 0.23 mills per kilowatt-hour. The FY 2018 Spill Surcharge Decision also addresses comments received during the public comment period. 

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Court Ordered Spring Spill For Fish Begins On Four Lower Columbia River Dams

    dam.photo***Note from Save Our wild Salmon***: follow this link to an alert to contact your Member of Congress and urge them to vote "no" when anti-salmon legislation HR 3144 comes up for a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives. Thank you.

    April 13, 2018

    Lower Columbia River dams began court-ordered spring spill this week to aid migrating juvenile salmon and steelhead just one week after spill began at lower Snake River dams.

    As is the case with the court-ordered spill that began a week ago at Snake River dams, spill at Columbia dams will be to the maximum total dissolved gas levels allowed by state water quality standards, known as gas caps. Percentage caps on total dissolved gas (caused when spill plunges into the river) are intended to protect young fish from gas bubble trauma during spill.

    A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled April 2 in favor of an April 2017 U.S. District Court injunction allowing more spring spill at four lower Snake and four lower Columbia river dams. With the decision, spill to the gas cap began April 3 at lower Snake River dams and at lower Columbia River dams April 10.

    Dan Turner of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ River Control Center told the interagency Technical Management Team at its meeting Wednesday, April 11, that the Corps began gas cap spill this week at McNary, John Day, The Dalles and Bonneville dams. Total dissolved gas is measured at the dam’s tailrace where the cap is 120 percent TDG, but also at the downstream forebay, where the cap is 115 percent.

    The Corps has developed levels of spill – spill target – that it believes would result in the allowed TDG levels. The spill target atMcNary Dam is 190,000 to 195,000 cubic feet per second, although the actual daily average spill April 10 was 184 kcfs, which produced a tailwater TDG measurement of 118 percent. Spill at the dam the day before was 90 kcfs, producing 114 percent TDG. Due to travel time of about two days between dams, TDG in the downstream forebay at John Day Dam was still at 106 percent. Spring spill at McNary Dam in 2017 was 40 percent of the river day and night.

    The spill target at John Day Dam is 140 kcfs and the actual daily average spill was 138 kcfs, which produced a tailwater TDG measurement of 120 percent. Spill at the dam the day before was 14 kcfs, producing 111 percent TDG. TDG in the downstream forebay at The Dalles Dam was still 114 percent. Spring spill at John Day Dam in 2017 was 30 percent of the river day and night April 10 to April 28 and 30 or 40 percent of the river April 28 through June 15.

    The spill target at The Dalles Dam is 125 kcfs and the actual daily average spill was 123 kcfs, which produced a tailwater TDG measurement of 118 percent. Spill at the dam the day before was 72 kcfs, producing110 percent TDG. TDG in the downstream forebay at Bonneville Dam was still 111 percent. Spring spill at The Dalles Dam in 2017 was 40 percent of the river day and night.

    The spill target at Bonneville Dam is 128 kcfs and the actual daily average spill was 127 kcfs, which produced a tailwater TDG measurement of 120 percent. Spill at the dam the day before was 40 kcfs, producing 114 percent TDG. Bonneville is the lowest dam on the Columbia River, so there is no downstream forebay measurement. Spring spill at Bonneville Dam in 2017 was 100 kcfs day and night.

    The plea for more spring spill to the gas cap was brought to District Court Judge Michael H. Simon in January 2017. Simon agreed that more spring spill would benefit ESA-listed fish, but delayed the action until 2018 while federal agencies completed a spill plan for lower Snake and Columbia river dams. That plan was submitted to the court Dec. 8, 2017 and Simon affirmed the plan in a January 8 order.

    The Bonneville Power Administration has determined that the cost of this additional spring spill could cost the region $40 million in foregone revenue due to water being spilled instead of being used to generate electricity.

    Snake River dams have had a full week of the new spill regime, according to Turner, and it’s been a learning experience for the Corps.

    For example, while keeping Lower Granite tailrace TDG near the 120 percent cap, it’s been difficult to keep the Little Goose forebay gas cap at 115 percent (it’s more often near an average of 117 percent). Spill at the upstream dam can’t just be adjusted instantaneously to hold forebay TDG levels within limits because of the two day travel time.

    Wind can be factor. With higher winds, the Corps can expect lower TDG, but when it factored an expected wind storm into its spill decision last weekend, the winds failed to materialize. Another factor is barometric pressure, Turner said. Higher barometric pressure produces lower TDG.

    A Snake River Overview Table of spill and TDG levels provided by Turner is at http://pweb.crohms.org/ftppub/water_quality/12hr/snake_river.html

    A Columbia River Overview Table is at http://pweb.crohms.org/ftppub/water_quality/12hr/columbia.html

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440516.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: ECONorthwest releases report on economic tradeoffs of removing Lower Snake River Dams; Northwest Riverpartners Challenge

    August 2, 2019

    IMG ice harbor 15 1 UVBU3Q5C L333157189The economic consulting firm ECONorthwest released a report this week analyzing the tradeoffs associated with removing the four lower Snake River dams in Washington, suggesting the benefits of removal exceed the costs by $8.6 billion, and thus the region would likely be better off without the dams.

    In addition, removing the dams, says ECONorthwest, “has the potential to improve fish passage, decrease the migration time for juvenile fish, introduce new main-stem spawning habitat for fall Chinook, and lead to reduced extinction risk for threatened and endangered fish stocks.”

    “Benefits accruing to the public from a restored natural river system and a reduced extinction risk of wild salmon outweigh the net costs of removing the dams by over $8.6 billion,” says the report. “On a per-household basis, we find there a willingness to increase electricity bills by an average of $39.89 per year to help protect wild salmon.

    “However, removal of the dams would be justified at any value over $8.44 per year, meaning that removing the dams would create an average of $31.45 of surplus-value per household, per year.”

    The report includes a benefit-cost analysis and economic impact analysis of removing the dams.

    In response to the report, Northwest RiverPartners, representing consumer-owned utilities, ports, and businesses, said “this report is potentially harmful and misleading to stakeholders on both sides of this critical conversation.”

    Currently, federal agencies are developing a draft environmental impact statement for the Federal Columbia River Power System’s impacts on salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act. The draft won’t be complete until February, but federal agencies have made public five alternatives, including a no-action or status quo alternative and an alternative that includes breaching lower Snake River dams.

    ECONorthwest prepared this report for Seattle-based Vulcan Inc., founded by the late Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen.  

    The consulting firm says “every effort was made to incorporate publicly available information in an objective, unbiased manner. Some inputs to this study remain a topic of substantial public debate, while others are based on estimates from scientific fields in which we are not experts or sufficient data does not exist. We did not seek to serve as the arbiter of disagreements or scientific uncertainty.

    “Rather, we evaluated the quality of all available information, made judgments on the validity of estimates, and incorporated reasonable ranges where appropriate. ECONorthwest has not independently verified the accuracy of all such information and makes no representation regarding its accuracy or completeness.”

    “There may be disagreements with the outcome of our analysis, and there may be disagreements with the inputs used. Nevertheless, this report serves as our best estimate of the benefits, costs, and economic impacts of removing the Lower Snake River Dams.”

    “The Lower Snake River Dams provide valuable services, however a careful exploration of the range of economic tradeoffs based on publicly available data suggests the benefits of removal exceed the costs, and thus society would likely be better off without the dams.,” says the report. “The best available information to date indicates that the substantial non-use and recreational use values gained from removal more than offset the costs of removal, even with increased power and transportation costs.”

    Some of the report’s conclusions:

    * Grid services:

    The report says the lower Snake River dams “supply a small share of the energy needs for the Pacific Northwest region,” and account for “less power than the Bonneville Power Administration currently exports to other regions, primarily California. With cheaper renewable energy sources entering the market, the conventional wisdom of hydropower generating the lowest-cost electricity is no longer accurate.”

    The report claims that while the “dams add useful capacity to ensure system reliability during certain months of the year, those capacity services could be provided by other resources at relatively low cost.”

    * Transportation:

    The report notes that approximately 2.2 million tons of agricultural products—mostly grain destined for export—move by barge through the four dams on the lower Snake River each year.

    “Although barge shipping is more cost-effective than truck or rail, significant federal appropriated funds are dedicated to maintaining the locks that allow barges to travel up and down the river. Even after accounting for the public costs of increased emissions, changes in accident costs, and the higher prices of shifting to truck and rail, the federal government still spends more money than the public gets back. The benefits produced by the lock system on the Lower Snake River do not justify its continued operation, even without removal of the Lower Snake River Dams.”

    * Irrigation:

    Only 13 percent of farmland within five miles of the lower Snake River is irrigated.

    This land is mostly located at the downstream end near the confluence with the Columbia River where several other water storage and conveyance projects operate or are under development.

    The report says the “loss of irrigation to this area could result in substantial economic losses to some growers irrigating.”

    “The costs of upgrading groundwater wells and surface diversions should be less than $200 million in total, based on an engineering cost analysis. The high rate of non-irrigated farming in the area suggests such practices are a reasonable choice for farmers. Furthermore, the growing demand for irrigated agriculture activity and storage capacity downstream along the Columbia River suggests that any reduction in water use along the Lower Snake River would likely be used by downstream water users. Depending on funding sources for upgrades to infrastructure and decisions to irrigate, any impacts to the agricultural industry would most likely be distributional in nature.”

    * Ecosystem services:

    Numerous recreational access points throughout the lower Snake River provide opportunities for reservoir-based fishing, hunting, and boating.

    Some of these activities will no longer occur with removal of the dams, however, restoration of a natural river system will lead to an increase in higher value river recreation trips. These new environmental resources will benefit both the users that enjoy them, as well as the tourism based-businesses in Clarkston, Washington, and Lewiston, Idaho.

    * Economic impacts:

    The report says analysis of the economic impacts of removal finds that although some sectors of the regional economy will experience a shift, “dam removal is fundamentally a massive public works project that will increase regional net jobs, income, and output.

    “Dam removal would result in a reduction in spending in some sectors (e.g. grain farming and dam operations and maintenance), however the physical costs of removing the dams would also produce a set of positive economic impacts, albeit potentially for a different population. Removing the Lower Snake River Dams will result in a net increase of $505 million in output, $492 million in value added, $408 million in labor income, and 317 annual jobs.”

    Northwest RiverPartners isssued a response:

    In Response to the ECONorthwest Study – Lower Snake River Dams: Economic Tradeoffs of Removal:

    Our mission at Northwest River Partners is to encourage the balanced use of Columbia Basin rivers while collaboratively working towards solutions that help hydropower and salmon coexist and thrive. The nature of our industry entails controversial and highly charged viewpoints and for that reason we encourage scientific, extensively researched, and balanced perspectives.

    Through this lens, we find that the recently released ECONorthwest Study funded by Vulcan Inc. is fundamentally flawed in its controversial and biased methodology. While we appreciate and respect their goal to work towards the best economic outcomes for our region, we feel that this report is potentially harmful and misleading to stakeholders on both sides of this critical conversation.

    The study purports to offer an economic impact analysis of removing the Lower Snake River Dams but its conclusion is based almost entirely on one question – asked in an unscientific manner – through a survey conducted by an anti-dam advocacy group. From this one question comes the study’s estimation of billions of dollars of supposed value.

    There are many gaps and inconsistencies in the report including several questions around the study’s power, transportation, and irrigation assumptions. However, most alarming is the type of valuation used in this study which is referred to in economics as the “Non-Use Valuation” or “Contingent Valuation Method”.

    This approach takes a sample of people, asks how much they’d pay for something, and then projects that amount across the entire population within a region or even the nation. It is a highly controversial technique because studies have found that respondents will generally overstate how much they would pay when you ask them about a specific cause.

    In the ECONorthwest report, this effect was furthered by the fact that the question claimed full recovery of salmon and improved water quality. However, the full report goes on to say that there is “extreme uncertainty” about the actual impact of removal, and that water quality would be poor for years following removal. This directly contradicts what was presented to survey respondents and shows the inaccuracy of the estimated non-use value.

    Noted economists have said this is an unreliable method for determining economic or public policy and, in our view, it completely undermines the validity of the study.

    We fully support work that is science-based, such as the current effort being undertaken as part of the National Environmental Policy Act. As part of the NEPA process, the federal government is analyzing the societal, environmental, and economic costs and benefits of breaching the four lower Snake River dams. The Columbia River System Operations Environmental Impact Statement – or CRSO EIS – analysis is currently underway, and the draft report is due in February 2020.

    We are keenly aware of the many misconceptions plaguing policy decisions on hydropower and salmon recovery. Regardless of viewpoint, we encourage participants on both sides to strive towards sharing transparent, reliable, and science-based data as we work towards solutions that benefit all stakeholders and the equitable use of our rivers.

    Kurt Miller,

    Executive Director, Northwest RiverPartners

    Eastern Washington US House:

    U.S.  Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) and Dan Newhouse (R-WA) released a joint statement following the release of a privately-conducted study regarding the removal of the Lower Snake River Dams:

    “This privately-funded study is a slap in the face of our state’s agricultural economy. It is another example of Seattle-based interests seeking to disrupt our way of life in Central and Eastern Washington. Increases in carbon emissions, higher electricity bills, and billions of dollars in infrastructure improvements that would be needed for irrigation and transportation hardly come across as a ‘public benefit.’ This report, like many others before it, fails to consider the consequences of dam breaching for communities and industries throughout the Northwest,” said Reps. Newhouse and McMorris Rodgers.

    They continued, “We trust the federal scientists and experts who are currently conducting a legal and comprehensive environmental impact study of the Snake River Dams. They should be able to do their jobs without groups from downtown Seattle dictating a cursory conclusion.”

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: EPA Releases Draft Columbia River Cold Water Refuge Plan; 12 Tributaries Tagged For Protection; Scientists’ Letter Says Lower Snake Dam Breaching Needed To Reduce Temps For Fish

    October 24, 2019

    LSR.Banks.SummerSummer water temperatures in the Columbia River can rise high enough (above 20 degrees Centigrade, 68 degrees Fahrenheit) to have adverse impacts on salmon and steelhead migrating upstream. Such temperatures cause disease, stress, and lower spawning success and can kill the fish.

    In their migration, salmon and steelhead will sometimes seek temporary refuge in areas of the river that provide cold water, which are mostly found where cooler tributaries join the mainstem Columbia River, according to a draft plan, “Columbia River Cold Water Refuges Plan,” completed by the federal Environmental Protection Agency this month and is now out for comment.

    The plan says that today the water quality standard for temperature in the lower Columbia is 20 degrees C, but prior to 1940 the river was some 2 to 2.5 degrees C cooler. Today’s higher temperatures in the river are due to anthropogenic causes, such as dams and reservoirs and climate change.

    And, the plan says, we can expect the river to continue warming with the average August temperature rising from today’s 20 degrees C to 23 degrees C by 2040 and to 24 degrees C by 2080, all bad news for salmon and steelhead, particularly those who pass through the lower river in August when temperatures are the highest.

    In another river temperature-related development, 55 scientists on Tuesday sent a letter to policymakers in Washington state, Idaho and Oregon highlighting the need to address the harmful effects of hot water on salmon and steelhead in the Columbia-Snake River Basin due in large part to reservoirs behind federal dams.

    The letter says that as federal agencies study alternatives to restore ESA-listed salmon populations, “strategies to reduce overall mainstem water temperatures do not appear to be sufficiently addressed.

    “This serious flaw, if uncorrected, will mean that hot mainstem water will remain unmitigated and salmon and steelhead losses will continue and worsen over time, especially for Snake River stocks.

    “The option of breaching lower Snake River dams, combined with existing or modified cold water releases, has enormous potential to alleviate the very serious problem of elevated summer temperatures in the lower Snake River, and increase the survival rate from out-migrating smolts to returning adults (smolt-to-adult return; SAR) for all salmon species.

    “It would also significantly increase available spawning and rearing habitat for imperiled Snake River Fall Chinook.

    “No other action or actions can significantly lower summer water temperatures in the lower Snake River on a long-term basis, while also providing additional cooling in the lower Columbia.”

    Rick Williams, Ph.D., former chair of the Independent Scientific Advisory Board for the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, fisheries consultant, Boise, Idaho said, “As federal agencies announce their plans for Snake/Columbia salmon policy and actions in early 2020, they must do more than just tweak the system a bit to deal with temperature. We will fail to solve the hot water problem, and fail to restore salmon runs, if federal agencies select any long-term plan that does not include removal of lower Snake dams. That action appears to be the only one available that can significantly lower water temperatures and aid in recovering Idaho’s salmon and steelhead populations.”

    The EPA had help as it developed the Cold Water Refuges Plan from federal, state and local agencies, tribes, watershed councils “and a variety of other parties involved in water quality and fish management in the Lower Columbia River,” said John Palmer, Senior Policy Advisor, Water Division, EPA Region 10. That list includes about 250 people.

    Initially, he said, EPA had asked those that participated in the plan’s development to review the plan, but that the agency is not limiting the review of the draft plan and will provide access to anyone who would like to review it. “EPA is interested in getting their feedback, particularly on recommended actions in the draft plan that involve their organizations,” he said.

    The EPA was directed to develop a Columbia River cold water refuge plan by a reasonable and prudent alternative included in NOAA Fisheries’ 2015 biological opinion for Columbia River temperature, the draft plan says.

    Most cold water refuges in the Columbia River are created where colder tributary streams meet the warmer Columbia. This type of refuge is at the confluence as well as in the lower section of a river where salmon and steelhead can rest to minimize their heat exposure.

    Cold water refuges can also be formed by inflowing groundwater in a river channel or in stratified reservoirs where deeper water is cooler. In addition, night time temperatures in rivers are cooler and provide some relief, but these types of refuges are minor and “there is no evidence that they serve a significant role for salmon and steelhead in the Lower Columbia River,” the draft plan says.

    The draft plan says that the average August temperature at McNary Dam is 20.9 degrees Centigrade (69.2 degrees Fahrenheit) and that water warms in the 80 miles downstream to the John Day Dam pool by another 0.6 degrees C. At 21.5 degrees C, the highest average August temperatures are in the John Day pool, but those temperatures drop slightly at The Dalles and Bonneville dams. Peak temperatures can reach 22 degrees C or more.

    Most, but not all of the Columbia River’s 191 tributaries in the lower river are cooler than the Columbia mainstem, some as much as 9 degrees C cooler and most of the cooler tributaries are located downstream of the Cascade mountains, the plan says. EPA filtered out tributaries where average August temperatures are less than 2 degrees C colder than the Columbia River or its mean August flow was less than 10 cubic feet per second, the minimum needed to form a cool water plume in the Columbia that could attract salmon and steelhead.

    Among the 13 tributaries that made the cut and that are located downstream of Bonneville Dam, the largest are Skamokawa Creek (August mean temperature difference -5.1 degrees C), Cowlitz River (-5.4 degrees C), Kalama River (-5 degrees C), Lewis River (-4.1 degrees C), Sandy River (-2.5 degrees C), Washougal River (-2.1 degrees C), Oneonta Creek (-8.2 degrees C) and Tanner Creek (-9.6 degrees C).

    The list shortens above the lower Columbia River dams. In the Bonneville pool are Eagle Creek (-6.1 degrees C), Rock Creek (-3.8 degrees C), Herman Creek (-9.2 degrees C), Wind River (-6.7 degrees C), Little White Salmon River (-7.9 degrees C), White Salmon River (-5.5 degrees C), Hood River (-5.9 degrees C) and the Klickitat River (-5 degrees C).

    In The Dalles pool is the Deschutes River (-2.2 degrees C).

    In the John Day pool is the Umatilla River (-0.1 degree C). Although the river’s temperature difference with the Columbia is less than 2 degrees C, EPA chose to include it because it is the only sanctuary in the John Day pool.

    Some 12 of the tributaries are considered of primary importance and make up 97 percent of the total cold water refuge volume. They are easily accessible and deep enough to provide cover and have been documented as having been used by salmon and steelhead, the plan says.

    They are the Cowlitz, Lewis, Sandy, Wind, Little White Salmon (empties into Drano Lake on the Columbia), White Salmon, Hood, Klickitat and Deschutes rivers, along with Tanner, Eagle and Herman creeks. Only one of these, the Deschutes River, is upstream of The Dalles Dam.

    The bulk of summer steelhead migrate past Bonneville Dam during the two-month period when the river is at its warmest, with temperatures exceeding 20 degrees C. In addition, the first half of the fall chinook run will also migrate during these warm temperatures. Steelhead and fall chinook are the species that most often encounter warm lower Columbia River temperatures and are the species that use cold water refuges the most, the plan says.

    Sockeye and summer chinook salmon pass Bonneville earlier and are less likely to use a cold water refuge. Even in cases such as the warm water they encountered in 2015, sockeye and summer chinook still use cold water refuges less. These fish will encounter even warmer temperatures in the mainstem if they were to delay their migration.

    About 60 to 80 percent of steelhead use cold water refuges when the mainstem water temperature hits 20 degrees C. About 40 percent of fall chinook use cold water refuges when the water is slightly warmer, about 21-22 degrees C, but not for as long as steelhead which don’t spawn until late winter and spring, so they have more time to hang out to wait for better conditions.

    Most of the steelhead that use the Deschutes River cold water refuge are ultimately migrating into the Snake River (61 percent of the fish that use the Deschutes cold water refuge) and others will head to the Middle Columbia (30 percent). Some 8 percent are heading to the upper Columbia River.

    The EPA plan is to maintain at least the top 12 cold water refuges in the lower Columbia River, but also to enhance two: the Umatilla River, the only significant opportunity for increased cold water refuge in the warm 93 mile reach between the Deschutes River and McNary Dam, and 15 Mile Creek, because it has substantial cooling potential and has been prioritized for restoration of Endangered Species Act-listed steelhead recovery.

    Plans to maintain the refuges in each of the 12 streams are described in detail in Chapter 7 of the plan. They include using existing regulations to protect streams, restore riparian shade, stream morphology and instream flow, time cool water releases at upstream dams to provide more cool water when most needed, manage sediment at the mouth of streams and limit harvest of steelhead and salmon within refuges.

    Overall, EPA says, the number and timing of existing cold water refuges “appears to be sufficient under current and 20°C Columbia River temperatures but may not be in the future. Therefore, maintaining the current temperatures, flows, and volumes of the 12 primary CWR in the Lower Columbia River is important to limit significant adverse effects to migrating adult salmon and steelhead from higher water temperatures elsewhere in the water body.”

    However, more cold water refuges may be needed in the future as the Columbia River warms, adding that the non-primary tributaries could provide that protection through restoration and enhancement.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Federal Agencies Update Court On NEPA, EIS Process For Columbia/Snake Salmon, Steelhead

    gavel copyNovember 03, 2017

    Saying that the five-year timeline to complete a National Environmental Policy Act process for the federal Columbia River power system’s impact on salmon and steelhead is aggressive, federal agencies this week also said they would continue to target completion of the process -- which includes an environmental impact statement -- with a record of decision by September 24, 2021.

    A filing in Oregon U.S. District Court October 30 is the first court- required update since the agencies in September completed the scoping part of the five-year process.

    A NEPA process was a requirement in the May 2016 remand by federal Judge Michael H. Simon of the 2014 NOAA biological opinion for Endangered Species Act-listed salmon and steelhead in the Columbia/Snake river basin affected by federal dams and reservoirs.

    In the July 6, 2016 Order of Remand, the court ordered the federal defendants – the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Bonneville Power Administration and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation – to file a status report of progress toward a completed NEPA process by October 30, 2017.

    “The process is presently on track with the five-year timeline proposed by Federal Defendants and adopted by the Court,” the court filing says. “However, the robust participation of the public and interested stakeholders, and the complexity of the issues raised during the scoping period, has confirmed that this timeline is aggressive. Nonetheless, the Federal Defendants continue to target completion of the NEPA process consistent with the schedule adopted by the Court.”

    The status report, according to the court’s order, should address the appropriateness of the remaining schedule after the scoping process and how the agencies intend to integrate and coordinate the NEPA process with the Endangered Species Act Section 7 consultation on threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River basin.

    The 5-year process under NEPA to produce an EIS was put into motion by Simon in May 2016 when he remanded the latest 2014 NOAA Fisheries’ biological opinion governing river operations to protect salmon and steelhead throughout the Columbia River basin.

    Simon gave the operating agencies five years to complete the process, although he expects a new BiOp from the operating agencies and NOAA Fisheries in 2018, and another BiOp when the NEPA process is complete in 2021.

    The operating agencies say in the update that they have been balancing compliance with the NEPA remand schedule with competing obligations, such as the court-ordered spill for fish injunction process, also ordered by Simon.

    The request for injunctive relief for more spill by the National Wildlife Foundation and the State of Oregon, with the support of the Nez Perce Tribe in January 2017 was enjoined with the BiOp remand in May.

    The groups asked the court to begin ordering spill to maximum total dissolved gas levels beginning April 3 this year and to continue for each year of the BiOp remand.

    Simon agreed with the plaintiffs that spill earlier in the year at the dams would benefit ESA-listed salmon and steelhead, but held off on ordering that spill until 2018, saying it was “too rushed,” giving federal agencies time to plan for operational changes at the dams resulting from the earlier spill schedule.

    For the NEPA scoping process, the federal agencies held 16 public meetings and two webinars across the region during public scoping where the public could ask questions in person and contribute their comments on what should be included in the EIS. They received over 400,000 comments.

    The comments addressed over 24 broad categories of topics, including climate change, flood risk management, water supply and irrigation, anadromous and resident fish, dam configuration and operational impacts on threatened and endangered fish, invasive and nuisance species, the NEPA process, Natural Historic Preservation Act compliance and river navigation, among other topics.

    “The three agencies acknowledge the effort extended by the public across the region, country, and internationally to provide the thoughtful and deliberate input summarized in this report,” according to the Columbia River Systems webpage at http://www.crso.info/. More information on the scoping results is at http://www.crso.info/eis.html.

    In addition to the public, 16 federal, state and tribal entities were invited to participate in comments.

    With the scoping meetings and comment period, the agencies completed step two of the $40 million process that began in September 2016. The step-by-step process is scoping, developing alternatives for evaluation, analysis of the alternatives, a draft EIS (2020), public comment, review and synthesis of the draft EIS, preparing a final EIS with preferred alternative, a final EIS and a Record of Decision.

    In the update, the agencies laid out their schedule, the same schedule outlined in July 2016 Order of Remand:

    Complete scoping: September 30, 2017

    Complete the Draft EIS: March 27, 2020

    Complete the Final EIS: March 26, 2021

    Issue a Records of Decision: September 24, 2021

    The agencies also identified the method and a schedule of how they will work with fish and wildlife agencies to integrate the NEPA process with a new BiOp process.

    That process by court order includes a BiOp that must be completed by NOAA Fisheries by December 31, 2018.

    A second BiOp will coincide with the completion of the NEPA process in 2021.

    The federal agencies say in the update that they will be engaged in consultation with NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service throughout the NEPA process, especially as they develop alternatives for consideration in the draft EIS.

    Once the draft EIS is published and is out for public comment, the agencies will initiate formal consultation with NOAA Fisheries.

    That, they say, will result in a biological opinion and a record of decision in 2021.

    “In short, while still in the early stages, Federal Defendants are confident that the rigorous, comprehensive, and inclusive NEPA process they have initiated is progressing towards Federal Defendants’ ultimate goal: the identification of a long-term strategy for the operation and configuration of the Federal Columbia River Power System that complies with all applicable laws, including NEPA and the ESA.”

    A BiOp status conference is scheduled November 28.

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/439818.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Federal Climate Report Suggests More Warm Years Such As 2015 Will Be A Reality For Columbia Basin 

    gallery 01 2008 Hanford ReachFriday, November 30, 2018

    In 2015, low river flow conditions, coupled with high air temperatures and warm water in the Snake and Columbia rivers and their tributaries from mid-June to mid-July, resulted in the highest mainstem water temperatures recorded in the Columbia River Basin.

    Few Snake River sockeye, listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act, made it to Lower Granite Dam and even fewer found their way to spawning grounds in the Sawtooth Valley.

    The until now unusually warm and dry year also resulted in irrigation shortages and crop losses, fish die-offs, large wildfires, record cases of infectious diseases and reduced recreation.

    That scenario could become the new normal or worse, says a federal report on climate change released the day after Thanksgiving, Nov. 23.

    According to the report – the Fourth National Climate Assessment, which has a chapter that focuses solely on the Pacific Northwest (Chapter 24) – climate change is affecting the natural environment, agriculture, energy production and use, land and water resources, transportation, and human health and welfare across the U.S. and its territories.

    “Unless we rapidly reduce the amount of carbon we’re putting into the atmosphere on a global basis, we will increasingly experience extreme weather events – and the Northwest will not be exempt,” said Phillip Mote, director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute at Oregon State University and a co-author on the Pacific Northwest chapter. Mote this week was named vice provost and dean of OSU’s Graduate School.

    “The impacts in 2015 were profound and affected natural resources, public health and local economies. I wish I could say that year was an anomaly, but it is likely that those conditions will become more and more frequent.”

    The Northwest experienced its warmest year on record in 2015: the annual average temperature was 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than the 30-year average. Winter was worse, with temperatures averaging 6.2 degrees F above normal.

    “Climate change threatens our health, our communities, and our economy. The science is there, the facts are real — and the time for bold action is now,” Oregon Gov. Kate Brown tweeted this week.

    The report says that “the warm 2015 winter temperatures are illustrative of conditions that may be considered ‘normal’ by mid-century,” according to an OSU news release.

    “As a result of the high temperatures and sparse precipitation, snowpack levels in Oregon and Washington were the lowest on record: Oregon was 89 percent below average, Washington, 70 percent,” OSU says. The snow drought led to lower river levels that affected many farmers, who received reduced allocations of water for irrigation or had their water shut off early. In Eastern Oregon’s Treasure Valley, farmers received only a third of their normal irrigation water because the Owyhee Reservoir did not have adequate river inflows to fill the reservoir for the third year in a row.

    The impacts of 2015 tell the story of what it will be like if the Northwest continues to warm at the same rate it has over the past half century, according to OSU. Low stream levels and warm water resulted in fish die-offs; agricultural losses were between $633 million and $773 million in Washington alone; a combination of low snowpack and extreme precipitation deficit in spring and summer led to the most severe wildfire season in Northwest history; Ski areas struggled to remain open; the lack of snow affected summer recreation. Visitors to Detroit Lake in Oregon dropped by 26 percent due to historically low water –as much as 70 feet below capacity in July – rendering most boat ramps unusable.

    “The scientific community has spoken clearly and unequivocally that climate change is a present and growing danger to our nation, our economy and our way of life,” said Washington Gov. Jay Inslee. “Nations are rushing to be at the head of the pack in the global transition to a carbon-free future. Now is the time for us to unleash American innovation and investment in clean energy technology and defeat the scourge of climate change before it’s too late.”

    Even in 2014 and before, the Council had anticipated that the Columbia River basin would see warmer temperatures with more precipitation falling as rain rather than snow, with snowpack diminishing, particularly in lower-elevation watersheds, and alteration of stream flow timing. Peak river flows will likely shift to earlier in the spring and water temperatures will continue to rise.

    Among the measures recommended by the Council’s Program to adapt to a changing and warming climate are:

    • Support development of improved runoff forecasting methods and techniques for Columbia River Basin watersheds and provide early (e.g., late fall or early winter) runoff forecasts for the basin;
    • Assess whether climate change effects are altering or are likely to alter critical river flows, water temperatures or other habitat attributes in a way that could significantly affect fish or wildlife important to this program. If so, evaluate whether alternative water management scenarios, including changes in flood control operations, could minimize the potential effects of climate change on mainstem hydrology and water temperatures;
    • Evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of possible actions to mitigate effects of climate change, including selective withdrawal from cool/cold water storage reservoirs to reduce water temperatures or other actions to create or protect cool water refugia in mainstem reaches or reservoirs;
    • Implement long-term habitat protections for resident fish and wildlife;
    • Identify and implement a strategic expansion of the network of stations for surface weather and streamflow observations in high-altitude mountainous areas of the Columbia Basin;
    • Investigate the feasibility of mitigating climate change impacts in the estuary and plume through changes in hydrosystem operations, including changes in flood-control operations.

    In a recent review of the Council’s Program by the Independent Scientific Advisory Board, the ISAB said “The scientific evidence is unequivocal that humans are driving climate change and ocean acidification. Indeed, the Council should increase its efforts to promote public awareness, convene science/policy workshops, and encourage the development of alternative energy.”

    Under the Northwest Power Act of 1980 that authorized the four Northwest states to form the Council, the Council created the original Program in 1982. The Program is revised every five years based primarily on these recommendations.

    The Council is currently accepting recommendations for amendments to the Program.

    “The more planning for adaptation and mitigation the better,” Mote said, “but there are some supreme challenges – especially for isolated communities, tribal communities and others that rely on natural resources. Water availability, water quality and infrastructure are foundational issues moving forward.”

    The report is the fourth National Climate Assessment under the U.S. Global Change Research program and the first since 2014. Representatives from 11 federal agencies constitute the Subcommittee on Global Change Research of the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources within the National Science and Technology Council, according to an OSU news release.

    The federal agencies involved in the U.S. Global Change Research Program are: the Departments of Agriculture; Commerce; Defense; Energy; Health and Human Services; the Interior; State; and Transportation; and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Science Foundation, Smithsonian Institution, and U.S. Agency for International Development.

    The Northwest chapter includes authors from Oregon, Washington and Idaho representing universities, state and federal agencies, Native American tribes, and private industry. They organized the chapter by looking at the impacts of climate change on natural resource economy, the natural world and cultural heritage, infrastructure, health, and frontline communities.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Feedback - Ocean Conditions And Salmon Survival

    salmonSeptember 29, 2017

    RE: CBB, Sept. 1. 2017, “Fish Managers: Low Steelhead Returns Likely Result Of 2015 Juvenile Fish Hitting Warm Ocean” http://www.cbbulletin.com/439508.aspx
    FR: Tom Stuart, Boise, ID

    A recent CBB article (http://www.cbbulletin.com/439508.aspx) wrote of a Northwest Power and Conservation Council meeting in which fish managers said that the primary cause of this year’s 40-year low in some salmon and steelhead returns, especially in the Snake River Basin, was ocean conditions - specifically, “a Blob” of hot water offshore. WDFW’s Dan Rawding was quoted:

    “While it’s impossible to blame the poor return on any specific factor, the phenomenon known as “Blob,” a vast area of unusually warm water in the north Pacific Ocean that persisted for several years until 2015, may be the chief culprit,” Dan Rawding of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife told the Council.

    “I’m not saying the ocean is solely to blame, but we know temperature caused a dramatic shift in the North Pacific ecosystem,” Rawding said. “We think a lot of our poor returns in 2017 are due to the impact of the Blob in 2015,” pointing to very low smolt to adult returns for fish that entered the ocean in 2015.

    Salmon managers ought not go too far in this direction. While ocean conditions are certainly a factor in salmon life-cycle survival, we must not forget that salmon and steelhead spend about half their lives in freshwater, where salmon policies and actions have long been negligent, insufficient, and illegal. NOAA weather experts predict that the ocean will not improve significantly anytime soon. Consequently, while we watch the ocean, the need for stronger freshwater policy and action is immediate - and compelling.

    Whether the ocean is good or bad, Snake/Columbia dams and reservoirs are still whacking salmon and steelhead in freshwater, both juveniles and adults, in their migration to and from the Pacific. Juveniles outbound from up-basin watersheds like the Snake River suffer enormous losses. Despite the federal claims of a “97 percent dam passage survival rate”, the cumulative survival of Snake River juveniles after passing eight FCRPS dams and reservoirs is 50 percent or less in most years. And, the 50 percent that survive include many fish that are stressed or injured due to non-lethal dam/reservoir impacts. Those that survive to adulthood at sea start back upriver to find overheated slackwater that can weaken and kill even more of them.

    Ocean conditions have nothing to do with these problems. When and if “the Blob” goes away, these terrible conditions for salmon in freshwater will still exist.

    As we wait for better ocean conditions, we must solve two problems in freshwater: 1) the FCRPS must be reconfigured to dramatically improve the life-cycle survival of upriver stocks, especially in the Snake River basin; and 2) the reconfiguration must allow for effective strategies to ameliorate chronically high water temperatures in the Snake/Columbia mainstem.

    The already lethal effects of FCRPS dams and reservoirs are now being intensified by a warming climate. Water temperatures in reservoirs behind Lower Snake River dams climb above – often well above - 68 degrees F, every summer, for weeks on end – adding 4-5 degrees overall to the mainstem temperature profile. As many know, water temps above 68 degrees begin to harm and kill salmon and steelhead, and the hot water flowing from Snake reservoirs pushes the lethal impacts into the lower Columbia. In 2015, 95 percent of adult Snake River sockeye died between Bonneville and Lower Granite. This year, despite delayed heating from a strong, cool spring runoff, water temperatures have been well over 68 degrees for weeks. Fish are dying; the Snake River’s 2017 steelhead return is at an all-time low.

    If we are lucky, the “Blob” will go away, eventually. When that happens, will freshwater conditions be any better? Current trends are not encouraging. And, because of poor returns in 2015 and again this year, several populations are likely to remain dangerously depressed for years.

    If we merely hope that an eventual improvement in ocean conditions will somehow cover for inadequate FCRPS management and hot reservoirs, or if we point to “the Blob” when salmon are not surviving the FCRPS experience well enough, ratepayer and taxpayer dollars will continue to be wasted. We will also fail to protect Snake/Columbia salmon and steelhead from extinction.

    Tom Stuart, Boise

    Save our Wild Salmon Coalition

    Idaho Rivers United

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Flows Drop on Columbia/Snake, Allows Transition To Court-Ordered Spill; Water Supply Forecasts Good

     Friday, June 08, 2018  Lower Granite Spill

    As the snow melt-off progresses and nears an end in some areas, river flows in the Snake and Columbia rivers are declining and so is involuntary spill at eight dams on the rivers that in May forced total dissolved gas levels higher than Washington and Oregon clean water standards allow.
     
    Lower flow at most dams is allowing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to begin to return to court-ordered spring spill up to state mandated total dissolved gas levels, known as gas caps – 120 percent TDG in tailraces and 115 percent TDG in the downstream dam’s forebay.
     
    Higher than normal flows, spill and TDG that impacted the spill cap operations in May are returning to lower levels, according to Dan Turner of the Corps’ River Control Center, speaking at the interagency Technical Management Team meeting Wednesday, June 6.
     
    Even with falling stream flows (flow at Lower Granite Dam on the Lower Snake River is 110,000 cubic feet, 10 percent below the 30-year forecast), the water supply outlook through early summer is looking good with forecasts at all major dams higher than the 30-year average.
     
    A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled April 2 in favor of an April 2017 U.S. District Court injunction allowing more spring spill at four lower Snake and four lower Columbia river dams. With the decision, spill to the gas cap began April 3 at lower Snake River dams and at lower Columbia River dams April 10. The additional spill through June 15 is designed to aid migrating juvenile salmon and steelhead.
     
    With lower stream flows at Snake River dams, the Corps is again managing to spill targets. It has now hit that target at Lower Granite Dam (31,000 cubic feet per second) since June 3 and has kept TDG levels at or slightly under gas cap levels since June 1. TDG in Lower Granite’s tailwater reached 126 percent May 26 and 27. The Little Goose Forebay hit 120 percent May 28 and 29.
     
    Flow on June 3 at Lower Granite was 110 kcfs, but had been over 200 kcfs at one point in May. It is forecasted to drop precipitously by July 1 to under 60 kcfs, according to Turner.
     
    The Little Goose spill target is 26 kcfs, which the Corps nearly hit June 5 and 6 when TDG levels fell within gas-cap levels. TDG in the tailwater hit 127 percent May 27 when the river was spilling 81 kcfs. The downstream forebay at Lower Monumental Dam hit 127 percent the next day.
     
    “LoMo is in transition,” Turner said, noting that the Lower Monumental Dam spill target has yet to be hit, but TDG levels were within the gas cap June 6. Tailwater TDG a LoMo hit 128 percent May 23 and the downstream forebay at Ice Harbor Dam hit 123 percent May 28 and 29.
     
    Ice Harbor Dam, the lower dam on the Snake River, has for the most part met its spill target of 80 kcfs since June 3, but the forebay at the next downstream dam, McNary, on the Columbia River continues to exceed the 115 percent TDG cap. TDG at Ice Harbor’s tailwater hit 130 percent May 27 and the forebay at McNary hit 125 percent May 23 and 24.
     
    Flow at The Dalles Dam on June 3 was about 350 kcfs. At one point in May, flow exceeded 500 kcfs. The forecast is for a flow level of about 225 kcfs by July 1.
     
    Although flows are also dropping in the Columbia River, involuntary spill is continuing and TDG at all four lower Columbia River dams – McNary, John Day, The Dalles and Bonneville dams – continue to exceed water quality standards set by the states.
     
    Water supply forecasts remain high with an April – August forecast at The Dalles Dam of 105,908,000 acre feet, which is 121 percent of the 30-year average (1981 – 2010).

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440889.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Harvest Managers Predict 23 Percent Decline In 2018 Fall Chinook Run, One-Half Of 10-Year Average

    chinook.hcnFriday, March 2, 2018

    The US v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee, which provides fishery managers with in-season forecasts, is forecasting a 2018 fall chinook run into the Columbia River that is 23 percent less than the actual number of fish that returned last year and about one-half of the 10-year average.

    TAC is forecasting a fall chinook run in 2018 of 365,600 fish. That’s down from 2017’s actual run of 475,900 fish and far lower than 2017’s forecast of 582,600 fish.
     
    TAC completed the preseason forecast Feb. 15, 2018, in preparation for the North of Falcon season-setting process, TAC said in a memorandum, saying that once that process is complete, the forecast could change slightly. The final forecast will be available in mid-April.
     
    The preseason estimate was made by a sub-group of TAC members along with others from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
     
    “The forecasts are down a bit and we think this is primarily due to poor ocean conditions,” said Stuart Ellis, TAC lead and harvest management biologist with the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.
     
    “They (the forecast numbers) get used first in planning ocean fisheries,” he said, explaining why the forecast will likely see a slight change later. “These get plugged into the ocean models and when the ocean fisheries are set, the ocean models predict slightly different ocean escapements (river mouth run sizes). This depends on the magnitude of the ocean fisheries. Last year fisheries were constrained and so the models actually predicted a few thousand additional fish back to the river mouth.”
     
    TAC will then use these “adjusted” river mouth run sizes as the pre-season forecasts for in-river fishery planning, he said. “We will begin to update the upriver fall chinook runs around September 10-15.”
     
    Fishery managers have scheduled a series of public meetings through early April before finalizing seasons later that month, a WDFW news release says.
     
    Kyle Adicks, salmon policy lead for the agency, said numerous salmon runs are expected to be lower this year compared to last season, including several key chinook and coho stocks. As a result, a number of fishing opportunities from Puget Sound south to the Columbia River will likely be restricted.
     
    "We will definitely have to be creative in developing salmon fisheries this year," Adicks said. "I encourage people to get involved and provide input on what they see as the priorities for this season's fisheries."
     
    The forecasts are based on varying environmental indicators, such as ocean conditions, as well as surveys of spawning salmon, and the number of juvenile salmon migrating to marine waters.
     
    According to the TAC-WDFW memorandum, fall chinook are made up of seven management components and this is the first year it has predicted separate numbers for the Lower River Bright (LRB) stock, which in the past has been included in the Bonneville Upriver Bright (BUB) stock.
     
    Some 62,400 Lower River Hatchery fall chinook (LRH) are forecasted to enter the river this year. That compares to last year’s preseason forecast of 92,400 and an actual run of 64,600. The 2018 forecast is 70 percent of the 10-year average.
     
    The number of Lower River Wild (LRW) fall chinook is 7,600 this year, while the 2017 forecast was 12,500 and the actual run was 7,800. The 2018 forecast is about one-half of the 10-year forecast.
     
    The Lower River Bright stock (LRB) prediction is 3,700 and the actual last year was 4,200. This is the first year TAC has predicted LRBs.
     
    The Bonneville Pool Hatchery (BPH) forecast is for 50,100, far below last year’s forecast of 158,400. However, the actual run last year was even lower at 48,200. The 2018forecast is slightly more than one-half the 10-year average.
     
    Upriver Brights (URB) comprise the largest single component of the fall chinook run with a forecast of 200,100 fish. The 2017 forecast was 260,000 and the actual run was 297,100. The forecast is slightly less than one-half of the 10-year average.
     
    A subset of URBs is the Snake River Wild (SRW), which is not forecasted this year. Last year’s predicted run was 12,400 and the actual run was 7,000 fish.
     
    The forecast for Pool Upriver Brights (PUB) is 36,400 fish. Last year’s forecast was 42,100 and the actual run was 46,000 fish. The forecast is slightly less than one-half of the 10-year average.
     
    Bonneville Upriver Brights (BUB), a subset of PUBs is not forecasted this year. The forecast last year was for 3,500 fish, all 5-year old fall chinook. The actual run was just 1,400.
     
    Some 5,300 Select Area Brights (SAB) are forecasted to enter the river. The 2017 forecast was for a return of 13,700 and the actual return was 6,600. The forecast is slightly less than one-half of the 10-year average.
     
    With the forecasted run size for URBs of slightly more than 200,000 fish, allowed harvest would be 33.25 percent of the fish, with 25 percent going to treaty fisheries and 8.25 percent going to non-treaty harvest (recreational and commercial). That assumes a Snake River natural run size of 5,000 fish. If more of the Snake River fish arrive, harvest could be higher. If 6,000 Snake River fish are expected, then allowed harvest rises to 38 percent, with treaty harvest at 27 percent and non-treaty at 11 percent. If 8,000 Snake River fish are expected, then harvest would be 45 percent with 30 percent for treaty and 15 percent for non-treaty.
     
    The anticipated number of coho entering the Columbia River is also lower than in past years. An estimated 286,200 coho are projected to return to the Columbia River this year, down nearly 100,000 fish from the 2017 forecast. About 279,300 actually returned last year to the river, where some coho stocks are listed for protection under the federal Endangered Species Act.
     
    A meeting schedule, salmon forecasts, and information about the salmon season-setting process are available on WDFW's website at https://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/northfalcon/. An online commenting tool will be available on the website later this week.
     
    Upcoming meetings and opportunities for comment include:
     
    --Ocean options: State, tribal and federal fishery managers will meet March 9-14 in Rohnert Park, Calif., with the Pacific Fishery Management Council to develop options for this year's commercial and recreational ocean chinook and coho salmon fisheries. The PFMC establishes fishing seasons in ocean waters 3 to 200 miles off the Pacific coast.
     
    --Regional discussions: Additional public meetings have been scheduled into April to discuss regional fishery issues. Input from these regional discussions will be considered as the season-setting process moves into the "North of Falcon" and PFMC meetings, which will determine the final 2018 salmon seasons.
     
    --Final PFMC: The PFMC is expected to adopt final ocean fishing seasons and harvest levels at its April 6-11 meeting in Portland, Ore. The 2018 salmon fisheries package for Washington's inside waters is scheduled to be completed by the state and tribal co-managers during the PFMC's April meeting.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: House Committee Passes Bill Requiring Congressional Authorization For Certain Changes At Dams

    ***Note from Save Our wild Salmon***: follow this link to an alert to contact your Member of Congress and urge them to vote "no" when anti-salmon legislation HR 3144 comes up for a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives. Thank you.

    April 13, 2018

    LSR.damThe U.S. House Natural Resources Committee this week passed a bill that would require congressional authorization for any structural modification or action at Columbia/Snake river federal dams that would restrict power generation or navigation.

    “No structural modification, action, study, or engineering plan that restricts electrical generation at any FCRPS (Federal Columbia River Power System) hydroelectric dam or that limits navigation on the Snake River in Washington, Oregon, or Idaho shall proceed unless such proposal is specifically and expressly authorized by an Act of Congress,” says a summary of H.R. 3144.

    The bill also requires the Bureau of Reclamation, the Bonneville Power Administration, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to operate the
    FCRPS in a manner consistent with the 2014 biological opinion for Columbia/Snake river salmon and steelhead “until the later of: (1) September 30, 2022; or (2) the date upon which a subsequent final biological opinion for the FCRPS operations is issued (after completion of the final environmental impact statement on a record of decision for a new operations plan for the FCRPS) and is in effect, with no pending further judicial review.”

    The bill says the agencies may amend portions of the biological opinion “and operate the FCRPS in accordance with such amendments, before such date if all of the entities determine that: (1) the amendments are necessary for public safety or transmission and grid reliability; or (2) the actions, operations, or other requirements that the amendments would remove are no longer warranted.”

    The bill is sponsored by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-WA. Co-sponsors are Reps. Jaime Herrea Butler, R-WA, Dan Newhouse, R-WA, Greg Walden, R-OR, Kurt Schrader, D-OR, Mark Amodei, R-NV, Raul Labrador, R-ID, Greg Gianforte, R-MT, Paul Gosar, R-AZ.

    A McMorris Rodgers press release says, “With a commitment from the Speaker of the House, this legislation will now go to the floor of the House of Representatives for a full vote in the coming weeks.”

    In testimony at a hearing on the bill last year, a representative of the Bureau of Reclamation said, “In our view, H.R. 3144 aims to allow NOAA Fisheries and the federal agencies responsible for System operations to focus on development of a long-term biological opinion and EIS without diverting resources for preparation of a short term biological opinion to cover the period of 2019- 2022. We believe H.R. 3144 also aims to reduce litigation over System operations during that period. The Department welcomes the opportunity to assist the bill sponsors and this Committee to ensure H.R. 3144 accomplishes our shared interest in providing continued stable operation of the System.

    “Section 2 requires the Secretaries of the Interior, Energy and Army to continue operating the System in compliance with the 2014 BiOp. The Secretaries would continue System operations under the 2014 BiOp until either September 30, 2022, or the date upon which a final biological opinion is in full force and effect, whichever date is later. It is our understanding that the sponsors’ intent in Section 2 is to authorize continued system operations under the 2014 BiOp, thus alleviating NOAA Fisheries’ obligation to complete the 2018 BiOp and the other agencies’ corresponding need to produce a biological assessment. This would allowfederal agencies to focus their resources on developing a long-term BiOp.”

    By court order, federal agencies are currently working to complete a new BiOp by 2018.

    “Hydropower helped build the Northwest, and still today it offers us clean, renewable, reliable, and affordable energy to help power our
    homes, businesses, and communities,” said sponsor McMorris Rodgers. “I’m proud to see this bipartisan legislation pass the House Natural
    Resources Committee today and look forward to it coming before the full House in the coming weeks. My goal is to ensure that dams and fish can co-exist, and this Biological Opinion provides a collaborative approach so we can continue to improve technology and fish recovery efforts, while supporting the clean energy produced on our dams. I’m proud to lead this effort along with the support of organizations and people all across Eastern Washington.”

    “Without Snake and Columbia river dams and the many benefits they
    provide, life in Central Washington as we know it would be unrecognizable,” said co-sponsor Newhouse. “I represent communities that actually live with the consequences of forced increased spill or potentially breaching dams, whether through higher electricity rates, higher transportation costs, reduced access to irrigation water, reduced flood control, and more. I appreciate the support from colleagues on both sides of the aisle for this bipartisan legislation to preserve the benefits of dams that communities in Central Washington depend on. We need to safeguard our dams while continuing to invest in fish recovery efforts because the cost of the alternative is too high for rural communities. I am grateful to Chairman Bishop for his support in committee as this legislation moves forward.”

    “This is a bipartisan bill with broad local support from citizens in the Pacific Northwest. It removes unnecessary federal barriers to water and power resources while protecting the environment, and I thank Rep. McMorris Rodgers and her colleagues from the region for their ongoing work to move this bill forward,” House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Rob Bishop, R-Utah, said.

    In contrast, late last year, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee expressed his opposition to H.R. 3144, writing to the House committee:

    “I write to express my deep concerns with HR 3144, legislation which would freeze in place a 2014 biological opinion (BiOp), or salmon management plan, for the dams composing the Federal Columbia River Power System. While the State of Washington believes the 2014 BiOp represented a step forward for efforts to protect and recover 13 stocks of threatened or endangered Columbia and Snake river salmon and steelhead, HR 3144 would thwart constructive ongoing efforts to improve future salmon and dam management. This would not only hurt salmon but also the recreational and commercial fisheries, tribes, and other species (such as Puget Sound’s southern resident killer whales) that benefit from healthy salmon runs.

    “I am committed to preserving the benefits of our hydropower dams in a manner that is in balance with protecting and restoring salmon. While our dams and dam operations have been modified to reduce their impact to salmon and steelhead over the last 20 years, there is evidence that salmon may further benefit from additional modifications to dam operations that would help restore salmon populations.

    “The State of Washington is participating in productive regional discussions about the best way to test the potential benefits of additional “spill,” in 2018 and potentially beyond. This discussion and learning opportunity would be blocked by HR 3144’s prohibition on any studies or actions that restrict electricity generation at any dams in the Federal Columbia River Power System, even by a small amount.

    “Similarly, several Washington State agencies are engaged as cooperating agencies in the Columbia Snake River Operations study process currently being conducted, pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). This process promises to provide valuable information on a range of potential future dam operations and salmon management strategies.

    “As with the discussion regarding increased spill over the dams, HR 3144 would halt this learning process in its tracks, preventing a constructive dialog among federal and state agencies, tribes, and the public about how best to manage Columbia and Snake river dams in a region that must continually adapt to ongoing changes to its climate, salmon habitat, and energy system.”

    NOAA Fisheries’ biological opinion, or “BiOp,” sets “reasonable and prudent alternatives” intended to mitigate for impacts of the federal dams on 13 species of Columbia River basin salmon and steelhead listed as threatened or endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act. Subsequent recovery plans for each listed species outlines the standards for recovery and the actions required to meet them.

    A federal court has set a schedule for federal agencies to replace the 2014 salmon/steelhead BiOp. The agencies charged with the NEPA process – Corps, Bureau and BPA – said the process would require five years of public involvement and work, but along the way it would meet the prior schedule for a 2018 BiOp, complete the EIS in 2020 and submit a new BiOp to the Court in 2021.

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440514.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Independent Science Board Reviews Two NOAA Experimental Spill Test Designs

    Friday, March 23, 2018

    The assertion that spilling more water at four lower Snake River and four lower Columbia River dams would result in more salmon and steelhead returning to the rivers is now being argued in the Ninth Circuit Court.

    While spill has been a leading strategy for more than a decade for increasing salmon survival through the Columbia River hydropower system, providing even more spill was proposed last year by plaintiffs in a case that in 2016 had resulted in a remand in U.S. District Court of the NOAA Fisheries 2014 salmon/steelhead biological opinion for the federal hydrosystem.

    However, even as it is opposing spill in the appeals court, NOAA Fisheries is also developing two designs to test the assertion that higher spill -- specifically spilling to the upper limits of what would be allowed for total dissolved gas at the dams – would improve smolt-to-adult survival.

    NOAA developed two broad categories of experimental designs to evaluate the effects of higher spill compared to the baseline spill level, a level of spill adopted by the 2008 BiOp, but which actually began in 2006 and has been used at some level every year since at the eight dams. The second spill level is the proposed increase to 120/115 percent gas cap that was developed through the Regional Implementation and Oversight Group (RIOG) last year in response to the court-ordered spill.

    The two experimental spill designs proposed by NOAA are a before/after design and a block design.

    NOAA submitted the designs to the Independent Scientific Advisory Board in January for review and the ISAB just completed that review this week, submitting its report March 19. The ISAB report is here. 

    NOAA’s draft proposal, “A Power Analysis of Two Alternative Experimental Designs to Evaluate a Test of Increased Spill at Snake and Columbia River Dams, Using Smolt-to-Adult Returns of Anadromous Salmonids,” was completed in January and can be found here.

    In that draft report, NOAA said that it could see four potential response variables to higher spill:

    1. smolt to adult return rate for smolts that migrate in-river

    2. smolt survival rate through the hydropower system

    3. smolt travel time through the hydropower system

    4. SAR of transported smolts relative to SAR of in-river migrants

    The first possibility for studying spill to the gas cap level would be to implement the action through the entire migration season, NOAA said in its proposal.

    “Response variables could be computed on an annual basis, and compared to corresponding annual measures from retrospective years,” it says. “We refer to this experimental strategy as the ‘Before/After’ approach. In this approach, there is no variation in the ‘treatment’ – the new management action – within prospective years and evaluation is essentially based on annual measures.”

    The second possibility for studying spill is to vary, or manipulate, the treatment level within the migration season in prospective years, the proposal says.  “In the case of the Spill Test, this implies that one spill level would be used during designated subset(s) of each migration season, and the other level used in the rest of the season. We refer to this experimental strategy as the ‘Block - Spill Design’ or simply ‘Block Design’ approach.”

    Staff at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center proposed an example of a block design and conducted a preliminary power analysis indicating that such a design will generally be better able to detect benefits from increased spill compared to a before/after approach.

    The ISAB agreed, saying that it found that the “NOAA’s analysis is a standard assessment of the power to detect effects and appears to be structured appropriately. The methodology and conclusions are conceptually sound, and the block design provides advantages to a before/after study.”

    The key advantage to the block design is that high year-to-year variation is controlled for by conducting both spill regimes in the same year, the ISAB said. “However, the advantages are somewhat tempered because of several sampling and estimation issues. In addition, the success of the proposed experiment may depend on a number of factors including the availability of sufficient water and tagged fish to actually implement the experiment, the assumption that past fish behavior (in the retrospective years) is indicative of what will happen under the new spill regime, and other operational issues that would need to be resolved before an actual experiment is implemented.”

    The operational issues are:

    1. the expected improvement in smolt-to-adult returns (SARs) associated with particular spill levels

    2. the impacts of low and high flow years on the study’s implementation

    3. whether the proposed spill regime is equally beneficial for fish of all sizes/ages when they start their migration

    4. impacts of the proposed spill regime on fish travel speed

    5. effects of new spillway detectors on the study design

    6. identification of adaptive management triggers, and

    7. the experiment’s effects on migrant survival when only half of the year is at higher spill levels compared to a full year at higher spill levels.

    So, while a theoretical implementation (i.e., NOAA’s block spill paper) may show high statistical power, an actual implementation may have less power because of these problems. These issues and several topics that should be explored to strengthen NOAA’s analysis are described in the full report, the ISAB said.

    The request for injunctive relief for more spill was enjoined with the earlier case argued in U.S. District Court of Oregon, with Judge Michael H. Simon presiding. The initial case resulted in a May 2016 remand of the federal Columbia River power system biological opinion for salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act.

    The spill plea was brought to Simon in January 2017, asking the court to begin ordering spill to maximum total dissolved gas levels beginning April 3, 2017 and to continue for each year of the BiOp remand. Simon agreed that more spring spill would benefit ESA-listed fish, but delayed the action until 2018 while federal agencies completed a spill plan for lower Snake and Columbia river dams.

    However, an appeal of Simon’s spill injunction was filed in the appeals court in early June 2017 by federal agencies, Northwest RiverPartners, the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, the states of Idaho and Montana, and the Inland Ports and Navigation Group.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Lower Snake River Sockeye Passage: “We have concerns fish are not passing upstream dams at appropriate rates”; Huge shad numbers causing some counting problems

    July 25, 2019

    1sockeye.web 2Although a “lot” of sockeye salmon are passing Ice Harbor Dam, the first dam the fish encounter when migrating up the Snake River, few are passing upstream dams, according to Claire McGrath of NOAA Fisheries.

    The expectation for the sockeye run this year is low, so the “lot” of sockeye McGrath referred to total just 299 fish at Ice Harbor, but passage at Lower Monumental Dam, the next dam upstream is far lower at 120 fish and that drops by more than half to 52 at Little Goose Dam and to 28 at Lower Granite Dam.

    “We know the vast majority of the sockeye at Ice are mid-Columbia stocks,” McGrath told the interagency Technical Management Team at its meeting this week (July 25). She went on to say that there is very little data about the sockeye this year, with just two fish passing Ice Harbor that are identified by their PIT-tags, “but we do have some concerns that the fish are not passing the upstream dams at appropriate rates.”

    “Relative to the 10-year average, this year is a very low return of sockeye, particularly Snake River sockeye,” she said.

    The 10-year average for Ice Harbor passage by July 23 is 898 and last year the count was 347. Going upriver, the 10-year average passage at Lower Monumental is 1,022 and last year the count was 338. The 10-year average at Little Goose is 923 and last year it was 233. At Lower Granite, the 10-year average is 877 and last year’s count was 218.

    Snake River sockeye salmon are listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act. The preseason sockeye run size for the entire Columbia River basin was downgraded by one third to 62,800 fish based on the recent 5-year average run timing at Bonneville Dam. The preseason forecast was 94,400 fish. The U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee met July 8, downgrading the expected sockeye run (most of those sockeye will travel to mid-Columbia River tributaries, with few turning into the Snake River).

    Fisheries managers, hoping to boost the number of fish passing Lower Monumental Dam, decided earlier this week to turn off the Adjustable Spillway Weir, which is designed to aid passage of juvenile salmon and steelhead.

    There are criteria in the Fish Passage Plan for turning off the ASW at LoMo at this time of year, McGrath said. Among those criteria are the date – August 1 – or if flows drop to 35,000 cubic feet per second and stay there for at least three continuous days, a level the river is approaching now. TMT managers will meet again this Friday to determine if the ASW should remain off.

    Much of the counting problem this year at lower Snake River dams has to do with the huge number of American shad passing through the Columbia River, with many turning into the Snake River. Some 7,447,091 shad had passed Bonneville Dam as of July 23, and 521,466 of those had passed Ice Harbor Dam, also as of July 23.

    Some checks of fish counts are now in process at both McNary Dam on the Columbia River and at Ice Harbor. There have been some incorrect counts at Ice Harbor and those are being corrected, which will drop the number of sockeye passing that dam and will address the low conversion rate (the number of fish passing one dam that successfully pass the next upstream dam) between Ice and Lower Monumental, said  Chris Peery, Corps Walla Walla District.

    “Shad complicates it,” he said. “With piles of shad it’s easier to miss something.”

    Jon Roberts of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said that cooler temperatures at Lower Granite have enabled the Corps to lower flows from Dworshak Dam, a source of cool water, on the Middle Fork of the Clearwater River. The Corps had been passing full powerhouse flows of about 9.4 kcfs, along with spilling water (totaling about 13 kcfs), to keep the tailwater at Lower Granite below 68 degrees Fahrenheit, partially as an aide to the few adult sockeye salmon expected to return to the Snake River and Sawtooth Basin this year. That is the upper temperature allowed in Lower Granite’s tailwater, according to NOAA’s 2019 federal Columbia River power system biological opinion.

    Cooler weather is predicted and Roberts said the Corps would keep the outflow at Dworshak at full powerhouse for the foreseeable future.

    In 2015, sockeye hit a thermal block as river temperatures rose considerably above the 68 degree F limit. Some 90 percent of sockeye died before reaching Ice Harbor Dam, the lower of the four Snake River dams. Idaho Fish and Game, NOAA Fisheries and the Nez Perce Tribes set up a rescue project at Lower Granite Dam to trap the adults and haul them to the hatchery at Eagle, Idaho.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: NOAA Fisheries Delivers First Court-Ordered Spring Spill For Fish Report; Shows Complex Operations

    Friday, June 18th 2018 slider.spill.dam

    NOAA Fisheries last month delivered its first report on court-ordered spring spill for juvenile salmon and steelhead passage to the U.S. District Court in Oregon. 
     
    The report describes spill operations by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at four lower Snake River and four lower Columbia River dams during April. Additional spring spill up to the maximum total dissolved gas levels allowed by state water quality rules, called gas caps, was ordered by the court one year ago. However, its implementation was delayed a year by the court to allow time for federal agencies to develop a spill plan.
     
    Total dissolved gas limits are intended to protect young fish from gas bubble trauma in the dams’ tailraces during spill.
     
    The additional spill began April 3 on the Snake River and April 10 on the Columbia River.
     
    The request for injunctive relief for more spill was enjoined with an earlier case argued in District Court. The initial case, heard by Judge Michael H. Simon, resulted in a May 2016 remand of the federal Columbia River power system biological opinion for salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act.
     
    The spill plea was brought to Simon in January 2017 by plaintiffs in the original case, the National Wildlife Federation and the State of Oregon, among others, asking the court to begin ordering spill to maximum total dissolved gas levels as set by Oregon and Washington beginning April 3, 2017 and to continue for each year of the BiOp remand.
     
    Simon agreed that more spring spill would benefit ESA-listed fish, but delayed the action until 2018 while federal agencies completed a spill plan for the dams. The plan is for additional spill only during the spring of 2018 to the total dissolved gas caps set by Oregon and Washington, as well as for earlier PIT-tag monitoring of juvenile salmon.
     
    NOAA Fisheries, Northwest RiverPartners, the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, the states of Idaho and Montana, and the Inland Ports and Navigation Group appealed Simon’s spill injunction in early June 2017 to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. However a three-judge panel of the appeals court ruled April 2 in favor of Simon’s spill ruling.
     
    According to the spill report, April 2018 was characterized by above average flows for the lower Snake and lower Columbia Rivers along with average to slightly above average air temperatures and above average precipitation across most of the Columbia River Basin.
     
    The Northwest River Forecast Center observed the April adjusted runoff for the lower Snake River at Lower Granite Dam at 131 percent of the 30-year average (1981-2010) with a volume of 5.97 million acre feet. The April adjusted runoff for the lower Columbia River at The Dalles was 119 percent of the 30-year average with a volume of 16.5 MAF. The April observed precipitation was 104 percent of average on the lower Snake River above Ice Harbor Dam and 118 percent of average on the lower Columbia River above The Dalles Dam.
     
    During the April 2018 reporting period, the planned 2018 Spring Fish Operations Plan spill operations began April 3 at lower Snake River dams – Lower Granite, Little Goose, Lower Monumental and Ice Harbor dams – with spill caps that achieve a 120 percent TDG in the tailwater of each dam and 115 percent in the forebay of each dam directly downstream.
     
    FOP spill operations at lower Columbia River dams began April 10, with the same gas caps as Snake River dams.
     
    Operating to gas caps is “a more complex operation to implement than the past years’ operations,” the report says.
     
    The Corps had to evaluate conditions every day to establish spill targets that would meet gas caps. The evaluation considered environmental conditions (e.g., river flow, wind, water temperature, barometric pressure, incoming TDG from upstream, and water travel time) and project operations (e.g., spill level, spill pattern, tailwater elevation, proportion of flow through the turbines, and project configuration), according to the report.
     
    In April, "Low flow" operations at the dams are triggered when inflow is insufficient to provide both minimum generation and the target spill levels.
     
    “In these situations, the projects operate at minimum generation and pass the remainder of project inflow as spill and through other routes, such as fish ladders, sluiceways, and navigation locks,” the report says. “As flows transition from higher flows to low flows, there may be situations when flows recede at a higher rate than forecasted. In addition, inflows provided by nonfederal projects upstream are variable and uncertain.”
     
    A combination of factors can result in times when unanticipated changes to inflow result in forebay elevations dropping to the low end of the Minimum Operating Pool, according to the report. Since these projects have limited operating flexibility, maintaining minimum generation, MOP elevation and the target spill may not be possible throughout every hour and actual spill can vary up to 2,000 cubic feet per second within an hour.
     
    In addition, a number of factors influence actual spill and resulting TDG, including hydraulic efficiency, exact gate opening calibration, spillway gate hoist cable stretch due to temperature changes, and forebay elevation (e.g. a higher forebay results in a greater level of spill since more water can pass under the spill gate).
     
    During April TDG in the Lower Granite Dam forebay (the upper of four lower Snake River dams) was under 106 percent, whereas its tailwater varied between 115 and the 120 percent gas cap, but not exceeding the gas cap.
     
    The Little Goose forebay – the next dam downstream of Lower Granite – exceeded the gas cap of 115 percent 16 times during April, on one occasion (April 27) reaching 120 percent. The Little Goose tailwater varied, but never exceeded 120 percent.
     
    TDG in the Lower Monumental forebay exceeded the 115 percent gas cap 21 of 30 days, reaching 120 percent on one day (April 7) . TDG in the dam’s tailwater did not exceed the 120 percent TDG gas cap during the month.
     
    The Ice Harbor Dam forebay TDG exceeded state limits 16 times in April, reaching 119 percent once (April 27). The dam’s tailwater reached 121 percent on four occasions in April.
     
    In the lower Columbia River, the McNary Dam forebay TDG didn’t exceed state limits of 115 percent until late in April when it exceeded the limit three times. McNary tailwater remained at or below the 120 percent TDG cap during the entire month.
     
    John Day Dam forebay TDG exceeded state limits seven times, all in the latter part of the month, reaching 121 percent on April 26 and 27. John Day tailwater remained within the 120 percent TDG cap over the entire month.
     
    The Dalles Dam forebay TDG exceeded the 115 percent gas cap 14 times during the month, reaching as high as 119 percent. The Dalles tailwater remained within gas cap limits.
     
    The Bonneville Dam forebay exceeded TDG limits 17 days in April, reaching 120 percent twice. Tailwater at Bonneville Dam exceeded the 120 percent gas cap seven times in April, reaching 123 percent on the month’s last day.

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440890.aspx 
     

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: NW Power/Conservation Council Gets Numbers Rundown On Columbia River Salmon/Steelhead Returns

    Friday, March 23, 2018

    Fisheries managers briefed the Northwest Power and Conservation Council at its meeting last week about what’s in store for Columbia River basin salmon and steelhead runs for 2018.

    Most runs are expected to be less than the 10-year average and that’s largely due to poor ocean conditions since 2014, according to Brian Burke, a scientist at NOAA Fisheries’ Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle. Although those conditions have improved for coldwater fish like salmon and steelhead, he said the conditions could continue to affect the fish for one to two more years.

    He predicted returns of chinook salmon to the Columbia River in 2018 will be similar to what they were in 2017, but that’s still far below normal.

    However, poor returns of fish doesn’t mean sportfishers won’t seek them out. Anglers took 126,800 trips searching for spring chinook in 2017 and 58,100 angler trips during the summer season, according to Dan Rawding of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    The spring harvest by sportfishers? Some 12,700 hatchery fish were kept downstream of Bonneville Dam, 1,400 hatchery fish were kept between Bonneville and the Oregon/Washington border and 1,300 were kept in Washington waters of the lower Snake River.

    With 58,100 angling trips, summer sportfishers harvested 3,100 hatchery chinook, 4,300 hatchery steelhead and 700 sockeye downstream of the dam, and 100 hatchery chinook and 500 sockeye between Bonneville and Priest Rapids dams, as well as 4,100 hatchery chinook and 5,500 sockeye from Priest Rapids to Chief Joseph Dam.

    The Buoy 10 fall season harvest was 17,800 chinook and 9,200 hatchery coho from 95,000 angler trips.

    From 133,300 angler trips downstream of Bonneville in the fall some 25,100 chinook, 1,300 hatchery coho and 1,900 hatchery steelhead were kept. From 44,100 angler trips at Hanford Reach, sportfishers harvested 16,900 chinook.

    Mainstem non-Indian commercial gillnetters in 2017 harvested 3,300 hatchery spring chinook, 3,000 chinook and 400 sockeye during the summer period and 58,900 chinook and 1,100 coho during the fall season.

    In addition, non-Indian commercial gillnetters harvested 7,300 chinook in select off-channel areas during spring, 1,800 chinook in the summer season, and 12,400 chinook and 34,700 coho during the fall.

    Commercial treaty gillnetters harvested in 2017, some 5,200 spring chinook, 18,600 summer chinook, 12,800 sockeye, and 2,700 steelhead in the spring and summer and 10,800 in the fall. The gillnetters also caught 134,100 fall chinook and 5,100 coho salmon.

    Rawding said that the total return of upriver salmonids – both salmon and steelhead that pass Bonneville Dam – in 2017 was just 856,000 fish and the 2018 forecast for upriver fish is just a little better at 904,000 fish. The total return of salmonids to the Columbia River was 1.2 million, while the 2018 forecast is less at 1.1 million fish. Both years are much lower than the 10-year average.

    The actual return in 2017 of upper Columbia River spring chinook was 11,166, which includes 2,514 wild fish (the wild run is listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act). The forecast last year was for 19,300 with 3,300 wild. This year the run is anticipated to hit 20,100 fish with 3,400 wild. That’s down from near 38,000 in 2002, 2010 and 2014, and over 50,000 in 2001.

    Some 115,000 upriver spring chinook arrived last year (the forecast was 160,000) and the forecast for 2018 is 166,700. The 2015 return was nearly 300,000 fish and the 2001 return was about 450,000 fish.

    Just 68,204 upper Columbia River summer chinook returned in 2017 (the forecast was for a return of 63,100 fish), while the forecast for 2018 is 67,300. The 2014 run was over 100,000 fish.

    The return of fall chinook in 2017 was 475,900 with some 391,300 of those upriver fish (the forecast last year was 582,600, with 460,500 of those upriver fish. The 2018 forecast for fall chinook is far lower at 365,600 total and, of those, some 286,600 are upriver fish.

    “Fall chinook are on a downward trend on returns, and that includes Hanford Reach,” Rawding said.

    The peak run of chum salmon was over 40,000 in 2016, but the predicted run for 2018 is one-tenth of that at 4,000 fish.

    Coho salmon that arrived in 2017 totaled 235,656 (the forecast was 225,805), while this year’s forecast is for 228,758 fish. More than 1 million arrived in 2014 and the biggest run since 1980 was 1.6 million in 1986.

    The run of upper Columbia River steelhead was the lowest in the last 25 years (recreational fishing was reduced to protect the species), but the 2018 run is expected to be a little better, Rawding said.

    Some 9,448 wild winter steelhead arrived in 2017 (the forecast was 11,900), while the forecast this year is 11,700 fish. The run in 2016 was 22,500 and in 2003 it was just under 35,000.

    With a forecast of 190,350 fish, upriver summer steelhead will have a better year in 2018 than it had in 2017 when the run was 116,841 fish (the forecast for 2017 was 130,700). Both 2010 and 2003 had runs of upriver summer steelhead that were over 600,000 fish.

    The 2018 forecast for Columbia River sockeye salmon is 99,000, somewhat better than the actual run last year of 88,263 (the forecast was 198,500). Of those numbers, 1,400 was forecasted last year to return to the Snake River, but only 14 arrived. The 10-year average is 212 at Lower Granite, and for 2018 the forecast is 216.

    The run of sockeye was over 600,000 in 2014 and about 500,000 in 2015, a year in which 90 percent of sockeye succumbed to low flow and warm water conditions in the summer.

    For runs into Idaho, according to Paul Kline of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, the forecast for natural origin spring/summer chinook is up to 12,655 fish as opposed to last year’s count of 4,108 fish. On the hatchery fish side, the forecast is also up from 30,179 in 2017 to 53,218 this year.

    The natural origin fall chinook run forecast in Idaho for 2018 is down to 6,113 fish from last year’s run of 6,966, and the hatchery fall chinook run is also down to 12,013 from last year’s 17,814.

    The natural origin summer steelhead forecast is higher this year at 24,780 vs last year at 10,540. The hatchery steelhead run is also up from 59,028 last year to 71,300 this year.

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Pacific Lamprey Return To Umatilla River In Record Numbers; From Functionally Extinct To Over 2,600

    June 15, 2018  fishingforlamprey

    Pacific lamprey, a prehistoric fish native to the Columbia River basin and treasured by Native American people, are returning to Oregon’s Umatilla River in record numbers.
     
    From the late 1960s through the early 2000’s lamprey were functionally extinct in the Umatilla Basin, and less than five years ago only a few-hundred Pacific lamprey returned to the Umatilla River each year.
     
    However, through efforts such as adult translocation, scientists with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation have counted more the 2,600 of the ancient fish migrating up the eastern Oregon river to spawn this spring.
     
    The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla have worked for nearly 25 years to increase lamprey numbers. The Bonneville Power Administration has funded most of the tribe’s lamprey projects since the early 1990’s, with much of the money going toward lamprey research and improving instream passage.
     
    Over the past 10 years, BPA ratepayers have invested just over $5 million in the Umatilla Basin for lamprey, said the agency in a press release.
     
    “Lamprey are culturally important and a critical First Food for tribes. And while they’ve been around for millions of years, until rather recently, managers failed to understand their importance within the food web,” says Aaron Jackson, fisheries biologist with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. “Our focus now is to continue lamprey supplementation actions to bolster the overall numbers of lamprey in the Umatilla and other ceded area basins.”
     
    “We understand the cultural significance of Pacific lamprey to the tribes which is one reason we’ve funded lamprey projects in the Umatilla,” says Lorri Bodi, vice president of Environment, Fish and Wildlife with the Bonneville Power Administration. “As a food source for other creatures, lamprey are also very important to a healthy functioning ecosystem such as in the Umatilla River, so it’s great to see our efforts paying off.”
     
    Pacific lamprey spend the majority of their lives as tiny larvae living in Northwest streams from three to seven years before migrating out to sea. Adult lamprey have a sucker-like mouth that allows them to be parasitic while in the ocean. They attach to fish and marine mammals for feeding.
     
    Lamprey usually live in the ocean for one to three years before returning to fresh water to spawn. Similar to salmon, lamprey die after spawning and their carcasses provide marine rich nutrients to streams.

    http://www.cbbulletin.com/440946.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: Preliminary 2015 Spring Juvenile Survival Estimates Through Snake/Columbia River Dams Dismal

    CBB.com copyFriday, October 23, 2015

    Abnormally low and warm water this spring contributed to one of the worst seasons for juvenile chinook and steelhead survival through Snake and Columbia river dams in the past 17 years.  

    That’s the conclusion of a preliminary report of passage survival through the dams produced by the NOAA Fisheries Northwest Science Center in Seattle. A final report, expected early in 2016, could adjust the findings of this preliminary study by up to 4 percent.   In the Snake River, water temperatures were at record highs, but river flows were near record lows.   Spill at the Snake River dams by volume, the amount of water actually spilled, was close to average, but the percent of flow spilled was high.  

    Juveniles did not move down through the power system this year as fast as they had in recent years, but the time generally exceeded travel times from years prior to spillway weirs at the dams and the requirement for more spill. Transportation of juveniles was also low.   “In terms of flow, 2015 was most like 1994, 2001, and 2007. In terms of spill percentages, 2015 was most like 2008 and 2010. In terms of water temperature, there are no comparable years in our times series,” the report said of Snake River juvenile survival. The 17-year time series is 1998 to 2015.  

    The report was sent in a letter to Ritchie Graves, chief of NOAA’s Columbia Hydropower Branch, from Richard Zabel at the Science Center September 10, 2015. To access the letter, go to http://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/tmt/agendas/2015/1021_Preliminary_Survival_Estimates_Memo_2015_1021.pdf <http://www.nwd-wc.usace.army.mil/tmt/agendas/2015/1021_Preliminary_Survival_Estimates_Memo_2015_1021.pdf> The work is funded by the Bonneville Power Administration.  

    NOAA Fisheries PIT-tagged 19,088 river-run hatchery steelhead, 10,752 wild steelhead, and 5,379 wild yearling chinook salmon for release. The PIT-tagged yearling chinook salmon were released from the seven Snake River Basin hatcheries: Dworshak, Kooskia, Lookingglass/Imnaha Weir, Rapid River, McCall/Knox Bridge, Pahsimeroi, and Sawtooth every year from 1993 through 2015 (except Pahsimeroi in 1996), the report says.  

    Here is what NOAA found:   The combined yearling chinook salmon survival estimate from a trap upstream of Lower Granite Dam to the Bonneville Dam tailrace was 39.7 percent, well below the long-term average of 49.5 percent and the third lowest of the past 17 years.  

    In fact, it is the lowest estimate for chinook in that reach since 2004 when the percentage was 35.3 percent. The worst passage survival in the past 17 years was in 2001 when just 26.6 percent of yearling chinook survived.  

    Survival from Lower Granite to McNary Dam was 69.4 percent and from McNary to Bonneville was 62.9 percent.   For wild Snake River yearling chinook, survival from the Lower Granite trap to Bonneville dam was 38.4 percent.   Steelhead from the Snake River fared even worse.  

    The combined hatchery and wild steelhead survival estimate from the trap to the Bonneville Dam tailrace was 36.1 percent, below the 17 year average of 45.1 percent and the fourth lowest of the 17 years.   Mean estimated survival for steelhead from Lower Granite Dam tailrace to McNary Dam tailrace was 62.3 percent, from McNary Dam tailrace to Bonneville Dam tailrace 66.3 percent and from Lower Granite Dam tailrace to Bonneville Dam tailrace 41.3 percent.   Several of the past 17 years had worse survival for hatchery and wild steelhead. The worst year was in 2001 when just 3.8 percent of steelhead survived through the Snake and Columbia river dams. In 2002 survival was 23.4 percent and 2003 survival was 28.8 percent.  

    For wild Snake River steelhead, estimated survival from the Snake River trap to the Bonneville Dam tailrace was 30.1 percent.  

    Survival for hatchery yearling chinook salmon from the upper Columbia River released near Wells Dam from the McNary Dam tailrace to the Bonneville Dam tailrace was 87.0 percent, much better than their Snake River counterparts and better than the 17-year mean of 80.9 percent.  

     The worst passage year for hatchery yearling chinook from the upper Columbia River was in 2004 when 61.8 percent of juveniles survived.  

    Survival for hatchery steelhead from the upper Columbia River from the McNary Dam tailrace to the Bonneville Dam tailrace was 57.0 percent, far lower than the 17-year mean of 75 percent and the worst survival of the past 17 years. The study says that it was not possible to measure survival of the fish upstream of McNary Dam because of limited PIT-tag detection capabilities at Mid-Columbia River PUD dams.  

    Survival of Snake River sockeye salmon (hatchery and wild combined) from the tailrace of Lower Granite Dam to the tailrace of Bonneville Dam was 37.3 percent, below the 17-year mean of 42.4 percent. The worst survival of sockeye juveniles was in 2001 when just 2.2 percent survived the Lower Granite to Bonneville migration. The best survival was in 2006 when 82 percent of the fish survived. Last year’s survival estimate was 71.3 percent.   Estimated survival of Columbia River sockeye salmon (hatchery and wild combined) from the tailrace of Rock Island Dam to the tailrace of Bonneville Dam was 34.0 percent. The 17-year mean is 50.6 percent, with the lowest survival in 2002 with 15.2 percent and the highest in 1998 with 100 percent.  

    Low survival this year for both chinook salmon and steelhead “were associated with a set of extreme environmental conditions and unusual operational conditions compared to past years,” the report says.  

    Mean flow at Little Goose Dam in 2015 during the main migration period (April 1 through June 15) was 53,000 cubic feet per second, well below the 17-year mean of 90.2 kcfs.  

    The only year of the 17 years with lower flow was 2001 with a mean of 48.9 kcfs. Daily flow values were below long-term daily means for every day in the main migration period.   Flow in the Snake River during the 2015 spring was “consistently lower than what we’ve seen in quite some time,” said Paul Wagner, NOAA Fisheries at this week’s TMT meeting. “And, the temperature is at the top and was higher from the get-go.”  

    Water temperature measured at Little Goose Dam spiked a couple of times in May and early June to over 19 degrees C (66.2 degrees Fahrenheit). Temperatures continued to rise even higher through the summer.   Mean water temperature at Little Goose Dam during the migration period was 13.1 degrees C (55.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The 17-year mean temperature is 11.1 degrees C (52 degrees Fahrenheit). 2015 was the warmest year of the time period. Daily water temperatures were above the long-term daily means on most days, with differences becoming greatest in late May and early June, according to the study.   Even with low flows, the amount of water spilled at Snake River dams was near the 17-year mean early in the spring, but dropped beginning in the middle of May. Mean spill at the dams was 19.9 kcfs, compared to the 17-year mean of 25.7 kcfs.  

    However, spill as a percent of river flow was the highest in 17 years: 37.7 percent of the river was spilled this year compared to the 17-year mean of 25.9 percent.  

    The spill percentage at Lower Monumental Dam reached 49 percent at one point due to the fact that spill at the dam is a fixed amount of water and generally will not vary with flow.   While travel time through the hydro system for the smolts was slower than 2008 through 2014, it was faster than the 17-year average and faster than most low flow years, the report says. The difference is that earlier years had extended periods with no spill and most dams had limited surface bypass structures or none at all.  

    The percentage of fish transported (non-tagged wild and hatchery spring-summer chinook salmon) was 11.4 percent for wild spring-summer chinook and 13.6 percent for hatchery fish.   For steelhead, the transportation estimates are 12.4 percent for wild and 13.9 percent for hatchery smolts. These estimates represent the percentage of smolts that arrived at Lower Granite Dam that were subsequently transported, either from Lower Granite Dam or from one of the downstream collector dams, the study says.   Both were the lowest of the 17 years, according to the study.  

    “This is partly due to the arrival timing of both species in relation to start dates of transportation, and partly due to very low collection probabilities at the collector dams during transportation operations. In 2015, collection for transportation began on 1 May at Lower Granite and Little Goose Dams and 2 May at Lower Monumental Dam. We estimate that 58 percent of the annual total passage of wild yearling Chinook and 58 percent of hatchery yearling Chinook passed Lower Granite Dam before transportation began,” the study says. Some 48 percent of steelhead had passed Lower Granite Dam before collection for transportation began.

    https://www.cbbulletin.com/435364.aspx

  • Columbia Basin Bulletin: With Run Downgrade, Summer Chinook Fishing Below Bonneville Dam Ends Early; Sockeye Above Forecast 

    Posted on Friday, June 29, 2018fishinbox

    Summer chinook recreational fishing that was to extend to the end of July was abruptly canceled downstream of Bonneville Dam where anglers have already exceeded a new catch allocation based on a 23 percent decline in the run size forecast.
     
    The lower allocation was a result of the U.S. v Oregon Technical Advisory Committee unofficially downgrading this week the number of summer chinook it expects this year.
     
    As it shut down summer chinook fishing, the two-state Columbia River Compact at its meeting this week opened recreational angling for sockeye salmon that previously was closed due to a low preseason forecast of the fish.
     
    TAC downgraded the summer chinook run from 67,300 fish at the river’s mouth to 52,000 at its Monday, June 25 meeting, but it more than doubled the anticipated run of sockeye salmon from 99,000 to 209,000 fish, allowing the Compact to open sockeye angling on the mainstem Columbia River.
     
    TAC’s summer chinook update is unofficial, according to Stuart Ellis of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission and chair of TAC, but the group will meet again Monday, July 2, he said, and at that meeting they will likely officially downgrade the run. The Compact conservatively accepted the unofficial in-season forecast as it reset fishing rules on the river at its meeting Thursday, June 28.
     
    The Compact and TAC consider chinook salmon that pass Bonneville Dam beginning June 16 to be summer chinook. The count at the dam as of June 27 was just 20,870 fish. Passage is typically 50 percent complete by June 30 and has been less than expected, according to the Compact’s June 28 Summer Fact Sheet #1.
     
    On the other hand, 120,577 sockeye had passed the dam by June 27 (half of the run is typically over the dam by June 26), so the run of sockeye has been far larger than what was anticipated by the preseason forecast. Last year just 50,329 sockeye had passed the dam by June 27 and the 10-year average is 186,613.
     
    In addition, through June 27, some 5,141 Skamania steelhead have been counted at Bonneville. That includes 2,181 unclipped fish. Based on the 10-year average timing, the total run would normally be about 79 percent complete and the unclipped run would be about 72 percent complete at Bonneville on June 3, the fact sheet says. TAC says the total run is tracking less than expected, but the unclipped portion of the run is near the preseason forecast.
     
    Given the higher preseason forecast for summer chinook, fisheries managers had previously set fishing quotas of 20,624 chinook for Treaty fishing and 3,541 for non-Treaty recreational and select area commercial fisheries.
     
    With the lower forecast, however, the allocations dropped to 14,059 for Treaty fishers and 919 for non-Treaty fishers. That breaks down to 184 non-Treaty upriver chinook for commercial gillnetters in select areas near Astoria, 625 for recreational anglers downstream of Bonneville Dam and 110 upriver chinook for recreational anglers from Bonneville Dam upstream to Priest Rapids Dam.
     
    Based on catch estimates of 455 summer chinook kept added to anticipated release mortalities since the opening on June 22, lower Columbia River retention is already at 986 fish or 158 percent of the revised allocation for the fishery of 625 fish. As a result, summer chinook retention will close from the Astoria/Megler Bridge to Bonneville Dam at the end of the day tomorrow, Saturday, June 30. The lower Columbia catch also includes 100 steelhead kept (28 released) and 24 sockeye, all released.
     
    Angling for hatchery summer chinook from Bonneville upstream to the Oregon and Washington border, which opened June 16, is scheduled to continue through July 31. Just 9 summer chinook have been kept in that fishery with fewer than 300 angler trips.
     
    Only five chinook have been caught in Washington waters from the border upstream to Priest Rapids Dam. That fishery also opened June 16 and will continue through July 31.
     
    Sockeye retention in the mainstem recreational summer fisheries was prohibited due to concerns regarding Wenatchee River escapement. However, escapement goals are now expected to be met, the Fact Sheet says. Based on the upgraded sockeye return, approximately 1,670 sockeye are now available for mainstem recreational fisheries downstream of the Snake River. That fishery opens July 1 and extends from the Oregon and Washington border downstream to the Astoria/Megler Bridge at Astoria.
     
    Anglers can retain two salmonids per day, including sockeye or hatchery steelhead, downstream of Bonneville Dam. Upstream of the dam to the Oregon and Washington border, anglers can keep two salmonids, including hatchery steelhead, hatchery chinook and sockeye.
     
    Treaty commercial fishing has some way to go to meet its allocation. After two weeks of fishing since June 16, the Compact approved one more week of Treaty gillnetting in Zone 6 (July 2 – 6, upstream of Bonneville Dam). Total projected catch through July 6 is estimated to be 11,172, leaving 2,887 remaining to be caught.
     
    Non-treaty commercial fishing in select areas is also under allocation for upriver fish because these fisheries are limited to areas where their take is almost all hatchery fish. Gillnetting in Blind Slough/Knappa Slough and Tongue Point was to end June 29, but the Compact extended fishing eight days for 12 hours each day during July in those areas.
     
    The extensions allow access to late-returning select area spring chinook that are still present in the fishing areas, as well as providing partial access to the commercial sturgeon allocation, the Fact Sheet says. The catch expectation is 800 – 1,200 chinook and less than 100 white sturgeon. At the end of the new fishing periods total catch of upriver fish is expected to not exceed 50.
     
    Idaho is closing some rivers this weekend because harvest goals have been met. After Sunday, July 1, all sections of the Lower Salmon River and the Little Salmon River will close, as well as the North Fork of the Clearwater River and the Lochsa River. The South Fork of the Salmon River and the Upper Salmon River will remain open.
     
    Fisheries managers at the Idaho Department of Fish and Game are anticipating about 2,000 adult chinook will return to the South Fork of the Salmon River, which would provide a sport-fishing harvest share of about 680 fish. The sport harvest share for the Upper Salmon will be about 250 to 300 chinook, according to an IDFG news release.

  • Columbia Insight: As salmon cook in rivers, pressure on Biden mounts

    A historic gathering of tribes from across Pac NW calls on the president to breach lower Snake River dams. House of Tears totem pole arrives in DC today

    2021.totemBy Eli Francovich
    July 29, 2021

    In a conference room on the Squaxin Island Reservation in Mason County near the southern edge of the Puget Sound, a dozen tribes came together this month in a show of resolve focused on saving a species—salmon—that unites indigenous peoples throughout the Columbia River Basin.

    Tribal leaders met at a “salmon and orca summit” organized by the Nez Perce Tribe and the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians on July 7. The summit rallied support for Idaho congressman Mike Simpson’s proposal to breach four dams on the lower Snake River by 2030 and replace the benefits they provide with billions in federal money from President Joe Biden’s nascent infrastructure bill.

    That proposal, which has made headlines since it was unveiled in February, provides a “glimmer of hope” in the long-simmering salmon wars, said Shannon Wheeler, vice chairman for the Nez Perce tribe.

    “We as human beings have the ability to change,” Wheeler said during the two-day summit. “Salmon don’t have that luxury. They don’t have that luxury to change.”

    Another totemic statement

    Meanwhile, in a cross-country trek that began on July 14, the Lummi Nation House of Tears Carvers have traveled 20,000 miles with a newly carved totem pole, conducting over 100 blessing ceremonies on their #RedRoadtoDC Totem Pole Journey.

    The trip began on Lummi Nation lands on Puget Sound in Washington state and has included stops to display the pole at sites considered sacred to local tribes and Indigenous peoples, and which are current or potential targets for dams, mining, drilling or oil pipelines.

    The trip’s first stop was at the Snake River within Nez Perce traditional lands on July 15. Subsequent stops have included Bears Ears National Monument in Utah; Chaco Canyon, Navajo Reservation in New Mexico; Black Hills in South Dakota; and others along the Missouri River, including Standing Rock Reservation, North Dakota.

    Along with tens of thousands of signatures and stories, the totem pole is being presented to the Biden-Harris administration on July 29 at a ceremony on the National Mall headed by Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland.

    The totem pole will be displayed in the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.

    ‘More than a treaty right’

    Simpson’s proposal to breach the lower Snake River dams has received bipartisan resistance from farmers, Democrats, Republicans and some environmental groups and faces an uncertain future. Meanwhile it’s been embraced by Northwest tribes for whom salmon are culturally and spiritually irreplaceable.

    “Salmon is the major unifying factor between the tribes of the Northwest,” said Leonard Forsman, chairman of the Suquamish Tribe and president of the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians.

    That tribal support broadened in June when the National Congress of American Indians, the nation’s largest association of tribal governments, passed a resolution supporting breaching of the four lower Snake River Dams.

    “It should be clear to the Administration and Northwest delegation that Tribal Nations across America stand united on the need to remove these obstacles that are choking our rivers and causing the extinction of salmon and orca,” said NCAI President Fawn Sharp in a statement.

    For many tribes farther up the Columbia River Basin system naturally returning salmon are a memory held in trust by a few elders, said Hemene James, a member of the Coeur d’Alene Tribal Council.

    “You look at historical pictures of Indians standing in line to get their rations. That is what our people are relegated to,” he said. “We have to look at this issue not as civil rights, not as human rights, not as treaty rights. We have to look at this as natural rights. The right to exist.”

    He warned those tribes that still do have salmon that action needs to be taken now.

    “Without the salmon, let me tell you it’s a pretty lonely world,” he said.

    Simpson speaks

    Throughout the summit leaders implored federal lawmakers to act. Simpson, the only federal lawmaker present, listened intently before taking the stage.

    Once there he thanked the tribes for their support and acknowledged that his proposal faces an uncertain future. Still, he urged continued action saying, “we will get this done. One way or another.”

    And he asked the tribes to keep the pressure on lawmakers, noting that tribal motivations for saving salmon run deep.

    “The key to this whole thing is you all,” he said. “You’re trying to preserve a history. A culture and a religion. Those are powerful motivating factors.”

    Little time left

    The dire future for salmon—and the need for action—was driven home at the July summit when David Johnson, director of the Nez Perce Tribal Department of Fisheries Management, presented a tribal study published in May painting a bleak picture.

    “These fish don’t have much time left,” he said. “Good ocean. Bad ocean. Now is the time we have to do something big.”

    Wild spring and summer chinook populations are declining by 19% per year, according to the study. By 2025, 77% of the Snake River basin spring and summer chinook populations will be perilously close to extinction if trends continue. The picture is slightly less grim for steelhead populations.

    A heat wave that’s stifled the Pacific Northwest has made the situation even worse. In June, water temperatures reached the low 70s in some areas between Portland and Lewiston, Idaho. Temperatures higher than 68 degrees are bad for salmon.

    In an odd way, Johnson said, the heat wave might “put pressure on to get this done.”

    Unchanged equation: fish or dams

    The fight over the four Snake River dams is a multi-decade battle, one that started before the first dam, Ice Harbor on the confluence of the Snake and Columbia rivers, was built in 1962.

    At that time fish advocates “fought Ice Harbor so hard because once it was built, they knew it would be impossible to stop the other three dams,” wrote Idaho historian Keith Petersen in his 1995 book, River of Life, Channel of Death.

    They were right. Three other dams were built—Monumental Dam in 1969, Little Goose Dam in 1970 and Lower Granite in 1975. Once constructed they flooded 14,400 acres, washed away Native American gathering sites, burial grounds, fishing areas and towns.

    Salmon populations plummeted with the dams, which cut off 55% of the Columbia River Basin’s fish habitat. In 1991, Snake River sockeye salmon were protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. Now there are more than 400 barriers up and down the Columbia River Basin.

    But, for the Nez Perce—or the Nimiipúu—fish, particularly chinook salmon, have played a keystone spiritual, cultural and economic role for more than 16,000 years.

    Prior to European colonization the Nez Perce lived throughout central Idaho, parts of southeast Washington and northeast Oregon. They hunted bison in Montana and fished for salmon on the main stem of the Columbia River.

    “There is an ancient covenant there that is between the salmon, the animals and us, as humans,” Wheeler said during an interview in June.

    In 2019, archaeologists carbon-dated charcoal and bone left at Cooper’s Ferry on the Salmon River. Those artifacts are more than 16,000 years old, according to the research published in Science.

    All of which provides essential context, Wheeler said, when considering the tribe’s commitment to salmon.

    “What if Congressman Simpson’s proposal doesn’t go through? Well then what?” asked Wheeler during the conference. “Well, we are going to continue to fight. This fight has been going on for a long time and we are not going to go away.”

    Eli Francovich is a journalist covering conservation and recreation. Based in eastern Washington he’s writing a book about the return of wolves to the western United States.

  • Columbia Insight: How (and why) to fix the U.S.-Canada Columbia River Treaty

    By Graeme Lee Rowlands.
    July 2, 2020.

    keenleyside.dam.2On June 30, the U.S. State Department and government of British Columbia issued a pair of surprising press releases regarding the latest round of Columbia River Treaty negotiations. The brief statements were surprising because few people even knew the tenth round of treaty negotiations, held June 29-30 via web conference, had even taken place.

    As with previous press releases, the two sides presented nearly identical information and offered few specifics.

    “During this round, Canada responded to a framework proposal previously tabled by the United States and presented a Canadian-developed proposal,” according to the State Department.

    “During the most recent round of discussions, Canada responded to a framework proposed by the United States during the previous round of negotiations in Washington, D.C., and tabled a Canadian proposal outlining a framework for a modernized Columbia River Treaty,” read the B.C. press release.

    What were the details of the American proposal and Canada’s response? How was the Canadian counter-proposal different?

    Neither country was forthcoming with details. Neither offered the media a personal contact with which to follow up.

    “Due to the confidential nature of the cross-border negotiations, details of Canada’s initial proposal and of the U.S. framework cannot be made public,” read the B.C. government’s press release, which also noted the next round of negotiation meetings has not been scheduled. 

    The lack of information is frustrating to many because the ongoing negotiations are vital to the long-term health and prosperity of the entire Columbia River Basin. 

    Although the treaty has no formal expiration date, either side can terminate most of its provisions with 10-years notice. In 2024, the treaty’s flood risk management provisions will automatically change unless both sides forge a new agreement first.

    It’s clear the treaty needs updating. Some believe broader reforms are needed.

    That makes the present stakes high. And not just for the respective governments at the forefront of negotiations.

    An increasing cast of stakeholders is grappling with issues the original framers of the deal did not foresee.

    ONE RIVER, ENDLESS SUITORS
    Though it took over a decade to negotiate before it was ultimately signed in 1961 and ratified in 1964, the Columbia River Treaty is a relatively simple agreement.

    CRT.mapAt its core, the treaty is about the U.S. federal government and the Province of British Columbia (which owns most Canadian obligations and benefits in the treaty) working together to use three Canadian dams to control river flows at the border for two specific purposes: hydropower production and flood risk management.

    The Columbia River Basin is a watershed the size of France with over 5 million residents. The entire Pacific Northwest depends on it for economic and environmental vitality.

    The modernization of the treaty is a rare opportunity to reshape the distribution of burdens and benefits between the region’s numerous and often conflicting interests.

    As the region’s most important economic and ecological artery, the 1,243-mile-long Columbia River has many suitors. Down-streamers want to keep strict flood protections in place. Up-streamers want more flexibility to operate storage reservoirs for local priorities. Indigenous nations and environmental advocates want better flows and new passage at dams for salmon and other aquatic species. Electric utilities want higher revenue. Irrigators want more water. Shipping companies want to protect navigation routes. Recreationalists want reservoir levels to accommodate their activities.

    Everyone will need to reckon with climate change, which is expected to shift the American side of the Columbia River Basin from a snow-dominated system toward a more rain-dominated system.

    Overall annual flow should stay similar, but timing is likely to change with increased winter flows, earlier peak spring runoff and longer periods of low, hot summer flows.

    These trends are already beginning and projected to intensify over coming decades.

    The Canadian side of the basin will be impacted in similar ways but is more likely to remain snow-dominated.

    NARROW TREATY, WIDESPREAD CONCERNS
    With so many groups competing to manage river resources, Columbia River Treaty negotiators are under a lot of pressure. As part of the formal review that started back in 2010, U.S. federal agencies, tribes, states and stakeholders came together to develop the U.S. Regional Recommendation for American negotiators to follow.

    This document lays out nine general principles and numerous specific recommendations covering hydropower, flood risk management, ecosystem health, water supply for irrigation and other purposes, navigation, recreation, climate change and the treaty’s governance structure.
    The U.S. negotiating team includes five federal agencies led by the State Department.

    On the Canadian side, the British Columbia government’s B.C. Decision lists 14 principles that outline its priorities for the modernized treaty.

    Additionally, the Canadian negotiating team includes the federal government and three Indigenous nations, all with their own priorities. Local governments in the Canadian portion of the basin have also organized into a formal committee with its own set of recommendations.

    With so many players and interests in the mix, some observers doubt even an overhauled Columbia River Treaty will be able to handle all concerns.

    The original treaty was negotiated and implemented in an era when the legal rights of Indigenous nations were barely recognized and standards for public consultation were much lower.

    As a result, the treaty was designed to serve only the narrow interests of federal agencies responsible for hydropower production and flood protection to the exclusion of everything else—including the health of the river’s salmon and other aquatic species.

    The decision-making structure used to implement the treaty is also narrow, with little space for public input or oversight.

    To address all interest groups’ hopes and fears in the context of future climate uncertainty, Columbia River Treaty negotiators would need to forge numerous complex compromises, radically expand the treaty’s scope to make space for them all and build in flexibility to adjust to changing conditions.

    As negotiations enter their third year and stakeholders grow anxious, academics are warning it’s unlikely the treaty alone will produce a comprehensive solution.

    WHAT'S AN IRBO?
    At the September 2019 Columbia Basin Transboundary Conference, an informal group of water resource experts released a draft proposal for broadly reforming water governance in the Columbia River Basin.

    The proposal’s authors believe the watershed’s issues “go beyond the current, or likely future, scope of even a ‘modernized’ treaty.”

    As a solution, they proposed creating a new joint entity called an International River Basin Organization, or IRBO.

    These kinds of organizations already operate in more than 110 international watersheds.

    “IRBOs are one way that basins around the world have found they can coordinate better and manage unexpected problems,” says Barbara Cosens, a law professor at the University of Idaho who helped develop the 2019 proposal. “It has provided [them with] greater adaptive capacity.” cosensCosens believes such an organization would improve decision-making in the Columbia River Basin.

    “[An] IRBO will unquestionably help meet the deficiencies of the treaty [by providing] a mechanism for enhanced public engagement and transparency, coordination and scientific review, and can operate as a referral resource to address emerging issues,” the governance-reform proposal states. “Those who live in the Columbia River Basin must adapt to climate change, changing energy markets, shifts in land use and a changing society. All will therefore benefit from the formation of a forum that responds to social and ecological change.”

    For an example of how such an organization could work in the Columbia River Basin, Cosens points to the Great Lakes Basin. There, eight U.S. states and two Canadian provinces work together through the Great Lakes Commission.

    CLOSED NEGOTIATIONS
    Frustrating to many, Columbia River Treaty negotiations are conducted behind closed doors. Within the limits of confidentiality, however, governments have a duty to keep their constituents informed.

    This week’s similar press releases notwithstanding, the two sides have taken significantly different approaches to keeping the public updated.
    Canada has invested in an extensive public process with a formal advisory council, detailed newsletters and dozens of open-ended public meetings.
    In contrast, the United States has limited its engagement with the public to spare press releases and five limited “town hall” meetings, which have allowed for minimal two-way dialogue with attendees.

    Canada has granted official observer status to three Indigenous nations based in its side of the basin, which are participating actively as part of the Canadian negotiating team.

    So far, the United States has declined to include tribes on its negotiating team, though it has engaged them in periodic consultations and invited representatives to make presentations as expert advisors during formal negotiating sessions.

    For some basin residents, especially in the United States where public engagement has been less robust, the inability to know what’s really happening is concerning.

    Under the State Department’s current public engagement practices, stakeholders have no direct way to voice concerns aside from waiting to submit comments at occasional town hall events or sending messages into a “black box” email account.

    Furthermore, there’s no indication of how negotiators handle feedback they receive.

    “One thing we learned very early on … was that many of the stakeholders in the basin felt that decisions on operations of the Columbia were made behind closed doors without any public input whatsoever,” says Cosens.

    Establishment of an IRBO could alleviate criticisms surrounding lack of transparency in negotiations.

    "TRACK RECORD OF FAILURE"
    Environmental advocates hope a modernized treaty will support more international collaboration to improve ecosystem health across the whole watershed.

    But they worry negotiators will maintain the status quo, with the environment taking second place and each country dealing with it domestically.

    They’re also concerned about the treaty’s ability to adapt to changing conditions with climate change.

    Several months after negotiations began, a collection of 30 environmental organizations wrote a letter to the State Department expressing concern “that the U.S. negotiating team has distanced itself from the regional expectation that ecosystem function will be a formal purpose of the treaty.”

    The letter also emphasizes that the four federal agencies chosen to support the State Department on the negotiating team “have a twenty-five year track record of failure when it comes to managing the hydrosystem in a manner compatible with salmon. … This history underlies our lack of confidence that the current composition of the negotiating team will aggressively advocate for ecosystem flows and other measures necessary to protect and recover [Endangered Species Act listed] populations and resident species.” keenleyside.damThough negotiating sessions would likely still be confidential, an IRBO could help facilitate better public engagement to help people understand what is happening and feel their voices are being heard and responded to.

    Cosens says that in the Great Lakes Basin an umbrella organization exists as a representative of the two countries.

    That group serves as a point for coming together on new issues as they arise and educating the public on current matters. A citizen’s advisory body and a science advisory body offer advice on new and existing problems.

    As part of this mission, the Great Lakes Commission holds an open forum every two to three years to update the public on important developments.
    “There’s an ongoing learning process that takes place,” says Cosens.

    “COMMUNITY OF THE COLUMBIA”
    Cosens recognizes concerns that an IRBO could be just an “academic idea” or another top-down bureaucracy. She emphasizes the proposal she helped write grew out of recently strengthened institutional connections across the international border.

    “If done right, I think [an IRBO] will build a regional approach to problem solving and resilience in the watershed,” says John Osborn, a Washington-based conservationist. “But to get there you have to start with understanding. You have to build trusting relationships. You have to build a ‘community of the Columbia.’

    For more than six years, Osborn has been working with Indigenous nations to coordinate an annual conference series called One River–Ethics Matter. The effort aims to bring people together to reflect on the history of the watershed and forge connections that can help guide its future.

    For Osborn, gatherings like this are a catalyst for people to identify shared goals. Ultimately, he says overcoming division is about “introducing people to each other and allowing [them] to work together for a common purpose.”

    In such a large and diverse region, where people have sometimes neglected to even include both countries on maps of the watershed, simply broadening the decision-making dialogue would be a positive step. What is a treaty, after all, if not a relationship?

    Graeme Lee Rowlands has traveled the length of the Columbia River and worked in both the American and Canadian sides of the Columbia River Basin. His writing on issues related to the Columbia River Treaty has appeared in numerous publications. He is on twitter at @gleerowlands

  • Columbia Insight: Hydro-fade. Pac NW power production is in dramatic flux

    By Steven Hawley
    June 17, 2021.

    snake river damsjpg 0a737256e566bbe3A draft power plan for the Pacific Northwest, due for release this summer, outlines challenges for defenders of hydropower, as well as opportunity for those who say its time for some dams to go.

    The report, from the Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPCC), forecasts power demand in the region will remain flat or slightly decline through 2030.

    Climate change will make both hydropower production and salmon recovery more challenging. Renewables will continue to proliferate, and the price of solar will continue to drop.

    That last development places some daunting new challenges in front of utilities in the region.

    The bulk of power produced in the Columbia River Basin comes from 31 dams whose power output is marketed and sold by the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA). Less than half of it is put to use by consumers inside the Pacific Northwest. The rest is sold south via high-capacity power lines known as the Western Intertie Network to electricity-hungry cities in Southern California.

    These “secondary,” outside-the-home-territory transactions were once a reliably lucrative arrangement for the BPA. On the open market for electricity sales, midday demand sent prices soaring.


    Tumultuous market conditions of the last decade aren’t an anomaly—the way we produce electricity is undergoing profound change.


    The federal power marketing authority could meet California’s needs, still keep the lights on in Seattle and Portland, and collect handsome profits from its California ventures. This windfall, in turn, was used to buy down rates for what the BPA calls its “preference” customers inside the Pacific Northwest.

    This customer base is comprised of public utility districts and rural electrical co-ops around the region, who rely on long-term “firm” power contracts with the BPA.

    The happy result for these preference customers has traditionally been some of the cheapest electricity rates in the country. But with the rapid development of California’s ambitious renewable energy policy, hydropower’s long joyride on the Columbia River appears to be slowing down.

    California solar changes Pac NW profits

    solarThe contrast between California’s energy transformation and the Pacific Northwest’s aging, mid-20th century dams is startling. Since the early 2000s, California has built over 12,000 megawatts of solar power. In terms of capacity, this’s nearly equal to what those 31 dams on the Columbia produce.

    California has taken a giant leap toward modernizing its energy system to reflect 21st-century realities.

    By contrast, the Columbia River’s flagship power plant, Grand Coulee Dam in Washington, was built in 1937. The average life expectancy of a dam is 50 years. (More than half of the dams in the United States have exceeded that time frame.)

    But the trouble isn’t limited to infrastructure that’s aging out.

    The economics of solar power are providing utilities as well as consumers with unprecedented opportunity to make the switch. The price of a solar panel has dropped 89% since 2010, according to the International Renewables Agency.

    Last year marked the beginning of a solar mandate for residential construction in the Golden State, with every new home there required to feature solar panels on its roof.

    Utility-scale solar projects have spread across California. Last year, the 8Minute solar energy company inked a deal with the City of Los Angeles to provide 400 megawatts of solar power, with 1,200 megawatts of battery storage to boot, for less than $25 a megawatt hour.

    For comparison’s sake, the four lower Snake River dams average 900 megawatts of power production annually. But that energy costs significantly more than what 8Minute will deliver to Los Angeles. BPA customers on firm power contracts are paying $37 a megawatt hour.

    Since 2009, BPA’s rates have risen 30%. Aging dams, deferred maintenance and upgrades, and funding federal pensions for the BPA’s 2,100 employees virtually guarantee the agency’s rates are going up.


    “We hit a place where standard industry practices diverged from the policy landscape in the West.”Ben Kujala, Northwest Power and Conservation Council


    Meanwhile, the price of solar is predicted to fall further, at least through 2030.

    Steve Kern, the former head of Cowlitz PUD in southwest Washington, summed up the tenuous nature of the BPA’s future in 2018, not long before he retired.

    “A financial cliff is coming,” said Kern, noting that BPA’s rates were already higher than the going market rate, and its power prices are forecast to be 55% above those market rates by 2028. Who’s going to sign up for BPA power at those prices?”

    New world confirmed

    Gone, too, is the ready availability of profitable midday electricity sales. Energy wonk blogs buzz with allusions to “the duck curve”—a glib turn of phrase that describes how electricity prices are now lowest in the middle of the day when they used to be highest—thanks in large part to solar panels’ peak production that occurs then.

    So much electricity is available now in midday, in fact, that prices routinely dip below $10 a megawatt hour, and occasionally head into negative territory—meaning producers are paying consumers to take it.

    The duck curve helps explain why the BPA’s debt problems—$15 billion in the red—are mounting. Cash reserves of almost a billion dollars in 2009 were reduced to near zero in 2019 on the agency’s power sales ledger.

    A profitable summer of 2020—good water supply and a hot Southern California summer—helped shore up finances in the short term. But with historic drought gripping the West this summer, quick profits are less likely.

    The long-term outlook isn’t so rosy. And it isn’t just critics of the BPA who are pointing this out.

    The Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPCC) is an interstate compact between Idaho, Washington, Oregon and Montana, created with the passage of a 1980 federal law that aimed to balance the needs of salmon recovery and electricity production in the Columbia River Basin. The governors of each state appoint two representatives to the eight-person voting body, which ultimately ratifies or denies a range of Council policies.

    Council staff writes plans and recommendations for the Bonneville Power Administration, for both its salmon recovery efforts as well as ensuring an adequate and reliable supply of electricity.

    The Northwest Power Act, the law that created the NPCC, isn’t perfect: its critics point out it lacks regulatory teeth; that is, the recommendations made by the Council amount to little more than that.

    Ed Chaney, who in the 1980s was Idaho Governor Cecil Andrus’ right-hand man on salmon recovery issues, and who has sued the Council several times over its failure to institute effective salmon recovery policy, is skeptical of NPCC’s continued existence.

    “The Council has accomplished the incredible feat of overseeing the expenditure of billions of public dollars and produced the opposite of what the Power Act required,” says Chaney. “Snake River salmon and Bonneville are now both threatened with extinction.”

    Chaney has tracked how the Council’s work on salmon recovery was ceded back to the BPA and NOAA over the years as litigation over endangered salmon stocks began to dominate recovery plans.

    Despite abdicating the salmon recovery portion of its mission, every five years the Council still produces a report on the energy picture in the region, and makes forecasts based on a survey of factors that affect power supply and demand.

    As work began on the current draft plan, Ben Kujala, the NPCC’s power division director, was initially taken aback by the results of the model they deploy to help craft the Council’s energy report. It was forecasting the need for a massive build-out of gas-fired power plants, a move at odds with what was happening on the ground.

    “The forecast still had elements of how we’d forecast prices in our previous power plans,” says Kujala. “But we had hit a place where standard industry planning practices had diverged sharply from the policy landscape in the West.”

    The model’s inputs were updated to reflect that current reality. A final draft of the ninth power plan will be ready sometime this summer, but initial findings of the plan have been previewed on several occasions in Council proceedings.

    The draft report confirms the tumultuous market conditions of the last decade aren’t an anomaly—the way we produce and distribute electricity is undergoing a profound change.

    Hydro’s reliable appeal

    Kujala, who moved over to the NPCC from a job with the Bonneville Power Administration as an energy analyst, cautions that the decision for utility managers isn’t as simple as signing an energy contract with a solar provider. He points out that utility managers and their commissioners might be inclined to stick with the BPA, paying more for power that comes with perks.

    “Convenience has value,” says Kujala. “You sign up with a [BPA preference customer contract] and you get reliable power that is shaped to meet your customers’ demand. It’s a nice tidy package delivered to your doorstep.”

    On the flip side, the vulnerability of that same contract is the vagaries of its price: BPA doesn’t set a fixed rate for its preference customers’ power purchases. When rates soar, as they have over the past decade, those same customers at least cast a furtive glance at what might be a better deal elsewhere.

    So is solar a better deal?

    It’s a decision, says Kujala, that utility managers face with some trepidation—but not, if he can help it, without good information to aid in deliberations. Where the future lies will very much depend on the size, location and specific needs of individual utilities.

    “A solar project has a fixed price,” he says. “You know what you’re getting. Sure, you might have a few cloudy days, but if you do a $25-a-megawatt solar project, you’re pretty sure you know what’s coming out.”

    By contrast, a drawback of a long-term contract with the BPA, says Kujala, is price uncertainty, particularly in an era of profound change in the energy business. A 20-year term is standard for preference customers.

    Tony Jones is an Idaho energy economist. He’s studied the federal hydropower system on the Columbia for three decades, and has a piece of advice for utility managers.

    “You don’t want to be the first to sign one of those 20-year contracts,” he says. “There’s a scenario here where a few key customers head for the exits. That leaves the remaining customers with rate increases to make up the cost of those departing customers.

    “In any business, a shrinking customer base is a death spiral. And you don’t want to be the PUD in the region stuck with the prospect of trying prop up the BPA.”

    The best way for Bonneville to survive, says Jones, is to get rid of its most vulnerable assets. The worst of the lot, he figures, are the four lower Snake River dams.

    Reassessing Snake River dams

    Kujala has been asked often since Idaho Rep. Mike Simpson proposed a concept for removing the four lower Snake River dams about whether the NPCC’s draft power plan will provide any insight into the feasibility of that prospect.

    He says the updated model they’re using is capable of providing a picture of what the federal hydropower system would look like without the Snake River dams. But in part because of the hotly contested politics of dam removal, he’d want the input of Council representatives.

    “What the Council does well is we pull everyone into a room, we make them all sit there and we go through everything in exhaustive detail,” he says. “We say ‘these are the inputs you wanted, these are the conclusions that came out,’ and we go through those slowly and methodically. We absolutely have the capability of doing it, and I think we could do it in maybe a more nuanced way than what’s been done so far. But it would be a big process.”

    The public will have a chance to weigh in on the draft plan at an as-yet undetermined time this summer, an opportunity Kujala encourages citizens to take.

    “Part of what we’re here for is to be helping people understand what’s going on in the power system,” he says. “We want to be one of the places people can turn to.”

     

    Steven Hawley is a journalist and filmmaker from Hood River, Oregon. He’s covered Columbia River Basin power and fish politics for the better part of two decades.

  • Columbia River Treaty: November 2013 Update

    November 11, 2013

    By Pat Ford

    Bonneville damThis is an update to SOS supporters on re-negotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, and SOS’ work on it.

    Recommendation to the State Department.  In December, the Northwest’s regional recommendation on the Treaty will be transmitted to the Department of State. The recommendation will likely come from the states and Tribes as well as federal agencies. Save Our wild Salmon and our colleagues hope to support it, but must wait to see it.

    While SOS has some problems with the final draft of that recommendation, issued over a month ago, we support it as the basis to start talks with Canada. It recommends that negotiations begin promptly, and that ecosystem function (or if you will, the health of the river) power production and flood control as a Treaty purpose. We think the best way to address its shortcomings is in the context of moving forward into talks with Canada.

    It is not clear if most Northwest public utilities will support moving forward. We hope they do. Utilities are asking Bonneville Power to change the final draft, and Bonneville is unsurprisingly spending much more time talking to them than to us.

    Senate Hearing. On November 7, Chairman Ron Wyden (D-OR) and his Senate Energy Committee held a full hearing on the Treaty in Washington D.C. We were pleased that Senator Wyden urged prompt action to re-negotiate, and to add ecosystem function to the Treaty, in part due to climate change, which is significantly affecting the Columbia-Snake Basin and its waters already. Greg Haller of the Pacific Rivers Council testified on behalf of several groups, including SOS, to echo Senator Wyden. Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Jim Risch (R-ID) are on the committee and also attended.

    It’s important that fishing and conservation groups meet with Northwest Senators on the Treaty as soon as we can. Funds to get to Washington D.C. are an issue, but one way or another we’ll make sure the Senators know our views.

    Conservation Caucus. A conservation/fishing caucus to work on the Treaty is taking shape, to help coordinate work by several organizations and recruit more, and to spread the work as much as possible at a busy time for all our groups. Center for Environmental Law and Policy, Pacific Rivers Council, Sierra Club, Water Watch of Oregon, and SOS are the main caucus members right now, but we intend it to grow. In addition, several U.S. organizations are meeting with some of our British Columbia counterparts in mid-November, as we hope a first step towards a cross-border Treaty network and alliance.

    Climate Change. This past summer, water temperatures at the eight mainstem federal dams on the Columbia and Snake were over 70 degrees for almost 45 straight days across the whole system. This is bad news for people as well as salmon, and an indicator why the Columbia River Treaty must be modernized to make the health of the river an equal Treaty purpose. This is urgent. River users have many disagreements about its management, but we hope all will agree on this.

    ###

    Pat Ford is past executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon and working on the Columbia River Treaty on behalf of SOS.

  • Columbia/Snake Salmon NEPA Analysis Public Scoping Comment Period: A Summary

    February 2017

    1comment cards.webThe three Northwest Dam Agencies – Bonneville Power Administration, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and U.S. Bureau of Reclamation recently completed the first phase – Public Scoping and Official Comment Period - of a court-ordered NEPA EIS Analysis. On May 4, 2016, United States District Court in Portland rejected the federal government’s 2014 Salmon Plan for the Columbia/Snake River Basin based on violations of the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act. This was the fifth federal salmon plan for the Columbia/Snake Rivers to be rejected now by three judges across twenty years.

    Following on his May ruling, presiding judge Michael Simon ordered NOAA-Fisheries in July to produce a new, legally-valid and science-based Salmon Plan (or Biological Opinion) by December 2018. He also ordered the Northwest dam “Action Agencies” to complete a full, fair, and comprehensive NEPA Review and produce an Environmental Impact Statement that updates critical information and considers all reasonable salmon restoration measures, including the removal of the lower Snake River dams – an option that the agencies have steadfastly avoided even analyzing for two decades.

    -- Find more information on the May 2016 Simon Ruling here. --

    1mccoy.workmanThe Public Scoping and Comment Period closed on February 7, 2017 but only after significant numbers of citizen comments, detailed policy comments and scores of media stories in print, radio, television and online. Read on for highlights from the Public Comment Period and links to further information.

    -- See a listing of and links to the media coverage about the Fall 2016-Winter 2017 NEPA Review Public Scoping and Comment Period here. --

    Despite efforts by the “Action Agencies" to bury this important public comment process amidst a chaotic election cycle and the year-end holidays, conservation and fishing advocates did an excellent job generating media coverage, contacting elected officials, and organizing comment and turnout at more than a dozen public meetings. More than 2,000 citizen advocates turned out for rallies to free the Snake and to attend the agencies’ public meetings. And the press paid attention – more than 50 stories and opinion pieces appeared last fall and early winter in print, online and on television and radio and included salmon, orca, fishing, and river advocates' perspectives. There were numerous citizen and community leader meetings with state and federal elected officials. Close to 400,000 people in the Northwest and nation submitted their official public comments expressing support for the restoration of a freely-flowing lower Snake River as a critical part of any legally valid salmon protection plan in the Columbia Basin.

    -- View photos from the public meetings (and the 2016 Free the Snake Flotilla) across the region here. --

    1mccoy.sea.inside.jbIn addition to citizen comment, scores of entities in the region also submitted detailed public comment – delivering recommendations to the Action Agencies about issues of critical concern as they begin what must be a full, fair, comprehensive and transparent NEPA Review and consideration of all salmon restoration alternatives, including the removal of the four high-cost, low-value lower Snake River dams. Below find a select list of comments from federal agencies, Tribes, States, utilities and NGOs asking the Action Agencies to, among other things, carefully, thoroughly and fairly consider the costs, benefits, opportunities and tradeoffs associated with the removal of the four federal dams on the lower Snake River.

    State of Oregon

    State of Washington

    Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission

    Nez Perce Tribe

    Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

    City of Lewiston, Idaho

    Pacific Fisheries Management Council

    Seattle City Light

    National Wildlife Federation

    Save Our wild Salmon Coalition/Earthjustice

    Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association

    Coastal Trollers Association

    NW Energy Coalition / Idaho Conservation League

    Natural Resource Defense Council

    Sierra Club

    Orca-Salmon Alliance

    Natural Resource Economics

    1Free the Snake Seattle 12.1.16

  • Commercial and Sport Fishing Ad in Oregonian

    Oregonian_Logo
    May 26th, 2009
    Commercial and Sport Fisherman post ad in Oregonian calling for Obama’s leadership on Columbia & Snake River salmon and steelhead recovery.

  • Courthouse News: Four Washington Dams Again on Chopping Block

    By Karina Brown
    January 10, 2020

    VANCOUVER, Washington — Farmers, fishermen and environmentalists sparred Thursday over a proposal to breach four dams on the Snake River to prevent extinction of salmon born there.orca.drone1

    The time could be ripe for the proposal long favored by environmentalists, with requirements under decades-running litigation dovetailing with measures called for by a state task force bent on saving endangered killer whales.

    The government is preparing to take an official position in February on whether breaching the four dams is necessary. U.S. District Judge Michael Simon ruled in 2016 that the Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation and Bonneville Power Administration must consider that action in their latest environmental impact statement on the operation of the 14 federal dams in the Columbia River System.

    Despite decades of work and billions spent to save salmon from damage caused by the dams, Simon wrote that the Columbia River system was “still crying out” for a major overhaul. He criticized the agencies for their failure to consider breaching the dams and for insisting that measures similar to those already in place would work to recover salmon. The National Wildlife Federation filed the lawsuit in 2001 and Simon’s 2016 ruling was the fifth in the case to scrap the government’s plan after finding it too meek.

    Washington state legislators earmarked $750,000 to produce a report on Washingtonians’ views on the potential removal of the four dams: Ice Harbor, Lower Monument, Little Goose and Lower Granite. The action was called for by Gov. Jay Inslee’s Southern Resident Orca Task Force, which determined that the main problem facing endangered orca is lack of the Chinook salmon the whales eat. The consultants’ final report will be out in March. It won’t make recommendations but will inform Inslee’s comments on the February environmental impact statement.

    Jim Kramer, one of the consultants hired to produce the report, led Thursday’s discussion with 10 panelists, ranging from farmers, barge operators, and dam operators to river guides, fishermen and whale biologists.

    The Washington Clean Energy Act calls for the state to be fueled by 100% clean energy by 2045. Sara Patton, former executive director of the Northwest Energy Coalition, said that would be possible with an increase in wind and solar energy, a transition to a smart energy grid and better efficiency standards.

    But Birgit Koelher, policy lead for power at Bonneville Power Administration, said power produced at the four dams is an important part of compliance with the new law.

    “There are times of year when Bonneville is struggling to just meet demand,” Koelher said. “The Snake River dams can pretty much instantaneously double their power generation when the conditions are right. For now, they’re a pretty darn valuable asset.”

    For Joel Kawahara, salmon fisherman and vice president of the Coastal Trollers Association, breaching is the obvious answer.

    “Wild salmon want undisturbed rivers to do their thing in,” Kawahara said.
    But Alex McGregor, chairman of the Association of Washington Business Rural Economic Vitality Taskforce, said potential disruption to irrigation and transportation farmers rely on is a hard stop.

    “For farmers, the issue is not a considerable amount of money,” McGregor said. “The issue is much deeper than that. Farmers love what they do, they believe in farming and so many people measure what the land was and want to see it better at the end of their tour of duty. I’ve yet to hear any way that that can be done with breaching.”

    A 2019 economic study by ECONorthwest found that the economic benefits of breaching the dams far outweighed those of keeping them operating. The environmental impact statement will include updated calculations of the dams’ costs and benefits.

    Dave Johnson, manager for the Nez Perce Tribe Fisheries Department, said tribes have been unable to harvest the salmon guaranteed in treaties in exchange for ceding their land.

    “It always seems as if somebody else’s livelihood is more sacrosanct than others,” Johnson said. “And we are the only ones with a guaranteed livelihood. In the treaties it said, ‘You’re always going to have that livelihood.’ The U.S. got millions and millions of acres of land yet we haven’t really had any harvest for years.”

    Sam Mace, inland Northwest director with Save Our Wild Salmon, said she hoped the discussion would create the meaningful action for salmon that litigation has failed to achieve.

    “We’ve just lost so much time in the last 20 years,” Mace said. “There’s urgency for our orca and for our salmon. And there just haven’t been enough of those conversations happening between different interests to figure out some of these issues.”

    Public comment on the draft report will be accepted until Jan. 24.

  • Crapo: Be open to dam breaching - Idaho Statesman - May 30, 2009

     

    ID.statesman.logoMay 30, 2009
    Idaho's senior senator says he's willing to wade into the region's most heated issue.
    by Rocky Barker
    Fresh off his success leading a collaboration on the Owyhee Canyonlands, Sen. Mike Crapo said finding a lasting solution to the Northwest salmon crisis means opening the door to all people and all options.  And that means a possible solution that he doesn't support must be considered. "Does that mean dam breaching must be on the table?" he said. "Yes. But that also means not dam breaching must be on the table." This is the strongest, most public declaration by any Northwest congressional leader that the region should consider removing the four dams on the lower Snake River in Washington that scientists say make it hard for the endangered fish to recover their once plentiful runs. Crapo's new stance contrasts with a longtime steadfast opposition to dam breaching from Idaho Republicans as well as downstream Democrats. The issue long has challenged some of the Northwest's most deeply held values. Salmon are a symbol of the Northwest's past, provide food and spiritual sustenance for American Indians and supply a fishing industry worth hundreds of millions of dollars. But the dams provide low-cost power and make it possible for shipping lanes to run to Idaho's Lewiston port. The powerful turbines they contain and the sun-warmed slackwater behind them, though, can be deadly to salmon smolts swimming out to the ocean to live their adult lives, scientists say. Idaho's senior senator before Crapo, Larry Craig, was so opposed to breaching that he tried to cut funding for federal scientists documenting dam passage problems. Crapo, though, now says that he is willing to lead a larger effort to find a real solution. He challenged members of the Northwest Energy Coalition meeting at the Red Lion Downtowner Friday to join him.
    Federal officials and three of the four state governors - including Idaho Gov. Butch Otter - say they are already collaborating. The Bush administration had convened what it called a collaborative effort between federal dam managers, wildlife officials, the region's Indian tribes and the states of Idaho, Washington, Montana and Oregon to write a salmon and dam plan that would meet a federal judge's approval. Oregon and the Nez Perce Tribe did not agree with the plan, called a biological opinion. And environmental groups, including the Northwest Energy Coalition, fishermen and fishing industry groups, were not included. Crapo said those groups need to be involved in any solution, along with Idaho water users, shippers, utilities, farmers and industry. The energy coalition is prepared to participate, executive director Sara Patton told Crapo. So is the group leading the salmon fight - Save our Wild Salmon - said Pat Ford, its executive director. Crapo's willingness to talk without ground rules on breaching is significant, Ford said: "Obviously that's been a big hurdle in the past." All sides will have to be patient for a truly collaborative process to work, Crapo said, noting the Owyhee wilderness bill took eight years to resolve. "I don't think salmon have eight years to wait before we take action," said Bill Sedivy, executive director of Idaho Rivers United, one of the groups challenging the federal salmon plan in court. "At the same time I believe this is the only way we are going to get a lasting solution." Representatives from Idaho Water Users and Otter's office did not return phone calls Friday. A Bonneville Power Administration official noted that three of the states, including Idaho, and most of the region's tribes had already signed off on a plan. U.S. District Court Judge James Redden, who presides over the salmon and dam lawsuit, has given the Obama administration two months to take a fresh look at the issue before he rules on the plan. Redden urged the administration to put breaching four dams on the lower Snake River back on the table, as well. Crapo suggested a litigation "time out" would help start a collaboration. In 1990, as federal officials first pondered listing Columbia and Snake river salmon and steelhead under the Endangered Species Act, another Republican senator, Mark Hatfield of Oregon, brought all of the region's players together to seek a consensus solution. The Salmon Summit, as it was called, laid the groundwork for the region's current salmon recovery efforts but failed to find a consensus. Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, and Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., have both expressed interest in working on a regional effort to find a solution. "I would think politically it would be helpful if there was Senate support from all four states," Crapo said.

     

  • Crosscut - Obama: Good news for Columbia River salmon

    crosscut.logo
    April 23rd, 2009

    By Daniel Jack Chasan
    The courts, which have rejected plans for Columbia River dams for decades, finally have a good governmental partner. But plenty of legal snarls remain, along with issues relating to climate change. 
    Last month, the same Obama administration that won't defend its predecessor's spotted owl recovery plan went into federal court and defended its predecessor's biological opinion on operation of the Columbia River system dams. That BiOp found — predictably — that by improving habitat in the tributaries and estuaries, modifying dam operations a bit, and continuing to barge salmon around the dams, the government could operate its dam system without jeopardizing the recovery of listed salmon stocks.

    Inevitably, salmon advocates sued. The case is currently before U.S. District Judge James Redden, who has been hearing motions and arguments about Columbia River salmon and dams for years. Redden and other federal judges have already tossed out three biological opinions since the first Columbia River system salmon population — Snake River sockeye — was listed in 1991. A fourth opinion was explicitly short-term. None has been approved.

    The latest BiOp may also wind up in the trash. But Redden has made it clear that he doesn't want the cycle to begin all over again. In a February letter to attorneys on both sides, he said pointedly, “I have no desire to remand this biological opinion for yet another round of consultation. The revolving door of consultation and litigation does little to help endangered salmon and steelhead.” If this BiOp proves defective, too, he'll want the two sides to work something out.

    That's “going to take a willing partner on the other side,” says Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda, who is handling the Columbia River dam litigation. Mashuda is optimistic. He figures that the Obama administration's decision to defend the BiOp doesn't signal a commitment to Bush salmon policies, but rather reflects a lot of empty offices at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (The Fish and Wildlife Service, which is responsible for the spotted owl plan, has filled a lot more vacancies than NOAA, which is responsible for salmon.) Mashuda says Obama's choice of Oregon State University marine ecologist Jane Lubchenko to run NOAA is “a good thing,” and once lower-level jobs are filled, “I hope and expect” that the agency will take a new approach toward the Columbia River and its dams.

    At the very least, the change of administration provides the best chance in a long time to find a solution. Judge Redden sent the Clinton administration’s 2000 biological opinion back to the National Marine Fisheries Service because the measures it proposed to mitigate damage to wild salmon runs weren’t “reasonably certain” to occur. That remand called basically for a little tweaking. Instead, the Bush administration came up with an unprecedented new theory: the big dams had become part of the environmental baseline, so the government didn’t have to consider their effects on wild salmon. Redden rejected that reasoning. The 9th Circuit sustained his ruling.

    The current BiOp is less of a stretcher, but it too seems unlikely to survive Redden's scrutiny. In his letter to the attorneys before last month's oral argument, the judge asked about a number of questionable assertions — not least the novel idea that dam operations would not jeopardize the recovery of a listed population if the population was “tending toward recovery.” Redden noted that the Endangered Species Act's “regulations define jeopardy as an action that 'reduce[s] appreciably the likelihood of both survival and recovery of a listed species....' Federal Defendants contend that a species avoids jeopardy if it is 'trending toward recovery,' or is in position for 'eventual progress towards recovery.' Neither of those terms appear[s] in the regulation, and Federal Defendants make no attempt to determine what actual recovery means.”

    The feds also oversold both the likelihood and likely impact of habitat improvements in the river's estuary and tributaries. “They estimate that implementation of estuary habitat actions will cost $500 million over the next 25 years,” Redden noted. “Yet, Federal Defendants and the Bonneville Power Administration are committed to only $5.5 million per year for the next 10 years, and much of that funding requires Congressional approval. Additionally, many of the proposed estuary habitat actions rely on private and third-party actions. How can these actions be characterized as reasonably certain to occur?”

    Funding aside, the whole estuary scheme seemed implausible: "In March 2008, the Independent Scientific Advisory Board (ISAB) concluded that the Estuary Recovery Module ('the Module) 'does not meet ISAB standards as a scientific document.' ISAB criticized the Module's lack of critical scientific review and the lack of scientific support for many of its optimistic assumptions.”

    Upstream, since “Federal Defendants are unable to identify specific habitat actions beyond 2009, how can they rationally rely on benefits from such actions in reaching a 'no jeopardy' conclusion?”

    And how can they rationally conclude that whatever may or may not be adequate now will be adequate in a Columbia Basin with a warmer climate? Mashuda says a number of studies suggest that what must be done now to help salmon populations recover will in the future only be enough to hold the line. The BiOp discusses climate change but its focus is short-term (the next 10 years) and it proposes nothing tailored specifically to helping fish survive in a warmer Columbia Basin.

    Yet the projections suggest that those effects may be catastrophic for some fish populations. The University of Washington's Climate Impacts Group reports: “Rising stream temperatures will likely reduce the quality and extent of freshwater salmon habitat. The duration of periods that cause thermal stress and migration barriers to salmon is projected to at least double . . . and perhaps quadruple . . . by the 2080s for most analyzed streams and lakes. The greatest increases in thermal stress would occur in the Interior Columbia River Basin and the Lake Washington Ship Canal.”

    By and large, water will stay coolest at the highest elevations and latitudes. For Columbia River system salmon stocks, the higher latitudes lie in British Columbia. The higher elevations lie in the wilderness of central Idaho. Salmon aren't going to reach B.C. ever again unless someone breaches Grand Coulee. That leaves Idaho, from which salmon must run the full gauntlet of lower Snake River dams. “That's very much on our minds,” Mashuda says.

    The BiOp steadfastly avoided any consideration of breaching the lower Snake River dams. Redden found this questionable. “What will the Federal Defendants do if their proposed habitat mitigation actions do not result in the anticipated benefits?” he asked. “Why not include a contingency plan in the biological opinion, similar to the 2000 BiOp? There, Federal Defendants committed to seeking Congressional authority to breach the lower Snake River dams if the mitigation plans failed. The ESA requires federal agencies to avoid any irreversible or irretrievable commitment of resources that may foreclose any future reasonable and prudent alternative. To ensure that dam breaching retains the potential to be an effective mitigation measure (i. e., that there will be listed fish in the river that benefit), why not begin analyzing the scientific and technical feasibility of such an option now?”

    On the other hand, Redden was definitely not making a plea for breaching. "I don't know if breaching the dams is the solution," he told the parties; "I hope it's never done."

    Redden has, however, issued an order — agreed to by both sides — to spill more water over the dams this spring in order to help young salmon make their way down the river. This marks the fourth year of court-ordered spring spill. Assuming he grants another order, it will be the fifth year of spill in the summer.

    Salmon advocates think the spills are working. The government credits ocean conditions, rather than court-ordered spills or other freshwater improvements, for relatively high salmon returns to the Columbia. Mashuda doesn't buy that. He points to a February letter from Michele de Hart, manager of the Portland-based Fish Passage Center. “There is no doubt that ocean conditions are important, but this does not reduce the importance of migration conditions and fish survival in-river,” de Hart wrote. “The NOAA conclusion that attributes the 2008 high return of sockeye salmon to marine/estuary conditions while discounting the effect of higher in-river survival, lower proportion transported and improved in-river conditions, is flawed because it fails to recognize that fish must reach the ocean/estuary alive to benefit from good ocean conditions. Even the best ocean conditions will not resurrect dead fish.”

    Giving all the credit to the ocean has had practical consequences. If freshwater conditions don't have much influence, why make economic sacrifices to improve them? Some changes of dam operation proposed in the current BiOp “are actually modifications that go to the fish's detriment,” Mashuda says. “For all the minor modifications to the dams that the agencies tout — and they really are minor if you're looking at it from the fish's perspective — the fact is that at the same time they've cut back on measures, like spill and flow, that we know to be effective. ”

    Mashuda also points south to the Sacramento River. Salmon from the Sacramento and Columbia “all experienced the same ocean,” he says. Yet Sacramento River chinook populations have crashed spectacularly, and commercial chinook fishing has consequently been shut down from the Sacramento north through much of Oregon for the second straight year. “The Pacific Fishery Management Council . . . estimated that only 66,286 adult salmon returned to the Sacramento River to spawn,” Jane Kay reported in the San Francisco Chronicle. “Six years ago, the peak return was 13 times higher.”

    Ocean conditions weren't kind to Sacramento River fall chinook, but neither were the people who manage California's water flows. In addition to warm ocean waters in 2005 and 2006, Kay wrote, “in 2004 and 2005, the years the chinook were born and traveled to the ocean, the federal Central Valley Project and the State Water Project exported record amounts of Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta water to urban and agricultural customers throughout the state, documents show.”

    There's no real connection between Sacramento River chinook and their more northerly cousins, but it's hard not to find parallels. “We look to the Sacramento as the cautionary tale of what you don't want to happen on the Columbia,” Mashuda says.

    Daniel Jack Chasan is an author, attorney, and writer of many articles about Northwest environmental issues. You can reach him in care of editor@crosscut.com.

    View this story online at: http://crosscut.com/2009/04/23/federal/18967/

    © 2009 Crosscut Public Media. All rights reserved.
  • Crosscut: Feds' latest Columbia River plan: Play me an old-fashioned melody

    DaggerFallsNews analysis: Hopes and vague promises didn't fly with Bush administration courts, or even two years ago. But here we go again.

    By Daniel Jack Chasan

    January 27, 2014.

    Will the fifth time be the charm? Probably not.

    The federal government has just come out with a new biological opinion (BiOp) on how to conduct the operations of its Columbia River system dams. The feds have been issuing Columbia River BiOps since Bill Clinton sat — and did whatever else he did — in the White House. And for all that time, the federal courts have been slapping them down.

    The newest version was unveiled on January 17. It looks remarkably similar to the last one, which was prepared by the administration of George W. Bush and repackaged with little substantive change by Obama officials. United States District Judge James Redden rejected that Bush-Obama hybrid document in 2011.

    If history provides a guide, this new BiOp will soon be the target of litigation by conservation groups and it, too, will eventually be tossed out by the courts. “Unfortunately,” said Save Our Wild Salmon executive director Joseph Bogaard in a press release, "this latest blueprint is virtually indistinguishable from the plan rejected by the district court in 2011."

    If, as they say, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over again but expecting a different result, those people at the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS, aka NOAA Fisheries) must be a pretty wacky bunch. Or not. The feds have basically tried to preserve business as usual. Through two decades of court losses, they have largely managed to do so.

    How did we get here? The background may be somewhat familiar, but worth recalling in what has become a court fight with a life cycle as predictable as that of the salmon. Here goes:

    1. The Columbia River system drains a quarter-million square miles, an area roughly as large as France. The Columbia itself rises in British Columbia, 1,200 river miles from the Pacific, and is joined at the Tri Cities by its largest tributary, the Snake, which rises in Wyoming.

    2. For millennia, the Columbia was the greatest chinook salmon river in the world. Up to 15 million wild salmon of all species made their way up the river to spawn.

    3. Tribes all along the river caught, dried and ate the salmon.

    4. Because it drops so far (roughly half a vertical mile) on its journey from the mountains to the sea, the Columbia has more hydroelectric potential than any other river in North America. From the 1930s to the 1970s, the federal government built a series of dams on the Columbia and its tributaries, including the Snake.

    5. Those dams, known collectively as the Federal Columbia River Power System, still generate some 40 percent of the electricity used in the Northwest — some of it in Seattle and Bellevue — and enable tugs and barges to travel all the way to Idaho.

    6. The dams blocked salmon passage to and from salt water. Some were built with fish ladders. Others weren't. Once the dams went in, the numbers of fish plummeted. This came as no great surprise.

    7. Dams haven't been the salmon's only problems. Columbia River salmon runs were clearly being overfished by the late 1800s. Much of the river's estuary has been filled in. Spawning streams have been affected by farming, ranching and development. To increase survival rates, for many years the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has trucked young salmon downstream around the dams. Federal, state and tribal hatcheries have pumped out many millions of fish. The river still supports only a fraction of its former runs.

    8. Starting in 1991 with the red fish (sockeye) of Idaho's Redfish Lake, Columbia and Snake river salmon populations have been listed as threatened and endangered species.

    9. Because of this, the federal government has had to issue biological opinions on whether or not operation of the dam system will jeopardize their recovery.

    10. Four BiOps have already been rejected by federal courts.

    No one has decided yet to sue over this version, but a bet in favor of litigation would seem less a gamble than an investment. As the newest act in this long-running drama plays out, though, there are some themes to remember.

    Like its predecessor, this BiOp relies heavily on habitat improvements rather than changes in dam operation; the court may or may not be convinced that these improvements will really happen — or that they will produce the benefits that the federal agencies predict.

    The easiest way to avoid making major changes in the status quo is by arguing that salmon will recover just fine if you do something else.

    Historically, something else has primarily meant building and operating hatcheries that pump new fish into the river system. Now, virtually everyone concedes that traditional hatcheries don't really work. Cue habitat improvements.

    There is no reasonable doubt that habitat in the Columbia Basin has changed in ways that are harmful to fish. There is also no reasonable doubt — certainly, there didn't seem to be much doubt in Judge Redden's mind — that the feds have used the promise of habitat improvement to avoid doing other things.

    When Redden tossed the last BiOp, he said it was "based on unidentified mitigation measures that are not reasonably likely to occur." He also expressed "serious concerns about the specific numerical survival benefits NOAA Fisheries attributes to habitat mitigation."

    The new BiOp relies heavily on habitat improvements, too. Some seem more likely to occur. But not all are well-defined, and attributing specific survival benefits to any of them is still pretty far-fetched. As Bogaard notes, it's hard to place specific numbers on the effects of habitat improvements that haven't yet been made.

    The government still doesn't want to use the B word: It does not seriously contemplate breaching the four lower Snake River dams. Those dams were the last ones built — I've described them before as the caboose on the federal gravy train — and contribute relatively little to the regional power grid. Losing them wouldn't drive up electricity prices. They do, however, provide appreciable generating capacity. More important politically, they make it possible for Lewiston, Idaho to function as a deep-water port.

    Fish advocates have long wanted to see those dams breached and have called for a hard-nosed balancing of their economic benefits against their environmental costs. The federal agencies haven't wanted to go there. Redden made it pretty clear he wanted breaching included as an option if other things failed. The BiOp merely says that if all else fails, the feds can launch a study to see how they should study the prospect of breaching.

    The BiOp recommends spilling less water — water that is key to speeding young salmon downstream over the dams.

    Nature designed young Columbia River system salmon to float downstream with spring floods. The pools of slack water created by the dams slow the river, extending the trip and creating dangerous conditions for young fish. Spilling water over the dams instead of running it through turbines speeds the young fish on their way. But water over the dam equals electricity foregone, so the BPA, which transmits and markets power from the dams, and public utilities, which rely on power from the dams, have wanted to minimize spill.

    Of course, restoring wild fish populations isn't the only reason for which electrical sales are foregone. Water that floats barges through lock systems isn't generating any electricity either. Nor is water channeled into irrigation canals. And large amounts of power are used to pump water uphill from dam pools to those canals. Nevertheless, diverting water to help fish is always the issue.

    Starting in 2006, the courts ordered the federal agencies to spill more water in the spring. Evidence suggests more fish survived. In 2010, the feds were about to propose reducing spring spill. Two different scientific groups hammered the proposal. The feds said never mind.

    But that's not what they say in the new BiOp. There, they suggest less spill.

    The feds' document suggests that what's already being done should enable salmon to do just fine with climate change.

    Salmon spawn in cool water. Average temperatures in the Pacific Northwest are expected to rise. Some streams will become too warm for the fish. In a December report, the University of Washington's Climate Impacts Group predicted "challenges" for salmon by 2050. "Rising stream temperatures and altered streamflows will likely reduce the reproductive success of many Washington salmon populations," it said. "Relative to 20th century conditions, under a low-warming scenario, juvenile salmon growth rates by mid-21st century are projected to be lower in the Columbia Basin."

    Protecting genetic diversity, so that some fish are more likely to withstand temperature changes, becomes key. So does protecting spawning areas at higher elevations, where temperatures will stay lower. The spawning streams in the mountains of Idaho are already protected within federal wilderness. But passage to and from those streams is blocked by eight dams, including the four on the lower Snake. Wild fish advocates argue that the threat of climate change raises the Idaho spawning streams to a new level of importance and should focus an even stronger spotlight on the Snake River dams. So far, the feds have shown no sign that they agree.

    It is "remarkable to me how much science NOAA itself has done on climate change and how little is applied in this opinion," says Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda. The BiOp recites a lot of what is known, but "when it comes to actually doing something about [climate change], they don't lift a finger."

    "This plan does nothing for climate change," Joseph Bogaard agrees. By saying that measures already being done to mitigate other threats to salmon will also mitigate the effects of higher temperatures, "they're effectively double-counting." As Mashuda puts it, there are "two threats, and they're using the same bullet on both of them. That just doesn't work."

    The BiOp argues that the river already produces enough chinook for endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales.

    Killer whales live all over he world. The orca pods that hang out in Puget Sound are distinct and therefore worthy of federal proetection because they don't interbreed with other groups, and they have their own culture: their own linguistic peculiarities, their own cuisine. Other killer whales eat sea mammals. Ours eat fish. They prefer salmon. In fact, like many of us, they prefer chinook salmon. Why? Presumably because chinook are bigger and fattier, and a killer whale doesn't have to catch as many — and therefore doesn't have to expend as much energy — to get a decent meal.

    Recent research suggests that the killer whales may need nourishment badly in the spring, when huge chinook runs once swam back through their range to the Columbia. If we want to restore the orca population, we may have to (at least partially) restore those salmon runs. The BiOp suggests that current hatchery operation will more than compensate for chinook losses at the dams — ignoring the obvious fact that if you want more orcas, you need more orca food.

    The logic of restoring chinook in order to restore orcas cropped up in NOAA Fisheries' own BiOp for operation of the Central Valley Project and California State Water Project. However, that reasoning doesn't seem to have crossed the California border.

    This BiOp certainly hasn't embraced it. And the BiOp hasn't rejected the argument dreamed up by the Bush administration that federal agencies can comply with the Endangered Species Act if the endangered species in question is "trending toward recovery." Under the Endangered Species Act, the goal for any listed species must be recovery, not mere survival; "they didn't all die on our watch" doesn't cut it.

    But what does the law really require? The Bush inspiration was that it didn't require much: Presumably if there's one more fish next year than this, even if full recovery requires thousands more, you comply with the law. This was justly ridiculed at the time, and Redden expressed his skepticism. “I still have serious reservations about whether the 'trending toward recovery' standard [that the Bush administration unveiled in this BiOp] complies with the Endangered Species Act, its implementing regulations, and the case law,” he wrote in 2009.

    But Redden, who rejected the last three BiOps, didn't have to consider such theoretical issues in 2011. Because the last BiOp relied on empty promises about habitat restoration, he could strike it down without doing so. But Redden had clearly lost patience. The feds had had their three strikes in his court.

    Faced with a fourth, Redden might very well have ordered significant changes in or taken partial control of river management. But Redden has retired. Will a new judge feel comfortable saying the government has used up its chances? Will a new judge give the government only one strike? Some observers doubt it — and are guessing that the feds doubt it, too.

    Daniel Jack Chasan is an author, attorney, and writer of many articles about Northwest environmental issues.

    Fore more information: http://crosscut.com/2014/01/27/environment/118402/feds-latest-columbia-river-plan-chasan/

     
  • Crosscut: "Feds vs. fish: crying over spilled water" by Daniel Chasan, April 26th, 2010

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    by Daniel Jack Chasan, April 26th, 2010
    As in George W. Bush's time, the Obama administration still seems to be telling the courts to just trust their work on protecting Columbia River salmon runs. What's a judge to do but listen, instead, to the science?

    The federal agencies that operate dams and sell power on the Columbia River will keep spilling water over the Lower Snake River dams next month to float young salmon downstream. They didn't want to. But with the weight of scientific opinion clearly against them, they decided to make the best of a bad thing.

    The Bonneville Power Administration, the Bureau of Reclamation, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the Northwest office of NOAA had asked the federal district court to let them follow a 2010 Spring Fish Operation Plan under which they'd stop spilling water over the lower Snake River dams by May 1.

    On April 19, they told the court never mind.

    Given all the scientific opinion to the contrary — everyone but NOAA thought that stopping spill was a bad idea — their chance of convincing the court seemed slim.

    Those agencies are, of course, the defendants in the long-running suit over the Biological Opinion issued by the Bush administration in 2008, tweaked but basically defended by the Obama Administration last year, and scheduled to make another appearance in U.S. District Judge James Redden's court next month.

    Federal courts have been hammering them over biological opinions for nearly 20 years. Redden, who tossed the Bush administration's first attempt at a BiOp, has expressed strong skepticism about this one, too.

    When last seen, the BiOp would have made this year's proposed spring fish operation plan the new norm: federal agencies could spill or not spill at their own discretion. The fish operation plan was basically an effort to jump the gun.

    Nineteen years after Columbia and Snake River salmon populations were first listed as threatened or endangered, we're still arguing about how to get them down the river.

     

  • Crosscut: A new film argues Lower Snake dams make life worse for salmon, orcas and everyone in the PNW

    As the documentary Dammed to Extinction tours the Northwest, its filmmakers argue time isn't up for orcas or salmon if we act now.

    August 13, 2019

    By Hannah Weinberger

    DammedToExtinctionPuget Sound’s orca population is starving. Between runoff that creates marine pollution, ocean noise that makes it hard to hunt and rapidly declining runs of the salmon that dominate their diet, the southern resident killer whales face grim prospects. 

    The world has taken notice. But despite numerous governmental and academic reports, international news articles and public demonstrations, the total number of whales in the three Puget Sound pods has declined from 98 at the time of their listing as an endangered species in 1995 to 73 this month. 

    Filmmakers Michael Peterson and Steven Hawley hope a new documentary can make a difference. The two Pacific Northwesterners premiered Dammed to Extinction at SIFF on May 9 in Seattle to viewers galvanized by last summer’s footage of mourning whale mother Tahlequah carrying her dead calf for 17 days through Puget Sound. 

    The pair have been working for 4½ years on the 51-minute film, which is based on a book Hawley wrote and made in partnership with the nonprofit Center for Whale Research. It explores both the majesty and plight of orcas before pivoting to a controversial solution: Keeping the whales alive means immediately increasing their access to chinook salmon, and many advocates say the best way to do that is by tearing down four dams in the Columbia River System. 

    In the film, respected orca researchers like Wild Orca’s Dr. Deborah Giles and Center for Whale Research’s Dr. Ken Balcomb join a cast of devoted and often eccentric whale advocates to argue that dams in the Lower Snake River are both unnecessary for humans and lethal to fish.

    They reduce available habitat, raise water temperatures and loom as concrete-and-turbine hurdles to migrating salmon from the Columbia’s upper headwaters in British Columbia to its mouth in southwestern Washington. The filmmakers claim the dams also displaced and disempowered indigenous communities all along the Columbia. 

    Scientists like Balcomb believe tearing down the four Lower Snake dams offers salmon recovery the biggest “bang for their buck.” Economists, fish advocates and retired state fishery personnel claim in the film that the dams provide mostly surplus energy and consequently are obsolete. Meanwhile, the filmmakers profile the people and fish whose lives were made harder by the dams’ construction. It’s a film that explores the American instinct to industrialize at all costs and the species we sacrifice when we attempt to harness natural resources. 

    The filmmakers, who both live along the Columbia River, returned to Seattle for a screening last week, just as orcas surfaced in the news again. Days ago, the Center for Whale Research announced the presumed deaths of matriarch J17 and males K25 and L84. Seven of the eight reservoirs in the Columbia system are hotter than 68 degrees Fahrenheit, effectively baking vulnerable juvenile Map.Dams.SnakeRiver.Peterson.Hawleysalmon. And consulting agency EconNorthwest just released a study for Vulcan that found removing the dams would create a net-positive economic impact on the region.

    With their film, Peterson and Hawley have established themselves as key interpreters of the politics of endangerment and the places where people and nature clash.

    Crosscut caught up with them ahead of their second Seattle screening at Patagonia’s downtown store to discuss their message and how this issue has resonated with people in the region since their premiere. This interview has been edited for clarity.

    Why did you choose Seattle for the premiere? 

    Hawley: It’s really the epicenter of this issue. I feel like in some ways this is a story about the haves and the have-nots. Seattle's a growing urban area, for young people particularly, one of the more sought out places to settle down and, on the other hand, what is the cost of that development? We're seeing the ecosystem of the Salish Sea suffer. One of the reasons people find it so attractive here is because you have the urban on one side and this relatively wild intact ecosystem with these crazy large apex predators on the other. How much longer are they gonna be around at this point is kind of the question.

    Between everything impacting orcas and salmon in the Pacific Northwest, why did these dams capture your interest?

    Peterson: [Between] unfavorable oceanic conditions and lack of habitat and predation and warm water — there's a lot of different reasons the salmon aren't doing well, but absolutely the biggest thing we could do to restore them is to remove those dams. 

    Hawley: Michael bought a house right above [the now-removed] Condit Dam on the White Salmon River [in Oregon], so as the process of sketching out this movie was going on, he was watching what was happening to that river [as a result of the dam’s removal] literally from the deck of his house. We just fished there last week. And it was absolutely stunning to see what was literally a mud pit in the fall of 2011 turning to this beautiful trout and salmon stream, you know? 

    Peterson: I have watched salmon spawn right next to my house, where they haven’t been in a hundred years. So I've seen how positive dam removal can be. Ironically, it's kind of a miniature version of the four Lower Snake River dams. Those dams don't make sense economically either. 

    Why are scientists focused on the four Lower Snake River dams out of the total eight? 

    Hawley: Economically, those are the most dispensable of the eight, and biologically they're the most damaging. 

    Peterson: The Snake has less water flow, and it's in Eastern Washington, where the temperature gets really hot behind those reservoirs. So the Columbia can handle a little slowdown of water better than the Snake can. 

    You've been screening this film all across the Pacific Northwest — have you had different reactions to it throughout the state? 

    Hawley: Spokane brought out surprisingly the most vocal and even irreverent audience that we had. They were openly pro-dam removal, booing some of their own congressional reps when their images came up on screen. 

    Peterson: Which goes to show it's not an east-west thing, it's not a Republican-Democrat thing. It's doing the right thing. [The response] has been overwhelmingly positive for our message, which is: Removing the Lower Snake River dams will help save the orcas and definitely will restore the salmon runs. We've had very few negative responses to the film yet, which is surprising to me. 

    Did you realize your film would have the international relevance that it does?

    Hawley: It's a heartbreaking story. When we started making the film, the whales were in much better shape than they are now. So a year ago, when we were watching footage of orca Tahlequah push her dead calf around, that was hard for both of us to watch that. We didn't anticipate that the decline of the southern residents and [that] people's very emotional response to that would become part of the film and part of the response to screening the film, and it has. And I think, as filmmakers, as unfortunate as that is for the southern residents, the timing of our film in that respect maybe couldn't be better, because they're out of time. If we're gonna do something, it's gonna have to be as soon as our political system will allow it to happen. 

    You had many experts across different fields telling you one thing about dam removal, but not all scientists and policymakers agree. What was the process for you, of figuring out who to trust? 

    Hawley: I have been following this issue for a decade now, and it took me a long time to figure out which information to trust. 

    Two things: One was follow the money. It’s gotten to the point where, if you just tell me the authors of a study and who's funding it, I can tell you pretty reliably what their conclusions are going to be. And that goes for NOAA [the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration], too. 

    The other thing is I think there's something to be said for scientists that have an affinity for the creatures they've spent their careers studying. And I think it's really impossible to spend 10, 20 or, in the case of Ken Balcomb, 40 years studying these animals without developing a real affinity for their habits, literally who they are.

    Ken gave us unrestricted access to himself and his archives. To be able to go in and have access to all that archival footage [was huge]. 

    How did you fund the movie? 

    Peterson: We've been struggling to make this film for four years. We've been doing it on our credit cards. and if it weren’t for the generous donations form the Ruth Foundation and help from the Center [for Whale Research], we might not have gotten it going. 

    We're far from having the film paid for. We're still really quite a long way in the red. But they gave us enough money to at least get it out.

    How do you feel about the growing awareness and momentum since the premiere?

    Hawley: It's a double-edged sword. I'm elated at people's response to this, and their compassion for the whales and to get the dams down, but it's an emotional roller coaster following this issue because both the salmon and whales are reaching biological deadlines for us to do anything about their predicament.

    Peterson: I’m elated, like Steven said, but I also feel surprised because I didn't think we'd make this much progress.

    People from over here [in Seattle] watch the film and read about these dams and think, “Oh my goodness, it's a no brainer. There's no reason not to take them out.” But if you grew up next to those massive concrete structures, you can't imagine them being torn down. 

    I grew up in Richland, a conservative town right on a reservoir. I was pretty ignorant of the damage those dams do. But they made electricity that helped us make the aluminum that built bombers for World War II. These are part of the society and the culture and the thought of them being gone, I never thought that I’d see it in my lifetime. 

    I’m blown away, honestly, that we have a Republican congressman [Mike Simpson of Idaho], who's actually said, “We're gonna look into [breaching the dams].” That it makes national, international news. 

    The officials you spoke with were all retired, and while you did have video showing Bonneville Administrator Elliot Mainzer commenting on the Bonneville Power Administration’s fragile financial situation, you didn’t show interviews with anyone currently in a regulatory or scientific capacity who was for keeping the dams. Was it difficult to find those people?

    Hawley: They won't talk on record. The culture of our federal government currently has become so oppressive — I guess there's no other word for it — that agency scientists simply are not allowed to talk on record. We had people who wanted to, but they knew what the consequences would be, right? 

    What did you learn about orca or fish behavior through this project that surprised you?

    Hawley: The thing that’s most astonishing to me is the familial and emotional ties whales have to one another. Cetaceans have a fourth lobe in their brains devoted to processing emotions, so it's quite possible that they are emotionally more sophisticated than us. You can certainly see that in their interactions both with each other and with people lucky enough to experience that.

    What human stories really affected you? 

    Hawley: Carrie Schuster's family land was drowned behind Ice Harbor Dam. Her tribe, the Palouse, prior to that had been on this 150-year diaspora because they never signed a treaty and were just sort of considered a nonentity. So she spent the first half of her life trying to keep those cultural ties together, and at least the last decade of her life working on getting the dams down, so [that] there will be some vestige of her culture's way of life left for her sons and daughters and grandchildren. That's mind-blowing. I never thought I would find a character like that when I started. 

    Can you talk to me about your choice to include a call to action at the end of the film?

    Hawley: I think it's been hard for me to approach this issue because it's personal enough for me that I have a hard time being “reporterly” and objective about it. And because I'm a reporter, I also have a streak of cynicism in me. But the reality is the only way that this situation is going to change is if people [do something] — whether it's calling your senator, organizing a screening of the film, attending a protest. It's the only option we have to change things, and it's the only way things have ever changed. In a worst-case scenario, even if we lose the orcas, we may gain something in terms of our cohesion as a democracy, as a community, as people. Then it won't have been all for nothing. 

    Is there any hope in the forecast for what could happen? 

    Hawley: Currently it's grim, but salmon are incredibly resilient creatures. These whales are not here in the Salish Sea because they're out in the Pacific looking for fish. And as long as they're looking for fish and finding enough of them to stay alive, I think, as filmmakers and as citizens and advocates and people who love living here and love those critters, we're obliged to keep fighting on their behalf.

    What’s the best way to get someone involved in this issue? 

    Hawley: I think the most meaningful thing you can do for salmon or whales is to go take a look at them. I think once most folks lay their eyes on a salmon in Idaho that's traveled 1,000 miles to spawn in the upper reaches of the Salmon River basin, or an orca breaching out in the Sound, that's inspiring. And then the next steps to take are kind of self-evident after that.

    Peterson: You make your voice heard, you vote, you put on a silly orca outfit and walk to the Capitol. Or support one of these organizations we have listed on our website. 

    You max out your credit card to get a film made. 

    Hawley: Right.

    Peterson: Exactly. 

  • Crosscut: Can Washington save salmon without removing dams? 

    April 29, 2019

    By Courtney Flatt  

    John Day Dam fish ladderRemoving the lower Snake River dams would be difficult, but advocates remain committed to helping struggling salmon.
      
    What to do with the four lower Snake River dams and how to best protect imperiled salmon have been tough questions for decades. They were the focus at a conference on salmon Tuesday at Boise State University’s Andrus Center for Public Policy.  The Bonneville Power Administration’s top official said removing the dams would be difficult. Elliot Mainzer, the head of the BPA, said he’s doing “significant due diligence” to understand the best path forward to protect salmon, while still keeping energy costs low. He said the administration must adapt and change. “We’ve got to try to lean in a bit more for the fish,” Mainzer said. The BPA is one of the agencies in the midst of developing a plan for the Columbia and Snake rivers. One piece of that plan could be to remove or alter the four lower Snake River dams. Mainzer said the four are integral parts of the power system’s flexibility and capacity. Without the dams, Mainzer said, “You would have a smaller system, and — absent other changes — you would be looking at having to put flexibility, capacity and energy focus on other parts of the grid.”
      
    Several food growers worried that removing or altering the Snake River dams could mean the growers would no longer have access to irrigation water, like Pasco, Washington-based wine grape grower Jeff Gordon. “We’re just above Ice Harbor Dam. That’s a pretty big body of water — it’s at least over a quarter of a mile wide and 90 feet deep. My sense is that water would be too far away for us to get to,” Gordon said. A solution will come down to working together, said Merrill Beyeler, an Idaho rancher and former legislator. Beyeler also has worked on salmon restoration in the Lemhi River Valley.

    “What I think has to happen is we have to find some way to advocate for each other. That means we do not leave anybody behind. We do not leave folks that depend on the Columbia River system to move the grain to the coast. We just don’t leave anybody behind,” Beyeler said. Tribal representatives said it’s important to have legislative support in Washington, D.C., before giving serious consideration to removing or altering the dams. Jaime Pinkham, the director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, said breaching the dams will be a “tough political lift to get through the halls of Congress.” He said a lack of congressional support for removing Snake River dams could lead to trouble for salmon. “It would not surprise me to see legislation introduced to either change the Endangered Species Act or do something as drastic, like we did with wolves, when we legislated their recovery,” Pinkham said. Right now, Pinkham said, flexible spill should be the main focus of restoration efforts. Other tribe members and fish advocates at the conference called for dam removal sooner, rather than later, to save both salmon and the Puget Sound orcas that depend on them for food.the  Chris Wood, the president of Trout Unlimited, said that to solve the problem, people have to start thinking on a bigger scale than they do now. “We’re not succeeding. We’ve spent $16 billion in one of the least successful recovery programs in the history of the world. That’s where we are right now with the status quo,” Wood said. He said carrying on the conversations from this conference could lead to a “far better place in five or 10 years than we are in today.” Looking decades into the future, U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, challenged the room to look for innovative solutions, like small modular reactors. He said people need to stop protecting their own interests and find ways to make keep energy rates low and protect salmon. “Make no doubt about it, I want salmon back in Idaho. Can this be done? I honestly don’t know. I don’t know if the willpower is there to do it. I don’t know if the willpower is in Congress to do it, but I will tell you that I’m hardheaded enough to try,” Simpson said.

  • Crosscut: Judge: Failed salmon restoration has cost billions

    slider.spill.damTuesday 17, May 2016

    by Daniel Jack Chasan    

    It’s Groundhog Day. Again. Or maybe not. On May 3, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon trashed the federal government’s plan for managing dams on the Columbia River and its tributaries, saying it leaves threatened and endangered salmon at risk of extinction. This makes the fifth time since the Columbia’s salmon were protected under the Endangered Species Act that a federal court has tossed a biological opinion on the dams.

    This is Simon’s first ruling on the issue, but it built on previous rulings by retired District Court Judge James Redden, who had rejected three previous opinions.

    Simon’s decision preserves the feds record of never having won a round in the court fights. On the other hand, they’ve largely preserved the status quo — for more than a quarter century.  The idea of tearing down four dams on the Snake River has yet to face any serious federal study. Procedurally, not much has changed with Simon’s ruling. The current biological opinion — BiOp, in federal lanuage — expires at the end of 2017, and Simon has given the feds until March 2018 to produce a new one.

    But substantively, Simon has issued the broadest and most aggressive rejection of a Columbia River BiOp so far. He picks up strong language from his predecessor about federal agencies’ “cynical and transparent attempt to avoid responsibility for the decline of listed Columbia and Snake River salmon and steelhead.” But he also covers new ground, going into fresh detail about climate change.

    Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon, says, “This is a very significant — and significantly different — ruling.”

    A week after the decision, a spokesman for the losing party, NOAA Fisheries (aka the National Marine Fisheries Service), declined to comment on it. He said federal agencies at the regional and national levels were still discussing what comes next.  Thirteen Columbia River system salmon population have been listed for protection under the Endangered Species Act since 1991. So, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Bonneville Power Administration, which operates and sell power from the dams, have had to consult on Columbia policies with NOAA Fisheries, which has had to issue biological opinions.

    This time around, Judge Simon basically said that NOAA Fisheries had offered up the same old, same old — and that wasn’t good enough. The most recent BiOp, he said, “continues down the same well-worn and legally insufficient path taken during the last 20 years.” He also faulted it for relying on “a recovery standard that ignores the dangerously low abundance levels of many of the populations of the listed species.”

    That flawed standard is “trending toward recovery,” something the Bush administration dreamed up for the 2008 BiOp and the Obama administration subsequently embraced. Basically, trending toward recovery means that if you have more fish this year than last, you’re not jeopardizing the long-term survival of the fish. It ignores the fact that a) it may take a long, long time to get the numbers up to a sustainable level; and b) at low numbers, a population runs a high risk of going extinct. “Without ‘trending toward recovery,’ ” says Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda, “the bar [for future BiOps] is automatically higher.”

    The 2014 BiOp was chock-full of information on climate change, but it was devoid of any specific new action to deal with changing climate. Mashuda pointed out at the time that there were two threats — the river conditions that have reduced fish runs and climate change — “and they’re using the same bullet on both of them. That just doesn’t work.” Since then, climate and our knowledge of its effects have marched on. Mashuda now points to last summer when high water temperatures led to the death of nearly half the sockeye that started up the river, including virtually all of those bound for Idaho.

    Simon’s opinion called attention to the BiOp’s lack of both new climate information and new proposals to deal with climate change. He said “the court is troubled” by NOAA Fisheries’ apparent effort to ensure that “the climate literature reviews . . . bolstered NOAA Fisheries’ contention that all new climate information is encompassed by NOAA Fisheries’ previous analysis.”

    Simon also said that the feds had to prepare an environmental impact statement. Yes, they had done impact statements  in the 1990s, but those reflect information that the judge dismissed as “stale.”

    Opponents have always argued that the feds should at least consider breaching the four lower Snake River dams. Those dams, built in the 1960s and ’70s, generate a small but appreciable amount of the region’s electricity and enable barges to reach the inland port of Lewiston, Idaho. They also impede passage to spawning streams in the mountains of Idaho. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers barges fish around the lower dams, but salmon population numbers remain low. Snake River sockeye were the first Columbia River system salmon population listed under the Endangered Species Act.

    Climate change has made the dam issues stark: On one hand, Bogaard says, the dams produce power without generating greenhouse gas. On the other, the high-elevation habitat above them, already protected as wilderness, may eventually contain just about the only spawning streams in the U.S. portion of the Columbia Basin that stay cool enough for fish. Bogaard suggests that the choice isn’t, or at least shouldn’t be, between saving salmon and replacing the dams with power plants that burn fossil fuels. They can be replaced by wind and solar, he says, at relatively modest cost.

    Simon didn’t order the feds to consider breaching. But he left no doubt that he thought they should. “Judge Redden, both formally in opinions and informally in letters to the parties, urged the relevant consulting and action agencies to consider breaching one or more of the four dams on the Lower Snake River,” Simon observed. “For more than 20 years, however, the federal agencies have ignored these admonishments and have continued to focus essentially on the same approach to saving the listed species.  … These efforts have already cost billions of dollars, yet they are failing.”

    Now, Mashuda says, if the feds  keep dam breaching off the table next time, “they have to come up with some explanation why it’s reasonable to not even consider it. I can’t imagine how they could justify it.”

    No one has a clue what will happen next. The presidential election might have an impact, but the 2008 election brought no changes.

    Regional changes may prove more significant. Former U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings, an ardent defender of dams, is already gone from Congress. And time is running out on agreements that the federal government has with state governments and tribes under which the feds channeled a billion dollars to hatcheries and habitat improvements, in exchange for which states and tribes — but not Oregon, which didn’t sign — agreed not to challenge the BiOp. Those agreements expire next year. What will the state, which has never fought the federal biological opinions, do then? What will the tribes do? Will the congressional delegation keep deferring to the Bonneville Power Administration’s desire to continue operating the dams?

    “A lot has changed in the real world,” Bogaard says. “If we’re not going to follow the science and law, we’re going to wind up doing what we’ve done.”

    To view article with graphics go here.

  • Crosscut: Obama science goes schizophrenic on salmon restoration

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    A Biological Opinion factors in the effect of climate change on California salmon runs and the orcas that depend on them. So why is the recent BiOp by NOAA on the Columbia and Snake so oblivious? By Daniel Jack Chasan

    Has the Obama administration gone schizophrenic on salmon? Wild-salmon advocates who were disappointed when the Obama administration defended the last Bush Biological Opinion on Columbia River dam operations say that the government not only could have done better, it did better, just a few months back. They point to the government's recent Biological Opinion on operation of the Central Valley Project and California State Water Project as examples of what NOAA should have done here. The California opinion looks at impacts on salmon and other fish in the Sacramento and San Joaquin river systems, and on the Southern Resident Killer Whales (aka Puget Sound orcas) that eat some of those salmon. It is “better and I would say significantly better” than what the government has done on the Columbia, says Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda. It's “not necessarily a road map” for dealing with all the Columbia's particular problems, but it does address some crucial issues “probably in the best way we know how.” You can expect salmon advocates to use some of the approaches and some of the science that NOAA employed in California to attack what NOAA has done — or failed to do — in the Northwest.
     
     
     
  • Crosscut: Tribes see return of long lost fish

    By Courtney Flatt, June 19 2018lamprey

    When Aaron Jackson was growing up in eastern Oregon, he’d never seen a lamprey in the Umatilla River. Tribal elders remembered harvesting the fish there for ceremonies.
    But by the time Jackson was a kid, 40 years ago, lamprey were gone.

    Now, Jackson is the lamprey biologist for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. He’s overseeing one of the many efforts throughout the Columbia Basin in Washington and Oregon that aims to restore lamprey runs. Jackson hopes, one day, tribal members will be able to harvest lamprey from the Umatilla River — and that the fish will be self-sustaining.

    “To be able to have a harvest here in the Umatilla, we’ll be able to, once again, walk in the footsteps of our ancestors that harvested lamprey here since time immemorial,” he said.

    With funding help from the Bonneville Power Administration, the tribes have worked to move lamprey around the dams and up to the Umatilla River.

    “We understand the cultural significance of Pacific lamprey to the tribes which is one reason we’ve funded lamprey projects in the Umatilla,” said Lorri Bodi, vice president of environment, fish and wildlife with the Bonneville Power Administration. “As a food source for other creatures, lamprey are also very important to a healthy functioning ecosystem such as in the Umatilla River so it’s great to see our efforts paying off.”

    Tribal members were excited when they saw the fish start returning. In 2011, Jackson thought 129 fish in the river was a major step.

     

    Now, lamprey numbers have dramatically increased. So far this spring they’ve seen more than 2,600 fish migrating up the Umatilla River to spawn.

    Jackson said he thinks they’ll see at least 3,000 lamprey this summer. It’s still not enough for the tribe to harvest, but it’s moving in the right direction.

    “The due diligence has now moved to a sense of mini-accomplishment. We’re not there yet, but things are looking better,” Jackson said.
    Lamprey are what are native people in the Northwest called a “first food.” They’re served at dinners and feasts at the longhouse and used at funerals and weddings.

    “It’s important to have a healthy, robust and thriving population in the Umatilla River because not only do they have an ecological importance in the food web, but it’s also important for our tribal culture and our tribal history — to be able to carry on our traditions,” Jackson said.

    Although there’s still a lot unknown about Pacific lamprey, biologists do know they spend up to seven years as larvae in streams before migrating out to sea, where they live for up to three years before returning to spawning grounds in Northwest streams.

    In the 1960s and 1970s, it was a common practice to eradicate what people thought were “trash fish,” Jackson said. Managers in the West would often put the pesticide rotenone in the rivers to kill off fish like lamprey and suckers — and make space for more desired fish, like salmon and steelhead. All of this was before biologists realized the ecological importance of those lesser-loved fish.
    That’s about when the tribe first started noticing lamprey numbers in the interior Columbia Basin dip. The population became functionally extinct in the 1970s. Tribal members alerted others to their concerns.

    “Their concerns fell on deaf ears by managers for quite some time,” Jackson said.
    In the early 1990s, BPA began funding a lamprey restoration project with with the tribe. After years of research, the tribe began collecting lamprey from dams on the Columbia River, bringing them upstream and releasing them just before they spawned.

    Early on, things moved slowly.

    “You could count all the fish at Three Mile Dam (on the Umatilla River) on your two hands,” Jackson said. Tribal members traditionally harvested lamprey at that dam.

    Flash forward about 25 years.

    “Last year, we had a return of 2,076 lamprey to Three Mile Dam. This year, within the first three weeks of May we broke that record,” Jackson said.

     

    Jackson said lamprey numbers have also increased elsewhere, like near Hood River, where there are fewer obstructions for them to pass. They’ve also seen lamprey numbers come back as soon as dams have been removed on the Elwha and the White Salmon rivers.

    Biologists are also working to produce lamprey, like salmon are bred in hatcheries.
    “It’s one big experiment in the mid-Columbia Basin,” Jackson said.

    He said the tribes hope to release their first hatchery-produced lamprey in the next year or two. Then they’ll have more tools to help increase lamprey numbers to harvestable populations, good news for tribal elders.

    “It gives (the elders) an opportunity to reflect when the lamprey populations used to be like that when they were kids, and they had opportunities to harvest lamprey here that they haven’t had since the 1960s,” Jackson said.

    Right now, lamprey can be harvested at Willamette Falls, near Portland, a long way from home.

    Biologists have seen a lot of fish passage improvements on the main stem Columbia River, Jackson said, but that could come into question.
    When the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers put its 2019 budget proposal together, it didn’t request any additional funding for a 10-year lamprey passage project that’s wrapping up this year. Previously around $5 million had been dedicated to lamprey passage each year, said Matt Rabe, the Corps’ Northwestern Division spokesman.

    “We’ll continue to operate and maintain what is in place — the passage systems that were constructed over the past 10 years,” Rabe said. “We’ll continue to count the lamprey at each of our facilities. But as far as any new work, I think that that is probably on hold until future opportunities are investigated and approved.”

    Rabe said the Corps will continue to work with tribes to understand their priorities and concerns about lamprey passage.

    Jackson said it’s frustrating because they’re just starting to see progress.
    Those fixes on the main stem of the Columbia River probably contributed to getting lamprey up into the Umatilla River, a tributary of the Columbia, he said.

    “We have a long ways to go, like up into the Grand Ronde River,” he said, “if things come to a standstill and we don’t see funding for main stem efforts, it’s going to be hard times for lamprey in (the) upper (basins).”

    For now, Jackson said, lamprey numbers in the Umatilla River are only continuing to grow. He said others are starting to translocate adult lamprey after the success here. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation has started moving lamprey to the Grande Ronde River. The Nez Perce Tribe is also releasing lamprey into the Wallowa River.

    “It feels good that we’re doing something right in the environment for a change, instead of reading all the stories of things that are going wrong,” Jackson said.

    https://crosscut.com/2018/06/tribes-see-return-long-lost-fish

  • Crosscut: WA lawmakers pass on whale-watching ban aimed at helping orcas

    April 8, 2019

    By Rachel Nielsen from InvestigateWest

    J PodOrca Task Force members and Gov. Jay Inslee said the moratorium was needed to give the endangered whales a break from boat noise.

    Washington legislators came into their 2019 session brimming with proposals to help rescue Puget Sound’s imperiled orcas. But now they have dropped one of the most important — and controversial — ideas: a three-year moratorium on commercial whale watching.

    Lawmakers denied Gov. Jay Inslee's attempt to force commercial whale-watching boats to keep extra distance from three pods of orcas that summer in the waters of Puget Sound and the Salish Sea between Washington and Canada.

    In doing so, they rejected a key recommendation supported by the majority of nearly 50 researchers, state and tribal officials and others who served on the Southern Resident Orca Task Force.

    "The task force really felt it was critical," said task force Co-Chair Stephanie Solien, who is also a civic activist and vice chair of the leadership council of the Puget Sound Partnership, a state agency. "We felt that a temporary moratorium... would give them kind of a break, from just the constant noise and interference that science shows they experience when they are surrounded by whale-watching boats."

    Scientists say the noise of boat motors interferes with the whales’ ability to find its favored prey, chinook salmon, through echolocation. This biological sonar allows orcas to create a sonic map of their surroundings when they emit a series of clicks by moving air between nasal sacs near their blowhole. When these clicks hit such objects as a fish and bounce back to a listening orca, the whales can determine precise distance and location of that object — similar to a human listening for an echo.   

    Bills filed early in the legislative session would have prohibited commercial whale watchers from approaching a southern resident orca within 650 yards until 2023. Some whale-watching industry supporters called that a de facto orca-watching ban. Currently whale-watching boats and other vessels must stay 200 yards away from the orcas.

    The bill's sponsors struck the moratorium from substitute bills in both chambers.

    "I didn't think that that was necessary," Rep. Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, the lead sponsor of the original bill in the House, HB 1580.

    Blake said public testimony in the House persuaded him to remove the 650-yard limit from his bill, as did private discussions with whale conservationists and advocates for the whale-watching industry. He also learned that the commercial orca-watching fleet's presence alerts the crews of other vessels that orcas are in the vicinity, reinforcing the need to proceed through the water cautiously.

    "We would lose that if we shut them down," Blake said in an interview.

    Shane Aggergaard, a whale-watching boat captain and business manager, made a similar argument to the Senate Agriculture, Water, Natural Resources and Parks Committee in a Feb. 12 hearing on the Senate version of the bill, SB 5577.

    "If you have a moratorium, there won't be boats on scene to lead as an example," Aggergaard told the committee."You take us away, we can't possibly put enough enforcement out there to protect these animals."

    The Pacific Whale Watch Association touted orca-watching boats as warning tools for recreational, shipping and military vessels in a special addendum to the orca task force's final list of recommendations released in November. The association also said it gives sighting information to the Center for Whale Research, a nonprofit orca study and conservation group.

    "The whale-watching industry does care about these orca, and they are active on our task force," Solien said. "But they disagreed with that [moratorium] approach, and they were able to get support in the Legislature to withdraw that suspension."

    Sen. Christine Rolfes, D-Bainbridge Island, the lead sponsor of the Senate bill, said she took out the 650-yard-limit from her bill because "we did not want to destroy the whale-watching industry." She said the industry "builds public support for saving orca whales, and it's... part of our region's economy."

    "We also believe that if the whale-watching boats are behaving responsibly, [then] they set up the buffer and the other boats follow," Rolfes said.

    In addition, she said "most of the science indicated that you could be closer if you were going slow," as laid out in the bill.

    The legislation enjoyed strong bipartisan support in both chambers, with the House bill passing 78-20 in the House and the Senate version approved 46-3. Democratic House leaders plan to pass the Senate version and send it to Inslee.

    House Republican Leader J. T. Wilcox, R-Yelm, voted for HB 1580. "I probably wouldn't support a total ban [on orca watching]," he said in an interview. "That's why I supported the compromise."

    "To say that you can have a boat out there that's fishing, or a ferry that's transporting people, but you can't have somebody operating a boat and adding to the economy, full of people that want to look through their binoculars at an orca, just seems silly," he said.

    By contrast, Rep. Joe Fitzgibbon, D-Seattle, chair of the House Environment and Energy Committee, said he "very much would have supported a temporary suspension in order to just ensure that we were being as protective as possible” of the whales.

    “It was clear to me that that did not have support to pass," he said."I'm never interested in letting the perfect be the enemy of the good, knowing how incremental the legislative process can be."

    While there are scientists and environmental activists who see value in orca-watching vessels, at least one backed the original version of the Senate and House bills that contained the moratorium. Todd Hass, special projects liaison at Puget Sound Partnership, said at the Feb. 12 Senate committee hearing that noise pollution is a serious problem.

    "Why do we need to quiet the waters? Because orcas are highly auditory animals and take advantage of the typically great benefits of using sound-based signaling and hearing, rather than vision," said Hass, who holds a Ph.D. in marine ecology and has studied acoustic communication.

    The orca task force and Inslee’s moratorium recommendation applied only to southern resident orcas; other species, including Bigg's (also known as transient) orcas, were exempt. The transient orcas eat marine mammals like seals, and their populations are much healthier: Some 250 visited the Salish Sea in Washington and British Columbia last year. By contrast, Puget Sound’s resident fish-eating orcas now number only 75, down from a historic population size thought to have been around 200.

    Lawmakers in Olympia have retained many of the task force-recommended measures to lessen noise for southern resident orcas. Provisions in the bill include forcing boats to observe a "go-slow" zone of half a nautical mile in any direction from a southern resident orca; forbidding people from positioning vessels fewer than 400 yards behind an orca; and prohibiting the steering of a vessel or other object within 300 yards of an orca.

    Under current law, vessels are banned from approaching within 200 yards of an orca and from positioning a vessel in the path of an orca at any point within 400 yards.

    The Senate legislation, which lawmakers plan to send to Inslee, would also introduce a commercial whale-watch license, which will be required of all commercial whale-watch operators.

    The Senate bill is in the House Appropriations Committee and could receive a vote of approval from the committee on Monday. It then would move to the Rules Committee, which will decide when to schedule it for a House floor vote that would send the legislation to Inslee. The governor is expected to sign it.

  • Crosscut: Will limits on fishing free up salmon for starving orcas?

    April 22, 2019

    By Jes Burns

    Orca.waveThe organization that sets limits for commercial, recreational and tribal salmon fisheries in the Pacific Northwest wrapped up their work Tuesday at a meeting in Northern California.

    The Pacific Fisheries Management Council bases the limits on salmon run projections up and down the coast. While the 2019 chinook salmon catch will be slightly lower than last year, the coho fishery in Washington and northern Oregon will be much improved. Recreational anglers would benefit most from this.

    In addition, the council is starting work on plans to rebuild five Northwest fish runs considered to be “overfished,” a technical designation for when the three-year average of salmon returning to a river to spawn falls below a threshold set by fishery managers.

    “The overfishing doesn’t necessarily mean we caught too many fish. It could be because of a drought. It could be a result of many, many environmental things going on in the streams,” said Butch Smith, a charter fisherman who chairs the Salmon Advisory Subpanel for the council.

    The overfished runs include fall chinook from the Klamath and Sacramento rivers and coho from the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Snohomish and Queets rivers. Over the next few months, the council will determine whether fishing limits should be adjusted next year to help increase the number of salmon.

    The Pacific Fishery Management Council also kicked off a process that could lead to more salmon being available for orcas in the Pacific Northwest. The council learned last month that the National Marine Fisheries Service, the agency responsible for administering Endangered Species Act protection for marine species, is planning to step in to assess how fishing affects southern resident orcas.

    The endangered southern residents spend most of their time in Puget Sound but feed off Oregon and California certain parts of the year. There are fewer than 80 left, and they depend on chinook salmon for food.

    Ten years ago, a similar assessment determined commercial, recreational and tribal fisheries did not have a significant effect on the orcas’ food supply. But in a lawsuit, the Center For Biological Diversity argued new information about where the whales get their food warrants another look.

    “We definitely intend for this consultation to not just result in a new document with a new date stamp on it, but it will actually inform how they manage these fisheries. And they could take measures that are going to help the orcas recover,” said center lawyer Julie Teel Simmonds.

    New science shows that the southern resident orcas depend on several of the same salmon runs regulated by the fisheries council — runs on rivers as far south as the Rogue, Klamath and Sacramento.

    While federal officials say there's a likelihood that this process will result in fishery closures, the notice to council members said, “any activities that affect the abundance of chinook salmon available to southern resident killer whales have the potential to impact the survival and population growth of the whales.”

    There has been concern that Northwest fishermen will disproportionately be penalized in order to protect the orcas.

    “It’s just not a one-stop shopping fix. I think a country [Canada] and Alaska have to also be engaged in the recovery of these whales,” Smith said.

    The consultation won’t affect this year’s fishery, but officials aim to have the process complete in time to set salmon limits in 2020.

  • Crosscut.com: Oil tankers could doom Puget Sound’s orcas

    orcas1-550x440By Nick Turner, December 13, 2016 Canada’s recent approval for the construction of a pipeline in British Columbia could signal big changes for killer whales in the Puget Sound.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau gave the green light to a pipeline proposed by energy giant Kinder Morgan to transport oil from the sands fields of Alberta to Burnaby, British Columbia, at a rate of 890,000 barrels a day. The problem for the orcas is that the land-based pipeline, nicknamed the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, is expected to bring a sevenfold spike in oil tanker traffic through the waters of the Salish Sea.

    This carries heavy implications for local marine life, especially the orca population living in Puget Sound and along the coasts of southern British Columbia and Washington state.

    Both the United States and Canada consider the orcas there to be endangered, and their declining population was causing experts to worry even before the pipeline proposal.

    “Death by a thousand cuts, and this is a very deep cut,” says Deborah Giles, research director for the Center for Whale Research.
    Giles explains that if the present rate of decline continues — even without the Trans Mountain Pipeline — the southern resident killer whales could die off before the end of this century.

    Killer whales, sometimes called the “wolves of the sea,” are iconic animals in the Northwest. Native American and First Nation peoples on both sides of the border revere orcas, often depicting them in their artwork and literature. Some tribes believe the killer whale embodies the souls of deceased chiefs, others believe it rules the undersea world.

    Some of the worry around the pipeline is the risk of an accident, namely an oil spill or a mishap with a vessel traveling near the coast. But even without an accident, there is an inherent risk for the orcas.

    Like all cetaceans, the killer whales depend heavily on sound for communication, navigation and feeding. They use clicks, whistles and pulsed calls to figure out their relative location, discriminate prey from objects and interact with others using a dialect unique to each pod. The ability for killers whale’s to hunt, rest and socialize is hampered by boats, ferries and other vessels traveling through the water, Giles explains. The increased oil tanker traffic from the Kinder Morgan pipeline will simply compound that effect.

    “They’re spending more energy to find less food and we’re adding the equivalent of a rock concert,” Giles says. “These whales will not survive.”
    Karen Mahon of Stand Earth, a leader in the Canadian opposition to the pipeline, told reporters in a conference call that experts generally agree: The southern resident killer whales are doomed if the tanker traffic goes up.

    Kinder Morgan says it is collaborating with “coastal communities, aboriginal groups and other stakeholders” to better understand the important of protecting marine mammals like the killer whales. The company will be required by Canada’s National Energy Board to create a marine mammal protection program, to develop a summary of possible effects on aquatic life, and ways to mitigate those effects.

    Three main resident killer whale populations live in the northeast Pacific Ocean. The Alaskan resident population is the biggest of the three, with more than 500 killer whales. The northern resident group has approximately 250 orcas and frequents the inland waters of Vancouver Island and Johnstone Strait at the north edge of the island.

    The southern resident group is the smallest.

    The southern resident killer whale population consists of three pods. The J pod has 26 individuals, K pod has 19 and L has 35, totaling approximately 80 orca whales that spend most of the year foraging near the coasts of Washington and southern British Columbia. In comparison the northern resident group is doing much better; the adults seem much healthier and better fed, and their newborns are born in regular intervals and survive more often. This contrast, Giles says, shows that it’s harder for the whales to survive points near Washington and southern BC.

    A 2014 report by NOAA found, among other things, that members of the southern residents killer whale population hunt less and travel more when vessels are present.

    They also suffer the most chemical contamination documented among marine mammals around the world, and they favor Chinook salmon as their main source of food — a species also in decline.

    After the recent death of a 24-year-old orca mother, known as J28, and her 1-year-old baby calf, the southern resident population recently fell to the current 80, a low point that hadn’t been reached in decades.

    “We’re losing them because they’re starving,” Giles said. “We know what to do to save these animals, we need to get more fish in the water for them to find, but so far that hasn’t been a priority of the [U.S.] federal government.”

    Kinder Morgan admits that the project will increase traffic in coastal waters to about 350 tankers per year. According to the company, this accounts for roughly 6.6 percent of all large commercials vessels trading in the region.

    “Impacts on the region’s whale population are occurring regardless of our Project and this is an issue that must be addressed by all marine users,” Kinder Morgan said in a statement in response to inquiries from Crosscut. “The solution lies in a group effort and Trans Mountain is taking a leadership role despite our relatively small contribution to the issue.”

    Mahon, the director of Stand Earth, says the amount of noise from the tankers, which are bigger than most other vessels travelling through inland waters, will devastate the killer whales. “They are dependent on echolocation for fishing, mating, communicating,” she says. “And the tankers provide such a high level of noise disruption.”

    Concern about the possibility of an oil spill are heightened, environmentalists say, because the vessels will be carrying bitumen, a type of oil that sinks in water. They say the presence of chemical diluents in the oil make a bitumen spill particularly harmful, pointing out that Trudeau’s decision to approve Trans Mountain came just six weeks after authorities struggled with the response to a spill from a tug boat that sunk off the coast of northern British Columbia.

    Kinder Morgan’s response: “We understand the concerns raised about tanker traffic, spill prevention and emergency response, and that’s why we’ve carefully developed measures to protect communities and our ecosystems.” The same statement went on to explain that, as a result of the project, an investment of more than $150 million will be made in Western Canada Marine Response Corporation that will “further improve safety for the entire marine shipping industry.”

    The investment will fund five new “response bases,” three of which will operate 24/7, along with new employees and vessels stationed at strategic locations along British Columbia’s southern shipping lane.

    Rebecca Ponzio from Stand Up to Oil, a Washington-based coalition of environmental advocacy groups that oppose new oil terminals in the Northwest, says that lawmakers here are concerned. “Legislators are thinking about how to hold the oil industry accountable for the risks that they’re industry poses,” she said.

    When he approved the pipeline, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the completion of the Trans Mountain Expansion Project is “in the best interest of all Canadians.” Proponents argue it would establish a bridge for oil companies to enter the Asian market. The project is slated to enhance local markets as well.

    According to National Resources Canada, the construction of the pipeline will generate 15,000 temporary jobs and “unlock the true value of Canada’s natural resources.” Officials say the projected greenhouse gas emissions fit within the country’s climate plan for 2030.

    According to Mahon, even in “the best case scenario,” in which case no oil is spilled, the added noise would still drive the southern resident killer whales into extinction within the next 50 to 100 years. For her, there is only one solution: block the pipeline and shipping traffic through legal action in Canada.

  • Crosscut.com: Salmon - Will the feds ever get their dam act together?

    crosscut.damIn preparing a new Biological Opinion, NOAA asks stakeholders how to resolve longstanding conflicts between Northwest dams and salmon.

    By Daniel Jack Chasan
    April 23, 2013

    It's April, so once again, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is spilling water over Columbia River system dams, speeding salmon smolts on their way downstream. The spill is "voluntary," but since 2006, federal courts have ordered the Corps to spill water over the lower Snake River dams every spring. Three years ago, the Corps, the Bonneville Power Administration, the Bureau of Reclamation and the Northwest office of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration proposed a shortened spill period, but after several scientific groups suggested that would be a bad idea, they thought better of it. The agencies have, at least for the time being, stopped fighting over spring spill.

    However, there's no sign that the Obama administration has stopped fighting for approval of a Biological Opinion (BiOp) on operation of the Columbia River dams. (A Biological Opinion, issued by a regulatory agency such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, assesses the impact of some action on an endangered species.)

    The first Columbia River system salmon population (Snake River sockeye) was listed in 1991. The feds have yet to produce a BiOp that can survive its day in court. U.S. District Judge James Redden tossed the last effort — basically an Obama administration repackaging of a Bush administration plan — in 2011. That document relied on possibly-fictitious habitat improvements to recover endangered salmon, and didn't even consider breaching the lower Snake River dams. Redden ordered the feds to produce a new BiOp by next January 1.

    So far, people outside the government say they have no indication that the new plan will differ significantly from what has been found wanting in the past. But that doesn't mean nothing has changed.

    Under NOAA's aegis, the William D. Ruckelshaus Center and Oregon Consensus are interviewing "stakeholders" — or, if you prefer, interest group representatives — about salmon and dams. People are being asked what the major issues affecting salmon are and how they'll know recovery when they see it; beyond that, the questions are about process. This marks the first time NOAA has solicited the opinions of interest groups — beyond the traditional insiders — about the longstanding regional conflicts between dams and salmon.

    Logically, these discussions will figure into NOAA's preparation of a new BiOp, but that is far from certain. For now, the two processes are being kept apart. The new BiOp would shape operation of the dam system through 2018. The stakeholder process would help shape a discussion of how to operate the dams after 2018. This isn't exactly the fast track. The interviews won't wrap up until the fall. The BiOp is due at the end of the year. Presumably, no one expects the former to have much effect on the latter.

    So, how are the fish doing, really?

    The new BiOp may turn out to be a rehash of the old version that has already been rejected by the court. In fact, indications are that federal agencies are pushing for just that. The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), which has just welcomed a new administrator, has traditionally fought to maximize power generation and the revenue from power sales. Its main constituency, the public utility districts, would like it to maintain that focus. Salmon advocates hope it will change.

    BPA has just come out with a statement that suggests salmon are doing very nicely under business as usual. The agency notes the significance of changing ocean conditions and the natural year-to-year variation in run sizes, but argues that overall, "runs of most Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead have increased since the first Endangered Species Act listings in the 1990s. Fish returns appear to be on the upswing." BPA strongly implies that without further changes in dam operation, the region is on the right track.

    But how well are the fish really doing? Fish advocates will tell you that they're not doing well at all. Commenting on the BPA statement, Joseph Bogaard of Save Our Wild Salmon says the bottom line is that "75% of the fish returning, on average, are hatchery salmon and steelhead. BPA and [the coalition of public utilities, ports, industries and farm bureaus known as Northwest] River Partners love to talk about record returns," Bogaard says, "but note that BPA does not back up the claim with any real numbers.

    "BPA and the Corps herald 'at-dam survival' by smolts," he continues. "This is a convenient metric for them. But why not include mortality in the reservoirs too? Or the cumulative impact through the entire gauntlet of dams? Or account for delayed mortality? Or the smolt-to-adult ratio — the true measure of sustainability for salmon and steelhead?" The bottom line: "No ESA-listed populations are anywhere near what is required to de-list."

    Asked about the BPA statement, Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda says he's heard that message before. So often, in fact, "I've stopped noticing." He notes that "[BPA] has been focusing on fall chinook a lot," because the numbers look pretty good, but " the spring numbers aren't that great."

    And salmon recovery isn't only about math. "There's a lot more to it than just meeting that number target," says Mashuda. "For [Snake River] fall chinook to recover, you need two major population groups, and right now you just have one." Those fish spawn in the river's mainstem, and to create spawning habitat for a second population, he explains, it will presumably be necessary to breach the lower Snake dams or reintroduce fish into the river above the dam at Hell's Canyon. "We hear a lot about the numbers," says Mashuda, "but we don't hear a lot about those other criteria."

    Where the politicians stand

    The position of most Washington state politicians on all this remains unknown. Before the Ruckelshaus Center and Oregon Consensus got involved, Governor John Kitzhaber and Senator Ron Wyden had advocated a broader regional discussion. Washington politicians had not. But the fact that the stakeholder conversations are happening at all means Senator Patty Murray — long a staunch defender of the status quo — has been willing to try something new. (Murray's office has — not for the first time — failed to return phone calls asking for comment on this subject.) Former Governor Chris Gregoire was a big defender of the status quo too. Current Governor Jay Inslee hasn't yet tipped his hand. He has made staff changes, but not yet changes in policy.

    Eastern Washington Representative Doc Hastings, who chairs the House Natural Resources Committee, has made his own position very clear. Hastings talked last year about taking back the offensive on the subject of Snake River dam removal. He wrote to then-NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenko that the process of broadening the discussion "could engender divisive proposals, such as dam removal."

    He may be right to worry. "What changes if any to the existing processes might you recommend for addressing salmon recovery in the long term," people are being asked. "What do you think will happen if the 'status quo' continues?"

    Hastings aergues that in light of high salmon returns to the Columbia Basin, NOAA shouldn't be out asking interest groups about ways to solve the basin's salmon problems. Instead, he wrote, the agency should "re-double this Administration’s commitment and focus to defend the Federal Columbia River Power System Biological Opinion crafted with the support of three Northwest states, numerous tribes and other stakeholders." In other words, circle the wagons around a document that has already been rejected by a federal court.

    If the feds trot out a facsimile of their last BiOp, salmon advocates will presumably go back to court, and the old drama will play out in much the same way. Does anyone really want to slap a new coat of paint on the last BiOp? Why yes. The Northwest River Partners coalition argues that "movement toward long-term [salmon] recovery does not include revisiting the Biological Opinion."

    Mashuda disagrees. "I don't think anybody on the salmon and clean energy and fishing side of things is going to say, 'oh let's ignore the problems with the defective BiOp,'" he says. "No one's going to accept that."

    http://crosscut.com/2013/04/22/environment/113913/columbia-river-salmon/

  • Crosscut.com: The orcas are starving

    orca.drone1by David Neiwert on Friday, June 24, 2016

    Vancouver photographer Mark Malleson took this photograph of the Southern Resident killer whale known as J-34, or Doublestuf, breaching while he was in the interior waters of the Salish Sea this spring. It’s a remarkable and frightening photo for orca lovers, because the male orca’s ribs appear to be protruding prominently.

    That’s abnormal, especially for a resident killer whale at this time of year, when the orcas are typically well fed after a winter of preying on Chinook salmon. And so Malleson’s photo set off a number of alarm bells in the Northwest whale-watching community as it circulated on social media.

    Subsequent photos taken of J-34 and his pod from a scientific drone suggested that, while the whales weren’t particularly plump, their girth was within their normal range. Nonetheless, veteran whale scientist Ken Balcomb is blunt about what he is seeing for the Southern Residents long- term: “These whales are starving,” he says. “There simply aren’t enough salmon out there for them to eat.”

    Balcomb and the crew at San Juan Island’s Center for Whale Research have been observing the Southern Residents foraging this winter and spring, and the behavior has been disconcerting: The whales are much more spread out, meaning they are having to forage harder for individual fish. Many of them appear underfed, he says. It’s an especially alarming development following last year’s “baby boom,” in which nine new calves were born into the population, one of whom has apparently already vanished and is presumed dead.

    Normally, at this time of year, the Southern Residents are being relatively well fed, since they typically hang out along the Continental Shelf between northern California and British Columbia for the winter and spring months, dining on the large runs of returning Chinook. Many of them spend inordinate amounts of time at the mouth of the Columbia River in the winter.

    There is an established and powerful correlation between salmon abundance and orca populations. The uptick in Chinook runs of the past few years on the Columbia/Lower Snake have been linked to the recent orca baby boom.

    The spike in salmon numbers is largely attributed to good ocean conditions for the past 12 years, and to some degree to a federal court ruling requiring the Bonneville Power Administration to spill water over Columbia and lower Snake River dams at key times of the year to aid migrating salmon smolt in their downstream journey. But it is the continuing presence of those same four dams — Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose, and Lower Granite, located on the Snake between the Tri-Cities of Pasco, Kennewick, and Richland and Lewiston, Idaho — that may ultimately doom the Southern Resident orca population.

    The dams’ authorized purpose is generating hydropower (tell us where that power goes?) and inland barge navigation that provide cheap transportation of grain downriver for the region’s farmers. A handful of large farms along one reservoir do have easy access to irrigation water.

    However, time and economic realities have rendered these dams obsolete. Their power generation has declined over time to about 800 megawatts of power annually.

    Worst of all, these dams are mass salmon killers. Migrating smolt, who need free-flowing rivers to get downstream, die in large numbers when they hit the warm, still water in reservoirs behind the dams, or are ground into meal in the dams’ turbines. The warmer water also impedes returning adults, as happened last summer, when 98 percent of the Idaho Sockeye run was lost — a run that taxpayers and ratepayers alike have spent millions in attempts to restore.

    The result has been disastrous for the fish on all ends of the system. In Idaho, where I saw Salmon River spawning beds in the early ‘60s boiling with returning fish, the runs fell into such sharp decline that by the 1990s, only a single sockeye managed to make it back to Redfish Lake. And on the coastal Northwest, sport and commercial fisheries spiraled into sharp declines all along the Columbia as Chinook and sockeye runs, especially, began to vanish.

    The endangered status for those runs sparked a series of lawsuits that produced a number of mitigation efforts. But while the Corps has spent nearly a billion dollars implementing two non-breach alternatives, a federal judge recently found that there has been no improvement in survival rates of salmon.

    First, the Corps continued a controversial and still-ongoing program in which they collect the smolts as they swim downstream and barge them below Bonneville dam. This costly effort, rather predictably, has produced only mixed results at best, and so in 2007 came another federal court ruling that produced the spillage requirements.

    Again, the results have been mixed. Chinook numbers have rebounded since the ‘90s, but a large portion of those are hatchery-produced fish, reducing their value in the wild; and the numbers (reaching a million Chinook in 2013 and 2014) still remain only a fraction of what the river used to produce historically.

    The salmon mitigation costs have simultaneously driven the dams’ economics well into the red. Retired Army Corps of Engineers official James Waddell has produced copious and detailed analyses in recent years demonstrating that, when all the costs are rounded up for maintaining these four dams in lieu of breaching them, taxpayers lose 85 cents for every dollar invested, while breaching would offer economic benefits ranging from $4 to $20 dollars for every dollar invested.  Moreover, as Waddell notes, the dams’ ongoing costs have already exceeded replacement costs for hydropower.

    The campaign to have the dams removed has been a long-running project for the Northwest’s salmon advocates. After the idea was first proposed in the 1990s, the dams became a major political football in the Culture Wars. Eastern Washington conservatives, especially radio talk-show hosts, seized upon the issue as proof that clueless “Seattle liberals” didn’t care about the needs of their agrarian neighbors on the dry side of the Cascades. When the Seattle City Council passed a resolution supporting the dams’ removal, 11 communities and two counties passed resolutions condemning the action. A Pasco City Council member even proposed breaching Seattle’s Ballard Locks in response.

    “We are not going to allow a few Seattle ultraliberal environmental zealots to destroy what took generations to build,” proclaimed then-state Sen. Dan McDonald, R-Bellevue, in Richland.

    But the connection between the Columbia/Snake River Chinook and Puget Sound orca populations has added fuel to arguments against the dams (or something).

    Southern Resident orca populations began to seriously decline in the years following the marine-park captures (1964-76) that first decimated their numbers. The population dropped so sharply in the late ‘90s and early 2000s that, by 2005, they were listed as endangered by the National Marine Fisheries Service.

    Their connection to the Columbia/Snake River Chinook has, over the years, mostly been anecdotal. Canadian scientist John Ford documented in the late 1990s that both the Southern Residents and their Northern Resident neighbors from Vancouver Island were, in the winter month, primarily dining on salmon that were migrating from the open sea to the Columbia.

    But beginning in 2012, a series of studies involving tracking devices attached to members of the Southern Resident pods began to establish concrete evidence that the whales were spending an inordinate amount of time in the vicinity of the mouth of the Columbia in the winter months. By 2015, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration had announced it was proceeding with the necessary process to list the Pacific Coast waters as critical habitat for the orcas.

    A recent ruling by yet another federal judge, Michael Simon, made clear that the BPA’s efforts for restoring salmon to the Columbia were still woefully inadequate, and it urged the administration to return to considering taking out the four Lower Snake dams. In doing so, it recommended yet another round of meetings and studies, suggesting the dam removal may still be years down the road.

    But while the wheels of bureaucracy churn slowly, time is fast running out for the Southern Residents. As the mute testimony of J34 and the other Southern Residents makes clear, we are at serious risk of losing all this forever.

    Removing the Snake River dams wouldn’t be a panacea — there remains a long road ahead to restore Puget Sound salmon runs to full health, another essential component of any long-term recovery for the population — but it would at least provide them the hope of getting some relief in the short term.

    Waddell and his organization, Dam Sense, have spent much of the past year lobbying the Obama administration to take executive action to remove the dams. Waddell says the administration has been sympathetic to his pleas, and D.C. officials have acknowledged that a low-cost dam removal is both feasible and sensible. But they quietly are awaiting action from Washington state officials, particularly its leading Democrats, before they’d undertake such an executive order.

    Ever since the brouhaha of the 1990s, the state’s political class – including its liberal, ostensibly “environmentalist” Democrats – have veered sharply away from any talk of breaching the dams, largely out of an abject fear of reigniting the Culture War resentments that continue to simmer in rural areas. In recent months, orca and salmon advocates have been pleading with Gov. Jay Inslee, Democratic Sen. Patty Murray, and other officials to finally take action on the dams, but they have been largely stonewalled and ignored.

    Asked about the salmon and their relationship to the orcas earlier this spring in a video discussion, Murray responded with a spiel straight out of the 1990s: “You know the dams in our state are an incredibly important part of our economy, in terms of electric production, in terms of our transportation systems, in terms of our water use, and our salmon and wildlife and fish are an important part of our economy too. Balancing that is always a challenge.

    “I know how hard it is to take out a dam,” she added, “because I worked on the Elwha Dam removal for well over a decade, and it’s costly, and it was a challenge.”

    But the Snake River dams are very different from the Elwha dams in several key regards, the main one being that they have large earthen-berms whose initial removal, as Waddell has demonstrated, would be a very simple matter: Simply excavate the earthen portions and leave the adjoining concrete structures in place, but out of use. Waddell argues that such a plan, in fact, would be so cheap that it could be financed simply within the Bonneville Power Administration’s and the Army Corps’ current operating budgets for the dams by diverting the costs of salmon mitigation.

    In fact, he argues, it could begin as early as this spring or summer. This, he argues, would provide the only viable means of cooling the reservoirs, that according to NOAA, will be as hot as 2015.

    Murray cracked open a window at the end of her remarks, though: “So it’s important that we look at all these issues and we do it in a balanced way, and actually right now the courts are looking at this issue and we’ll be watching closely to see what they say.”

    Well, the courts have had their say, and Judge Simon was clear in his overall verdict: It is time to seriously consider removing those four dams.

    Many observers seem to believe that the ruling will only ensure another round of studies and talks and delays. “Indications are that regional federal agencies will submit yet another inadequate plan, causing delays past 2018 and into 2020 or later,” Jim Waddell observes. “That’s already happened five times.”

    But Waddell believes that the time has run out, both for the orcas, and for the salmon. He has proposed an immediate drawdown on Lower Granite dam to protect salmon from high river temperatures this summer, and starting the breaching process by the end of the year.

    “Without action now,” he says, “Snake River wild salmon runs will be lost in the next one to three years, with hatcheries not far behind.”

    If that happens, it will be because of the failure of the federal administrations to respond in a timely fashion, and a massive failure of political will on the part of the Washington’s politicians.

  • Crosscut.com: To save the orcas, do we need to demolish dams?

    orca.kitsapSunday 15, November 2015
    By Daniel Jack Chasan  

    The show is over — at least it’s almost over. SeaWorld has announced that next year, it will phase out its killer whale performances in San Diego. The theme park has been under fire — and, perhaps more importantly, losing visitors — ever since the 2013 movie Blackfish documented its abusive treatment of captive killer whales.

    But the whales – endangered Puget Sound orcas, if you prefer – need more than just to be freed from captivity. Not surprisingly, they need to eat.

    Specifically, they need chinook salmon, says Carl Safina, a former National Audubon Society vice-president for marine conservation who hosted the PBS series entitled Saving the Ocean with Carl Safina. And in order to get more threatened, endangered and otherwise diminished chinook into the water, he says, we’ll need to breach the four lower Snake River Dams.

    * * *

    Safina laid all this out one night last month at the Seattle Aquarium, where he was the keynote speaker at an unveiling of the Orca-Salmon Alliance, a coalition of regional and national environmental groups formed to “prevent the extinction of the Southern Resident Killer Whales by recovering the wild Chinook populations upon which the whales depend.” Member groups include Earthjustice, Save Our Wild Salmon, Defenders of Wildlife and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

    The orca-salmon connection is clear. Killer whales live all over the world. Some eat other marine mammals. The southern resident population that we see in Puget Sound eats fish. This is a cultural adaptation, like vegetarianism or my Neapolitan uncle Claude’s fondness for the cooking of southern Italy. For a Puget Sound orca, food primarily means salmon, above all chinook salmon, presumably because chinook grow bigger and fattier than other species and therefore provide a better return on a killer whale’s investment of hunting energy.

    But when your favorite food winds up on the endangered species list, you’ve got a problem. Puget Sound chinook were listed as threatened in 1999. Four populations of Columbia River system chinook, including two on the Snake, have also been listed, as have fish in the Upper Willamette, and California coastal, Central Valley, and Sacramento River winter run chinook.

    An orca’s options aren’t what they used to be. These days, when the killer whales swim in and around Puget Sound, their main source of chinook lies north of the border: the Fraser River.

    Not surprisingly, Southern Resident Killer Whales joined the endangered list themselves ten years ago. Their numbers had dipped to 79 in the first years of this century from an estimated level in the mid-1960s of about 100. Not only were chinook populations depressed; the whales also suffered from the noise of boat engines, which disrupts their hunting, and an assortment of toxic chemicals, which lodge in their blubber. A lack of prey exacerbates the other problems: If a whale is starving, it mobilize its fat reserves, which brings the toxins out of storage.

    The orca population had rebounded somewhat, but it now languishes in the low 80s. It still shows the effect of whale captures in the late 1960s and early 70s, when hunters herded the whales and took young ones from the pods for SeaWorld and other destinations. The captures finally ended after a 1976 whale roundup in Budd Inlet, more or less in front of the state capitol, horrified an aide to Governor Dan Evans named Ralph Munro, who was sailing nearby, and ultimately, state politicians. (A KING-TV documentary had already started to turn public opinion against the whale captures.) But there’s still a hole in the population where females of breeding age should be.

    When I spoke with Safina the day before the aquarium event, he suggested the population must once upon a time have been much, much larger. Scientists have speculated that there may once have been a couple of hundred Southern Resident Killer Whales. Safina envisions “hundreds, maybe even thousands.” He can’t believe a smaller population could have differentiated itself so successfully from its mammal-eating cousins. And he figures that the once-enormous regional salmon runs would have supported a host of killer whales.

    * * *

    Safina, who was also promoting his new book, Beyond Words, about the way non-human beings experience the world, nodded to part of the logic behind the Orca-Salmon Alliance when he said that people who want to save the orcas should “talk about money.”

    He suggested that casting the northern spotted owl fight of the early 1990s as a conflict between logging and forest preservation was “the biggest mistake the environmental movement has made in this country.” It was too easy for the forest products industry to characterize the choice as “jobs vs. owls.”

    Instead, Safina argued, the environmental side should have talked up the value of the fish that spawned in the national forests, which were worth as much as the trees.

    He hopes that people who want to save southern resident killer whales have the sense to argue economics. There’s plenty to argue: He points out that last year, whale watching on the Salish Sea was a $100-million business. (It has taken off since Blackfish.)

    Save Our Wild Salmon and other fish advocates have long argued that an honest cost-benefit analysis of the lower Snake River dams would make an economic case for dam breaching, too.

    Those dams not only generate power, they also help lift barges all the way to Lewiston, Idaho. The barges haul wheat and barley from Lewiston to the coast. But a recent economic analysis  commissioned by Save Our Wild Salmon concluded that investment in barge transportation on the lower Snake returned 43 cents on the dollar.

    If you believe numbers like that, it’s hard to argue that saving the dams makes more economic sense than saving the fish.

    * * *

    Our knowledge of the orcas’ needs has become more nuanced, but we have known the basics for quite a while.
    Long before the dams went up, when Lewis and Clark reached the Columbia, they found the number of salmon “incrediable.” It must have been. This year’s big run of Columbia River chinook, touted as a record, amounts to only about one-third of the number caught in 1883, the last year before the runs were depleted by overfishing and, eventually, the dams. The Southern Resident Killer Whales must have evolved knowing that every year, millions of chinook would appear at the river’s mouth.

    Things have changed — and they probably must change at least part of the way back in order to build up the population of killer whales. In California, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has basically acknowledged that. In the Northwest, it has not. A 2009 NOAA biological opinion on operation of the California State Water Project and the Central Valley Project called for changing operations — providing less water for agriculture — in order to build up chinook populations on which the orcas rely.

    In contrast, a series of biological opinions — four rejected by federal courts, a fifth currently awaiting a U.S. district court judgment — on operation of the federal Columbia River system dams has not called for any adjustments to increase the orcas’ food supply. The feds acknowledge the orcas’ dependence on chinook. They just don’t propose doing anything about it. They claim that hatcheries can keep the current chinook numbers from dropping, without acknowledging that if we want more orcas, we have to give them more fish.

    Acknowledging that might lead to the idea of breaching those Snake River dams — a subject that many people in power, including Washington governors and U.S. Senators, have studiously avoided. The judge who struck down the last three Columbia River biological opinions made it clear that he thought dam breaching should be on the table. But he has retired. What the current judge thinks about the subject has yet to be seen.

    We have a pretty good idea of what the killer whales need. We certainly know about their decline. Now, Safina said, we have a choice. “Do we want to watch it,” he said, “or do we want to stop it?”

    http://crosscut.com/2015/11/to-save-the-orcas-activists-say-we-need-to-demolish-dams/

  • Crosscut.com: U.S. tribes are being left out of talks over the Columbia River's fate. Why? 

    June 27, 2019

    By Greg Scruggs

    snakeriver.2020The U.S. and Canada are renegotiating a 60-year-old treaty that dictates usage rights for the river. All the water that flows through the Columbia River and its heavily dammed tributaries originates from a watershed the size of France, one that stretches into both the United States and Canada. Much of that water comes from the north and all of it drains into the ocean just south of Washington state. Along the way it creates energy, fuels economies, feeds ecosystems and, if it isn't managed, risks flooding communities.
      
    Which is why, in 1964, the two countries signed a binational treaty that has since governed the river and its many functions. Some of those provisions are scheduled to expire in 2024, the same year either country would be allowed to terminate the treaty. And while neither country has signaled it would take that step, the two nations began meeting in May 2018 to modernize the agreement. The pace of negotiations — which consist of closed-door talks between the governments and occasional town halls hosted throughout the Northwest — is as slow as a lazy day on the river and likely to stretch over several years. The issue at the center of the discussions has been the future of the “Canadian entitlement” — an annual energy allotment that the U.S. pays to Canada in exchange for releasing water from upstream reservoirs to maintain hydropower in the States and prevent downstream flooding. The entitlement’s monetary value varies with power prices, but has been estimated at as high as $335 million annually. Environmentalists and indigenous groups, meanwhile, would like to see more water flow through the Columbia to support healthier fish stocks, a goal that might be achieved if so-called “ecosystem-based function” is added as a pillar of the modernized treaty. That regional concern has received minimal attention in the talks thus far, but that may have changed last week when the U.S. State Department hosted a Canadian diplomatic delegation in Washington, D.C., for the seventh round of talks. Unlike in the previous six rounds of talks, representatives of the Ktunaxa, Syilx/Okanagan and Secwepemc Nations, the three First Nations living in the upper Columbia basin, joined the Canadian side of the table — a domain previously dominated by diplomats from Ottawa and the British Columbia provincial government. The landmark inclusion, first announced in April, was hailed as a watershed moment in Canadian reconciliation. “We are confident that we can continue to contribute positively to these negotiations and help realize the First Nations’ goals for meaningful outcomes … that are of critical importance to our nations and homelands,” the nations said in a statement. Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland welcomed the new parties to the negotiations in an April statement. “By working together, we will ensure that negotiations directly reflect the priorities of the Ktunaxa, Okanagan, and Secwepemc Nations — the people whose livelihoods depend on the Columbia River and who have resided on its banks for generations,” she said. The Canadian decision renewed for U.S. tribes that their multiyear demand for a seat at the negotiating table would be met. Thus far, there are no signs that will happen. “We have no plans to change the general composition of the team,” a State Department spokesperson told Crosscut following Canada’s announcement. “We value the tribes’ expertise and experience and are consulting with the tribes throughout the negotiating process.” Tribes have expressed their disappointment, but have shown restraint in their criticism as they continue to serve an advisory role before and after each round of negotiations. “The U.S. team needs to follow suit with Canada and also invite tribes to participate,” Rodney Cawston, chair of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, told Crosscut last week. U.S. chief negotiator Jill Smail visited the Colville reservation on May 21, and Cawston pressed his case once again, but has yet to receive a final decision. A State Department spokesperson told Crosscut the presence of First Nations observers at last week’s talks did not change Foggy Bottom’s mind. “The U.S. negotiating team structure is based on how we determine we can best meet our foreign policy objectives,” the spokesperson said. The difference between the Canadian and U.S. approaches to the Columbia River Treaty are all the more frustrating for Cawston, given the seemingly arbitrary nature of the international border that runs between his reservation on the south side and that of the Sylix/Okanogan, who are close relatives of the Colville. That relationship, he hopes, may push the tribal position in the negotiations from the Canadian side, even if U.S. tribes remain on the sidelines. “We can’t be on both sides of a negotiation, but we have met with First Nations officials and I really believe in the heart of Canadian First Nations that we have common goals and interests,” he said. “We all want to see fish passage above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams — they all want that as much as I do. The geographic border isn’t our border. That border was imposed and put us on two different sides of a negotiation team.” Ottawa’s decision, which brings more perspectives of those living near the river to the Canadian negotiating team, also highlights for many regional observers how much the other Washington is controlling a long-term decision with significant impacts for the future of the Pacific Northwest. In addition to Smail, the State Department diplomat, the U.S. negotiating team includes representatives from the Bonneville Power Authority, which administers hydroelectric power generated by dams along the Columbia, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Northwest Division. None of the seven states impacted by the treaty is participating, even though the states were heavily involved in the original talks, with four senators serving as observers. Meanwhile, every round of talks the U.S. hosted has been held in Washington, D.C., except for one round in Portland. By contrast, Canada has hosted every round of its talks in different locations throughout British Columbia. The eighth round of talks, in September, will be in Cranbrook, where Columbia tributaries the Kootenay and St. Mary’s rivers meet. Over a year into the process, close observers like Greg Haller of Portland-based conservation group Pacific Rivers are dissatisfied with the top-down, D.C.-led approach since Smail took over as chief negotiator in 2017. “The negotiation is being handled very poorly,” he told Crosscut, citing Smail’s decision to close a working group of scientists, engineers, tribes, and maritime industry representatives. That group was modeling different scenarios of river flows to provide actionable information for U.S. negotiators following a regional recommendation issued in 2013 . Seattle City Light signed on to that document, indicating that if the recommendations were reflected in the modernized treaty, it would save the utility $9 million to $11 million per year in what it buys from the Bonneville Power Authority. “That’s not how people in the Pacific Northwest are used to having decisions made about their resources,” he said. Barbara Cosens, a law professor at the University of Idaho who edited a book on the treaty, concurs that the fate of such a vital source of energy and economic development should not be decided by a distant capital. “It’s not only a break with the trend towards increasing public involvement and transparency in decision-making, it’s a break with what was happening in the Pacific Northwest even before that trend,” she told Crosscut, citing the heavy state involvement in the original talks. “Even if everything the negotiators do is true to recommendations from the region, it does not give the perception of good faith.” “We are addressing ecosystem benefits in negotiations with our Canadian colleagues and seeking greater coordination with Canada on the appropriate quantity and timing of water releases to help support a healthy ecosystem, as well as opportunities to improve ecosystem cooperation for the benefit of fish and wildlife in both countries in ways that appropriately balances this with other benefits,” the State Department spokesperson said. “All of us have a shared interest in maintaining a sustainable ecosystem.” Others who have been involved since the regional recommendations were drafted at the beginning of the decade are comfortable with D.C.’s role in the driver’s seat. “The State Department represents all of us in international negotiations,” Kristin Meira, executive director of the Pacific Northwest Waterways Association, a Portland-based trade group for river-borne commerce, told Crosscut. “There is strong Northwest representation and we feel confident in the team that’s been assembled.” Despite the continentwide gap between the Columbia River and the halls of power where its future may be decided, Cosens is confident that some measure of local consensus exists — and that the negotiators would be foolish to ignore it. “The bulk of people in the basin want to continue having a cheap, noncarbon source of electricity and they don’t want Portland to flood, but they want to see some changes in flows that would help salmon,” she said. “The modeling showed that those things can happen.”
      

  • Crosscut.com: Where have all Puget Sound’s orcas gone?

    November 14, 2017 by Allegra Abramo

    orca.threeEvery day this summer, Jeanne Hyde scanned the waters off the west side of San Juan Island, hoping that the killer whales would show up. All night, she streamed the underwater sounds from microphones submerged along the shoreline, waiting for the whales’ distinctive trills, chirps and whistles to wake her up.

    Too often, she slept through the night.

    “Day after day after day, I’d wake up the next morning and I’d check the recording to make sure I didn’t miss something,” said Hyde, 71, who has watched and listened for the whales every day for 14 years.

    “And I’d just put a line through the date and the time: nothing, nothing, nothing. They just weren’t here.”

    This summer was “the worst year on record” for sightings of endangered southern resident killer whales in the Salish Sea, according Ken Balcomb, a biologist and founder of the Center for Whale Research, who has been monitoring the animals for more than 40 years.

    Orca daily sightings 2004 17

    As recently as 2004, the whales were spotted 150 days from May through September, or nearly every day. This year, they showed up on only 40 days in the same period, Balcomb said. Previously, the worst year was 2013, when there were 70 sightings.

    The southern residents, a small, distinct population of orcas, historically spent much of the late spring through early fall cruising our inland waters in pursuit of large, fatty Chinook salmon, which make up the bulk of their diet.

    But with this year’s record-low Chinook runs, the whales had no reason to waste their time in the Salish Sea, Balcomb said.

    The southern residents’ absence this summer is just one more signal that, without more salmon, the whales’ survival is in jeopardy. A new study, to which Balcomb contributed, concludes that the only way increase the number of whales is to increase the number of Chinook, while also addressing other threats to their survival, including noise from ships and boats that can disrupt their feeding.

    The deaths of seven whales in the past year, including a calf that appeared emaciated before disappearing in September, dropped the wild population to only 76 animals. That’s the lowest number in more than 30 years, and about half as many southern residents as probably existed before dozens were killed or captured for marine parks in the 1960s and 70s.

    orca srkw-populationOrcas are having difficulty reproducing in large part because they don’t have enough to eat, with two-thirds of pregnancies ending in miscarriage, a recent University of Washington study found. No calves were born alive and survived this year.

    Aerial photographs over the past decade have also shown many whales with shrunken fat deposits on their heads, likely due to inadequate food. In severe cases, these skinny whales have knobby “peanut heads” and an increased chance of dying.

    The southern residents are the proverbial canary in the coal mine, said Joe Gaydos, science director for the SeaDoc Society, a University of California Davis program to preserve the health of the Salish Sea.

    “When you have a top predator that is suffering, it just lets you know that everything below that is also not in a good place.”

    orca srkw population 768x720

    It’s not just the whales’ absence this summer that concerns scientists and observers. The three sub-groups, or pods, that make up the southern resident population also displayed unusual travel patterns.

    “Not only are there now fewer sightings,” Balcomb said, “there are fewer whales in each sighting, and they are spread over dozens of square miles whereas formerly they traveled in enthusiastic and enduring groups — cohesive pods.”

    This was the first year on record that the whales never turned up all together in the so-called “super-pod.” And the J pod, which tends to be around earlier and more often than the other two, was gone for all of August — another first. Some speculate that last year’s death of “Granny,” the J-pod matriarch who guided the group to the best feeding spots, also may have disrupted the animals’ historic patterns.

    While the southern residents were off hunting elsewhere, Bigg’s killer whales, also called transients, were in the Salish Sea twice as often this summer as last, according to the Center for Whale Research. Unlike the fish-munching southern residents, transients prefer a diet of harbor seals, sea lions and other marine mammals, which are abundant.

    The transients are “fat, they’re robust, their population is growing,” said Gaydos. Yet they live in the same noisy seas as the resident whales, and they accumulate even higher concentrations of contaminants because they are a level up on the food chain. “And so it really makes you realize that that food piece is critical,” Gaydos said.

    Food is, indeed, the most critical piece, according to a new comprehensive analysis of the threats to southern residents. In order to recover the population, we’ll need to increase Chinook runs by 15 to 30 percent, the paper’s authors conclude. That’s a heavy lift, considering that decades of salmon recovery efforts have yet to yield sustained increases.

    If conditions for the whales worsen, the same paper estimates a 70 percent chance the whales will be quasi-extinct in a century, meaning that only 30 individuals — too few to sustain the population — will remain. The southern resident killer whale population “has no scope to withstand additional pressures,” the researchers write.

    Yet additional pressures are likely due to proposed oil and gas developments. Those include Canada’s expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline, which will increase tanker traffic, underwater noise and the risk of ships strikes and oil spills. “Our models of the additional threats expected with a proposed increase in oil shipping show that these threats will push a fragile population into steady decline,” the researchers write.

    Scientists and orca advocates speak of a mounting sense of urgency, spurred by the whales’ falling numbers, skinny appearance and dwindling visits to their historic summer feeding grounds.

    “We definitely do feel a sense of urgency,” said Lynne Barre, NOAA Fisheries recovery coordinator for the southern residents. “But it’s a small population and not the lowest we have ever seen them. So I still have hope that they can be resilient at their current population levels.”

    NOAA is developing plans to expand the whales’ critical habitat — the area where federal agencies can’t take actions that would harm the whales, possibly including underwater munitions testing by the Navy. The protected area, which now includes almost 2,600 square miles of the Salish Sea, could expand to include the whales’ winter foraging grounds in coastal waters between Washington and central California.

    Balcomb, of the Center for Whale Research, isn’t hopeful that we can overcome the decades of “poor management and greed” that now put salmon and southern residents at a high risk for extinction.

    “We should be concerned because in the big picture we are not only losing the fish and whales and birds,” Balcomb said, “we are losing the natural bounty and sustainability of the Salish Sea ecosystem.” To top it off, he added, we’re spending millions of taxpayer dollars “to accomplish this slow-motion extinction.”

    Hyde, the longtime orca tracker, also wants to see less talk and more action.

    The whales “can’t fix the lack of salmon; we can,” Hyde said. “We have to fix it, because we broke it.”

    http://crosscut.com/2017/11/puget-sound-orcas-j-pod-disappearing-salmon-washington/

  • CSM: In Idaho, the plight of salmon spawns an unorthodox proposal 

    In the Pacific Northwest, a growing number of advocates are questioning the conventional wisdom that the interests of salmon and hydropower are inherently at odds. July 2, 2019 
     

    By Mark Trumbull

    seattletimessockeyeBoise, Idaho - Justin Hayes points to a map that shows the route salmon must take in their juvenile journey out to the ocean ​– and eight reasons why it’s so difficult. For ages, the smolts glided swiftly with the currents. In modern times, they must negotiate an arduous passage over or through eight dams.  To Mr. Hayes of the Idaho Conservation League, that is four dams too many. Most of the young fish are perishing. 

    These are the fish that Lewis and Clark spotted (and ate) in abundance on their expedition in 1805. To the native peoples of this region, they were a core of both diet and culture. Even the forest landscapes, Mr. Hayes says, have been shaped by the way migrating fish transfer nutrients gathered in the ocean to mountain streams when they die after spawning.  For decades, two priorities in the Pacific Northwest – salmon and the hydroelectric dams that power the region’s economy – have seemed inescapably opposed. But old assumptions may have started to shift.  At a conference here in Boise this spring, Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho put an idea on the table that has long been resisted by elected politicians: possibly breaching some of the dams ​– to unblock the river to help the threatened fish populations survive and recover. Equally important, perhaps, was way this Republican congressman framed the discussion. The hydropower system faces a crisis just like the salmon do, and “they are interwoven.”  The changing economics of electricity ​– with hydropower no longer the region’s lowest-cost option ​– appears to be breaching old ways of thinking. “There is a new fact on the field,” says Mr. Hayes. And he says that, as Mr. Simpson elevates this discussion, “for the first time in many years I feel like we have a hopeful chance of saving salmon for future generations.” A struggling business model
    Support for breaching dams is far from universal, but there’s no doubt that the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) faces an altered outlook. For years, this federal power-marketing agency had its core customers in the region hooked on cheap hydropower.  Now, as natural gas and renewable sources like solar and wind have grown cheaper, retaining those core customers can no longer be assumed. (Their contracts expire in 2028.) Meanwhile, the BPA finds itself squeezed by high debt loads, the cost burden of fish-recovery efforts, and a decline in demand from California for the agency’s surplus power. Bonneville hasn’t endorsed dam breaching, and is working to implement a strategic plan to address its challenges. But BPA Administrator Elliot Mainzer has been blunt about the stakes. “It’s been a bloodbath for folks in the wholesale market,” he said in a public appearance last year. “I’m not in a panic mode, but I am in a very, very significant sense of urgency mode.” About these ads <https://www.csmonitor.com/About/Contact/Feedback/About-these-Ads
    In April speech to various stakeholders gathered in Boise, Congressman Simpson argued that it’s time to seek a holistic solution, by rewriting the 1980 Northwest Power Act to reflect the needs for both electricity and fish. He didn’t call for dam removal outright, but he questioned pointedly whether the four dams on the lower Snake River – which account for barely 13 percent of BPA’s hydropower capacity – are needed. Signs of a shift

    His speech isn’t the only sign of fresh urgency regarding endangered salmon. Washington state’s Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee, with an eye on struggling populations of orcas that rely on salmon for food, has supported extra spilling of water over dams to aid the oceanward migration of young fish. Both he and Republican Gov. Brad Little of Idaho are convening task forces on how to do more. Yet Mr. Simpson’s nudging toward new federal legislation on the issue ​may be the most significant step of all. “We’ve never really heard a congressional leader from the Northwest delegation kind of lay that on the table,” says Jaime Pinkham, executive director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, in Portland, Oregon. Mark Trumbull/The Christian Science Monitor 
    Justin Hayes, executive director of the Idaho Conservation League, stands outside the group's office in Boise on June 7, 2019. He calls for removing four dams on the lower Snake River, to allow for the state's native salmon populations to survive. 
    The idea of breaching dams faces political hurdles as uphill as the ones returning salmon make through fish ladders on their journey to spawn. Even the Fish Commission, representing four tribes with treaty rights for harvesting fish, hasn’t officially endorsed the idea yet. Since a range of factors affect fish populations, from ocean conditions to predators, some observers ask if it would make much difference to demolish dams or breach them to restore a free-flowing river. But on that question, Mr. Pinkham cites research by fish biologists to give an unhesitating answer.  “You bet it will!” he says.  Big concerns for farmers
    But breaching dams has harsh critics, too. It would disrupt everything from electricity supplies to irrigation to the ability of farmers to export their grain to Asia. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse, both Republican members of Congress from farm-oriented districts in Washington state, released a joint statement May 20: “We stand with the people of Central and Eastern Washington who rely on the Snake River dams.” They asked Governor Inslee to veto a state-funded study on dam breaching. Farmers’ concerns run deep. Tom Davis, director of government relations at the Washington Farm Bureau, says grain shipments hinge on a navigable river, which in turn is created by the pooling of water into reservoirs. He says breaching the dams would not only disrupt grain exports, but also require building new diversion points for drawing river water for irrigation. Other critics of dam breaching include tourist-boat operators. Still others say a virtue of the dams is producing clean and “dispatchable” power, potentially available at times when sunshine or wind might not be.  Bureau of Reclamation employees discuss the installation of a fish ladder on the Cle Elum dam on August 10, 2016 in Cle Elum, Washington. The dam is located on the site of a deep glacier lake in the Stuart range. The project seeks to install a newly developed fish ladder that will allow the fish to exit the lake bypassing the dam is a safe manner. 
     
    Beneath the debate, too, is a regional gap in political identity and trust. Farmers in eastern Washington, Mr. Davis says, “get very tired of folks in Seattle telling them how to live their lives.” Mr. Simpson says it’s time to seek creative answers. Could truck or rail transport be expanded in a way that works for farmers? Could the region lean on its national labs to become a leader in battery storage for the grid, and in a safer next generation of nuclear power plants? Whatever the details, consensus building will be vital if a bill focused on Columbia-Snake complexities is to pass Congress. “It would take a coordinated and cooperative Northwest delegation to make something like that happen,” says Tom Karier, an economist at Eastern Washington University. Not all salmon are endangered. But important species in Idaho are, notably spring and summer chinook salmon. Other migratory fish including steelhead are also at risk.  “The fish are imperiled,” says Jason Vogel, acting director of fishery research with the Nez Percé Tribe, based in Lapwai, Idaho.  “Here in Idaho there is not a single river or stream where there are enough fish returning” to be deemed a sustainable population, as determined by federal scientists under the Endangered Species Act, he says.

    A recovery would benefit not only the fish themselves, and tribes with harvesting rights. It also would buoy a now-constrained recreational fishing industry. And it would help malnourished orcas, whose plight has prompted more than 750,000 people to sign an online petition supporting dam breaching. A comeback for the chinook?

    Among the benefits of breaching or removing dams: less water pooled in reservoirs. The result would be safer (cooler) water temperatures for the salmon, a more normal pace of their migration, and fewer predators along the way. “It’s a matter of cumulative effects,” explains Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon, a Seattle-based coalition. Each dam is a hurdle, but research suggests there’s a big difference between needing to pass four versus eight. Mr. Bogaard says dam removal on smaller rivers has been successful. “The lower Snake restoration provides an order of magnitude [more] habitat,” he adds. “There’s tremendous potential of a very big restoration [of fish].”  Mr. Pinkham, who is from the Nez Percé Tribe, is among the stakeholders who says he’ll be meeting with Mr. Simpson in coming weeks to confer about possible answers. Finding a consensus may require compassion and humility as well as outside-the-box thinking. “We always say you want to make everybody whole” in situations like this, Mr. Pinkham says. “Tribes haven’t been made whole since those dams were built. Others may feel that sense of sacrifice too.”
      
    Despite the rifts among interest groups, Representative Simpson’s push for fresh thinking gives Mr. Pinkham hope.  “Is he a linchpin? I would say he is,” Mr. Pinkham says. The congressman made a commitment to explore this issue, and “I think he has the leadership to do it, regardless of who controls the House or the administration.”

  • CSM: In Idaho, the plight of salmon spawns an unorthodox proposal 

    In the Pacific Northwest, a growing number of advocates are questioning the conventional wisdom that the interests of salmon and hydropower are inherently at odds. July 2, 2019 
     

    By Mark Trumbull

    seattletimessockeyeBoise, Idaho - Justin Hayes points to a map that shows the route salmon must take in their juvenile journey out to the ocean ​– and eight reasons why it’s so difficult. For ages, the smolts glided swiftly with the currents. In modern times, they must negotiate an arduous passage over or through eight dams.  To Mr. Hayes of the Idaho Conservation League, that is four dams too many. Most of the young fish are perishing. 

    These are the fish that Lewis and Clark spotted (and ate) in abundance on their expedition in 1805. To the native peoples of this region, they were a core of both diet and culture. Even the forest landscapes, Mr. Hayes says, have been shaped by the way migrating fish transfer nutrients gathered in the ocean to mountain streams when they die after spawning.  For decades, two priorities in the Pacific Northwest – salmon and the hydroelectric dams that power the region’s economy – have seemed inescapably opposed. But old assumptions may have started to shift.  At a conference here in Boise this spring, Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho put an idea on the table that has long been resisted by elected politicians: possibly breaching some of the dams ​– to unblock the river to help the threatened fish populations survive and recover. Equally important, perhaps, was way this Republican congressman framed the discussion. The hydropower system faces a crisis just like the salmon do, and “they are interwoven.”  The changing economics of electricity ​– with hydropower no longer the region’s lowest-cost option ​– appears to be breaching old ways of thinking. “There is a new fact on the field,” says Mr. Hayes. And he says that, as Mr. Simpson elevates this discussion, “for the first time in many years I feel like we have a hopeful chance of saving salmon for future generations.” A struggling business model
    Support for breaching dams is far from universal, but there’s no doubt that the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) faces an altered outlook. For years, this federal power-marketing agency had its core customers in the region hooked on cheap hydropower.  Now, as natural gas and renewable sources like solar and wind have grown cheaper, retaining those core customers can no longer be assumed. (Their contracts expire in 2028.) Meanwhile, the BPA finds itself squeezed by high debt loads, the cost burden of fish-recovery efforts, and a decline in demand from California for the agency’s surplus power. Bonneville hasn’t endorsed dam breaching, and is working to implement a strategic plan to address its challenges. But BPA Administrator Elliot Mainzer has been blunt about the stakes. “It’s been a bloodbath for folks in the wholesale market,” he said in a public appearance last year. “I’m not in a panic mode, but I am in a very, very significant sense of urgency mode.” About these ads <https://www.csmonitor.com/About/Contact/Feedback/About-these-Ads
    In April speech to various stakeholders gathered in Boise, Congressman Simpson argued that it’s time to seek a holistic solution, by rewriting the 1980 Northwest Power Act to reflect the needs for both electricity and fish. He didn’t call for dam removal outright, but he questioned pointedly whether the four dams on the lower Snake River – which account for barely 13 percent of BPA’s hydropower capacity – are needed. Signs of a shift

    His speech isn’t the only sign of fresh urgency regarding endangered salmon. Washington state’s Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee, with an eye on struggling populations of orcas that rely on salmon for food, has supported extra spilling of water over dams to aid the oceanward migration of young fish. Both he and Republican Gov. Brad Little of Idaho are convening task forces on how to do more. Yet Mr. Simpson’s nudging toward new federal legislation on the issue ​may be the most significant step of all. “We’ve never really heard a congressional leader from the Northwest delegation kind of lay that on the table,” says Jaime Pinkham, executive director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, in Portland, Oregon. Mark Trumbull/The Christian Science Monitor 
    Justin Hayes, executive director of the Idaho Conservation League, stands outside the group's office in Boise on June 7, 2019. He calls for removing four dams on the lower Snake River, to allow for the state's native salmon populations to survive. 
    The idea of breaching dams faces political hurdles as uphill as the ones returning salmon make through fish ladders on their journey to spawn. Even the Fish Commission, representing four tribes with treaty rights for harvesting fish, hasn’t officially endorsed the idea yet. Since a range of factors affect fish populations, from ocean conditions to predators, some observers ask if it would make much difference to demolish dams or breach them to restore a free-flowing river. But on that question, Mr. Pinkham cites research by fish biologists to give an unhesitating answer.  “You bet it will!” he says.  Big concerns for farmers
    But breaching dams has harsh critics, too. It would disrupt everything from electricity supplies to irrigation to the ability of farmers to export their grain to Asia. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse, both Republican members of Congress from farm-oriented districts in Washington state, released a joint statement May 20: “We stand with the people of Central and Eastern Washington who rely on the Snake River dams.” They asked Governor Inslee to veto a state-funded study on dam breaching. Farmers’ concerns run deep. Tom Davis, director of government relations at the Washington Farm Bureau, says grain shipments hinge on a navigable river, which in turn is created by the pooling of water into reservoirs. He says breaching the dams would not only disrupt grain exports, but also require building new diversion points for drawing river water for irrigation. Other critics of dam breaching include tourist-boat operators. Still others say a virtue of the dams is producing clean and “dispatchable” power, potentially available at times when sunshine or wind might not be.  Bureau of Reclamation employees discuss the installation of a fish ladder on the Cle Elum dam on August 10, 2016 in Cle Elum, Washington. The dam is located on the site of a deep glacier lake in the Stuart range. The project seeks to install a newly developed fish ladder that will allow the fish to exit the lake bypassing the dam is a safe manner. 
     
    Beneath the debate, too, is a regional gap in political identity and trust. Farmers in eastern Washington, Mr. Davis says, “get very tired of folks in Seattle telling them how to live their lives.” Mr. Simpson says it’s time to seek creative answers. Could truck or rail transport be expanded in a way that works for farmers? Could the region lean on its national labs to become a leader in battery storage for the grid, and in a safer next generation of nuclear power plants? Whatever the details, consensus building will be vital if a bill focused on Columbia-Snake complexities is to pass Congress. “It would take a coordinated and cooperative Northwest delegation to make something like that happen,” says Tom Karier, an economist at Eastern Washington University. Not all salmon are endangered. But important species in Idaho are, notably spring and summer chinook salmon. Other migratory fish including steelhead are also at risk.  “The fish are imperiled,” says Jason Vogel, acting director of fishery research with the Nez Percé Tribe, based in Lapwai, Idaho.  “Here in Idaho there is not a single river or stream where there are enough fish returning” to be deemed a sustainable population, as determined by federal scientists under the Endangered Species Act, he says.

    A recovery would benefit not only the fish themselves, and tribes with harvesting rights. It also would buoy a now-constrained recreational fishing industry. And it would help malnourished orcas, whose plight has prompted more than 750,000 people to sign an online petition supporting dam breaching. A comeback for the chinook?

    Among the benefits of breaching or removing dams: less water pooled in reservoirs. The result would be safer (cooler) water temperatures for the salmon, a more normal pace of their migration, and fewer predators along the way. “It’s a matter of cumulative effects,” explains Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon, a Seattle-based coalition. Each dam is a hurdle, but research suggests there’s a big difference between needing to pass four versus eight. Mr. Bogaard says dam removal on smaller rivers has been successful. “The lower Snake restoration provides an order of magnitude [more] habitat,” he adds. “There’s tremendous potential of a very big restoration [of fish].”  Mr. Pinkham, who is from the Nez Percé Tribe, is among the stakeholders who says he’ll be meeting with Mr. Simpson in coming weeks to confer about possible answers. Finding a consensus may require compassion and humility as well as outside-the-box thinking. “We always say you want to make everybody whole” in situations like this, Mr. Pinkham says. “Tribes haven’t been made whole since those dams were built. Others may feel that sense of sacrifice too.”
      
    Despite the rifts among interest groups, Representative Simpson’s push for fresh thinking gives Mr. Pinkham hope.  “Is he a linchpin? I would say he is,” Mr. Pinkham says. The congressman made a commitment to explore this issue, and “I think he has the leadership to do it, regardless of who controls the House or the administration.”

  • CTV News: Scientists suggest new threat to endangered B.C. orcas: pink salmon

    January 18, 2019

    By Gene Johnson, The Associated Press  SanJuanSEATTLE -- Over the years, scientists have identified dams, pollution
    and vessel noise as causes of the troubling decline of the Pacific
    Northwest's resident killer whales. Now, they may have found a new and
    more surprising culprit: pink salmon. Four salmon researchers were perusing data on the website of the Center
    for Whale Research, which studies the orcas, several months ago when
    they noticed a startling trend: that for the past two decades,
    significantly more of the whales have died in even-numbered years than
    in odd years. In a newly published paper, they speculate that the pattern is related
    to pink salmon, which return to the Salish Sea between Washington state
    and Canada in enormous numbers every other year -- though they're not
    sure how. They suspect that the huge runs of pink salmon, which have
    boomed under conservation efforts and changes in ocean conditions in the
    past two decades, might interfere with the whales' ability to hunt their
    preferred prey, Chinook salmon. Given the dire plight of the orcas, which officials say are on the brink
    of extinction, the researchers decided to publicize their discovery
    without waiting to investigate its causes. "The main point was getting out to the public word about this biennial
    pattern so people can start thinking about this important, completely
    unexpected factor in the decline of these whales," said one of the
    authors, Greg Ruggerone. "It's important to better understand what's
    occurring here because that could help facilitate recovery actions." Ruggerone, president of Seattle-based Natural Resources Consultants and
    former chairman of the Columbia River Independent Scientific Advisory
    Board, and the other authors -- Alan Springer of the University of
    Alaska at Fairbanks, Leon Shaul of the Alaska Department of Fish and
    Game, and independent researcher Gus van Vliet of Auke Bay, Alaska --
    have previously studied how pink salmon compete for prey with other
    species. As news stories chronicled the struggles of the orcas last year -- one
    whale carried her dead calf on her head for 17 days in an apparent
    effort to revive it -- the four biologists looked at data on the Center
    for Whale Research's site. Thanks to their previous research, it took
    them only a few minutes to recognize a trend that had escaped the
    attention of other scientists. "We know that some are good years for the whales and some are bad years,
    but we hadn't put it together that it was a biennial trend," said Ken
    Balcomb, the centre's founding director, one of the foremost experts on
    the so-called Southern Resident killer whales. Further analyzing the data, the researchers found that from 1998 to
    2017, as the population of whales decreased from 92 to 76, more than 3.5
    times as many newborn and older whales died during even years -- 61,
    versus 17 in odd years. During that period, there were 32 successful
    births during odd years, but only 16 during even years. That biennial pattern did not exist during a prior 22-year period from
    1976 to 1997, when the whale population was recovering from efforts to
    capture orcas for aquarium display, the researchers said. But in 1998, salmon harvests were curtailed amid efforts to boost runs
    decimated by overfishing, pollution and habitat loss. A strong change in
    ocean conditions occurred around the same time, benefiting pink salmon
    especially by increasing the abundance of zooplankton, which make up
    much of the pink salmon's diet. The combined effect of the ocean changes and fishing restrictions has
    greatly benefited the pinks, which are by far most numerous salmon
    species in the North Pacific. When they return to the Salish Sea, there
    are about 50 for each of the bigger, fattier Chinook. Nearly all pinks
    return to their natal streams in odd years, completing their two-year
    life cycle, unlike other salmon, which stay in the ocean longer. Meanwhile, Chinook populations have continued to struggle -- the dearth
    of Chinook is considered the most severe threat to the orcas -- and many
    scientists say they will continue to do so unless four dams on the Lower
    Snake River are breached. The researchers speculate that the blossoming
    numbers of pinks in the Salish Sea during odd-numbered years have
    interfered with the echolocation the orcas use to hunt increasingly
    sparse Chinook. The orcas almost never eat pink salmon. Because the whales are such large mammals, the theory goes, the stress
    caused by the pinks in odd years would not affect their mortality rates
    and reproductive rates until the following year -- and that's why more
    die in even years. Another possibility is that presence of pinks means less food for the
    Chinook -- and thus less food for the orcas, Ruggerone said. The researchers also put forth a contrary hypothesis: that the presence
    of pinks somehow enhances the orcas' hunting, improving their survival
    in odd-numbered years -- though they say they have no reason to believe
    that's the case.

  • Daily Astorian Editorial: Orcas growing factor in Columbia River salmon management

    orca.drone1October 26, 2015
     
    An unfortunate fact of life for orcas — and everything else that relies on salmon — is that runs fluctuate.
     
    Iconic Northwest species enters our waters

    There was fascinating news last week about southern resident killer whales that have an extensive connection to the Columbia River. These scientific findings could have a major impact on salmon management and the hydroelectric system.

    For many years there were occasional reports of orcas being seen by fishermen working offshore in the Columbia River plume. Starting in 2013, a satellite-tracking program showed how they also range up and down the outer coast. They appear to bide their time, waiting for returning Chinook salmon to begin congregating near the Columbia’s mouth.

    Last week’s most attention-grabbing orca news involved a different new technology — use of a camera drone this fall to conduct a thorough survey of the J, K and L pods in Washington’s Puget Sound. Photos reveal the orcas’ everyday behavior, without the drone appearing to disturb them in any way. The 82 famous killer whales are doing very well, with new 2015 calves fattening and additional females showing signs of pregnancy. This is extraordinarily promising news for animals that are counted among the eight most endangered species in the U.S.

    This comes in a year of healthy Chinook salmon runs, especially to the Columbia-Snake system. The annual count is now above 1.3 million returnees to Bonneville Dam. Unlike transient killer whales that range around the North Pacific hunting smaller marine mammals, the Puget Sound orcas are strictly fish-eaters, strongly preferring Chinook. This abundant year has clearly set off an enthusiastic round of baby-making.

    An unfortunate fact of life for orcas — and everything else that relies on salmon — is that runs fluctuate. This year’s extreme Pacific Northwest drought and the warm El Niño waters now dominating the Pacific may mean a sharp decline in salmon two to four years from now.

    A thorough report by The Seattle Times (www.tinyurl.com/TimesOrcaStory <http://www.tinyurl.com/TimesOrcaStory> ) explores the Puget Sound orcas’ strong Columbia River connectio.n:

    • “Scales and fish tissue samples from fish kills by orcas has enabled researchers to trace those fish to Canada’s Fraser River in the summer, and the Upper Columbia and Snake River in the winter.”

    • “A conservation biologist at the University of Washington... has noticed in his research on orcas that thyroid hormone levels that set metabolic rates are highest when the orcas arrive in late spring, suggesting the whales are arriving in Puget Sound after feeding on a rich food source: spring runs of Columbia Chinook salmon.”

    This news is bringing a renewed interest in returning the Snake River to a natural-flow regime, something that would require bypassing four hydroelectric dams. This has been a nonstarter for regional politicians for years. But the amazing popularity of orcas and stringent federal legal protections conferred on them could be a game-changer.
     
     While dam removal could eventually enhance salmon runs, the orca-Columbia connection could also bring additional fishing restrictions, notably in years when salmon are in short supply.

    It is anybody’s guess how all this orca news will balance out for local fishermen. But it’s still fun knowing our local waters play such a key part in the lives of this iconic Northwest species. We look forward to many more sightings this winter and next spring.

    http://www.dailyastorian.com/editorials/20151026/editorial-orcas-growing-factor-in-columbia-river-salmon-management

  • Daily Kos: As killer whales starve to death, public anger drives a shift in the political winds

    September 1, 2019 

    By David Neiwert

    J PodEveryone in the San Juan Islands who watches the whales remembers the summer of 2016. No one wants to relive it.

    That was the summer the Southern Residents lost seven members, including one of the J Pod’s elderly matriarchs, who scientists say are the acknowledged leaders of the pods and repositories of the stored knowledge essential to the whales’ survival. But it was the death of J28 and her calf that stirred people to action.

    It was late summer when observers began noticing J28, a 23-year-old female known as Polaris. She had given birth to a male calf that spring, but as the summer wore on, it became clear something was wrong. One day in August was especially telling.

    The scene unfolded in the waters directly off Lime Kiln Lighthouse, in Washington state’s San Juan Islands: Polaris’s 6-year-old daughter, J46, nicknamed Star, was swimming about actively in the roiling currents with her mother and her baby brother, who had been designated J54, but had not yet been named.

    They were not, as is often the case at this lighthouse, merely frolicking in the nearby seas. They were pursuing the salmon that comprise most of these endangered killer whales’ diets, and there was a deadly serious intent to it.

    A week or so before, researchers at the nearby Center for Whale Research had sounded an alarm of sorts about Polaris, who was in her reproductive prime, and by extension the dire lack of salmon for the Southern Resident killer whale population. Ken Balcomb, the center’s founder, had reported that another J Pod matriarch, J14 (Samish), was missing and presumed dead, and that several whales appeared to be struggling.

    “Things are shaping up to be pretty bad,” said Balcomb. “J28 is looking super-gaunt, and I would say she is within days of her death.”

    The “peanut head” condition that Balcomb had reported—a severe sunkenness in the flesh directly behind the orca’s skull, an indication of extreme malnutrition and often a harbinger of imminent death—was clearly visible in Polaris the day we observed her, about a week after the warning. However, the listlessness CWR had reported also was ameliorated somewhat: The orca mother appeared at times to be frolicking physically with her calf, and seemed to be fairly active, though at times she also was simply “logging,” laying still on the surface and drifting with the current.

    The most striking aspect of the scene was Star’s activity. She swam constantly around her two companions, diving deep at length and doing percussive behaviors like tail-lobbing and pectoral-slapping, often pointing in her mother’s direction. At times, the three of them would go down into the deep currents and disappear for minutes at a time, evidently foraging. It appeared to my amateur eye that she was herding the salmon she could find toward her mother, helping her get the food she so desperately needed.

    The scene also had a deep emotional resonance for me: Six summers before, when Star had just been a still-callow baby of eight months, I had encountered her with Polaris a little south of the lighthouse, along a cliff wall in my kayak. I had tucked into a cove, well out of their way, and began taking photos.

    That too had been a deeply touching scene: The mother and little amber-toned calf had played in the still morning waters, nuzzling and wrestling about, reveling in the kind of contact that human parents and their bonded offspring know well, the joy of touching. Polaris also seemed to be feeding the calf, getting its first nascent tastes of fish as the mother dove and brought at least one healthy Chinook to the surface to show and share, as these orcas have been observed doing for years.

    Six years later, the now-grown calf was doing her part, returning that love and care to her mother by helping her find and catch the salmon she clearly has not been getting. The familial bonds of killer whales are now a scientifically established fact, but they are profound things to observe, spine-chilling reminders of the deep connection that exists between humans and orcas, whom the Northwest Native Americans referred to as “the people under the sea.”

    The afternoon feeding at the lighthouse was a bit of good news, at least—it appeared that Polaris was more active and feeding well. Orcas have occasionally recovered from “peanut head,” though rarely (in captivity, it has been a virtual death sentence). Still the worry remained, and was compounded by the reality that if Polaris died, it meant nearly certain death for her still-unweaned calf, too.

    In some regards, the loss of J14 Samish—a 44-year-old female whose still-mysterious death can’t be attributed to malnutrition or a lack of salmon, since the last sightings of her just days before her disappearance showed her in robust apparent health—may prove even more devastating for the Puget Sound’s endangered orcas. Recent research has revealed that post-menopausal females play an essential role in orcas’ long-term survival, because they actively lead the pods in their foraging and represent long-term memory of prey-seeking routes. Without their immense brains leading the way, orcas have a harder finding the large of amounts of fish they need to eat daily to survive and thrive.

    That year also saw the loss of a big, striking male once so large he was nicknamed “Doublestuff,” who died after being struck by some unknown vessel. There was also a mother who died after her developed fetus died and became necrotic. Another big male died after government scientists darted him, and the wound became infected.

    The bad news regarding the two well-known orca females cast a pall over a multimillion-dollar whale-watching industry in the San Juans that had just endured the worst season (for seeing resident orcas, at least) in its history, and seemed to cast a cloud on the island’s whole community. As September drew to a close, it seemed everyone wanted to know how J28 was doing, as though the fate of the Southern Resident killer whale population seemed to hinge on the news. And in some respects it may have.

    The orcas’ human advocates were not giving up, but the picture was becoming grim. “Right now, we don’t even have a sustaining population of Southern Residents,” said Deborah Giles.

    “We’ve gone backwards. There were 88 animals when they were listed in 2005. Now we are down to 82, and maybe fewer very soon.” As she said this, she looked out over the waters where we had all observed Polaris and her offspring a few days before, and a cloud crossed her face.

    A month later, on Oct. 28, CWR scientists made it official at a press conference in Seattle: J-28 had disappeared and was now presumed dead. Her baby, J-54, they said, looked even more malnourished and was being supported in the water by his sister, J-46. They gave him only a few more days, if not hours, to live, and at the time of the announcement was also presumed dead.

    "It's a sad day," said Ken Balcomb. "I've been to several funerals and that's what this feels like."

    Something snapped. The agony of watching a mother orca slowly starve to death, followed by the spectacle of her unweaned baby’s path towards the same death, was like a final straw that kicked the region’s whale advocates into action.

    Coordinating among several advocacy groups and the CWR, they organized a press conference at the Seattle waterfront focusing on the deaths of J28 and J54 as a tragic warning sign for the state of the endangered Southern Resident killer whale population. Even the normally reclusive Balcomb was persuaded to participate, and he delivered the message in stark terms.

    “We know what we need to do—feed them!” Balcomb told the assembled reporters, and urged government officials to take immediate steps to begin removing the four Lower Snake River dams.

    “Restore Chinook habitat, anywhere, anyhow,” he said. “If we don’t, we will lose our whales.”

    The surge of publicity created immediate political pressure on the state’s politicians, though it eased off over the following year or so, but local lobbying efforts in Olympia, led by the Pacific Whale Watch Association and other advocacy groups, stepped up their intensity during 2017, culminating in Gov. Jay Inslee’s March 2018 announcement that he was forming an Orca Recovery Task Force to tackle the problem.

    In the meantime, the bad news for the Southern Residents reached a kind of apex when, shortly after New Year’s Day 2017, Balcomb and the CWR announced a momentous death in the population: J2, aka Granny, the J Pod’s grand matriarch who was estimated to be more than 100 years old.

    There was only one further death in the population in 2017: J52 Sonic, a 2-year-old male who disappeared in September. But 2017 also saw a significant change in the Residents’ behavior: Their presence in the Salish Sea waters became extremely scarce.

    It may have been one of the effects of Granny’s death; matriarchs are known to be the leaders of the pods, calling the shots on where they go and when, and the change in J Pod leadership clearly affected its foraging patterns. However, the far more likely culprit in the change was the disappearance of Fraser River salmon.

    The Chinook produced by the Fraser—which flows out of British Columbia just south of Vancouver—have long been the primary reason the Southern Residents have come to the Salish Sea in the summertime: Scientists estimate that 80 percent of their summer diet comprises fish from the Canadian river. And in the summer of 2017, the numbers of Chinook returning to the system, measured at the Albion Point salmon station, simply flatlined.

    Canadian officials remain puzzled at how the returns simply fell off the table that year, but the trend has remained similar through 2018 and much of 2019, as well. The return of the J Pod to the San Juans this past week coincided with a marginal rise in salmon return numbers on the Fraser.

    So for most of the summers of 2018 and 2019, the Southern Residents have simply been absent from the Salish Sea.

    “It still feels very surreal that we've just had our first June on record with no Southern Resident killer whales in inland waters,” wrote Monika Wieland, executive director of the Orca Behavior Institute and the author of Endangered Orcas: The Story of the Southern Residents, at her blog.

    “June used to be a highlight of the year because of the abundance of sightings of all three pods on the west side of San Juan Island. Yet here we are, 58 days without any of them in the Salish Sea. The silence created by their absence is deafening.”

    The absence of the Residents, however, has not been the complete disaster one would expect both for land-based whale watchers and for the whale-watching operations based in the San Juans and Vancouver/Victoria area. That’s because the second population of orcas to use these waters—the mammal-eating population known as transients, or Bigg’s killer whales—have suddenly begun showing up in unusually large numbers.

    The two populations—which geneticists have determined haven’t exchanged DNA in more than 300,000 years—are not friendly; when they have been observed in proximity to each other, the Residents have generally chased away the smaller pods of Bigg’s whales. So scientists have hypothesized that the Bigg’s whales may be taking advantage of the absence of the Residents to access the abundant numbers in the Salish Sea of their main prey: namely, seals and sea lions.

    Additionally, humpback whales—which were absent from the Salish Sea after being hunted out near the turn of the 20thcentury—have begun returning as well, feeding on the large schools of herring and the semi-abundant krill that can be found here.

    Certainly, passengers on the region’s whale-watching tours have had plenty to witness. On one tour I took this spring, we followed a pod of Bigg’s whales as they hunted a Dall’s porpoise at high speed, and then turned the waters around them blood-red when they finally caught and killed it. Even more common have been sightings of Bigg’s whales launching hapless harbor seals 50 feet into the air with their powerful flukes at the climax of a hunt.

     “The transients are fascinating animals, and it’s been great to have them here,” says Jeff Friedman, owner of Maya’s Legacy Whale Watching and president of the PWWA. “They are amazing to watch, especially when they’re hunting.”

    However, the tour operators aren’t content with the new reality. “The fact is that our number one priority is the recovery of the Southern Resident killer whale population,” Friedman says. “They are the reason we are here. Even with the transients around, the picture isn’t right without the Residents.”

    Friedman, like the scientists and advocates, has been heavily engaged in the Orca Recovery Task Force process. Even though his focus has necessarily been directed to warding off the would-be moratorium on whale watching, he says his primary mission remains getting enough fish in the water to return the Resident population to health.

    However, many of the solutions under consideration by the task force—habitat restoration, vessel effects, toxins in the water, and dam removal among them—are all long-term solutions that do relatively little to help the orcas now. Even if the Lower Snake dams were all to be taken down within the year (not at all likely), it would be as long as another decade (though perhaps sooner, depending on which salmon scientists you talk to) before the Snake/Salmon river systems would produce numbers of fish appreciable enough to help the killer whales.

    The pressing issue facing scientists is how to get enough fish in the water to feed the orcas right now.

    J35 Tahlequah, the mother whose mourning for her dead calfgripped the world last summer, thus sparking the wave of anger over the loss of the whales that finally drove the state’s politicians into action, was among the J Pod whales who returned to the San Juans last week. She looked plump and healthy, frequently playing with little J56, and tail-slapping and socializing.

    “We have seen her foraging successfully a couple of times. She looked really healthy to me,” says Deborah Giles. “It made everyone happy.”

    Both the condition and the behavior of J Pod made clear that they have, for now at least, figured out how to sustain themselves without enduring the paucity of salmon that has been their reality in the Salish Sea recently. “It’s so heartening to see these whales, and to see them together, see them playing, lifting each other up out of the water, breaches and tail slaps—it’s really amazing,” says Giles. “And it’s really, really good to see them looking as well as they do.

    “But in the back of my head, I am thinking—where is K pod? Where is L pod? Are there more babies? Obviously K27 lost the baby she was pregnant with last September. She didn’t come back with a baby. K pod hasn’t had a new baby since 2011.”

    OrcaBaby.J53.2019While J Pod appears to have regained its health, there were nonetheless three deaths among the Southern Residents this year, including J17, a 42-year-old matriarch known as Princess Angeline. She was Tahleuqah’s mother, making J35 the matriarch of her clan at age 21. 

    So while Giles spends her time this month on the water collecting scat samples, she has been directing her political focus on getting more fish in the water sooner. For her, that means fisheries management.

    The Northwest’s salmon harvest is carefully regulated by a treaty overseen by the Pacific Salmon Commission, an international body that includes both American and Canadian stakeholders such as commercial and sport fishermen, as well as Native American tribes. That body produces a treaty every 10 years—vigorously negotiated—in which the salmon harvest produced in Pacific waters is divvied up among those various interests.

    The Southern Resident killer whales, however, do not have a place at that table. So their needs are left to whatever might be left over from the divided harvest.

    “What we’ve all been screaming about is giving the whales a place as a major stakeholder in fisheries management,” says Giles. “We’re asking for an allocation of fish for the whales.”

    The solution, as she sees it, is for much tighter regulation, if not an outright moratorium, on fishing for Chinook in the orcas’ home waters, which run the entire length of the Pacific Coast.  “If not full on fisheries closures, we at least need to have targeted regulations for where and how we fish,” Giles says. “It’s past time we’re doing that. And a lot of that has to do with tribal rights, which is where it becomes very political.”

    Recently undertaken studies aimed at identifying key orca-foraging “hotspots” in the San Juans could help provide the data needed to make such a plan a reality, Giles says. However, “the thing I am scared that if we don’t get a handle on these fisheries, there won’t be any salmon even in those hotspots.

    The PSC itself has been resistant to these overtures, though its most recent news releases have indicated at least a sensitivity to the political pressure that has arisen around orca recovery.

    “At the Pacific Salmon Commission, at that highest level, in the rhetoric around the most recent treaty, the dialogue was that ‘the needs of the Southern Residents would be taken into consideration,’ but if you look at the treaty itself, the words ‘whale,’ ‘killer whale,’ ‘orca whale’—none of that show up in the treaty itself,” Giles observes.

    “So basically it’s just lip service. Those words ‘allocation’ and ‘Southern Resident’—they don’t want those to pass into reality. No way.”

    However, an adjunct body of the Pacific Salmon Treaty, the Pacific Management Fishery Council, has proven more amenable to whale advocates’ overtures. It is holding public hearings of an ad hoc group in key cities around the Pacific Northwest, examining the impacts of mixed open fishing on Southern Resident killer whales.

    “It is a start, and the more people that get involved in those hearings, and make comments leading up to the meetings” the better, Giles says, noting that the deadline for such commentsis Tuesday.

    Overall, Giles is mostly heartened by how the public has responded to the killer whales’ plight, and how the effort has drawn help from a variety of quarters. “There are a lot of people working in a lot of different arenas to help these whales in different capacities—like the Toxic-Free Future people, who are doing a lot of important work to remove toxins from our system, and to try to push legislation that reduces the use of chemicals as much as possible. I think that’s good, I think we need to keep pushing each other in our own areas of expertise. “

    “And we need to be engaging with our political appointees, the people that we elect, and pushing them into continuing to address the issues and continuing to cut to solutions,” she adds.

    At times, particularly back in 2016, Giles would confess that she feared she was doomed simply to document the demise of a once-great population of killer whales. These days, she is more hopeful—not to mention determined.

    “We may well be witnesses to the complete loss of the Southern Residents,” she says. “But we know what can be done. It may get depressing at times, but none of us will ever stop fighting for them.”

  • Daily Kos: Endangered orcas' fate is tied to a series of dams 400 miles inland

    September 1, 2019

    By David Neiwert

    Sockeye.RedfishLakeThe river, I thought, looked like you could walk across it, there were so many fish. It was a wide and shallow stretch, the kind that salmon like to use as spawning beds, and it was positively alive with hundreds, maybe thousands of thrashing salmon.

    To my five-year-old eyes, the sight of the returning salmon along the headwaters of the Salmon River in the early 1960s was so awesome it has been burned into my memory since. My granddad Mel had taken us to visit his favorite fishing holes in the Stanley Basin, but we weren’t catching many of the cutthroat we usually came for, because the salmon were crowding everything out, it seemed.

    I’ll never forget what the fish looked like, either: Hook-jawed and fierce, some of them (the sockeye) flaming red, and huge. It confused me at that age that we couldn’t catch and eat these giant fish, but my dad explained to me that their meat was soft and almost inedible by the time they reached the spawning beds. All of them were scarred and battered, the results of their thousand-mile journey from the ocean.

    By the time I was a teenager in the 1970s, most of the big spawning runs had dwindled to a few dozen. By 1992, when only a single spawning sockeye—dubbed “Lonesome Larry”—returned to the Stanley Basin, those runs had simply vanished. Gone, too, were the throngs of native cutthroat my granddad had loved to catch, because when the proteins that the salmon brought up to the Sawtooths from the ocean stopped arriving, the entire native ecosystem there collapsed.

    There were a number of causes for the runs’ decimation, including overall declines in fish habitat and commercial overharvest, but one loomed above them all: the construction of four dams—Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose, and Lower Granite—on the Snake River between Lewiston, Idaho, and Richland, Washington. They were built in the late 1950s and continuing up through 1970, at the height of the Northwest’s dam-building mania, when they were still largely viewed as unalloyed assets for the region. These four dams were largely the brainchild of chamber-of-commerce promoters from Lewiston, who envisioned creating the world’s most inland seaport in their city and campaigned for the idea for nearly two decades before the dams were finally built.

    That, in fact, is the main benefit of these dams: barging traffic. By creating four navigable slackwater reservoirs up to Lewiston, barges became capable of moving grain and other goods downstream to Portland at what were then cheaper rates compared to rail or truck shipping.

    Because they are relatively shallow dams with little water behind them (in the hydroelectric business, they are called “run of the river” dams), their ability to produce electricity was always limited. At best, they have only produced a small fraction of the region’s electricity, and currently only contribute about 3-4% of the total Northwest energy grid.

    The dams quickly proved to be salmon killers too, as fishermen in the Stanley Basin could attest. Fish ladders were installed when the dams were built that enabled salmon to return upstream, though over the years these required improvements as they proved less than effective in their supposed purpose; but the downstream trip for young smolt making their way to the ocean proved to be the truly lethal component of their migration, since the reservoirs created flatwater that stopped the smolt in their downstream track (scientists have since ascertained that they need free-flowing rivers to effectively get to the ocean), and the few smolt who did make it past them were often ground into fish meal by the dams’ turbines as they passed through them.

    The Snake River salmon numbers crashed so precipitously that, shortly after the “Lonesome Larry” episode, federal officials began the process of listing the four key salmon runs under the Endangered Species Act; Snake River Chinook and sockeye were both listed by 1995. That’s about the same time that salmon scientists and environmental advocates began talking about the eventual need to remove the four dams.

    That created a huge political backlash in eastern Washington, whipped up by politicians and radio talk-show hosts. When the breaching was first proposed in 1999, pro-dam rallies were held in various communities at which the rhetoric became high-pitched. Leading the way were top Republican officials, including then-Senator Slade Gorton, who warned of various miseries that breaching would inflict, and smeared the plans as an attack on “our way of life.”

    “We are not going to allow a few Seattle ultraliberal environmental zealots to destroy what took generations to build,” said Republican state Senator Dan McDonald, of Bellevue, at a Richland gathering in 2000.

    “In case you don’t understand the urgency of this, think about this: The bulldozers are coming,” said Republican Representative Shirley Hankins, of Richland at the same rally. “The gun is at our heads, and we need to act right now before they pull the trigger.”

    The bulldozers never came. The furor instead gave ammunition for the federal agencies that maintain the dams and who have ardently defended them since their construction—the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bonneville Power Administration—to sustain their existence in the face of mounting costs and shifting economics. They began mitigation efforts to save the smolt by collecting them as they came downriver, loading them onto barges, and then taking them downstream past the Columbia dams and releasing them, an extremely expensive effort that cost millions annually, and proved to have little effect.

    What did follow, however, were multiple lawsuits demanding that the Corps and the BPA adhere to the letter of the Endangered Species Act—and in the courts, at least, the salmon advocates proved to have the science and the law on their side. A 2003 ruling by a federal judge, James Redden, knocked down the Bush administration’s plans to maintain the status quo on the dams. In 2005, after continuing declines, Redden ordered the BPA to begin spilling water over the dams at key times of year to help the smolt migrate downstream on their own.

    As it happened, 2005 was the year that the National Marine Fisheries Service officially listed the Southern Resident killer whale as endangered. And suddenly, the whole picture became even more complicated.

    It seems counterintuitive to think that the endangered Puget Sound orcas’ fate could ultimately depend on some earthen dams far away, deep inland. To understand the larger dynamic, you have to take into account how these killer whales feed year-round.

    The scientists who study them have found that during the summer months, especially in July and August, the Southern Residents feed primarily on Chinook from the Fraser River, the large British Columbia waterway whose delta is just south of Vancouver, which is why they come inland to feed in the Salish Sea. But the rest of the year, especially during the winter months, these orcas roam the Continental Shelf dozens of miles off the Pacific Coast and hundreds of miles along it. During those months, they feed off all the available Chinook along the shelf, but the majority of those salmon, the ones they prefer to target even as far north as the Queen Charlotte Islands, come from the Columbia River.

    NOAA scientists have been working hard to try to figure out which river systems the whales mostly feed from in the wintertime, because they need the scientific data in hand before they can begin to establish the mouths of these rivers as the orcas’ critical habitat in the wintertime, the first step in any federally funded recovery program. NOAA Northwest’s chief whale scientist, Brad Hanson, first collected a handful of fish scales from an orca feeding at the mouth of the Columbia in 2010, and then in 2012 began a program of darting Southern Resident orcas with satellite tags that, in some instances, remained functional for several weeks, giving the researchers a wealth of data about the orcas’ feeding habits for the past three winters. It ended with the death of the young male infected by a dart in 2016.

    Columbia Chinook runs generally (and the Snake River runs especially) have been listed as either threatened or endangered since the 1990s, and their future looks precarious at best. Recent bouts of high summer temperatures in the river water (which is worsened by the four Lower Snake Dams) have killed thousands of sockeye attempting to return up the river, and similarly threaten the future of the runs’ remaining wild stocks, which are essential for their long-term well-being.

    The reason the Snake River system is so promising when it comes to Chinook recovery lies in what is behind those four dams at its lowest reaches: for hundreds of miles beyond them, the river and its arms continue into pristine wilderness, primarily the 425-mile-long Salmon River, which winds its way through the massive Frank Church/River of No Return Wilderness before reaching its headwaters in the protected Stanley Basin. It is prime salmon habitat that, before the dams arrived, produced salmon by the hundreds of thousands. The promise of salmon recovery in that kind of habitat is extremely high.

    So the orca scientists are able to make a powerful case that, when it comes to recovering the Southern Residents’ critical habitat in the wintertime, the most logical target is not just the Columbia, but the Snake River system particularly. It offers the most bang for the buck when it comes to providing the whales with at least enough fish in the short term to sustain them and perhaps begin a recovery.

    A recent ruling by yet another federal judge, Michael Simon, made clear that the BPA’s efforts for restoring salmon to the Columbia were still woefully inadequate, and it recommended the administration to return to considering taking out the four Lower Snake dams. The agencies that operate the dams have now initiated a series of public hearings on the issue, the first stop in a long process that likely means dam removal will be years still down the road. Meanwhile, the state’s political leaders—especially Sen. Patty Murray, who has shunned multiple requests from dam-removal advocates for a face-to-face meeting—have mostly remained hunkered down on the issue, fearful of stirring up the culture-war hornet’s nest that awaits them on the eastern side of the state.

    And it remains potent. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, a Spokane-area Republican best known as a key congressional ally of President Trump, earlier this year successfully drummed up support for legislation that essentially would have rendered the dams a permanent fixture, immune even to court edicts. The bill, H.R. 3144, passed the House, but died in the Senate.

    The Orca Recovery Task Force, however, has opened a window of opportunity by including dam removal discussions as a key component of its second round of discussions this year.

    Unsurprisingly, that has in turn sparked a fresh round of claims that heedless Seattle liberals are trying to destroy eastern Washington farmers’ way of life.

    Orca.waveThe facts on the ground have shifted dramatically, however. Due to rising fuel costs, barging is no longer the more economical means for farmers to get their grain to market that it once was, and the large majority of eastern Washington farmers are now using rail lines for transport. And the small portion of electricity that the dams produce is actually part of a power-oversupply problem in the Northwest, where there’s an annual surplus of about 16% of power production that costs ratepayers by reducing demand while also crowding out wind and solar energy as it comes online. The old arguments defending the dams have largely evaporated, while the need for their removal, in a biological sense, has become profound.

    Jim Waddell, a retired Army Corps of Engineers official from the Walla Walla district that oversees the four dams, has been arguing forcefully for the past couple of years that not only are the dams a boondoggle that wastes taxpayers’ money and needlessly destroy salmon, but that the means exists for the Corps to begin tearing the dams down as soon as this year.

    Waddell was part of the Corps team that wrote its 2002 (and still operative) Environmental Impact Statement on the dams, and he delights in pointing out that dam breaching is included as one of the viable options in it if the salmon-mitigation efforts it lists failed to recover the endangered runs—as they have. Waddell also makes a powerful case that the dams cost taxpayers in excess of $170 million annually, with an investment return of 15 cents on the dollar.

    The wave of bad news for the Southern Residents over the summer added more fuel to the case for dam removal. And indeed, the offices of Gov. Inslee, as well as Murray and her fellow Democratic senator, Maria Cantwell, were inundated with calls from angry constituents demanding action, and frequently demanding the dams be taken down.

    National Marine Fisheries Service officials held a series of meetings last winter in Friday Harbor and Seattle intended to ameliorate and perhaps address the raw anger in the communities over the deaths, first, of J-35’s calf and its subsequent remonstrative display by her grieving mother, and then more recently the loss of J-50, aka Scarlett, the spunky little four-year-old.

    The meetings simmered with resentment as hundreds turn out to voice their frustration. Many vented their anger: “You have done nothing! Nothing!” shouted one resident to the silent panel of scientist bureaucrats seated at the front of the room. “It’s time to stop playing politics!”

    The orcas’ human advocates are not giving up, but they believe the picture has become grim. “Right now, we don’t even have a sustaining population of Southern Residents,” says Deborah Giles of the University of Washington’s Friday Harbor Labs. “We’ve gone backwards.”

    “They were declared endangered in 2005,” Ken Balcomb, chief scientist of the Friday Harbor-based Center for Whale Research, reminded the NOAA panel. “And fifty-one animals have died since then.

    “These babies that we see dying now are probably the most dramatic. They’re probably the most media-savvy. They’re telling us something: We’ve got to do something NOW about restoring wild salmon.”

    Earlier this summer, the nonpartisan think tank ECONorthwest published a study examining the pros and cons of removing the four Lower Snake River dam, concluding that “society will incur some costs from dam removal due to lost barge transportation and effects on grid services, but the public benefits relative to costs strongly justify removing the Lower Snake River Dams. In other words, the benefits of dam removal are large enough to fully compensate individuals or industries that could experience costs if the dams are removed.”

    Especially damning were the portions of the study that examined barging on the river: It showed the federal government’s subsidies for the lock system far exceed in federal costs what the public gets in return.

    Local Republicans jumped to denounce the study: "This privately-funded study is a slap in the face of our state's agricultural economy,” a joint statement from McMorris Rodgers and Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse read. “It is another example of Seattle-based interests failing to understand our way of life in Central and Eastern Washington.”

    However, one glimmer of political hope has turned up from an unexpected source: Conservative Republican Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho—who has his own memories of seeing salmon spawn in Idaho rivers—has recently begun denouncing the federal inaction on the state’s diminishing salmon runs, arguing for serious consideration of the dams’ removal. Simpson says he wants to see the runs recovered in his lifetime.

    “We need to stop thinking about what currently exists and ask ourselves, ‘What do we want the Northwest to look like in 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years?’ ” Simpson told a Boise gathering aimed at addressing the salmon problems. Among his likely backers on the discussions are Idaho’s Native American tribes.

    A Christian Science Monitor piece noted that Simpson’s approach is based on economic realities—particularly the fact that hydropower no longer is the lowest-cost energy option for Northwest utilities.

    “There is a new fact on the field,” Justin Hayes of the Idaho Conservation League remarked to the Monitor, adding that as the discussion moves forward, “for the first time in many years I feel like we have a hopeful chance of saving salmon for future generations.”

  • Daily Kos: The politics of starving orcas - Why human folly is killing off an endangered population

    August 31, 2019

    By David Neiwert

    J PodFriday Harbor, Wash.—The mood around San Juan Island has been decidedly cheerier the past couple of weeks: The Residents are back.

    By “Residents,” everyone here means the Southern Resident killer whales (also known locally by their acronym, the SRKWs), the salmon-eating orcas whose population (now down to 73) has been on the endangered species list since 2005, and who generally return to these inland waters in the summertime.

    The celebratory mood here since they returned on Aug. 21—a sunset arrival viewed by a crowd of avid whale watchers at Lime Kiln Lighthouse, on the island’s west side—has been especially acute because of the long wait: While the Residents normally can be seen in these waters in June and July, they have been utterly absent here (outside of a brief peek in July) until this late-summer appearance.

    This has been the second consecutive summer mostly without Residents here, and it has been something of a cultural shock for island residents accustomed to their reliable presence and the economic boon it brings in tourists coming from around the globe. So the sudden appearance of about 20 members of J Pod, the most frequent visitors here, has cheered everyone.

    However, the memories of what happened last summer are the dark cloud lingering in the background. That was when the orca identified as J35—nicknamed Tahlequah—gave birth to a calf who apparently survived only a few hours before perishing; so her mother, in a display of mourning, began pushing its tiny corpse about in the water, holding it up for everyone to see.

    This was not entirely unusual behavior: It had been observed previously among mourning orca mothers, but typically for only a matter of hours, perhaps a few days. But Tahlequah did not stop. Eventually she did it for 17 days straight before finally giving up.

    It was the height of whale watching season, and Tahlequah—who, like all the Southern Residents, was plainly aware of the humans who come to watch them—seemed to be sending a message. Certainly, as her sad tale unwound before a gathering global media that came to witness her grief en masse, her calf’s death and the ensuing coverage of the orcas’ plight made irrevocably plain: These orcas are starving to death before our eyes.

    But that was only half the message the public needed to hear. These orcas are dying because of humans—most of all, human politics.

    Orcas go past the lighthouse at Lime Kiln State Park on San Juan Island, close to shore.

    Many people in the orca-watching and environmental communities in the San Juans angrily blame their state’s politicians for the whales’ plight. They have good reasons.

    The black-and-white cetaceans, one of the only such populations that can be seen with relative ease by visitors and residents alike, are iconic for the Pacific Northwest, having achieved a kind of mythic status for their innate power and beauty. You see them everywhere in the cities—on downtown Seattle murals, on T-shirts, on buses and airplanes, at art shops and jewelers, on business logos, represented in public art ,and central, in many ways, to the region’s self-image.

    After all, it was the captures from these waters between 1964 and 1976 that founded the captive-orca marine park industry, though only one of the estimated 58 orcas that were removed from this population remains alive today (Lolita, at the Miami Seaquarium). Striking and charismatic, the creatures’ various images are pervasive here.

    The attachment, however, runs even deeper than that. Many Northwesterners recognize that these orcas represent a unique national treasure, the only one of its kind in the world. So the decades of environmental neglect that their precarious status reflects have also brought an agonized, simmering anger to the region, even as the local whale watching community mounts a kind of death watch for the orcas they have long tried to defend.

    Most of all, as the apex predator in these waters, the orcas are also the ultimate indicator species. Their ill health is a powerful indicator that the overall health of Puget Sound and its adjacent waters is in a precarious state.

    There have been lots of issues linked to the decline in the population, including toxins in the waters of the region, and the presence of vessels and their noise and its negative effects on orcas’ abilities to seek prey. But scientists readily acknowledge that all of these issues would become functionally irrelevant if they were to solve the gorilla in the room, the major and ultimately primary cause of the killer whales’ plight: a lack of salmon.

    First listed in 2005 under the Endangered Species Act, the Southern Residents have been struggling with the loss of their primary prey—namely, Chinook salmon, which comprises about 80% of their diet—for decades now. What frustrates observers—as well as both whale and salmon advocates—is that the listing produced a lot of studies and handwringing, but precious little action.

    This is especially the case with the region’s salmon runs, which have been on the endangered list since the early 1990s, with new rivers and new runs seemingly added every year. The picture for Chinook is especially grim: Along the Pacific Coast from California to Washington, some 13 Chinook runs are listed as threatened or endangered. Total salmon runs in the Columbia River system, even after recent federally touted “recoveries,” remain at only about 1% of their historical levels.

    While a paucity of available prey is at the root of the orcas’ predicament, there has been no shortage of blame to go around—particularly pointed in the direction of the fleet of whale watch boats that often tracks, and sometimes surrounds, traveling orcas in the Salish Sea. The boats are accused of forcing the whales to expend extra energy to avoid them, and, more importantly, of creating enough noise in the water with their engines to interfere with the orcas’ echolocation, the whales’ sixth sense that enables them to see underwater.

    However, recent research on vessel noise and its effects on orca behavior indicates that whale watch boat noise is only a secondary problem compared to the primary source of such noise in these waters—namely, the large ships that come through Haro Strait en route to the port in Vancouver, usually from ports in Asia and Russia. The noise thrown up by these huge freighters—from both their propellers and their massive hulls—can sometimes be nearly deafening underwater, and will shut down orcas’ communications for extended periods of time.

    University of Washington marine scientist Scott Veirs has been studying this issue for years, assembling an impressive collection of data and transforming it into studies that make clear that large-ship noise in fact profoundly impacts killer whales. “These ships are not only prevalent, but quite loud compared to other sources of noise in the ocean,” Veirs told one reporter. “Ships are dominating the soundscape.”

    That doesn’t leave the whale watch boats blameless, of course. One study found that the presence of whale watch boats increased the time that orcas spend altering their behavior due to noise, though only marginally—from 3.0 hours daily to 3.2.

    Whale watch operators point out that they also provide a safety buffer for the orcas by giving local boaters—who can be prone to speeding through pods unawares—a heads-up to the whales’ presence. Regardless, the whale watch operations are the focus of a lawsuit brought by environmental groups to create even larger buffer zones around the whales.

    “They provide a sentinel role,” explained Kelly Balcomb-Bartok, a spokesman for the Pacific Whale Watch Association, to The Seattle Times. “Without the whale-watch fleet, there is nothing to tell that Bayliner to slow down. Continuing to hammer on the industry is not helping. Let’s focus on the fish, that is the real problem.”

    It’s also worth noting that PWWA’s extensive lobbying in Olympia—primarily built on demonstrating the vital economic role the SRKWs play for the San Juan Islands—played a key role in the one major piece of good political news for the orcas in recent years: Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s March 2018 executive order creating the formation of a task force charged with spearheading an effective recovery plan for the Southern Residents.

    The task force—comprised of a range of stakeholders, from salmon advocates to staunch dam defenders—began meeting the fall of 2018. In December, Inslee proposed a $1.1 billion package of legislation aimed at orca recovery, the bulk of which was dedicated to paying for culvert replacement in sensitive salmon habitat areas.

    Tahlequah’s globally reported mourning, and its message, had given the measures an intense level of approval. “These expenditures have to be done now,” Inslee said. “There are lots of things in life you can put off for a decade. This is not one of them … This is a one-time shot.”            

    The bills passed. The question on everyone’s mind—often voiced at task force meetings—was whether these measures were too timid, too little, too late, to save the Residents.

    The brightest aspect of J Pod’s return to the Salish Sea (the inland waters around the San Juans and the archipelago along southern Vancouver Island) this past week is that they looked good. There was even a glimmer of hope in the shape of a new calf.

    Deborah Giles, a research scientist with the University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology and the science and research director for the organization Wild Orca, has been out on the water in her permitted research vessel with the orcas this week, gathering scat samples with the help of a dog. As someone who has been monitoring this population for years, she was relieved by what she saw.

    “They actually look better than they have in the past,” she said. “Like, yesterday they stopped sleeping—they were socializing and resting, with a little bit of foraging but not much. By and large, they look pretty dang good.”

    Perhaps the most encouraging sign is a new calf—designated J56, it’s still too young to count as a member of the population (calf mortality is so high among resident orcas that calves are not counted until they are a year old). But this one is special.

    “She is such a pest,” says Giles, laughing. “She has a lot of energy. … It seems like she pesters her family to play with her. She is often awake and active when her family is trying to rest. Eventually one or more of her family, or young females without calves of their own yet, will play with her, lift her out of the water, much like we throw our own young kids up in the air. She is very gregarious. And tenacious.”

    Giles has been participating in the governor’s Orca Recovery Task Force as a member of two of its working groups. She says that, while it’s been mostly productive, the intensity seems to have waned. Still, she’s happy that Inslee took the initiative.

    “I have to give credit where it’s due, and I feel a lot of the interest and the dialogue we are having would not have occurred without the governor’s task force,” she says. “That needs to be recognized, that having a political person try and rally the troops has drawn attention to these whales in a way that we’ve long needed.”

    The task force generally proceeded with good-faith cooperation on all sides in the summer of 2018, but it was distracted and nearly derailed at the end by the insertion by whale watch opponents of a proposal to institute an indefinite but “temporary” moratorium on all whale watch operations around the Southern Residents. When the task force reported its first draft in September 2018, the proposal was included, and eventually legislation was drafted to create the moratorium. However, it was defeated in committee.

    Ken Balcomb, the longtime SRKW scientist who oversees the Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island, was scathing in his assessment of the task force’s recommendation in a Seattle Times op-ed, particularly after moratorium advocates cited his research to justify the measure.

    “I do not know whether it is a diversionary tactic encouraged by special interests,” he wrote, “but I am particularly dismayed to see that the findings of my 42 years of study of the whales are being misused to support emotional and irrational anti-whale watching agendas that realistically are of no benefit to the survival of these beloved Pacific Northwest icons. Such emotions have not added one more fish to the ecosystem, and never will.”

    For researchers like Giles, the most urgent question is how to get enough fish into these waters to feed the Southern Residents—all of them. Her visits with J Pod were shadowed by this reality.

    “I’m looking through the photos I took yesterday and they look really good,” she says. “They were socializing, and that means something. It means they’re not spending all of their time searching for food.”

    The problem is not what she was seeing, but who she wasn’t. In addition to the J Pod—which numbers only 24 whales—two other pods, designated K and L, are significant parts of the Southern Resident population, and they have not appeared in the Salish Sea all summer long.

    “We don’t have the numbers,” Giles says. “All we have is members of J pod. We need to have members of everybody.”

    Their absence points to once-again low Chinook numbers in these waters, which apparently are enough to sustain the J Pod but not the rest of the population. “The downside is that presumably there’s not enough fish here for Ks and Ls to come in. That’s really what we should be seeing. This time of year we should be having numbers of all three pods, but that is absolutely not the case.”

    Balcomb is fond of recalling an old coastal Native American adage: “No fish, no blackfish.” What’s becoming clear is that the Residents have found ways to sustain themselves without Salish Sea fish; but if the fish can return, then so can the whales.

    It would be possible, in reality, to recover these populations if the government devoted the right resources and developed an effective plan of attack. What have been taken instead, however, are federal and state half-measures that have added up to a failed salmon-recovery program, especially on the Columbia River, which historically has produced the lion’s share of salmon along the Pacific Coast generally.

    The region’s politicians, critics point out, have long known what to do. They’ve just lacked the courage to do it.

    That’s because the key first step in recovering the orcas’ salmon involves one of the state’s oldest, and most potent, political footballs in its long-raging culture wars: a phalanx of four dams four hundred miles inland from the San Juans, keys to the salmon runs on a river that doesn’t even pour into Puget Sound, the Columbia.

    Those politics, in the end, may spell doom for the endangered orcas of the Salish Sea. Even the nearest solution, under the bravest of scenarios, will take years to bring them more salmon.

    For the Southern Resident orcas, time has just about run out.

  • Dammed If We Don't - an essay from Patagonia's Yvon Chouinard

    YVON.chouinard

    Yvon Chouinard, founder and owner of Patagonia, Inc. January 2012

    Environmentalist David Brower was once asked, "Why are you conservationists always against things?" He replied, "If you are against something, you are always for something. If you are against a dam, you are for a river."

    I'm also a lover of wild rivers. That's why our company has been involved in trying to take out obsolete and damaging dams since 1993. We've had some success helping take down the Edwards Dam on Maine's Kennebec River in 1999, and the Savage Rapids Dam on Oregon's Rogue River in 2009. As I write this, three large dams are slated to come down on Washington's Elwha and White Salmon Rivers. The United States has more than 82,000 dams in its inventory and researchers estimate there may be at least two million dams of various sizes. So far, at least 836 dams have come down, but 26,000 "hazardous" dams (according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) remain. Many of these dams were built by local irrigation districts, private power companies and local, state and federal governments. When they become obsolete safety hazards, like mines, the owners just walk away and leave the cleanup and restoration to the taxpayers.

    Read more of Yvon's essay over at Patagonia.

  • December 5, 2017: Governor Inslee issues statement opposing harmful HR 3144

    gov.inslee.3144Please see the Dec. 5 statement from Gov. Inslee explaining his opposition to HR 3144, a bill introduced by Rep. McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) earlier this year that would, if it were to become law, reverse several recent court decisions, undermine the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act, and harm endangered wild salmon and steelhead populations by rolling back increased spill over the federal dams on the lower Snake and Columbia Rivers, ordered by federal court in May 2017.

    Salmon and orca advocates in Washington State and across the Pacific Northwest appreciate that Governor Inslee has issued this strong statement and clearly communicated why he believes passage of HR 3144 into law would deliver a terrible blow to salmon and orca populations and fishing communities, and derail current efforts in the region to protect and restore healthy, abundant populations of wild salmon and steelhead in the Columbia and Snake Rivers.

    Link to the bill language – HR 3144:
    http://www.wildsalmon.org/images/factsheets-and-reports/2017-MMR-bill-HR3144.pdf

    Link to a HR 3144 factsheet from Earthjustice/Save Our wild Salmon describing the bill and its impact on salmon, ESA, NEPA, and recent court decisions:
    http://www.wildsalmon.org/images/factsheets-and-reports/2017-HR3144-SOS-EJ-Factsheet-FINAL.pdf

    Guest opinion opposing HR 3144 from the Spokesman Review (8.11.2017):
    http://www.wildsalmon.org/news-and-media/opinion/spokesman-review-guest-opinion-bill-would-rubber-stamp-salmon-failure.html

    Editorial opposing HR 3144 from the Register Guard (Eugene, 7.13.2017):
    http://www.wildsalmon.org/news-and-media/opinion/eugene-register-guard-editorial-a-damming-proposal-congressional-bill-is-not-a-good-option.html

    If you have questions, please contact:
    Sam Mace, SOS, 509-863-5696 (Spokane)
    Joseph Bogaard, SOS, 206-300-1003 (Seattle)

  • Defenders Magazine: Looking for a Sound Solution

    Compromised by pollution, with their fate tied to a fish, the orcas of Puget Sound struggle to hang on

    By Daniel Jack Chasan

    magaizine-spring-2016-orca-dave-ellifrit-center-for-whale-research-nmfs-permit-15569-dfo-sara-272 A big, green-and-white ferry veers, slows and then stops almost dead in the waters of Puget Sound, where, just around the point, the skyscrapers of downtown Seattle soar. To the west, the Olympic Mountains rise behind the low islands and fir-darkened shore, and to the south stands Mt. Rainier’s 14,000-foot snowy cone. But no one’s looking at the scenery. The captain has just announced that a pod of killer whales is heading north. Commuters, school kids and other passengers rush to the port-side windows. Black dorsal fins break the choppy water. Sleek black-and-white bodies curve up into daylight and back down below the waves. Some leap clear of the water, exciting all the passengers.

    Also called orcas—a shortened version of their Latin name—these marine mammals are icons in the Puget Sound area. Technically, this population is called southern resident killer whales. But they are not really whales. They are the largest members of the dolphin family. The name killer whales, twisted in translation, comes from Spanish whalers who saw them hunt whales and dubbed them whale killers.

    Orcas live in every ocean, traveling in close family groups known as pods. Many are doing fine, but the southern resident population—protected under the Endangered Species Act since 2005—is clearly in trouble with a population that numbers only in the 80s.

    Genetically distinct for 700,000 years, they do not breed with other populations and are culturally distinct as well. The southern residents communicate in their own dialect and dine almost exclusively on salmon. Other populations with overlapping ranges eat marine mammals, sharks, rays and more.

    The southern resident population got a push toward extinction in the 1960s and early 1970s, when Sea World and other marine parks realized that leaping, trainable, 20-foot sea mammals were crowd-pleasers. Whale hunters started rounding them up in Puget Sound, but public opinion quickly turned against the captures. In 1976, Sea World agreed to stop trapping in the sound, but lasting damage had been done. Sam Wasser, director of the University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology says that there’s still a hole in the population where females of breeding age should be and, by now, inbreeding problems likely exist.

    Other problems include toxic chemicals and, most worrisome, a lack of food. Southern residents don’t just eat any salmon. They prefer chinook, also called king, and their tastes match our own. When high-end Seattle restaurants offer salmon on their menus, they let diners know they’re getting “wild-caught king.” Killer whales presumably like chinook for the same reasons we do: Of all the Pacific salmon species, they’re the fattiest and grow the largest. Their size and fat content give an orca the greatest possible return on the energy spent foraging.

    The big salmon spawn in rivers all along the Northwest coast. “Satellite tagging is supporting what people knew anecdotally before,” says Deborah Giles, research director at the Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island. “The killer whales use the whole coastline from southeast Alaska to Monterey, California.” She says that as they travel, “in effect, they’re checking: ‘Is the buffet open yet?’”

    Fish returning to the Columbia River’s largest tributary, the Snake, seem crucial, Wasser adds.  In spring, one of the whales’ first major migration stops is the mouth of the Columbia River for early spring chinook. “Those fish are incredibly nutritious,” he explains. “The whales come out of a hard winter and these salmon really replenish them.”

    Historically, the Columbia basin was a cornucopia for the orcas. Chinook, some weighing up to 100 pounds, swam 1,500 miles to the river’s headwaters in British Columbia. In the Puget Sound basin, another run of 100-pounders spawned in the Elwha River. But the giant fish are long gone.

    “Big fish were important to orcas, which are known for sharing food among pod members,” says biologist Elizabeth Ruther, Defenders’ Northwest representative. “This is easier to imagine when the fish were as big as seals. But it’s not so easy with the size of chinook today. It’s like a human family sharing a Dorito chip instead of a whole bag.”

    Not only are those 100-pounders long-gone, but whole chinook populations have gone extinct. Those from Puget Sound—and others in the Columbia, Snake, Willamette and Sacramento rivers—have been federally listed as threatened or endangered. Completion of Grand Coulee Dam in 1941 destroyed the Columbia River runs. More than 70 years earlier, people fishing—in an unregulated free-for-all from rowboats—had started Columbia River chinook on a long decline. The river’s chinook catch peaked in 1883.

    The waters were also cleaner in the good old days. Now, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration labels the southern resident killer whales “among the most contaminated marine mammals in the world.” The southern residents eat contaminated fish, and they hang out near three large coastal cities, exposing them to pollutants from urban treatment plants and pavement runoff.

    Defender to the Core
    A Q&A with a Defenders Expert

    Elizabeth Ruther, Defenders’ Northwest representative

    Q: What is Defenders of Wildlife doing to help the orca’s of Puget Sound?

    A: First, we are working to reduce toxins in the orca’s home and food. Second, we’re focused on increasing or restoring chinook salmon habitat so that more fish can spawn, thrive and play their part in a complex ocean food web. Our work is focused at the county, state and federal level to pass legislation to reduce these threats and build public support for the orca’s continued recovery.

    Q: What’s the connection between dams and orca?

    A: The southern resident orca’s diet consists of more than 80 percent chinook. Simply put, it’s impossible to recover orca without restoring imperiled chinook salmon, too. Unfortunately, habitat loss and barriers to migration—namely dams—have decimated chinook populations in the Northwest. Hydroelectric dams in particular carry a one-two punch: They flood river and floodplain habitat and cause high mortality of juvenile fish as they pass through the dams to swim toward the ocean.

    Q: What can you do to help orcas—even if you don’t live in the Pacific Northwest?

    A: No matter where you live, be mindful of what goes down the storm drain. The toxins we use are harmful to orcas, fish, other aquatic wildlife—and potentially to us. Toxins that run off our driveways, lawns, roads and roofs, flush into streams and rivers and ultimately the ocean. You can help by washing your car on your lawn instead of your driveway, running dish and clothes washers when it’s not raining, using less toxic cleaners, planting rain gardens to catch your roof runoff, using permeable pavers—rather than concrete or asphalt—for patios and driveways, fixing leaky cars, and using alternatives to traditional lawn fertilizers and pesticides. Flame retardants, used in many consumer products, are also fast becoming known for their health hazards to humans and wildlife. Support state and federal efforts to ban these dangerous chemicals, just like DDT and PCBs. Finally, whale-watching has become a big business. No matter what kind of marine mammal you are watching, make sure the operator is conservation-minded and is sensitive to endangered species protections. If you’re in a private boat make sure you don’t get too close and never follow a marine mammal swimming away. This causes the animal to expend energy, increasing the need for food and decreasing the opportunities to find it.

    Toxins accumulate in fatty tissue, which is why Washington state warns people to avoid eating chinook caught anywhere in the southern sound more than once a week. An orca eats up to 300 pounds a day. And eating less wouldn’t help. If they have plenty to eat, the chemicals stay in their fat, but if food is scarce, the story changes. “As you start running out of food, you metabolize your fat,” says Wasser. This gets the toxins flowing through the body.

    The three pods of whales that make up the southern residents populations, identified as J, K and L by researchers, have varying levels of toxins in their system. Members of J pod, which spends the most time within Puget Sound, carry extremely high burdens of PCBs—largely banned in 1979—and other substances washed into the sound by stormwater. K and L pods, which spend less time in the inner sound but swim down the coast to Point Reyes National Seashore and Monterey Bay in California, carry fewer PCBs but a lot more DDT. Also largely banned in the 1970s, DDT remains in marine ecosystems off the Oregon and California coast, where rivers and streams carried it from inland farms.

    Stormwater also flushes toxins directly and indirectly into Puget Sound. Flowing off roads, it carries an estimated 7 million quarts of leaked motor oil into the sound every year. “That is only one example,” says Ruther. “But it is a big reminder that what we do as individuals, especially when dealing with chemicals, has huge impacts on animal habitats. We can make sure we aren’t harming habitat and wildlife by responsibly handling our own chemical waste—from fixing leaky car engines to making sure we take our old boat out of the water and to the dump.”

    It’s the reason Defenders is studying ways to incentivize responsible action on derelict and abandoned vessels in the Northwest—from private recreational boats to old fishing vessels and decommissioned Navy ships. Abandoned boats eventually sink, and depending on what’s on board it can be incredibly hazardous to marine wildlife. Preventing the boats from being abandoned in the first place eliminates the hazard and is less expensive overall.

    Defenders is also working with a broad alliance of local, regional, national and international conservation groups to bring attention to the plight of orcas and the salmon they depend upon for survival. “Many people are unaware how closely tied the southern resident orcas are to salmon, and getting that message delivered to the right people is the first step,” Ruther says.

    To halt the decline of chinook and other salmon species, conservation scientists agree that we have to deal with the “4 Hs”: hydro, habitat, hatcheries and harvest.

    “Hydro” means dams with turbines that convert the energy of moving water to electricity. The nation’s two largest hydro projects stand on the upper Columbia River, barring salmon from spawning streams in Canada. Four less-imposing dams on the lower Snake River depress the survival rate of salmon populations in the Snake and its tributaries, including the fish that Wasser terms incredibly nutritious. Many of the Columbia Basin’s spring chinook spawn in the Idaho wilderness, where the high elevation may enable salmon to flourish even if climate change makes stream temperatures in the rest of the vast watershed too high.

    The idea of taking out a sizable dam is controversial but no longer unthinkable. The two dams that long blocked the Elwha River were recently removed, making the Elwha the model for what can be done. As soon as the dams came out, people saw chinook spawning upstream in Olympic National Park. “Successful dam removals show us it’s time to take inventory of all dams in salmon country, hydro or not, and figure out which were a mistake, have outlived their usefulness, are more expensive to maintain than remove, or would just plain give salmon the habitat back that they need to survive,” says Ruther.

    Chinook developed in dam-free rivers with braided channels, log jams and wide, soggy plains into which the water periodically spilled. University of Washington geologist David Montgomery has argued that these floodplains could again be “salmon factories.” He says the most cost-effective way to get a lot more salmon would be to buy land or rights in those floodplains that aren’t yet extensively developed, and let the rivers be rivers once again.

    Ruther agrees. “If we’re seriously interested in expanding habitat, we need floodplain restoration,” she says. “If you look at large salmon-producing rivers within the southern resident orca’s range, it’s one tragic story of river habitat destruction after another. It’s no surprise we are facing a salmon extinction crisis today. We must work to reverse our mistakes before it’s too late for salmon and orca and many other species.”

    Along rivers now diked and channeled, hatcheries crank out fish for the short-term benefit of commercial- and sport-fishing activities and for tribes with treaty rights. This produces fish that compete with native populations, reducing genetic diversity—which may be the salmon’s best hope for surviving climate change—and the chance that wild gene pools will endure, say researchers.

    Catching salmon for fun or profit isn’t necessarily bad, but regulators often allow an “incidental” catch of imperiled salmon in more robust runs. “Sustainably caught” salmon can also include fish from threatened and endangered runs. When the fish are divvied up among human interest groups, neither killer whales nor future generations get a seat at the table.

    While there are recovery plans for threatened and endangered chinook populations, says Ruther, “critically imperiled southern resident orcas should also be included in these plans.” For example, chinook recovery plans often require fisheries and hatcheries to manage so that they do not detrimentally impact wild fish stocks. “Many species eat chinook salmon, but very few large marine mammals exist almost exclusively on chinook,” says Ruther. “This means fisheries managers can have a direct hand in southern resident orca recovery.”

    Recent headlines in Seattle about a modest killer whale baby boom—nine new calves born in the past 12 months—do seem to point to happier days to come. “This is wonderful news,” says Ruther. “But the sad reality is that more fish are needed to sustain the current population and these adorable new additions. They will continue to struggle until wild salmon recovers.”

    She also cautions that preliminary findings from new research suggest that first-time orca moms experience high rates of miscarriages and stillbirths, or they lose their first-born shortly after birth because of higher levels of development-disrupting toxins in the milk firstborns receive.

    “This is the sad news that keeps me working hard to recover orca,” she says. “But I do look forward to a day when there can be celebrations all around for a newborn orca calf. No environmental crisis is insurmountable as long as there’s hope and committed people who can step up and make a difference, and we’re certainly not going to give up.”

    Daniel Jack Chasan writes about conservation issues in the Northwest from his home near Puget Sound.

    https://www.defenders.org/magazine/spring-2016/looking-sound-solution

  • Defenders of Wildlife: Wild Without End - Orcas in a Tight Spot

    orca calf 1November 2017

    Southern Resident orcas in the Salish Sea are facing population decline at the hands of a severe drop in salmon numbers. Noise pollution from ship traffic, the pollution of the ecosystem and bioaccumulation of toxins in Southern Resident orcas are other massive stressors on the population.

    Bioaccumulation occurs when toxics enter the food chain and predators begin to consume contaminated prey. As orcas consume more and more contaminated salmon, they also consume the toxics in the fish, accumulating dangerously high levels of pollution in their fat reserves. Like all marine mammals, orcas rely on the energy in their fat for when prey is scarce. This is an all-too common occurrence for Southern Residents. Chinook salmon, their primary prey, have collapsed across the west coast, leaving fewer fish for the whales.
    Without abundant salmon runs, the orcas metabolize the stored fat and energy in their blubber. Doing so also floods their bodies with toxic chemicals, which can make them sick. Milk produced for calves is also made from these toxic fat stores, which may be a driving factor behind the high calf mortality and low reproductive rates in the population. Pollution enters the Salish Sea from several sources, but some of the most concerning are old, derelict vessels and wood pilings in the water and polluted stormwater runoff. This pollution makes conserving and restoring Southern Resident orcas extremely difficult.

    Old ships and vessels abandoned in the water leak out oil, lubricant and other harmful substances used to construct the vessel or in the cargo onboard. Creosote treated wood pilings, which used to support old docks and mooring facilities, also taint the Salish Sea. Coal tar creosote, a substance containing up to 10,000 chemicals, was commonly used to protect wooden support structures from decaying in the water. By far the largest source of pollution in the Salish Sea is polluted stormwater runoff.

    Luckily there are clean ups already underway in the Salish Sea. The Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has two programs that are actively removing both derelict vessels and creosote pilings. The DNR’s derelict vessel removal program began in 2002, and it has removed over 700 vessels that were polluting the Salish Sea. The DNR’s creosote removal program has, to date, removed roughly have of the creosote pilings in Puget Sound.

    Derelict Vessel Removal
    While the program has greatly reduced pollution from these old vessels, more can be done. Vessel removal can be expensive, and the DNR’s program is unable to remove all the identified derelict vessels in a given funding cycle. The state could also do more to prevent vessels from becoming derelict in the first place, which not only prevents pollution from contaminating the Salish Sea and orcas, but it also is significantly less expensive than removing vessels from the water. Additional funding from the legislature could improve and expand on the DNR’s programs, allowing the department to do more in a given year. Furthermore, coordination and collaboration with other government agencies can greatly improve the efficiency of removal and prevention efforts. Through updated record keeping, increased education efforts and improved collaboration, local governments, state departments and federal agencies could efficiently and effectively leverage their resources and expertise to have an even greater impact on removing these polluting vessels and preventing others from sinking to the bottom of the Salish Sea.

    Creosote Removal
    The DNR also manages the state’s creosote removal program. Unfortunately, due to decreases in funding, the remaining pilings have not been removed. Like the derelict vessel removal program, an influx of funding from the state could finish the job and remove all of the creosote pilings from Puget Sound. This would reduce one of the most toxic sources of pollution from the Salish Sea.

    Stormwater Runoff Reduction
    Stormwater runoff remains one of the most difficult challenges to address because it is the largest source of pollution affecting the Salish Sea, and it comes from everywhere and everyone. While this may make the problem seem daunting, there are several simple, concrete ways that local governments and individuals can reduce the amount of stormwater pouring into the Salish Sea. One of the best tools we have at our disposal is raingardens; bowl-shaped gardens that collect stormwater and naturally absorb and filter the water.

    Studies have shown that when stormwater is treated through biofiltration systems, like raingardens, the filtered water is clean enough for salmon. By installing raingardens, homeowners and local governments can address one of the biggest threats facing the Salish Sea while also beautifying homes and neighborhoods. Large raingardens installed in public places are becoming more common in communities around Western Washington. Currently, the stormwater treatment facility at Point Defiance Park in Tacoma is the largest biofiltration system in the world, treating much of the stormwater runoff from West End neighborhood before it pours into Commencement Bay.

    https://medium.com/wild-without-end/orcas-in-a-tight-spot-d34d255cd025

  • Different Situations: Grand Coulee Fish Kill and Columbia/Snake River Salmon Spill

    Grand_Coulee_Dam2The recent fish kill below Grand Coulee dam has garnered some media attention.  We wanted to take a moment to clear up some misconceptions about how this relates to spill for salmon: A large release of water from Grand Coulee Dam on the upper Columbia River in northern Washington has killed several thousand farmed steelhead trout being raised in net pens in the river.  This situation is very different from that of salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River below Grand Coulee, and in the Snake River, where fishing, business and conservation groups are seeking additional beneficial spill to help salmon.  The differences make all the difference for fish, people and businesses. Read more over at the SOS Blog.
     
     

     

  • Don't let BPA squander clean energy jobs and innovation.

    ACTION: Urge Secretary Chu and the U.S. Senate to change BPA’s current course.

    bpa.logo2Last year, we faced the largest environmental disaster in our nation’s history: the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. In many ways, this tragedy helped renew a conversation about our energy future.

    While oil was spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, the Northwest was facing an incredibly stormy spring; lots of wind and rain led to a surplus of energy from both hydroelectric dams and wind turbines.

    Yet, instead of using last spring’s abundance of power as an opportunity to expand and diversify the Northwest’s clean energy portfolio, the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) – which manages much of the Northwest’s energy transmission – opted instead to undertake a planning process to deal with what it calls “over-generation.”

    The result of this process is a protocol where, in times of high wind and high water, BPA will start shutting off wind turbines as a way to reduce surplus power on the region’s grid.  

    By putting wind power on the chopping block before pursuing any number of other viable alternatives, BPA is shielding dam energy at the expense of clean energy jobs and wild salmon.

    And now, BPA is poised to implement this “over-generation” strategy.  As temperatures rise this week and next, and more snowmelt fills the Snake and Columbia rivers, BPA will likely begin curtailing wind production – a move that harms Northwest renewable energy development and the good jobs that go with it.

    TAKE ACTION: Urge Secretary Chu and the U.S. Senate to change BPA’s current course.

    In the Pacific Northwest we are blessed with emerging clean energy and energy conservation opportunities. Unfortunately, our region’s lead energy broker, the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) remains active in the policies of the past.  In its ongoing effort to minimize the amount of water spilled over the dams to help salmon in the Columbia and Snake rivers, BPA is now attempting to use salmon as an excuse to shut off wind energy production in the region when river flow levels are too high. You can download BPA’s “over-generation” proposal here.

    Contrary to BPA’s assertions, salmon protection in the Columbia-Snake River Basin are linked with wind power, not in conflict. In the Northwest, we can have both – a truly clean energy future and wild rivers teeming with wild salmon.

    Nevertheless, BPA’s proposal creates the false impression that we need to curtail wind in an effort to protect salmon – an assertion that is at odds with salmon science and causing confusion among leaders in Congress. The story has been covered in the Oregonian, the Seattle Times, and the Eugene Register Guard.  In addition, Congressman Markey (D-MA) recently sent a letter to Secretary Chu urging his leadership to change BPA's current course.

    Please take action here and forward the alert to your friends and family in the Northwest

  • E-mails show internal debate over Obama salmon plan

    Oregonian_Logo
    By Matthew Preusch
     
    December 24, 2009
    Independent scientists largely approved of the Obama administration's plan for Northwest salmon and dam, internal e-mails show. The administration released scores of documents related to its review of the controversial plan, meant to keep salmon from sliding closer to extinction due to the operation of federal hydroelectric dams, late last month. The documents show considerable internal discussion over what parts of the plan need to be strengthened, as well as many positive comments from independent scientists.

     

  • E&E News: A Republican wants to breach dams. Where are Democrats?

    Jeremy P. Jacobs
    March 26, 2021

    simpson.videoA sweeping proposal to remake the Pacific Northwest's energy system to save its iconic salmon has been met with crickets on Capitol Hill and appears to have driven a wedge among environmental groups.

    Idaho Rep. Mike Simpson (R) released a $33.5 billion proposal for the region in early February that would breach four dams on the Lower Snake River in eastern Washington — the subject of decades of litigation and the country's most expensive endangered species boondoggle.

    Simpson said breaching is necessary to give the river's dwindling salmon runs a chance at survival. But in order to bring all the parties that rely on the dams to the bargaining table, he included many provisions and pots of money to, as he puts it, make everyone whole.

    Some of those measures have rubbed environmental groups the wrong way. The Center for Biological Diversity's Oregon policy director, Quinn Read, called it a "nonstarter" in a statement.

    In a letter with 16 other groups, CBD said they support breaching the four dams. Simpson's proposal is the first major policy framework that calls for dam breaching. Still, the groups called it "disastrous."

    The groups, which also included WildEarth Guardians and Food & Water Watch, said Simpson was acting "cynically" and that he was continuing a "false narrative that environmental safeguards are to blame for declining wild salmon populations."
    Their letter was sent to Washington state's and Oregon's four senators.

    In particular, the groups took issue with a provision of Simpson's plan that would provide a 25-year moratorium on litigation under the Clean Water Act and Endangered Species Act.

    It would also extend the licensing on the Columbia River Basin's remaining dams for 35 years, which would deprive environmental groups of the opportunity to challenge environmental mitigation measures in the relicensing process.

    Simpson's "current proposal sacrifices too much, fails to address major limiting factors in the survival of wild salmon, steelhead, and other species in the Columbia Basin," they wrote, "and would lock in a failed status quo or worse for much of the rest of the basin."

    The letter set off a frenzy from other environmental groups and tribes, seeking to clarify that while they do not agree with the litigation moratorium, Simpson's plan was intended to be a starting point for negotiations; actual legislation has yet to be drafted.

    "The Northwest delegation must engage now to ensure a future where salmon are once again abundant," Don Sampson of the Northwest Tribal Salmon Alliance said in a statement. "What we cannot do is wait. Waiting is death. It is our sacred obligation to preserve these salmon and our ways of life."

    Some advocates also said the outright dismissal of the proposal fails to recognize the complexity of the issue and the interwoven nature of the region's hydropower system.
    "We can't think about the Snake River dams like they are the wishbone in a game of 'Operation,' and some measure of caution and precision will extract them without setting off the buzzer," said Jim Norton, a board member of the Idaho Conservation League. "This will change things — that's the point."

    Complicated politics

    The dispute underscores the challenges facing Simpson politically.
    On one hand, the infighting among environmental groups could boost Simpson's efforts to build support among the region's utilities, including the Bonneville Power Administration, the region's federal hydropower marketer.

    Simpson alluded to that this week. He called groups behind the original letter "extreme."

    "The reason they are opposed to it is they don't want to give up their right to sue," he said at an event hosted by the City Club of Boise. "That kind of tells you what their game plan for the future is."

    The litigation provision was intended to bring an end to what's been in decades of court battles. And, in so doing, provide some certainty to the region's retail utilities that the rates they pay for BPA's wholesale power won't continue to rise due to litigation costs or fish mitigation costs that result from court rulings.
    And that measure is very important to utilities. "Without that," said Kurt Miller of Northwest RiverPartners, which represents many of the public power utilities in the region, "I don't see how public power would be supportive of it."

    On the other hand, the politics of moving forward a sweeping proposal may be proving more complicated than Simpson imagined.

    Simpson's proposal would include $1.4 billion to breach the four Lower Snake River dams — Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite — beginning in 2030.

    Then it would create buckets of money to replace what the dams do. That includes $10 billion to replace the power they produce and more than $2.2 billion for the region's farmers to find another way besides barging to move their crops to Portland, Ore., for export (E&E Daily, Feb. 8).

    No takers

    Simpson has found himself on an island. So far, virtually no lawmakers have stepped up to lend significant support to the proposal since he released it more than a month ago.

    The offices of Washington Sens. Maria Cantwell (D) and Patty Murray (D) as well as Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden (D) and Jeff Merkley (D) either didn't respond to requests for comment or referred to an earlier, noncommittal joint statement after the plan was released.

    "All communities in the Columbia River Basin and beyond should be heard in efforts to recover the Northwest's iconic salmon runs while ensuring economic vitality of the region," they said in early February.

    "Any process needs to balance the needs of communities in the Columbia River Basin, be transparent, be driven by stakeholders, and follow the science."
    Some Senate offices said that they continue to examine the issue and meet with advocates and other people involved.

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) offered some support in a statement after Simpson went public, but he is also trying to establish his own regional process to address the issue. His office declined to comment further.

    Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D) issued perhaps the most supportive statement in February but has not provided details on developments since.

    "I'd like to thank Rep. Simpson for working with a broad coalition of interested parties across the Northwest to craft this proposal, which will help us to build on the economic opportunities of the Columbia Basin and invest in a clean energy future," Brown said.

    "At the same time, we can restore the promise of healthy and abundant salmon and steelhead stocks for generations to come, while respecting the history and rights of the sovereign tribes that have been stewards of these rivers since time immemorial."

    'Not the last opportunity'

    The relative silence highlights the challenge Simpson — a conservative Republican — faces in getting the region's top Democrats on board. Simpson also appears to be recognizing that.

    His plan was initially to push to include the proposal in President Biden's forthcoming multitrillion-dollar infrastructure plan. But this week, he signaled a shift in strategy, saying that he'd likely only seek the funding in that bill and pursue stand-alone legislation later.

    "If we don't get it there, it's not the last opportunity," he said, referring to the infrastructure package. "Then we would work on trying to pass a piece of legislation."
    Norton, the Idaho Conservation League board member, said Simpson deserves credit for going public with his proposal, and it deserves to be taken seriously by all the region's stakeholders — including its environmental groups, utilities and congressional delegation.

    "These are big systems with entrenched beneficiaries. It takes a lot of work, and nerve, to propose something different. Simpson did that work and took a big risk putting it out there," he said.

    "Rethinking the role of the federal government and Bonneville Power in the [Pacific Northwest] energy system is a formidable challenge. But I can't imagine how we breach those dams without dealing with the elephant in the room."

  • E&E News: Calif. greenlights massive Klamath River dam removal

    By Jeremy P. Jacobs
    April 9, 2020klamath.dam

    The largest dam removal project in U.S. history came one step closer to fruition this week, as California issued permits for breaching the four dams on the Klamath River.

    The State Water Resources Control Board issued a Clean Water Act certification and environmental assessment for the proposal to remove three dams in Northern California and one in southern Oregon.

    "Decades in the making, this historic and comprehensive project will help restore native fish populations, and improve water quality in the Klamath Basin," board Chairman E. Joaquin Esquivel said in a statement.

    At issue are four dams on the Klamath River, which snakes from southern Oregon through a rugged and remote part of Northern California to the Pacific Ocean.

    The river is the second largest in California, and it is home to multiple tribes that have relied on its salmon runs for millennia. Those runs have dwindled significantly due to a variety of factors including climate change and the river's four downstream dams.

    After years of lobbying and pressure, the four hydropower dams — Copco No. 1, Copco No. 2, J.C. Boyle and the largest, Iron Gate — are set to be removed after their operator, PacifiCorp, concluded the dams no longer made financial sense; they produce very little power, and relicensing them with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission would likely be costly because fish mitigation would be required (Greenwire, March 13, 2017).

    PacifiCorp is seeking to transfer the dams' license to the nonprofit Klamath River Renewal Corp. It says breaching the dams could begin in 2022, and FERC could vote on the transfer as soon as this spring.

    The local tribes on the river cheered this week's announcement from the State Water Resources Control Board as the clearing of a key hurdle.

    "This represents another milestone in our decades long effort to remove dams and restore our fishery," said Frankie Myers, vice chairman of the Yurok Tribe, in a statement. "Working with PacifiCorp, we have found a way to remove dams, restore our river, and dramatically improve water quality."

    Nevertheless, the roughly $450 million dam removal project remains controversial in the region, one of the most conservative areas of California. In particular, landowners along the river and the reservoirs behind the dams say their property values will plummet (Climatewire, March 30).

    Other supporters of dams in the West, including in Congress, have raised concerns about the precedent the project would set.

    Twitter: @GreenwireJeremy Email: jjacobs@eenews.net

  • E&E News: Climate activists put bull's-eye on hydropower dams in Wash.

    Four dams along the Lower Snake River are drawing protests for their impacts on salmon.

    By Zeina Mohammed
    April 19, 2022

    cw 0419 mohammed activism 1160 01CLIMATEWIRE | Thousands of students in the Pacific Northwest are fighting to protect salmon and steelhead by joining tribes and state officials to call for the removal of four dams along Washington's Lower Snake River.

    The dams are part of the Federal Columbia River Power System, the largest regional supplier of clean energy. While the hydroelectric dams have produced emission-free power, their impact on fish species has drawn attention from activists and high-profile officials who say the structures should be replaced with other forms of renewable energy.

    “The question should not be whether to remove the dams but rather how best to mitigate the impacts of doing so,” said Maanit Goel, 16, founder of the Washington Youth Salmon Alliance. “Clean energy at the cost of a keystone species is not really clean energy at all.”

    Raised in the Seattle suburbs, the high school sophomore leads a youth movement advocating for fish protections because a shortage of salmon endangers the orcas in Puget Sound that rely on them for food.

    Over the past few months, the group has been collecting hundreds of signatures to present to Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Gov. Jay Inslee (D) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which manages the dams, to draw attention to the structures' effect on fish.

    Shiva Rajbhandari of Idaho leads the Youth Salmon Protectors, a coalition of over 2,000 students pushing for the removal of the four dams. The group has been working since January 2021 to pressure lawmakers to take legislative action toward breaching the dams, which block the fish from swimming upriver into Idaho.

    Last year, Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) proposed the Columbia Basin Fund initiative, a $33 billion effort to remove and replace the dams by 2031 and create clean energy programs that would help restore local wildlife. A few months later, Inslee and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said they would propose plans for the dams' removal and replacement by July.

    “This summer is the summer for salmon,” Rajbhandari said. “We mean to mobilize over a million people, including at least several hundred thousand students, to take action and tell their elected officials why this matters.”

    The issue has also received attention from the Biden administration. Last fall, the administration announced it will collaborate with tribes through a multiagency effort to restore wild salmon and their ecosystems.

    Last month, the White House published a blogacknowledging federal culpability for actions “that have caused harm to the ecology of the river, its tributaries, and importantly, its first residents” while reaffirming the administration's commitment to work with tribes.

    Youth activists said they are optimistic that federal attention will lead to the dams' removal.

    “I hope the Biden administration works with lawmakers like Rep. Simpson and the delegations from Oregon and Washington to solidify a plan,” said Liz Duke-Moe, one of the leaders of the Youth Salmon Protectors. “This is no longer a fight for salmon, but a moment to prove there is hope for our generation within the climate crisis.”

  • E&E News: Climate concerns preclude dam breaching — Trump admin

    By Jeremy P. Jacobsdam.photo
    August 11, 2020

    The Trump administration has a new argument for opposing the breach of salmon-killing dams in the Pacific Northwest: climate change.

    In a highly anticipated environmental analysis of the Columbia River's hydropower system, the administration justifies keeping the dams by arguing that taking their hydropower offline would require the region to turn to more carbon-intensive energy, such as gas or coal.

    That switch, the agencies say, would make it harder to comply with states' efforts to fight climate change. Washington state's law, for example, requires 100% carbon-free power by 2045.

    Taking out the dams would make those climate change-related goals "more difficult to achieve," they wrote.

    Conservationists said the justification is galling coming from the Trump administration, which exited the Paris climate agreement, has undone numerous federal climate-related policies and is set this week to dismantle EPA regulations for limiting emissions of heat-trapping methane (see related story). The administration, they say, is pitting climate change against fish.
    "It is one of their more cynical rationales," said Todd True of Earthjustice, who has repeatedly sued federal dam managers. He called the reasoning "shameless."

    Scott Levy, director of the advocacy group bluefish.org, was equally blunt. He called it "egregious."

    Columbia River salmon and steelhead runs were once among the most prolific in the world, returning 10 million to 16 million fish to the system yearly.

    Those numbers began to plummet in the 1960s due to dam building, commercial harvesting and climate change.

    In the decades since, conservationists have waged a litigious battle with the Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation and the Bonneville Power Administration, which sells the power produced at the dams.

    Environmentalists have targeted four impoundments on the Lower Snake River in particular: Ice Harbor (completed in 1961), Lower Monumental (1969), Little Goose (1970) and Lower Granite (1975). Those dams were among the last built in the system and, conservationists argue, sealed salmon's fate.

    With the addition of the four dams, salmon and steelhead must navigate eight dams on their migration from Idaho to the Pacific Ocean. Most of the runs are now listed under the Endangered Species Act.

    In 2016, a federal court struck down the management plan for the fifth time. Judge Michael Simon of the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon found "significant deficiencies" and raised questions about the effectiveness of an endangered species program that has cost nearly $17 billion.

    "[T]he option of breaching, bypassing, or even removing a dam may be considered more financially prudent and environmentally effective than spending hundreds of millions of dollars on uncertain habitat restoration and other alternative actions," Simon wrote.

    Simon ordered the agencies to consider breaching the four dams.

    The resulting 8,000-page environmental impact statement, or EIS, points to the complicated and sometimes contradictory objectives placed on the agencies. The Lower Snake River dams provide some irrigation and recreation and produce power that Bonneville has maintained is important to grid reliability during peak times.

    "Collaboration has been the cornerstone of this process," Bureau of Reclamation Regional Director Lorri Gray said when the EIS was released. "This document evaluates the necessary balance between responsible environmental stewardship and the multiple uses of the Columbia River System."

    Breaching the four dams, the document stated, "would not meet the objective" to provide a reliable and economical power supply.

    But it also acknowledged that continued discussion about the dams is necessary, as is coming up with a regional solution to the problems that is beyond their authority in the EIS.

    Fully tackling all the issues, the agencies wrote in a summary, will "require additional regional actions to address other effects that are beyond the co-lead agencies' authorities" in the Columbia River system (E&E News PM, July 31).
    Other analyses have taken issue with justifying the dams based on the electricity they produce, even if it is mostly carbon-free.

    A comprehensive 2018 NW Energy Coalition study found that the approximately 1,000 megawatts of annual power production from the dams could be replaced by demand response and renewables at little to no cost to customers (Greenwire, Oct. 23, 2019).
    "The evidence shows this is an eminently solvable problem," said Joseph Bogaard of the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition. "The thing we need to be doing is sitting down and developing that plan."

    Earthjustice's True said the agencies' setting up a "supposed conflict" between the salmon, the endangered orcas that rely on them for food, and climate change is illustrative of the overall approach by the agencies.

    "Part of the problem," he said, "is one of the features of this EIS is it doesn't try to solve problems; it just tries to perpetuate them."

    Twitter: @GreenwireJeremyEmail: jjacobs@eenews.net

  • E&E News: Columbia River Treaty deal would boost US energy capacity

    The Biden administration said its preliminary agreement with Canada signals on a 20-year treaty would include Canada giving up some of its claim on hydropower generation.

    crt.photo.copy

    By JENNIFER YACHNIN
    Jul 11, 2024

    The United States would see an immediate bump in its energy capacity under a tentative Columbia River Treaty agreement, with Canada shrinking its claim to Pacific Northwest hydropower supplies, senior Biden administration officials said Thursday.

    Beginning in August, Canada would reduce its share of hydropower produced on the Columbia River, boosting U.S. capacity by 600 megawatts and energy available for sale to consumers by 230 MW.

    "These new terms will go a long way towards helping meet the growing demands for energy in the region, and avoid building unnecessary fossil fuel-based generation," said John Hairston, who serves as administrator and CEO of the Bonneville Power Administration.

    The shift in energy availability is part of a "agreement in principle" announced Thursday by President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to modernize the 60-year old Columbia River Treaty, which governs both hydropower operations and flood risk management on the waterway.

    Under the 1964 treaty, Canada had received half of the hydroelectric generation created by water stored in three facilities for the United States.

    But beginning in August, Hairston said that Canada agreed to decrease its share, ultimately reducing its entitlement to 50 percent of its current take by 2033.

    In exchange, Hairston said that transmission rights currently utilized by the Bonneville Power Administration would be turned over to Canada.

    "This historic 20-year agreement provides substantial value to communities across the Basin," Hairston said. "It ensures both nations will continue to share in the benefits of the Columbia River Power System, which is vital to the economies and cultures of people both north and south of the border."

    The agreement would also require the United States to operate with less pre-approved storage in Canada, reducing storage levels to 3.6 million acre-feet of water, although given recent drought conditions Biden administration officials asserted that storage would be sufficient.

    A senior administration official, who spoke on background during a briefing arranged by the State Department, said the total contract is valued at $1.5 billion.

    Negotiators will next draft the new treaty documents and engage Columbia River Basin residents for feedback, according to a news release from the British Columbia provincial government.

    The Columbia River Treaty was established in 1964 in response to flooding that submerged the entire city of Vanport, Oregon, in 1948, as well as to address hydropower and agricultural irrigation needs in the Pacific Northwest.

    According to statistics from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the Columbia River Basin is home to 29 Gigawatts of hydroelectric generating capacity.

    A second senior administration officials said the agreement also includes provisions for Native Americans and Indigenous nations to form an organization "to make recommendations on ecosystem provisions and recommending the timing and quantity of flows for salmon."

    But Joseph Bogaard of the Save Our wild Salmon Coalition, who chairs the Columbia River Treaty NGO Caucus, raised concerns the agreement still leaves uncertainty about the basin's salmon and native fish populations.

    “The health of the Columbia River must become an explicit purpose in a new, modernized Treaty,” Bogaard said. “The Columbia Basin is out of balance today. A modernized Treaty could become a tool for restoring balance and solving problems. Salmon advocates have serious concerns with this Agreement in Principle. It leaves a lot of uncertainty for the future of this historic river, its native fish populations and the many benefits they bring to our communities.”

    Members of Congress praised the preliminary deal, while vowing to meet with local residents on as more details become available.

    “The Columbia River Basin has far-reaching effects on my constituents and the Pacific Northwest. A modern Columbia River Treaty is essential to managing flood risks, ensuring a reliable supply of green energy and growing the regional economy," said Washington Democratic Rep. Rick Larsen. “I will be engaging with my constituents on the specifics of the updated treaty.”

    Washington Democratic Sen. Patty Murray likewise said she remains "hopeful" the agreement benefits ratepayers, tribal nations, river users and the ecosystem alike.

    "I pressed the administration to engage with Tribes and stakeholders in the Northwest as openly as possible throughout negotiations and continue to do so now through the drafting process — and as Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I will work with the administration and my colleagues to ensure Congress provides the necessary resources for the United States to meet its obligations," Murray said.

    E&E News: 'Columbia River Treaty deal would boost US energy capacity' article link

  • E&E News: Energy Transitions - Hydropower giant Bonneville Power is going broke

    September 3, 2019

    By Jeremy P. Jacobs, E&E News reporter 

    dam.lowergraniteLewiston, Idaho — Nearly a century ago, America embarked on a great social experiment in the Pacific Northwest, charging up the Columbia River and erecting dams.

    It worked. Construction jobs pulled the country out of the Great Depression. Cheap electricity spurred the growth of cities like Seattle, Portland and Boise. And hydropower fueled the military effort to defeat the spread of fascism in World War II.

    Now the system is buckling.

    The Bonneville Power Administration, the independent federal agency that sells the electricity produced by the dams, is careening toward a financial cliff. BPA is $15 billion in debt, facing a rapidly changing energy market increasingly dominated by wind and solar and a desperate need to maintain aging infrastructure that's expected to cost $300 million to maintain and upgrade by 2023.

    "If this were a private company, you would be shorting BPA," said Tony Jones, an economist at consulting firm Rocky Mountain Econometrics. "If it was a private-sector company, it would restructure. Or this would be a good time to declare bankruptcy."

    Hydropower no longer produces the region's cheapest electricity.

    In the past, the utility relied heavily on selling surplus power at high rates to states including California, often referred to as the utility's ATM. But starting around 2008, California invested in wind and solar, and soon it no longer needed BPA's power. Bonneville was left with virtually no customers for its extra power.

    As a result, BPA's rates have risen 30% since 2008. BPA currently charges its utility customers nearly $36 per megawatt-hour. On the open market, they could buy electricity for $22.

    BPA has survived so far because it inked 20-year contracts with its utility customers in 2008, before California and others shifted to solar, wind and natural gas. But those agreements end in 2028, and if BPA doesn't come up with a plan, its customers will buy cheaper electricity elsewhere.

    If even a few do that, BPA would likely have to raise rates even higher to cover costs, which could lead other customers to similarly head for the exits. And that, in turn, could force even higher rate increases.

    The economic term for that cycle, Jones said, is a "death spiral."

    That's only part of BPA's problems. In addition to facing market pressures, it pays for the largest endangered species recovery program in U.S. history.

    To date, it has cost BPA nearly $17 billion to mitigate the effects of its dams on threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead. Those costs translate into nearly a quarter of the rate BPA charges its power customers.

    And that program is failing.

    Fish runs continue to decline, and though proponents highlight fish passage improvements at dams, the program's primary success is that what were once some of the most prolific salmon and steelhead runs in North America haven't vanished yet.

    "We are not recovering salmon," said Patrick Wilson, a professor of natural resource policy at the University of Idaho. "We are just preventing them from going extinct."

    Most experts give them 10 years until extinction.

    The Northwest's status quo is broken. And it will only get worse, threatening to create a regional economic crisis.

    Climate change will bring harsher conditions for the fish, including warmer rivers and oceans, potentially deadly reservoir temperatures, and less usable habitat.

    BPA, meanwhile, is approaching its federal borrowing limit and could reach that cap by 2023, raising questions about whether it can even afford the fish program in the future.

    The utility knows this. BPA Administrator Elliot Mainzer testified last year that it's been a "bloodbath" on the wholesale market as new wind and solar have driven prices down.

    Yet no one had questioned BPA's role as a regional powerhouse. Until now.

    In April, Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) delivered a speech that for the first time said changes are needed.

    "BPA is in trouble," Simpson said at an Andrus Center for Public Policy at Boise State University forum.

    And in a first for a lawmaker, Simpson also said the fish problems and the crisis facing BPA are connected and must be addressed together.

    Simpson stopped short of saying dams should be breached. But he spoke about salmon in nearly religious terms.

    Recalling seeing adult salmon return to Idaho — swimming 900 miles from the ocean, gaining 7,000 feet of elevation — to spawn and die, he said: "It was the end of a cycle. And the beginning of a new one. These are the most incredible creatures, I think, that God's created."

    His speech sent a tsunami through the political, environmental and energy communities.

    "For 50 years, the federal agencies in charge of managing the dams on the Columbia and Snake have successfully managed to keep all the congressional delegation in the four affected states marching in lockstep and parroting their messaging," said Steven Hawley, a journalist and author of the book "Recovering a Lost River." "Simpson is the first to be openly critical and question what's going on with the hydro system."

    He added, "I'm sure it makes people in the agencies really nervous."

    It has also invigorated conservationists. Outdoor outfitter Patagonia Inc. is getting involved, and local activists are going on the road to drum up support.

    They estimate ratepayers have contributed some $10 billion toward the flawed fish program.

    "And you are getting no results," said Linwood Laughy, a Harvard-educated activist based in Moscow, Idaho. "Well, shit, how dumb are we?"

    They point to a 2017 report from the Fish Passage Center — an independent research entity funded by BPA by law — that concluded removing four dams on the Lower Snake River, increasing spill over other dams, would lead to a fourfold increase in the number of fish.

    Simpson's assault on these problems won't be easy.

    Interests that rely on the dams have had decades to become entrenched, and Simpson will have to somehow make sure everyone wins to drum up political support. That includes one of the country's most productive wheat-growing regions. Those farms rely on barging their 2.2 million tons of product from ports including the one here in Lewiston, Idaho, down the river to Portland for shipment overseas.

    If they lose barging, they say, they'll be held hostage to rapidly escalating rail rates.

    "If there is no longer a river system, somehow holding rail rates down while rail operates at a monopoly — there is nothing that holds that rate down," said Chris Peha of Northwest Grain Growers. "It's impossible to estimate a cost."

    Many members of the Northwest's congressional delegation are dead set against removing dams, including Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R), whose eastern Washington district includes some of the ones on the Lower Snake River.

    "For me, dam breaching is off the table," McMorris Rodgers said in an interview, adding that the hydropower system is "really at the foundation of our economy."

    "Bottom line: Dams and fish coexist," she said.

    But others wonder whether it's time for change. The current regime was established by 1980 legislation that arose following a similar set of problems.

    Sometimes "a whole bunch of circumstances align, and then you get an opportunity to do something, to fix something," said Michele DeHart of the Fish Passage Center, who has studied the issue for decades. "We may be in one of those places. It takes a lot of courage."

    That is exactly what Simpson is talking about. He is obsessed with the issue. The walls of a room in his congressional office are papered with maps, statistics, financial reports and everything else exploring the problem.

    "Make no doubt about it: I want salmon back in Idaho in healthy and sustainable populations," he said. "Can this be done? I honestly don't know. I don't know if the willpower is there to do it. I don't know if the willpower is in Congress to do it. But I will tell you that I am hardheaded enough to try."

    When President Franklin Delano Roosevelt looked for public works projects for his New Deal, the mighty Columbia River was too good to pass up.

    The river rumbles more than 1,200 miles from the Canadian Rockies to the Pacific Ocean, crossing seven states and a Canadian province. It is the fourth-largest river system in North America, draining an area the size of France.

    Roosevelt's Public Works Administration quickly set to work on building a major dam near the mouth of the Columbia, and Bonneville Dam — technically the second built on the river — came online in 1938, to much fanfare.

    "This Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River... when fully completed... will produce 580,000 horsepower of electricity," Roosevelt said at its dedication in September 1937. He added that such projects "will give us more wealth, better living and greater happiness for our children."

    Next came the masterpiece: Grand Coulee.

    Completed in 1941 in the northeast corner of Washington, Grand Coulee is 550 feet tall and nearly a mile long. One of the largest structures America has ever built, it is roughly the size of the Golden Gate Bridge filled in with concrete.

    The legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie, commissioned by the government, immortalized the project in his 1941 "Roll On, Columbia."

    "And on up the river is Grand Coulee Dam / The mightiest thing ever built by a man / To run the great factories and water the land / So roll on, Columbia, roll on."

    Updated in 1974 to produce more hydropower, the dam now has the capacity to pump 6,800 megawatts, making it the country's most productive hydropower station.

    Roosevelt's administration and others treated the whole basin like a big construction site. The idea was to build the dams, then provide their electricity at cost, a massively federally subsidized regime that critics today would undoubtedly equate to socialism.

    In 1937, Congress established the Bonneville Power Administration to sell the power from its namesake dam and others. Some of the first sales went to aluminum maker Alcoa in 1939 to aid the war effort.

    More than 400 dams were eventually built. BPA ended up with 31 under its marketing purview, along with the regional transmission system and a lone nuclear plant in Hanford, Wash.

    'We just went too far'

    As Grand Coulee and the other dams ushered in the hydropower era, they quickly had an impact on fish runs that historically returned millions of salmon and steelhead.

    Salmon.Comic.BPACommercial fishing had already significantly harmed regional fish populations, but three dams in particular effectively cut off thousands of miles of their historical spawning grounds.

    To the north, Grand Coulee blocked the fish from the upper Columbia River and Kettle Falls 100 miles upstream, the system's second-most important hatching grounds.

    To the south, Idaho Power Co.'s Hells Canyon Dam, completed in 1967, cut off migration into most of the Snake River in southern Idaho.

    And in the middle, Dworshak Dam, completed in 1973 and operated by the Army Corps of Engineers, created a 717-foot wall in front of the north fork of the Clearwater River, a tributary of the Snake.

    Agencies sought to mitigate the effects of these dams with hatcheries and other elaborate programs for barging and trucking juvenile fish around the dams. But ultimately, more than 55% of historic spawning habitat in the basin was permanently blocked.

    And the impacts on the fish were severe.

    By 1991, the Snake River sockeye salmon was listed as endangered. A dozen more runs of salmon and steelhead would follow for the basin.

    Those dams' impassability led conservationists to focus on four other dams on the Lower Snake River in eastern Washington: Ice Harbor (completed in 1961), Lower Monumental (1969), Little Goose (1970) and Lower Granite (1975).

    They were among the last dams built in the system, and they sit square in the middle of it, below Grand Coulee far to the north, above Hells Canyon to the south and right before an adult fish migrating upstream would hit Dworshak.

    To many activists, they are critical to the survival of fish. Those four dams sit in front of some of the best salmon and steelhead spawning habitat in the Lower 48.

    Tear them down, and the migration corridor to those areas of Idaho becomes much more manageable: Instead of having to go over, through and around eight dams, the fish would have to navigate only four.

    "There was probably a balance point where we could have had some reasonable fish populations and reasonable level of development. We went beyond that point," the Fish Passage Center's DeHart said.

    "These populations now can't take that much life cycle stress. We just went too far. We went beyond the point of balance."

    The science is complex, but it boils down to this: When juvenile fish leave the spawning grounds, they must navigate the eight dams before reaching the ocean — the four on the Lower Snake River and four on the Columbia River.

    Dams create slack pools where there was once a strong current pushing juveniles to the ocean mostly tail first. The reservoirs allow temperatures to rise to potentially lethal levels and create easy hunting for predators.

    That adds weeks to what should be a short migration and delays the fish's physiological transition from fresh water to salt water. Many die in the ocean and don't return as adults in a phenomenon called "latent" or "delayed" mortality that is only now being studied in earnest.

    It is not unusual to lose 50% of a juvenile run through the eight dams in a normal year. Losses can be upward of 85%. And when they return as adults to spawn, the fish must get up and over the eight dams again.

    "These fish are threatened and on the verge of extinction because there are too many stresses on their life cycle," DeHart said.

    Other tributaries of the Columbia, like the Yakima, Deschutes and John Day rivers, have much better survival rates. Fish from those rivers navigate fewer dams on their way to the ocean and back — two for the Deschutes, three for the John Day and four for the Yakima.

    Proponents of the system say tearing down the dams won't guarantee the fish will recover. Other factors, such as a warming ocean and predators, could prove just as harmful to the species' long-term survival.

    NOAA Fisheries, the federal science agency that oversees the program, says breaching the dams won't solve the problem.

    Ritchie Graves, who leads NOAA's Columbia Hydropower Branch, said breaching the dams "might improve" direct juvenile survival by 10% to 15%.

    "That represents a small improvement," he said, "but certainly not the sort of magnitude that you would need to push some of the species to the delisting criteria."

    But conservationists have challenged the management of the Lower Snake River dams in court.

    They've won — five times.

    Most recently, Judge Michael Simon of the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon delivered a 149-page tongue-lashing in May 2016, ordering the agencies to start a new environmental review that includes consideration of breaching the four dams.

    The agencies had "ignored" earlier rulings that said the system "literally cries out for a major overhaul," he wrote, and "instead continued to focus on essentially the same approach to saving the listed species — minimizing hydro mitigation efforts and maximizing habitat restoration."

    He added, "Despite billions of dollars spent on these efforts, the listed species continue to be in a periloSalmon.Sockeye.Three.Underwaterus state."

    'Whoops'

    In his speech, Simpson outlined cascading problems and an opportunity to try to solve them in far-reaching legislation.

    And in some respects, that shouldn't be new to the region. It's had to do it before.

    When the last hydropower dams were completed in the mid-1970s, concerns quickly arose that demand for electricity in the region would outpace supply. There would need to be more power plants built and brought online.

    That led to disputes over the allocations of hydropower, and a rush by what was then the Washington Public Power Supply System to build five nuclear plants.

    Those forecasts turned out to be inaccurate — wildly so.

    By the late 1970s, it became clear that that much power wasn't needed.

    The Washington Public Power Supply System ultimately defaulted on $2.25 billion in municipal bonds, the largest public default in the country's history. And the region soon began sounding out the utility's acronym: WPPSS became "Whoops."

    That crisis — along with the declining fish runs, particularly in the Snake River — led to landmark legislation. In 1980, Congress passed and President Carter signed the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act.

    The law created the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, an independent entity charged with doing two jobs: making sure there's a reliable regional power supply and mitigating the effects of the dams on fish and other wildlife.

    It also had a major consequence for BPA: It put the agency on the hook for the fish program — including recovery costs, studies and litigation.

    Simpson, in his speech, questioned whether the framework for BPA laid out in the nearly 40-year-old law still makes sense. And he doubted whether there is the political appetite now to simply bail out the utility.

    "It's time that we relook at the Northwest Power Planning Act and write a new Northwest Power Planning Act," he said.

    "Either we can do it, or it will be done for us."

  • E&E News: Pacific Northwest salmon review is Groundhog Day to greens

    By Jeremy P. Jacobs

    Feb 28, 2020Snake River Salmon.JPG t1170

    The Trump administration today released a court-ordered plan to rescue the Pacific Northwest's iconic salmon from the brink of extinction through changes to the complex Columbia River hydropower system.

    But environmentalists — who have successfully challenged dam managers in court five times — said it is just more of the same program that has failed the fish for nearly half a century. They vowed to continue their legal fight.

    "Salmon-dependent communities across the Pacific Northwest feel like Bill Murray in 'Groundhog Day,' reliving the same day over and over again," said Wendy McDermott, a director at American Rivers overseeing the Puget Sound and Columbia Basin region. "Here in the Northwest, we're looking at yet another Snake River salmon recovery plan that will almost certainly fail and is unlikely to survive legal challenge."

    The Pacific Northwest's salmon and steelhead runs were once among the most prolific in the world. An estimated 10 million to 16 million fish returned to the Columbia River, and about half traveled hundreds of miles up its main tributary, the Snake River, into Idaho to spawn.

    Those numbers have dropped dramatically to record lows for the Snake River runs due to harvest, ocean conditions, predators and rapid dam-building in the 20th century.

    Most experts agree the Snake River salmon and steelhead are heading toward extinction despite the most expensive Endangered Species Act recovery program the country has ever undertaken. It has cost nearly $17 billion.

    In May 2016, a federal judge ordered the federal agencies that own and operate the dams — the Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and Bonneville Power Administration — to undertake a new environmental analysis.

    And the judge ordered them to consider breaching four of the most contentious dams on the Lower Snake River in eastern Washington: Ice Harbor (completed in 1961), Lower Monumental (1969), Little Goose (1970) and Lower Granite (1975).

    They sit in the middle of the system, and conservationists say they add fatal stress to juvenile salmon and steelhead as they migrate down the Snake River to the Pacific Ocean.

    Those fish must navigate eight dams. Data suggests they aren't returning at rates to survive.

    Today, the agencies released the draft environmental impact statement. It did not endorse removing the dams.

    "Despite the major benefits to fish expected" from breaching the dams, a summary of the document states, that option is not the preferred alternative "due to adverse impact to other resources such as transportation, power reliability and affordability, and greenhouse gases."

    Instead, the agencies' preferred option would boost levels of water spilled over the dams and includes other measures.

    "The draft EIS represents a remarkable collaborative effort to gather public input and information for a current and thorough analysis of options that meet the goals of the EIS and our future responsibilities to the region," said Brig. Gen. D. Peter Helmlinger, Northwestern Division commander at the Army Corps.

    Environmentalists said those measures have been tried before — and have come up short.

    "Rather than seizing this opportunity to heed the public's call for working together for a solution that revives salmon populations, the
    draft plan is built on the same failed approach the courts have rejected time and again," said Todd True of Earthjustice, who has represented conservation groups in their legal challenges.

    Hydropower

    The draft EIS provides extensive discussion of breaching the dams.

    But the agencies' opposition to breaching appears to boil down to the same reasons they have used for years, including the importance of the power produced by the dams and the barging they provide for the region's farmers.

    "The dams play an important role in maintaining reliability, and their flexibility and dispatch ability are valuable components" of the
    hydropower system, the summary states. Breaching "would more than double the region's risk of power shortages compared to the no action alternative."

    The four 100-foot-tall, run-of-the-river dams have the capacity to produce about 3,000 megawatts. But, on average, they generate about a third of that due to river conditions — they can only max out when flows are high — and fish mitigation measures such as spill.

    At most, that's about 12.6% of the Bonneville Power Administration's total power that it sells both inside and outside the region from the 31 dams in the system.

    BPA is already facing significant energy market pressures. Due to increased wind, solar and natural gas coming online, its wholesale power rate has climbed 30% since 2008 to about $36 per megawatt-hour. With contracts with the region's utilities set to expire in 2028, some of its customers are considering potentially cheaper alternatives (Greenwire,
    Nov. 27, 2019).

    BPA has said it believes its hydropower will become more valuable as states like Washington mandate 100% clean power.

    But the EIS also says that removing the dams would create "upward rate pressure of between 8.2 percent and 9.6 percent."

    Others have disputed how much the region needs the power from the Lower Snake River dams.

    In 2018, an extensive analysis by the NW Energy Coalition found solar, wind, demand response and efficiency measures could replace the power from the dams at relatively low prices. And it concluded that the renewables would make the region's dams more reliable, not less.

    Similarly, an economic analysis last year by ECONorthwest, a consulting firm, concluded the benefits of breaching outweighed costs by between $5.4 billion and $12.4 billion (Greenwire, Oct. 23, 2019).

    Some conservationists, like former Idaho Fish and Game biologist Steve Pettit, said this is what they expected from the agencies.

    "But I guess I'm really saddened," he said, that the agencies are selecting an "alternative that has been their choice, in one form or
    another, for the last 40-plus years and has failed miserably to even slow down the race towards extinction that wild Snake [River] salmonids have [been] heading."

    The public comment period on the draft runs through April 13.

  • E&E News: Proponents of breaching dams see opportunities in Trump era

    "We're ensuring that this thing is moving," Shannon Wheeler, chair of the Nez Perce tribe, said at an online forum Wednesday.

    4 sockeyes

    By Jennifer Yachnin | 11/21/2024

    Tribal officials advocating for the removal of four Pacific Northwest dams to boost beleagured salmon and steelhead populations say the effort could remain on track, even with Republicans opposing the effort prepare to take control of the White House and Congress.

    Shannon Wheeler, chair of the Nez Perce tribe in north-central Idaho, said optimistic that efforts to remove the four Lower Snake River dams will continue, however slowly.

    “It always has been difficult. It isn't going to change,” Wheeler said Wednesday at an online forum sponsored by the tribe’s Salmon Orca Project.

    Tribal advocates scored a victory in late 2023, when the Biden administration announced a $1 billion settlement agreement in a long-running federal lawsuit over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers.

    The agreement between the federal government and the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the states of Oregon and Washington, includes funding for multiple studies on the impacts of removing the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite hydropower dams.

    The studies will examine how to ensure water supplies for crop irrigation, transportation, and recreation, as well as other sources of energy production.

    Only Congress has authority to actually order the dams’ removal, and Republicans, including Oregon Rep. Cliff Bentz, have vigorously opposed the idea.

    Wheeler — who along with other speakers didn't mention President-elect Donald Trump by name, or any other officials, aside from praising Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) —noted that progress on restoring fish populations has long been a complex process decades in the making.

    “We're ensuring that this thing is moving,” Wheeler said. “Sometimes it may seem like it slows, but even if it moves an inch, that's enough.”

    Wheeler said that tribal leaders would focus on education efforts about the salmon populations, as well as work with federal, state and local officials and environmental groups to address how to best move forward with dam removal and restoration efforts.

    “Over the next five to 10 years, let's ensure that the studies that are being done in Washington are completed and our voices are being heard through that process,” Wheeler said.

    “I can still see the end, the goal line here, and it gets tough in the red zone,” he added, utilizing terminology used in football when a team is near the goal line.

    Kayeloni Scott, who serves as executive director of the Columbia & Snake River Campaign, a coalition of 40 organizations, said Washington and Oregon would also need to serve as leaders on the project.

    “Just because our trajectory might be shifting a little bit, doesn't mean the timeline of the salmon has changed,” Scott said. “We're still looking at two life cycles before we're in serious, serious trouble, which means eight to 10 years.”

    E&E News: Proponents of breaching dams see opportunities in Trump era

  • E&E News: Reclamation weighs how to keep taps open on Lower Snake River

    dam.lowergranite

    By Jennifer Yachnin
    June 26, 2024

    A senior Bureau of Reclamation official said the agency will not limit "any potential solutions" as it weighs how to continue to deliver water to farmers and municipalities in the Pacific Northwest in the event four hydropower dams are breached in a bid to restore fish populations in the region.

    Roland Springer, a Boise, Idaho-based deputy regional director at Reclamation, made the comments Tuesday during a public webinar on the agency's new "Lower Snake River Water Supply Replacement Study" on current water supply needs and use.

    "At this point, we don't want to limit any potential solutions," Springer said. "We recognize there's lots of limitations on water throughout the basin, but we're not constraining what sources would be looked at."

    The study is being conducted as a result of the $1 billion settlement agreement the Biden administration struck late last year in a long-running federal lawsuit over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers.

    Tribal nations with rights to access and use the rivers assert that the dams decimated Pacific Northwest salmon and steelhead populations, along with other species.

    The Columbia Basin Restoration Initiative, as the agreement is formally known, includes the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the states of Oregon and Washington.

    Although only Congress can order the breaching of the dams — something that GOP lawmakers in the region have vigorously opposed, asserting the dams provide necessary hydropower, river transportation for agricultural products and irrigation for farmland — the settlement has prompted a series of studies and reports to consider removing four structures on the Lower Snake River.

    That includes the new study set to be produced by Reclamation and the Washington State Department of Ecology, which a draft report set for publication by the end of this year.

    The report will examine current water supply drawn from the four dams — Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite — and how it is used by agricultural, municipal and industrial users in the region.

    Researchers will also consider how to replace flows drawn from the existing reservoirs, as well as potential replacements, such as groundwater pumping, or new infrastructure to draw from a free-flowing river.

    "The water is going to be there even if the dams get breached," said Ron Fehringer with the Jacobs Engineering Group, which Reclamation contracted to conduct the study. "It's not that the water won't still be flowing by [but] it won't be nearly as deep. So then it becomes a matter of infrastructure and potential effects of sediment."

    During the 90-minute session, Reclamation officials repeatedly fielded questions about other aspects of a potential dam breach — including how power production would be replaced — by noting that other agencies including the Energy Department and the Army Corps of Engineers would conduct separate studies.

    Reclamation will hold a second public comment session on June 27 at 3 p.m. PDT.

    E&E News: 'Reclamation weighs how to keep taps open on Lower Snake River' article link

  • E&E News: Record salmon migration runs into hot water

    Rising water temperatures in the Columbia River Basin are raising questions about whether fishery managers must take new steps to save the imperiled fish.

    Salmon Neil Ever Osborne

    By Jennifer Yachnin
    07/17/2024

    A persistent heat wave gripping parts of Washington state could spike temperatures as high as 105 degrees this week, prompting warnings from the National Weather Service to drink plenty of fluids, avoid the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors.

    There’s no mention of what to do, however, if you’re a salmon swimming upstream to spawn.

    As air temperatures hit records in recent weeks, Native American and state fisheries experts and environmentalists are warning that water temperatures in the Columbia River Basin are similarly on the rise.

    Those warming waters — in major tributaries like the Okanogan River and the Snake River — come at the same time as annual migrations of sockeye salmon from the Pacific Ocean, complicating a spawning ritual that spans hundreds of miles and is already peppered with human-made obstacles.

    Although salmon populations in the region have benefited from efforts to improve their spawning habitat, restore river flows and remove barriers from their travels, fisheries managers worry long periods of hot water could ruin it all in the years to come.

    “Those water temperatures are warmer than ever this year,” said Tom Iverson, regional coordinator for the Yakama Nation Fisheries. “Literally, they’re almost too warm to swim in.”

    That’s because the fish — including a record run of nearly 740,000 sockeye past the Bonneville Dam at border of Washington and Oregon as of Sunday, nearly 235 percent above the 10-year average — prefer a water temperature below 68 degrees.

    The Okanogan River, which will be traversed by the majority of those fish during the final leg of their journey into British Columbia and a series of four chain lakes, has reached temperatures of nearly 83 degrees in recent days, according to U.S. Geological Survey data.

    Reservoirs along the Lower Snake River, which are home to endangered Snake River sockeye, similarly crested to 69.53 degrees, according to the nonprofit Save Our Wild Salmon, which tracks water temperatures.

    A difficult salmon migration

    Now state and tribal officials are mulling over whether those fish — which enter the Columbia River Basin at the same location from the Pacific Ocean in Clatsop County, Oregon, and then split to their respective natal streams — could merit human intervention to help them make it to their destination.

    Near-term efforts for the endangered Snake River population include trucking them upstream, while researchers ponder whether similar steps should be taken for more fish in the basin.

    "Most salmon, when they hit fresh water, they stop feeding," Iverson explained, noting that the fish will rely solely on fat stores once they begin the journey and shift their focus to spawning.

    "Once they start migrating, they basically have so many days to migrate. If the temperature is warmer they have fewer days," he added.

    The Columbia River Basin's salmon and steelhead populations have been the focus of intensive restoration efforts for decades. Of the 16 stocks that historically spawned above the Bonneville Dam, four are extinct and seven are listed under the Endangered Species Act.

    Anadromous fish populations — those whose lives begin in freshwater before swimming down to the Pacific Ocean and then returning to spawn — in the region once numbered in the millions, but were decimated as hydropower dams began to rise up on the river, beginning with the Bonneville Dam in 1938.

    Construction of the dams and the impacts on salmon and steelhead populations "disproportionately harmed" eight tribal nations — the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs, Umatilla, Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Indians, the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of the Fort Hall Reservation and the Spokane Tribe of Indians — the Biden administration acknowledged in a report issued last month.

    Efforts to restore the populations — including regional and federal programs to raise fish in hatcheries — have totaled at least $20 billion since 1992, according to the Idaho Conservation League.

    But despite that enormous investment, salmon and steelhead have continued to struggle. Critics, too, say the focus on salmon breeding in hatcheries along the rivers in the basin has resulted in farmed fish having “genetic and ecological interactions” with wild fish, putting the species further at risk.

    Restoration efforts also failed to curb legal battles over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers, although one major lawsuit is on hiatus while the Biden administration seeks to implement a $1 billion settlement agreement.

    In the meantime, fisheries managers, tribal leaders, state officials and environmentalists are cheering the unexpectedly large run of sockeye this month.

    "We're in the middle of a record sockeye migration with respect to the Columbia River population of sockeye," said Miles Johnson, legal director at Columbia Riverkeeper. "That's a huge recovery story.”

    The sockeye resurgence is of wild fish, separate from hatchery breeding, Johnson said. "It's a testament to what these fish are capable of when we give them a chance,” he added.

    Chad Jackson, a fish program manager in the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, described the event as a “bit of a perfect storm,” attributing the large number of fish to a successful outward bound migration and survival rates in the ocean.

    Too hot to move

    That success, however, must still survive the unusually warm temperatures in the Columbia River Basin’s tributaries.

    The problem is what scientists call a “thermal barrier,” which marks the point at which the water temperature becomes too warm for the fish to continue their journey — typically over 68 degrees during both day and night.

    It’s found where the Columbia River meets the Okanogan River, which travels north into Canada and is reliant on snowpack and prone to low flows and high temperatures. The salmon will typically halt their upstream travels at this point in Brewster, Washington, while waiting for the water temperature to drop back to an acceptable level allowing them to move on.

    Biologists in the region warn the thermal barrier — which occurs annually — is starting earlier and expected to last longer than usual.

    “A lot of people who are in salmon management restoration, we worry about this thermal barrier becoming much longer in duration and intensity,” said Jackson, with the Washington wildlife agency.

    Jackson said there are no plans in place to relocate the salmon. But the possibility of such action in future years — with climate change driving protracted summer heat waves — is a key discussion for the state and other fisheries managers, he noted.

    "If conditions become worse, how can we get sockeye up into Canada during those years, and how can we predict when that action is necessary?" said Jackson, whose work is focused on sockeye salmon bound for the Upper Columbia River above the Priest Rapids Dam in Mattawa, Washington. That dam is about 160 miles due south of the Canadian Border.

    Sockeye salmon making their way up the Columbia River to Canada begin to arrive in Washington state in late June, with the migration in full swing by the end of July.

    "They only have so much energy to make it up there," Jackson said. "The worry about the thermal barrier being prolonged later into the fall is that their success of being able to make it [to the spawning grounds] diminishes."

    Michael Milstein, a spokesperson for NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region, said the agency is concerned about potential fish losses depending on how long the thermal barrier remains in place but remains hopeful about the outcome.

    "The bottom line, we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that this is a success story. We're seeing so many salmon come back given all the risks and threats that they face. It does show that people working together and using good science can figure out what the fish need and give it to them," Milstein said.

    He added: "We can't always control the climate but we can make the best possible decisions."

    Hitching a ride?

    Although temperatures in portions of the Columbia River Basin have spiked in previous years — an early heat wave in 2015 trapped fish in the Lower Columbia River, resulting in a major die-off, and temperatures in 2021 achieved levels similar to this season — salmon populations have never been physically relocated across the thermal barrier at the Okanogan River.

    "People are asking the question, people are thinking about it, but logistically there are a lot of steps and a lot of things to contend with," Jackson said. "It's not as simple as — pull some fish out of the river and truck them into Canada."

    The majority of these sockeye salmon in the Columbia River will ultimately end up in British Columbia, in the Osoyoos Lake, Vaseux Lake, Skaha Lake or Okanagan Lake.

    "Sockeye can be pretty delicate and sensitive to stressful events, more so than other species of salmon," Jackson added. In addition to any permitting issues between the United States and Canada, he pointed to concerns over how and where to safely collect fish into hatchery trucks, and then keeping the water properly cool over the long journey.

    "I think people are asking the question," Jackson said, "and trying to plan ahead."

    That includes the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, which is working with the Okanagan Nation Alliance in Canada, and the provincial government on how water flows in the region could be moderated to assist fish once the thermal-barrier breaks.

    "We're trying to minimize any mortality associated with migration," said Chris Fisher, principal biologist at the Colville Tribes Fish and Wildlife Department.

    Fisher's agency is weighing whether water could be released from the Zosel Dam, managed by the Washington State Department of Ecology, increasing flows to ease passage of the fish once the migration begins up the Okanogan River.

    Typically, it takes the fish about two days to travel the 60 miles upstream, but researchers want to ensure that the fish do not become trapped — should water temperatures drop and then rise back up during daytime highs — during that journey.

    "Let's try to facilitate when the thermal barrier breaks, as much unimpeded access as we can," said Fisher. "It's better than just watching. We have to try something."

    Lower Snake River plans

    In the Lower Snake River, however, efforts have already begun to transplant sockeye into the cooler reaches upstream.

    The Snake River is home to an endangered sockeye — the population of a few thousand is largely made up of hatchery-born fish — which veers off from its more popular relative, the sockeye populations headed to British Columbia — after entering the Columbia River.

    Iverson, with the Yakama Nation Fisheries, confirmed that sockeye are being trapped at the Lower Granite Dam and then being moved by truck to an Idaho state-run Eagle Fish Hatchery.

    The effort aims to collect about 50 fish each day, with a goal of a few hundred fish captured during the spawning season.

    While the main stem of the Columbia River is typically fairly cool, Iverson said sockeye that veer into the Snake River face higher temperatures.

    Fisheries managers can attempt to use water from the Dworshak Dam in Idaho to moderate temperatures.

    “At the Clear Water River and the Snake River confluence, we try to mix water and create a water recipe that keeps temperatures down around 68," Iverson explained. "It's more art than science."

    But when temperatures in the reservoirs lining the Lower Snake River become too high for the fish, human intervention is required, Iverson said.

    Given the dwindling numbers of Snake River sockeye, "every one of those fish counts."

    The series of four dams along the river is at the heart of a dispute over how to balance the future success of salmon and steelhead populations with the current hydropower production, transportation and irrigation needs of the region.

    As part of the $1 billion settlement the Biden administration struck late last year in a long-running lawsuit over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers, various federal agencies are examining how the benefits of those dams might be replaced if the structures are breached. Only Congress has the authority to call for the dams’ removal, however, and Republican lawmakers in the region have voiced strong opposition to the effort.

    "We think with the removal of those dams we'd have much more favorable temperatures," Iverson said. He noted that a naturally flowing river would also create "deep pools and hideouts for the fish" to act as sanctuaries when temperatures rise.

    "The heat's not new. It is getting hotter," Iverson said. "They have mechanisms to deal with that in a natural environment."

    E&E News: 'Record salmon migration runs into hot water' article link

  • E&E News: Spotlight turns to states as critics slam feds' salmon plan

     By Jeremy Jacobs
    March 3, 2020Lower Granite from Corps

    A long-awaited, court-ordered federal plan to recover the Pacific Northwest's salmon has satisfied few and has shifted attention to Congress and statehouses to come up with a solution before time runs out for the region's iconic species.

    Federal managers of the Columbia River's complex hydropower system last week released a draft environmental analysis of how the dams affect salmon and steelhead, and what they should do to mitigate those impacts.

    For the first time, they were required to consider breaching four dams on the Lower Snake River in eastern Washington that conservationists say are the straw that breaks the camel's back for several runs of salmon and steelhead.

    Unsurprisingly, advocates who sued to force the assessment say, the agencies did not back the breaching option. Instead, they recommended relatively minor tweaks to a program that many say isn't working for several runs of fish (Greenwire, Feb. 28).
    "With this draft EIS, the agencies have confirmed that they are not going to take the kind of broad view that would let us actually make the investments and take the actions to solve this problem," said Todd True of Earthjustice, who represented environmental groups in the lawsuit that led to the new review.

    "That really puts the spotlight on various elected leaders," True said.

    The salmon and steelhead runs of the Columbia River were once among the largest in the world, with 10 million to 16 million fish returning every year to spawn. About half of those swam upstream hundreds of miles to the Columbia's main tributary, the Snake River, and into Idaho.

    Those numbers plunged quickly in the 20th century, especially for the Snake River runs, thanks to harvest, predators, dam building and a warming ocean due to climate change.

    More than a dozen runs are now listed under the Endangered Species Act. Most experts agree that the country's most expensive recovery program — it's cost nearly $17 billion — isn't working for some of those runs.

    A federal court has struck down aspects of the program on five occasions, most recently in May 2016. One judge ruled that it "literally cries out for a major overhaul."

    That led to the draft environmental impact statement last week from the Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation and the Bonneville Power Administration, or BPA, which sells the power from the dams.

    It comes as BPA faces its own challenges. BPA funds the endangered species program, but wind, solar and natural gas have challenged its hydropower as the cheapest source of energy in the region. Some of its customers have said they will at least explore other options when contracts expire in 2028 (Greenwire, Nov. 27, 2019).
    Many say the region needs a more far-reaching solution.

    "The EIS process," Sean O'Leary of the nonprofit NW Energy Coalition said, "is too limited in scope to adequately address all the relevant issues, which is why a more comprehensive process is needed to solve the challenge of fish restoration while also addressing the full range of regional, community, and tribal needs."

    O'Leary's group was one of 17 parties — including tribes, environmental groups and power providers in the region — that sent a letter to the governors of Idaho, Oregon and Washington state late last month.

    It called for a collaborative effort and a commitment to "abundant and harvestable fish" while ensuring reliability of the electric grid (Greenwire, Feb. 25).
    Some experts and advocates say the only way to achieve "abundant and harvestable" fish runs is to remove the four Lower Snake River dams: Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite.

    O'Leary's group did an extensive analysis in 2018 that found solar, wind, demand response and efficiency measures could replace the power from the four dams at relatively low cost.

    He said their preliminary analysis of the draft environmental impact statement found "significant shortcomings," including the absence of any discussion of wind power and demand resources.

    "We think those shortcomings result in an overstatement of the amount and the cost of new electricity resources that would be required to replace power and services from the dams." O'Leary said.

    Linwood Laughy, an Idaho-based activist, said the preferred alternative of the environmental assessment — whose measures include tweaks to some programs and increased spill over the dams to help the fish migrate — "just leads us back to court and drags this all out for another five years."

    And it shows that any effort to save the fish must come from elsewhere.

    "It's going to have to take some alignment of Pacific Northwest power brokers," Laughy said.

    'These fish may not make it’

    Notably, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D) appeared to endorse breaching the four dams last month in a letter to Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) (Greenwire, Feb. 18).

    Inslee and Idaho Gov. Brad Little (R) have both spoken on the issue and convened task forces to study salmon, as well as how the depleted runs are affecting a pod of orcas in Puget Sound that relies on salmon for food.

    But both have also sidestepped the politically charged question of whether to breach the four Lower Snake River dams.

    That's spurred an increased focus on Rep. Mike Simpson. The Idaho Republican delivered an impassioned speech last April that connected BPA's financial challenges to the fish problems and pledged to ask hard "what if" questions about the entire system as it exists now.

    He also spoke about salmon in nearly religious terms. Describing seeing adult salmon in Idaho that had swum 900 miles from the ocean and up 7,000 feet of elevation gain to spawn and die, Simpson said: "It was the end of a cycle. And the beginning of a new one. These are the most incredible creatures, I think, that God's created" (Greenwire, Sept. 3, 2019).
    However, some important players in the region have yet to sign on to a new, separate negotiation process.

    The Pacific Northwest Waterways Association represents parties that rely on the Columbia and Snake rivers for barging and transportation, which is made possible by the four 100-foot-tall, run-of-the-river dams on the Lower Snake River. That includes shipping companies, ports and, importantly, the region's farmers.

    Executive Director Kristin Meira said the draft environmental impact statement struck the right tone.

    "From where we sit," she said, "it appears to be a balanced approach when it comes to satisfying all the different authorized purposes of the dams in the basin, with continued improvements for fish."

    She said long-term concerns about salmon recovery are best addressed through the Columbia Basin Partnership Task Force, an initiative NOAA established three years ago.

    Others have been skeptical of that process, including how quickly it can generate changes to benefit the fish.

    Laughy, the Idaho-based activist, said the clock is ticking.

    "We don't have a lot more time for these fish, considering the predictions about global warming," he said. "These fish may not make it even if we take the dams out."

    Twitter: @GreenwireJeremy Email: jjacobs@eenews.net

  • E&E News: Trump admin extends environmental review of Columbia River dams

    Lower Snake River Dams ©EcoFlight

    By Jennifer Yachnin
    02/07/2025 01:51 PM

    The Trump administration is pushing back a review into how dams on the Columbia River system could be operated to benefit endangered salmon and steelhead population, extending a deadline set under the previous White House by nearly two months.

    In a joint statement Thursday night, both the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation announced a new May 9 deadline for a supplemental environmental impact statement focused on 14 dams on the waterway. Related public meetings are also being rescheduled to take place in April, instead of next week.

    "This extension will allow additional time to receive vital public input and engagement on this important topic," the agencies said in the statement. The deadline had been in March. "USACE and Reclamation are committed to transparency and meaningful public participation, and both agencies are still available to discuss the SEIS and provide information related to this process."

    The review, which began in late December under the Biden administration, was triggered by the "Resilient Columbia Basin Agreement," the name of the $1 billion settlement agreement reached in 2023 between the federal government and plaintiffs in a lawsuit centered on hydropower operations on the waterway.

    The settlement paused the lawsuit for up to 10 years, while federal agencies and the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the states of Oregon and Washington, study the impacts of breaching four of the dams and how to replace services like marine transportation, hydropower and irrigation services.

    Although the settlement does not explicitly call for removing any dams, proponents have not shied away from admitting that their goal is to see four structures — the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite hydropower dams — breached.

    That action, however, would require Congress' authorization, and GOP lawmakers who currently control both chambers and the White House have expressed opposition.

    The Trump administration also opposed breaching those dams in the previous review of the Columbia River system, which was completed in 2020. That review found that the dams could spill more water to support endangered fish populations, instead of being removed.

    E&E News: Trump admin extends environmental review of Columbia River dams


    Read more news

  • E&E News: White House celebrates $1B deal to save Columbia River Basin salmon

    Chinook Neil O

    By Jennifer Yachnin
    02/23/2024

    But Biden administration officials acknowledged it is just a first step in a long process.

    Top Biden administration officials and Native American leaders on Friday celebrated a $1 billion settlement agreement to restore Pacific Northwest salmon populations, while acknowledging it will take years of continued collaboration to achieve its goals.

    A cadre of Biden administration officials — including John Podesta, the president’s chief clean energy adviser; White House Council on Environmental Quality Chair Brenda Mallory; and Laura Daniel-Davis, the Interior Department’s acting deputy secretary — met for a signing ceremony at the White House along with Native American tribal leaders and two governors.

    “This is only the beginning,” Podesta said Friday. “In a sense, this agreement really is just a handshake: a set of solemn mutual commitments, ones we worked very hard to create.”

    He added: “It will take all of us committing to this partnership now and for years to come to lift the words off the page and bring this agreement to life.”

    The White House announced the “Columbia Basin Restoration Initiative” in December as a settlement agreement in the long-running legal battle over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers. Plaintiffs in the case who signed the settlement include the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the states of Oregon and Washington.

    The settlement will fund studies on how to address transportation, irrigation and recreation uses of the Lower Snake River if a series of four hydropower dams were to be replaced on the waterway in a bid to improve conditions for salmon and steelhead populations. While the agreement sets up a pathway to removing the dams, Biden administration officials have emphasized that only Congress has the authority to do so.

    Proponents of dam removal argue the structures must come down to lower water temperatures and reconnect habitats for the salmon and steelhead. A NOAA Fisheries study in 2022 described removing the dams as a “centerpiece” in the bid to restore fish populations.

    A federal judge issued a five year stayin the lawsuit earlier this month — with the potential for the pause to go up to 10 years — to allow the settlement to be put into place.

    “Our work is far from finished,” said Daniel-Davis. “But this agreement is a turning point and our collective efforts to restore this ecosystem for our shared and abundant future.”

    The agreement has drawn criticism from some Republican lawmakers, including House Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers from Washington state, who argues that breaching the Lower Snake River dams would disrupt barge traffic and irrigation projects in the region.

    Earlier this week, McMorris Rodgers asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to weigh in the impacts of breaching the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite dams on the Snake River.

    White House officials have emphasized that only Congress wields the authority to order the dams’ removal.

    “I’m confident that with that we will secure … a restored Columbia River Basin,” Mallory said Friday. “A healthy basin creates security and resilience for all, and I want to be there to witness that moment when we see it all come together.”

    Proponents of the agreement, including Nez Perce Tribe Chair Shannon Wheeler, told E&E News that while concerns raised by McMorris Rodgers and others are valid, those fears should not prevent change.

    “The concerns that some of the Northwest delegation may have … can be answered and will be answered,” Wheeler said.

    He added: “We can do business differently, but you have to give it an opportunity, otherwise the demise of the salmon will continue.”

    Collin O’Mara, CEO and president of National Wildlife Federation, agreed that the worries about what dam removal would mean for crop irrigation and transportation in the region, as well as energy production, are reasonable. But he said the memorandum is intended to balance all those needs while restoring the salmon population.

    “This is a great first step, but there’s additional work that needs to be done in the years ahead,” O’Mara said.

    The settlement directs the Department of Energy to work with tribes to stand up new energy infrastructure in the region, which would go toward replacing 3,000 megawatts of capacity lost if the dams are removed but does not specify how to address other aspects of the waterway.

    “I do think there are investments that need to be made to make sure folks in agriculture, in shipping, in some of the other industries that depend on the system as it is today are made whole,” O’Mara said.

    He noted that solutions could be drawn from existing studies on the river basin produced in recent years, pointing to a proposal floated by Idaho Republican Rep. Mike Simpson, and a report issued by Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) and Sen. Patty Murray (D).

    Jonathan Smith, chair of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon, described the agreement as ensuring “salmon, steelhead and energy for all.”

    “This settlement deserves to be celebrated. It takes the interests of all the stakeholders in the Columbia Basin into account,” Smith said. “It lays out a pathway to restore salmon and steelhead to healthy and abundant levels and moves forward with the necessary green energy transition in a socially just and equitable way.”

    E&E News: White House celebrates $1B deal to save Columbia River Basin salmon article link 

  • E&E News: White House pledges $1B to restore Pacific Northwest salmon, steelhead

    2 chinook salmon

    By Jennifer Yachnin | 12/14/2023

    The White House announced a $1 billion settlement agreement in its legal battle over 14 dams in the Pacific Northwest — including provisions geared toward the eventual removal of four of those structures — as it seeks to ensure the future of the region’s imperiled salmon and steelhead.

    The Biden administration will fund studies to determine how “transportation, irrigation and recreation services provided by the four Lower Snake River dams could be replaced,” at the same time the Energy Department works with Native American tribes to stand up new energy infrastructure in the region.

    “The historic agreement charts a new course, one that preserves options, is responsible to regional leaders and ensures Congress has the information it needs to best invest in and increase the resilience of the Pacific Northwest,” Brenda Mallory, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, told reporters on a press call Thursday afternoon.

    Tribes and conservation groups sued the federal government because they maintain dams have caused the precipitous decline of native fish in the Columbia River Basin.

    But Republican lawmakers from the area have pushed back at the idea of removing the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite dams, asserting that doing so would eliminate not only a key source of affordable electricity but also remove sources of irrigation water, interrupt barge traffic and negatively impact recreational benefits.

    The settlement agreement filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon comes after more than two years of negotiations. The lawsuit, brought by Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the National Wildlife Federation and other conservation groups represented by Earthjustice, centers on the impacts of those facilities on the region’s salmon and steelhead, with particular emphasis on the future of four lower Snake River dams.

    The White House and other proponents of dam removal have stressed that Congress will need to act for those dams to be torn down.

    White House senior adviser John Podesta reiterated that point Thursday, while pushing back against criticism raised in a House Natural Resources subcommittee meeting this week, in which lawmakers accused the Biden administration of attempting to circumvent congressional authority.

    “I think we have been clear throughout this process that this is a congressional prerogative and they will have to face this question,” Podesta said. “They need to face it with not just a sense of what might be possible but in a context in which not only have the studies been done, but the work begins to be done to provide additional clean, renewable resources that the region is going to need.”

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D), who was also on the call, noted that his administration does not support breaching the dams at this time because it must “have a plan for how to replace those services.”

    “We are moving forward to attempt to get as good of answers as possible to those questions,” Inslee said. “We should not be afraid to ask questions about how we can be better in the state of Washington.”

    The deal directs the Bonneville Power Administration to invest $300 million in restoring native fish and their habitat. When combined with other funding, the total investment will total more than $1 billion over a 10-year period, Mallory said.

    Proponents of dam removal argue action is needed to lower water temperatures for salmon and other species and improve access for Native American tribes in the region.

    In a fact sheet detailing the deal, the Biden administration emphasized that it is “not making judgment on whether to breach the dams, nor does it have the authority to do so.”

    But the settlement — which will include a five-year stay in the litigation, with an expected additional five-year extension — appears to prepare the region for the eventual removal of those facilities.

    “We support removal of the Lower Snake River dams, but we also recognize that if we are to remove those dams we have to replace the benefits of those dams,” said Corinne Sams, chair of the Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission.

    The final agreement echoes a confidential mediation document leaked by House GOP lawmakers last month. That document suggested the Biden administration would propose a “significant Federal investment,” including new energy infrastructure, as well as studies of transportation, water supplies, and recreation and public access to the waterways.

    E&E News: "White House pledges $1B to restore Pacific Northwest salmon, steelhead" article link

  • E&E: Lower Snake River flows sufficient even without dams, research finds

    manysockeye

    By Jennifer Yachnin
    10/10/2024

    Farmers, cities and other users that tap the Lower Snake River for their water supplies could still rely on the waterway even if hydropower dams are breached and their reservoirs drained, given that the river's flow “far exceeds” existing demands, according to preliminary research.

    The Bureau of Reclamation and the Washington State Department of Ecology shared their findings Wednesday in a public preview of their ongoing “Lower Snake River Water Supply Replacement Study" on current water supply needs and use in the region.

    The study is being conducted as a result of the $1 billion settlement agreement the Biden administration struck late last year in a long-running federal lawsuit over hydropower operations on the Snake and Columbia rivers. The federal government is looking at how to restore fish populations in the Pacific Northwest, which dramatically declined after the construction of dams.

    “All indications are that the availability of water in the Lower Snake River far exceeds existing demands,” said Devin Stoker with the Jacobs Engineering Group, which is contracted to conduct the study along with state and federal officials.

    “We're still refining numbers and turning some knobs on some models, but that's roughly an order of magnitude higher than the sum of the existing authorized water uses in our study area,” Stoker said. “At a regional scale, the water supply question really becomes one that isn't, ‘Is there enough water?’ but ‘Is there enough infrastructure in place to continue to put it to good use?’”

    The study, which is set to be released in a draft form at the end of the year, will also contemplate options for water delivery, including new pipelines or pumps to serve existing users, as well as a potential pumped storage reservoir, an option that would also supply hydropower.

    “Our solutions that we're developing designs around do not involve importing or bringing water in from another source,” added Perrin Robinson, who is with Jacobs Engineering. “One of our overarching goals in developing these conceptual designs and these solutions is to have a design that could be built, constructed and be operationally ready Day 1 for any potential breaching of the dam.”

    Although only Congress can order the breaching of the dams — something GOP lawmakers have vigorously opposed — state and federal officials are moving ahead with studies on how energy production, river transportation and irrigation needs could be carried out if the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite dams are ultimately removed.

    Tribal nations with rights to access and use the rivers assert that the dams should be removed to help restore salmon and steelhead populations.

    E&E: Lower Snake River flows sufficient even without dams, research finds

  • EarthFix: Taking Down Snake River Dams: It's Back On The Table

    Sockeye in RiverBy Courtney Flatt
    Oct. 21, 2016

    Starting Monday people will get a chance to weigh-in on a controversial question: Should four dams come down on the lower Snake River? They’re facing renewed scrutiny because of a court-ordered analysis on how the dams are harming salmon.

    Last May, a federal judge — for the fifth time — rejected the government’s plan for protecting threatened and endangered salmon in the Columbia River system. He said agencies must take a new look at all approaches to managing the dams — including breaching those on the lower Snake River in southeast Washington.

    “Although the Court is not predetermining any specific aspect of what a compliant NEPA analysis would look like in this case, it may well require consideration of the reasonable alternative of breaching, bypassing, or removing one or more of the four Lower Snake River Dams,” U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon wrote in his decision. “This is an action that NOAA Fisheries and the Action Agencies have done their utmost to avoid considering for decades.”

    Simon’s order has lead to a deluge of public meetings throughout the Northwest.

    Supporters say the dams benefit the region with irrigation, hydropower and slackwater that barges can navigate from the mouth of the Columbia all the way to the port in Lewiston, Idaho.

    Terry Flores, Northwest RiverPartners executive director, said the dams are an important part of the Northwest economy.

    “The situation we have with the Snake River dams is a situation where I think both salmon and the dams are coexisting,” Flores said.

    And the dams, she said, should stay.

    “I think [removing the dams] is a draconian solution,” Flores said. “Why would you take out dams that are providing clean energy, billions of dollars worth of commerce, emergency back up?”

    Conservation groups say it’s impossible to protect Snake River sockeye with the four dams still standing. Joseph Bogaard, Save or Wild Salmon executive director, said people don’t have to choose between salmon and clean energy.

    “A form of energy that is causing an extinction can’t possibly be considered clean,” Bogaard said.

    Salmon advocates say other forms of renewable energy, like wind and solar, could help replace the dams.

    The four dams — built in the 1960s and 1970s — provide about 5 percent of the region’s power demand, or roughly enough power for 800,000 homes for a year.

    A report by the Bonneville Power Administration said that the Snake River dams would need to be replaced by a natural gas-fired plant, which the agency said would contribute about the same greenhouse gas emissions as adding about 421,000 passenger cars to the road.

    Last summer’s drought spelled disaster for Snake River’s endangered sockeye salmon and gave a glimpse into predicted climate change conditions. Ninety-nine percent died before making it to spawning grounds in Central Idaho.

    “What we’ve got going right now isn’t working, and clearly we can do much better,” Bogaard said.

    The first of 15 meetings is kicking off at 4 p.m. Monday in Wenatchee, Washington, and the last meeting wraps up Dec. 8 in Astoria, Oregon. Public comments will be accepted through Jan. 17, 2017.

    http://earthfix.info/news/article/taking-down-snake-river-dams-on-table/

  • East Oregonian: Oregon looks upstream to the lower Snake River

    By Jessica Pollard
    Feb 22, 2020 Lower Granite from Corps

    PASCO, Wash. — Oregon Gov. Kate Brown shifted the political debate from cap and trade during the short-session in Salem to the waters of the Columbia River’s largest tributary — the Snake River — and the four lower dams on the Eastern Washington portion of it.

    Brown on Feb. 11 wrote a letter to Washington Gov. Jay Inslee expressing her support to remove the earthen portions from the four concrete lower Snake River dams.

    She stated the science was clear — removal is the most probable answer to salmon and steelhead population recovery in the Columbia River Basin, which could aid orcas in their forage for fatty spring Chinook salmon off the mouth of the Columbia in late winter each year.

    However, she added, “much must be done before this is accomplished in order to help minimize and mitigate for potential harm to other vital sectors.”

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the mid-1970s built the Lower Granite Dam, the Little Goose Dam, the Lower Monumental Dam and the Ice Harbor Dam east of Pasco where water discharges into the Columbia. The dams supply water to irrigate farmland, hydropower and transportation routes.

    The Nez Perce, Yakama, Umatilla, Warm Springs, and Shoshone Bannock tribes all relied on fishing from the river, which was once a main contributor and contained millions of salmon each year, well before the construction of the dams.

    Tribal salmon now are harvested per treaty rights at less than 1% of the levels they were before tribes made contact with white settlers, according to a report issued by the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission in 2014.

    “Our diet still consists highly on salmon. It’s important we’re able to consume those foods,” said Chuck Sams, communications director for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. “We agree with a number of science reviews that there are issues around dams that could be resolved through fish passage and eventual dam removal.”

    Sams said the Confederated Umatilla Tribes will release a policy statement in coming weeks as the fishing commission works to put its own new analysis of the lower Snake River together.

    Cooperatives, such as Umatilla Electric in Hermiston and Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative in Baker City, purchase the majority of its power from the Bonneville Power Administration, the federal hydropower agency. Ted Case, director of Oregon Rural Electric Cooperative Association, said the 1,000 average annual megawatts the lower Snake River dams produce can power a city the size of Seattle. He was shocked to hear Brown’s recent position in the lower Snake conversation.

    ‘We’ve had no consultation, there was no discussion about us,” he said. “It’s confounding.”

    He and representatives from other electric cooperatives are worried about what dam removal would bring for rural Oregonians.

    “We’ll be short of power,” he said. “There’s a lot of concern as to how we’ll reach capacity. You could have blackouts in rural Oregon and electrical grid crashes.”

    But a study in 2018 by Energy Strategies LLC for the Seattle-based Northwest Energy Coalition begs to differ.

    The analysis quantified the power from the lower Snake River dams and assessed the fixed and variable costs of implementing renewable replacements, such as wind and solar, and what that would do to market prices.

    The lower dams provide nearly 4% of the Pacific Northwest’s electricity, according to the report, and at less than a 1% increase in emissions, a new energy portfolio relying on renewables and increased energy-efficiency would add a bit more than $1 a month to customer costs.

    But Energy GPS LLC refuted that last month in a study for Northwest RiverPartners. It stated the lower Snake River dams generate up to 5.5% of the region’s electricity and replacing that power would cost $860 million a year.

    “The essence of it is this — the capabilities of these dams cannot be easily or inexpensively replaced. This would hurt those in Eastern Oregon who can least afford it,” Case stated in an email to the East Oregonian.

    Case also said he doesn’t think the federal approval needed to remove the dams would come anytime soon.

    “These dams would have to be removed by congressional action. It would cost billions of dollars,” he said. “We’re going to do everything we can to prevent that, but I see no broad support for such action.”

    For the Governor’s Office, the letter to Inslee is simply an initiation of discussion about the long-term future.

    In an email to the East Oregonian, press secretary for Brown, Kate Kondayen said the letter does not call for tearing the dams out, “as has been characterized in initial coverage.”

    “Instead, Oregon is asserting that we see value in analyzing a future without the dams in the long term, but focusing any definitive next steps on working together to identify a viable path forward to that future with interim steps such as flexible spill agreements,” she stated.

    Brown’s letter raised eyebrows for farmers and ports about what dam removal would mean for the transportation industry. The Pacific Northwest Waterways Association asserts the Columbia Snake River System is the nation’s largest wheat export gateway, transporting more than half of all U.S. wheat to overseas markets.

    “Compromising, jeopardizing, eliminating any proponent of the system jeopardizes the region on many levels,” said Port of Umatilla General Manager Kim Puzey. “The timing is not great.”

    Brown’s letter comes a few weeks before a draft of the Columbia River Systems Operations Environmental Impact Statement is anticipated to be released in conjunction with the Corps, the Bureau of Reclamation and Bonneville Power in response to a federal ruling calling for a major overhaul of Columbia Snake River dam operations in 2016.

    The Port of Umatilla has invested more than $100,000 in litigation regarding dam removal, and is home to one of Oregon’s largest wheat terminals along the Columbia Snake River System.

    United Grain Corp operates the terminal and traffics hundreds of millions of bushels of wheat along the Snake River every year, including yields from Umatilla and Morrow counties.

    “As a grain company we depend on the river system heavily,” said Pacific Northwest United Grain manager Jason Middleton.“Farmers enjoy a low basis number. (Removal) would have an immense impact.”

    Puzey and Middleton question the fuel efficiency of relying more heavily on trains and trucks without the barge locks provided by the dams.

    “People who are concerned with a carbon footprint and the airshed as it relates to transportation can’t possibly make a viable argument that the dams be removed,” Puzey said.

    According to the Waterways Association, transportation via barge is the most fuel efficient. A single barge on a river can carry as much cargo as 134 trucks can.

    “Removal would put many more trucks on the freeways and the highways. Infrastructure costs would go through the roof,” Middleton said.

    But David Moryc, a senior director for American Rivers, said continued discussion could lead to cost-effective solutions, possibly through the formation of a shortline railroad cooperative along the Snake River.

    “It’s really important we think strategically about infrastructure upgrades,” Moryc said. “How do we replace and improve the benefits that farmers want to see from their transportation systems?”

    He asked how the billions of dollars being poured into salmon restoration along the river could be reinvested were dam removal to boost populations back to historical levels.

    “You’re talking about really high valued habitat where currently the salmon and steel stocks are having trouble because they have to pass through eight dams,” he said.

    American Rivers has helped negotiate river restoration projects and private dam removals around the Pacific Northwest.

    “You’ve got a number of examples of significant dam removal projects in history. We’re seeing positive responses for salmon returns,” he said.

    Moryc said some utility entities have decided salmon restoration efforts and maintenance costs outweigh the price-tag from options outside hydropower.

    He doesn’t know how long it could take for dam removal to come to a head at a federal level, and added the environmental impact statement coming later this month likely won’t advocate for dam removal. Still, Moryc said he sees a spark in Brown’s recent letter.

    “My hope is that there are some seeds here,” he said, “some kernels of hope in the dialogue.”

  • East Oregonian: Progress silences Celilo Falls; stories keep its memory alive

    Exhibit at Tamástslikt Cultural Institute explores history of lost tribal fishing grounds on the Columbia River

    fred.hill copyBy Tammy  Malgesini, June 9, 2017

    Although just a baby when the waters of Celilo Falls went silent just more than 60 years ago, Fred Hill passes on stories to keep the memory alive.

    “I never got the privilege to see Celilo Falls,” he told a crowd during “Stories & Songs,” a May 31 Pepsi Primetime @ the Museum presentation at Tamástslikt Cultural Institute.

    “The falls died, according to the stories and things that I’ve heard, on March 10, 1957,” added Thomas Morning Owl, who also is too young to have firsthand memories.

    The presentation coincided with the museum’s current exhibit, “Celilo: Progress Versus Protest.” The display, which remains through July 14, tells the story of the demise of the falls as a result of construction of The Dalles Dam.

    “We predicted many years ago that the dams would kill the salmon. We were a voice in the wilderness. We were told by the government and everyone else to keep our mouths shut — we need the electricity,” reads a caption attributed to Richard T. Pressey, a biologist who worked for both federal and state fish agencies.

    On the morning of March 10, 1957, the massive floodgates on the newly constructed dam were closed. Within hours Celilo Falls, located approximately 13 miles upstream, disappeared beneath the rising water.

    John Caldbick said the falls extended across the entire river. At approximately 40 feet high, he described the Columbia River as tumbling into a series of chutes, rapids, eddies and narrows through the basalt rock.

    Throughout the early part of the 20th century, American Indians used dip nets, gaff hooks and spears to catch fish at Celilo Falls. Later, the elaborate construction of fishing scaffolds — or platforms — were popular from the mid-1930s on. After a number of deaths as fishermen were swept into the churning water, the Bureau of Indian Affairs required the use of harnesses that secured fisherman to the platforms or the shore.

    Dorothy Cyr, who attended the “Stories & Songs” presentation, said her father-in-law, Wilfred Yallup, described the sound of the pre-dam falls.

    “He said it was like a freight train,” she said. “It was really loud.”

    Hill and Morning Owl said many stories have been passed down about the day the falls went silent. A lot of people, including some elders, Morning Owl said, didn’t think it would really happen.

    “When the falls died, the sound died,” Morning Owl said. “You could just hear the wind and the sound of people crying. They wailed.”

    For thousands of years, Celilo Falls was a gathering place for the Plateau peoples — a place where they fished, traded goods and shared common bonds. In addition to seven species of salmonids, the museum display indicates Celilo was known for its lamprey, mussels, sturgeon and other fish.

    Hill said his aunt Flora always shared stories about Celilo Falls.

    “She talked about getting smoked fish or dry fish,” he said. “That was a big staple.”

    Because of the falls, Celilo was one of the largest trading centers in North America. People traveled by horses, boxcars and later hitchhiked or drove to fish, exchange goods or fellowship with others.

    “We didn’t need a newsletter. The elders would tell everyone what was going on,” Hill said. “Everything was storytelling... there was a lot of visiting.”

    Morning Owl has been active in the modern day version of Celilo — now the home of a small Indian village and the Celilo Longhouse. The falls have been replaced by a slack-water lake.

    People still fish and gather for ceremonies. Cyr stops there every chance she gets, bringing youths from the reservation to see the area.

    “I make them take a rock. I tell them to take a piece of Celilo with you,” she said. “There’s a lot of our history there.”

    http://www.eastoregonian.com/eo/local-news/20170609/progress-silences-celilo-falls-stories-keep-its-memory-alive

    ———

    Contact Community Editor Tammy Malgesini at tmalgesini@eastoregonian.com or 541-564-4539

  • East Oregonian/Columbia Insight: Thermal hopscotch: How Columbia River salmon are adapting to climate change

    By Chuck Thompson and Valerie Brown, Columbia InsightToo Hot
    Jul 28, 2020

    HOOD RIVER — Water in the Columbia River Basin isn’t just getting warmer. In places, it’s getting downright hot.

    At the confluence of the Columbia and Yakima rivers in Southeastern Washington, for instance, summer water temperatures have been recorded as high as 90 degrees.

    Blame dams, levees and other concrete additions to the river. And, of course, climate change.

    All salmonids — chinook, coho, sockeye, steelhead — suffer if the water they live in spikes above 68 to 70 degrees. Anything above 70 degrees increases stress and the likelihood of fatal diseases.

    In water above 74 degrees salmon stop trying to swim altogether. At that point, many will die.

    Swimming in warm water requires fish to expend fat stores and burn more energy than they otherwise would.

    As a result, by the time they reach spawning grounds, gonadal functions may be impaired or fish may simply be too exhausted to spawn.

    So what’s a migrating salmon or steelhead to do when confronted with a warming Columbia River?

    What is a ‘cold water refuge’?

    For salmon and steelhead moving up the Columbia River in summer — when water temperatures above 70 degrees are now commonplace — the answer to an increasingly inhospitable river lies in a relatively recent behavioral adaptation.

    In growing numbers, salmon and steelhead have begun seeking relief in small pools of cool water. These pools form at points where mountain rivers and creeks feed into the Columbia.

    Scientists call these areas of naturally occurring thermal relief “cold water refuges” or CWR. They’re sometimes referred to as “thermal refuges,” “thermal sanctuaries” or simply “refugia,” but each term describes the same thing.

    Get used to that acronym. CWRs have become critical pit stops for migrating fish.

    “These refuges are really telling about the way adult salmon are using habitat in the Columbia,” said Margaret Neuman, executive director of the Mid-Columbia Fisheries Enhancement Group, in Ellensburg, Washington.

    “There’s this idea that they’re hopscotching up the river from cold-water input to cold-water input.”

    Dashing dozen

    Researchers became aware of the importance of CWRs in the Columbia River in the 1990s. Studies led by teams from the University of Idaho in the early 2000s established the current baseline of scientific knowledge about them.

    But a 176-page EPA report due at the end of summer 2020 — the Columbia River Cold Water Refuges plan — will shed light on just how crucial CWRs have since become to salmon and steelhead survival.

    The report is certain to become the touchstone document for assessing CWRs in the Columbia River.

    In the lower Columbia — the stretch from its mouth at the Pacific Ocean to its confluence with the Snake River some 325 miles upstream near the Oregon-Washington border — EPA researchers assessed 191 sources of water input into the Columbia.

    Of these 191 tributaries, just 23 qualified as CWRs — meaning the water they drain into the Columbia flows at high enough volume and significantly colder temperature to make a localized impact.

    Of these 23 CWRs, 12 were identified as “primary” CWRs.

    How important are these 12 primary refuges? Collectively, they constitute 97% of the total CWR volume on the lower Columbia River.

    The two largest are located at the mouths of the Cowlitz River and Little White Salmon River, which empties into Drano Lake prior to entering the Columbia River. Both rivers are in Washington.

    Perhaps the most astonishing find by researchers is the way salmon and steelhead are altering historic patterns of migration to dash from CWR to CWR on their way to upriver spawning grounds.

    “During the peak CWR use period — late August-early September — we estimate that (as much as) 85% of the steelhead in the Bonneville Reach between Bonneville Dam and The Dalles Dam are in CWR, which is 0.2% of the total volume of water in this reach,” said John Palmer, senior policy advisor at the EPA Region 10 office in Seattle and the new CWR study’s primary author.

    In other words, when temperatures are warm the majority of migrating fish aren’t even bothering with most of the Columbia anymore. They’re simply seeking out rare breaks from its punishing heat and regrouping before racing to the next refuge.

    Enough cold water left?

    Starting in the 1930s, dams and the slackwater they produce have warmed summer temperatures in the Columbia River by about 2 degrees, according to the EPA. Climate change has additionally warmed the river by a little more than 2 degrees.

    Conditions will get worse. Across the Columbia River Basin the trend is warmer water.

    “There’s only so much cold water,” says Palmer. “It gathers in winter and spring, but slowly gets flushed out of the system (as summer progresses).”
    So, given current models, are there enough CWRs to accommodate the needs of migrating fish?

    In the lower Columbia, probably so.

    East of the Cascades, however, rivers and streams flowing into the Columbia are generally warmer. That’s where the situation gets dire.

    “We’re still examining the question,” says Palmer. “There are no refuges above the Deschutes River. So fish have to go from there past the John Day Dam up through the 76-mile John Day Reservoir. It’s the warmest stretch of the river and there’s really nothing there for them to escape those temperatures.”

    Just below the McNary Dam, the Umatilla River can be considered a CWR only after late August and September, when it begins to run slightly cooler than the Columbia.

    The Umatilla would need substantial upstream restoration to reestablish flow and lower its temperature before it could supply meaningful thermal refuge to fish in the hottest weeks of summer.

    Waters begin to cool, if gradually, after the Columbia’s northward bend into Washington and eventually British Columbia.

    From fire to frying pan

    CWRs might sound like a welcome relief for salmon and steelhead. But any benefits they derive from CWRs are mitigated by a massive drawback.

    CWRs don’t just attract fish. They attract fishermen.

    “Fishermen know these areas because that’s where fish go. But they don’t refer to them as ‘refuges.’ They call ’em ‘fishing holes,’ right?” says Palmer.

    Fish in a kettle is an apt analogy. There’s a reason large CWRs, such as Washington’s Drano Lake, attract commercially guided fishing expeditions from as far as Yakima. Anglers know their chances of landing fish increase in compact areas where fish cluster.

    A 2009 study found migration success among steelhead that used CWRs was about 8% less than steelhead that didn’t use them. Fishing in CWRs explained the decreased survival rate.

    It’s a cruel twist for migrating species. Fish are seeking cool refuges; in response, humans have made these refuges even more dangerous than the warm waters fish are so desperate to escape.

    Palmer stresses the purpose of the coming EPA report is to provide information, not suggest mitigation efforts.

    “We’re not in the fish-regulation business, we’re in the water-quality business,” he says.

    Nevertheless, the agency’s forthcoming report will likely inform future conservation strategies.

    “People in the salmon recovery world doing projects in these tributaries can help justify a project by saying, ‘Well, not only are we going to increase spawning and rearing habitat in the tributaries but it’s helping to cool the water, which will have a beneficial effect down river.’ People doing projects will think about this as an objective,” says Palmer.

    Management policies have already been influenced by the evolving significance of CWRs.

    In 2020, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife closed all fishing during warm months at what the department calls “thermal sanctuaries” at the mouths of Eagle Creek, Herman Creek and the Deschutes River.

    The closures are in effect from July 15 to Sept. 15.

    The EPA’s report could help build a case for more protections around CWRs.

    Enhancement projects Although cold water refuges occur naturally, efforts to enhance them are popping up around the Columbia River Basin.

    The Portland-based Lower Columbia Estuary Partnership is currently in the assessment phase of a thermal refuge enhancement project at the confluence of Oneonta and Horsetail creeks on the lower Columbia River.

    “The concept is to construct one or more diversion structures that will promote expanded cold water plume formation by diverting warmer Columbia River water away from the confluence zone,” says LCEP physical scientist Keith Marcoe.

    In 2019, near Benton City on the Yakima River, the Mid-Columbia Fisheries Enhancement Group (MCFEG) reconnected a small, cool groundwater spring to the river. It’s likely the Yakima River Mile 25 Thermal Refuge is the first such enhancement project on the river.

    Coupled with downstream projects currently in development, the goal is to capitalize on critical sources of cool water in what the organization calls a “very hot portion of the Yakima River.”

    “The spring is already naturally there; we’re trying to maximize how much positive impact it’s having on the river,” says MCFEG executive director Neuman. “We basically dug a little alcove into the bank … and added wood and planted trees along the spring area to try to keep the water cool. We installed (structures) to hold the spring-water back, just not let the spring-water all run off at once, but try to modulate it a little bit.”

    A beaver has since settled in the area — beaver ponds can enhance cold water refuges — but it’s too soon to gauge the project’s long-term impact.

    Manmade CWRs?

    Such small-scale interventions lead to a broader question: are large-scale manmade cold water refuges possible?

    Although created unintentionally, artificial CWRs already exist along the Columbia River.

    Government Cove, where Herman Creek spills into the Columbia River just east of Cascade Locks, was created when small islands in the river were artificially joined. The result is a protective barrier that collects and delays the flow of cool water from Herman Creek before it empties into the mainstem of the Columbia.

    “It wasn’t built to be a cold water refuge but it’s turned into that,” Palmer said. “The cold water stays there for a while, and fish go into it.”

    By far the largest and most used refuge, Drano Lake, east of Stevenson, Washington, is another unintentional refuge. The lake was created when a dike was built at the mouth of the Little White Salmon River to accommodate railroad tracks, and later State Highway 14.

    “That already is kind of an artificial CWR,” Palmer said. “So it’s not impossible to think about doing some of this.”How much help, really?Among some environmentalists, CWRs are increasingly seen as an important piece of salmon recovery strategies.

    Is that hope misplaced? Is human enhancement of CWRs a too-little-too-late solution to the Columbia’s epic problems?

    “From our perspective, the problem with temperature in the Columbia and Snake is that the whole river is too hot,” says Miles Johnson, senior attorney for Columbia Riverkeeper. “I don’t mean to say that cold water refuges are not important and worth protecting. But the lower Snake and lower Columbia are too hot for salmon and steelhead and it’s dams and reservoirs and climate change (causing the problem).”

    The implication is only large-scale solutions can fix the large-scale problems in the Columbia and Snake.

    Especially considering their vulnerability to fishing, Palmer admits the overall value of CWRs is “a big question.” But he’s more bullish on their role.

    He points to a modeling study conducted at an EPA lab in Corvallis, Oregon. In a theoretical Columbia River in which all CWRs were removed, the simulation showed stress levels in salmon and steelhead more than doubled.

    “In the lower Columbia the salmon have told us cold water refuges are helpful for them; it’s mitigating the warmer Columbia,” says Palmer. “I don’t think they would be going into cold water refuges if there wasn’t some benefit there.”

     

    Columbia Insight, based in Hood River, Oregon, is an online, nonprofit publication focused on environmental issues of the Columbia River Basin.

  • Editorial Lewiston Morning Tribune: If you love a river, you’ll reopen the season

    fisher.w.steelheadDecember 5, 2018

    By Marty Trillhaase

    Last week, Idaho Rivers United pulled out of a threatened lawsuit that prodded Idaho Fish and Game into closing the steelhead season effective Saturday.

    It was the right thing to do for IRU, for Riggins and other Idaho communities whose livelihoods are tied to the winter steelhead fishing season — but most of all, for the fish themselves.

    Fish numbers are plummeting. As of Sunday, 48,471 steelhead had cleared Lower Granite Dam since July 1 — the lowest number since 1994 and about a third of the 10-year average of 149,067.

    About a quarter of those are wild fish. There’s a risk that at least some wild fish will be mortally injured even by catch-and-release fishing.

    So IRU and other groups saw an opening: For eight years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries had failed to renew Idaho’s permit to inadvertently injure and kill an incidental number of wild steelhead.

    In a binary world, it doesn’t matter that Idaho was a victim of federal inaction. The state had no permit. So when IRU and some of its fellow conservation groups threatened to sue, Idaho Fish and Game folded; declaring the season closed as of Dec. 8.

    All of which has the result of forcing Riggins and other fishing communities to accept 100 percent of the sacrifice for what will be at best a negligible gain in fish survival.

    Longterm, however, nobody wins — certainly not the fish.

    Fishing communities such as Riggins, Salmon or Orofino bring a genuine Idaho message to the fish debate.

    Many Idahoans live in one-horse economies. Moscow wouldn’t be much without the University of Idaho. Lewiston would be decimated by loss of its sawmill and paper plant. You wouldn’t recognize Idaho Falls without the Idaho National Laboratory.

    They see themselves in the plight of Riggins outfitters and guides, hotel operators and restaurant owners whose businesses disappear without a fishing season.

    Fishing communities also can deliver an economic counter-argument to those who say preserving the lower Snake River dams is more important.

    If someone is not a fish advocate before he goes fishing in Riggins, he will undergo a conversion to the cause before leaving.

    What fishing communities lack, the conservation community can provide:

    A national audience that responds to ecological arguments that often fall flat in Idaho.

    A donor base.

    Political expertise.

    Legal talent.

    That kind of partnership spans Idaho’s ideological spectrum from right to left. It combines urban and rural interests. It merges sportsmen with tree huggers.

    As Boise State University political scientist John Freemuth told the Tribune’s Eric Barker last weekend, the only alliance that even comes close is the swath of Idahoans committed to keeping public lands in public hands.

    Now, however, the two sides are gearing up for a fight. As Wapiti River Guides owner Gary Lane told Barker, “the shit hit the fan, basically.”

    Preserving and enhancing Idaho’s fish is already an upstream battle. It means going up against entrenched political and economic interests within several Western states.

    How much tougher does that fight become if conservationists are persona non grata in Riggins — and conservationists are left to mouthing scientific platitudes?

    Perhaps there is a middle ground — such as single, barbless hooks and not allowing anglers to take wild fish out of the water. IRU’s former co-plaintiffs are free to negotiate.

    But if Saturday dawns in Riggins with the season closed, former partners will go to war.

    What matters more to the Conservation Angler, Wild Fish Conservancy, Friends of the Clearwater, Snake River Waterkeeper, Wild Salmon Rivers and Wild Fish Conservancy?

    Winning this round.

    Or saving Idaho’s fish?

    If it’s the latter, they will follow IRU’s lead and tell their lawyers to stand down.

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