Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business
www.tricitiesbusinessnews.com/articles/2430
Todd Myers

Snake River dam removal distracts from salmon recovery efforts

December 16, 2019

By Todd Myers

Should Washington state risk 11 years of salmon recovery funding on something scientists believe will do little to increase salmon populations? How about eliminating electricity generation equivalent to every solar panel and wind turbine in Washington state?

Essentially,

those arguing we need to destroy the Snake River dams suggest we do both.

Focusing on the four Lower Snake River dams is a deadly distraction from

efforts to recover salmon across the Northwest—one that could backfire badly.

As

a member of the Puget Sound Salmon Recovery Council, I am frustrated by the

push to destroy the dams, which is not simply misguided — it is irresponsible.

Some

activists claim Snake River salmon are near extinction. This is a familiar

refrain. In 1999, activists bought an ad in The New York Times claiming that

unless the dams were removed, “wild Snake River spring chinook salmon … will be

extinct by 2017.” When 2017 arrived, the Snake River Chinook population was six

times larger than in 1999.

Despite

their poor record, advocates of dam destruction insist this time they are

right. Fisheries scientists disagree.

In

2017, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries noted the dams

are “very close to achieving, or have already achieved, the juvenile dam passage

survival objective of 96 percent for yearling Chinook salmon and steelhead

migrants.” Destroying the dams would increase the survival rate by, at best, a

few percentage points.

In

fact, NOAA fisheries and other scientists argue salmon may not be helped by

destroying the dams. UCLA Professor Peter Kareiva, the former science director

for The Nature Conservancy, analyzed the impact of the Snake River dams while

at NOAA Fisheries in the early 2000s. He now argues, “it is not certain that

dams now cause higher mortality than would arise in a free-flowing river” on

the Snake.

Some

now claim destroying the dams would help the struggling southern resident

killer whales in Puget Sound. Again, scientists disagree. NOAA Fisheries and

the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife prioritized the most

important watersheds for Puget Sound orca, ranking the Snake River ninth

overall. Destroying the dams, NOAA Fisheries concluded, “would result in only a

marginal change in the total salmon available to the killer whales.”

Worse,

spending scarce resources on the dams would mean other salmon-recovery projects

would go unfunded. The Army Corps of Engineers estimates the cost to remove the

dams would be more than $1 billion — equal to more than 11 years of state salmon

recovery funding. We asked University of Washington scientist Deborah Giles,

who is pushing to destroy the dams, where that money would come from. She

responded by citing Karl Marx, writing, “From each according to their ability,

to each according to their need,” claiming the federal government could

magically find the money. Aside from the oddity of unselfconsciously quoting

Karl Marx, if an additional $1 billion was available, it should go to

watersheds the state Department of Fish and Wildlife says are most important to

orca, not destroying the dams.

The

dams are responsible for about

7 percent of Washington’s electricity generation, more than all wind and solar

in the state combined. The Northwest Power and Conservation Council told the

Legislature last year that the region faces an energy shortage in upcoming

years, noting that dam removal would make that shortage worse.

Despite

that, some advocates of dam destruction claim we could easily replace the

electricity they generate. This is nonsense and contradicted by their own

allies. Last year, the NW Energy Coalition, which supports removing the dams,

found it would cost an additional $400 million a year in electricity costs to

replace part, but not all, of the energy from the dams. They also admit it would

increase carbon dioxide emissions because some energy would be replaced by

natural gas.

Although

we are in a down cycle, salmon populations along the Snake River are larger

today than two decades ago. Some, however, continue to ignore the latest science,

pushing policies that would increase air pollution, raise electricity rates and

divert money from effective salmon recovery. Preserving the Snake River dams

isn’t just good for our economy, farmers and energy – it is good for the

environment.

Todd Myers is a member of the Puget Sound Salmon Recovery Council and environmental director for the Washington Policy Center, which has offices in the Tri-Cities, Spokane, Seattle and Olympia. Online at washingtonpolicy.org.