This Will Be the Biggest Dam-Removal Project in History

National Geographic – by Sarah Gilman

More than 400 miles of the Klamath River system that have been blocked for a century will open up for people and wildlife.

Glen Canyon Dam began its life with an explosion. Congress authorized the dam’s construction on this day in 1956, and about seven months later, then-president Dwight D. Eisenhower pressed a telegraph key in the Oval Office, sending the signal to blast a string of dynamite wedged in the side of a sinuous canyon. Boulders sprayed through the air at Arizona’s northern border, and workers began drilling a tunnel to temporarily redirect the flow of the Colorado River while they built the base of the dam.

Monstrous Lake Powell filled in behind the 710-foot dam, drowning Glen Canyon’s otherworldly red-rock amphitheaters and slot canyons under its silty depths.

These days, when dams in the U.S. make news, it’s often concrete getting blasted, not bedrock. And last week, the biggest dam-removal project in history got a crucial endorsement.

Picture of Copco No. 1 Dam is one of several Klamath dams in Oregon and California

Federal officials, the states of Oregon and California, and the utility PacifiCorp signed a pair of agreements opening the way for removal of a whopping four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River, which flows from Oregon through Northern California.

“It’s certainly the most significant dam removal and restoration project ever undertaken,” says Steve Rothert, California regional director of American Rivers, an environmental advocacy group.

After the Glen Canyon Dam was approved 60 years ago, a group of archaeologists and river runners documented what would be lost beneath the flood. Katie Lee, a folk singer and actor turned activist, recalls walking naked throught the canyon. (Caution: This video contains nudity.)

Nationwide, more than 1,300 dams have been removed as of 2015. The Elwha and Glines Canyon Dams were blown out of Washington’s Elwha River between 2011 and 2014. Between 2011 and 2012, the Condit Dam vanished from the state’s White Salmon River.

Such projects allow backed-up rivers and the fisheries they once supported to be reborn. They reflect a broader shift in the way Americans relate to rivers, seeing them as more than just workhorses for hydropower, agriculture, and economic growth.

Historically, the Klamath River system above the dams supported between 10,000 and 149,000 naturally spawning Chinook salmon, and 18,000 to 30,000 spawning steelhead each year. According to Rothert, it was the third most important fishery on the West Coast behind the Columbia and Sacramento Rivers.

The Klamath dams themselves have blocked fish passage for a century, severing some local tribes from a food source they’ve relied on for millennia. And the fish that survive in the system have had major die-offsdue to toxic algae blooms, warm water, and disease. “To me, it’s an environmental injustice,” says Klamath Tribes Chairman Don Gentry. “Many people have benefited from the development and changes at the expense of the resource and the tribes. It’s only right to restore the fishery back to us.”

Under the agreement’s terms, the dams will be removed by 2020, opening up 420 miles of connected habitat for fish and potentially helping boost numbers of some species by 80 percent.

“And from a whitewater recreation standpoint, you’re going to be looking at a multiday river trip down through that system that will be remarkable,” says Dave Steindorf, California stewardship director for the group American Whitewater.

Other dam removal projects have been extraordinarily successful. On the Elwha, “I think that everybody has been pretty amazed at what happened with the estuary,” says Mike McHenry, habitat biologist for the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe. As the sediment trapped behind the dams spilled out and settled near the end of the river, “almost overnight it converted from a steep, cobbly, high-energy environment to a sloped, sandy, lower-energy environment,” forming a critical haven for salmon transitioning between freshwater and saltwater and helping set the stage for further recovery.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/04/160411-klamath-glen-canyon-dam-removal-video-anniversary/

3 thoughts on “This Will Be the Biggest Dam-Removal Project in History

  1. Question: If we’re tearing down hydroelectric dams, but not building new power plants, where is the energy these dams provide going to come from? We can’t burn coal and nuclear is evil, so where is the power going to come from? FYI, if you say wind and solar, I’m going to laugh at you!

  2. if you say wind and solar, I’m going to laugh at you!

    Start laughing…. I read another article that stated that was their answer…

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