Legislation - Policy

A Republican’s quixotic quest against dam removal

Photo: Demolition of the Klamath River’s Copco No. 2 dam began last year. | Shane Anderson/Swiftwater Films/Klamath River Renewal

LET IT FLOW: Water is flowing unimpeded down the Klamath River to the Pacific Ocean for the first time in more than a century — and Rep. Doug LaMalfa is depressed.

“It’s our worst defeat since I’ve been a legislator,” he said in an interview ahead of PacifiCorp’s emptying of three reservoirs on the Klamath River in order to demolish the dams that stand in front of them.

It’s the largest dam removal project in the country, and it’s a harbinger of the shifting politics around rivers in the age of climate change.

The traditional fault lines that have long pitted anti-dam environmentalists and tribes against pro-dam farmers and utilities, who benefit from their water and electricity, are blurring. Dam owners are increasingly buckling under the costs of repairs, tighter environmental standards for migrating fish and the difficulties of managing more extreme storms and drought from climate change.

On the Klamath, California’s second-largest river, one of PacifiCorp’s dams is already down and the other three will be demolished by October. Next up are two Pacific Gas & Electric dams on the Eel River, just south of LaMalfa’s district, where farmers partnered with environmental and fishing groups to figure out how to parcel out water without the dams to help manage flows.

In Washington, four dams on the Snake River are the closest they’ve ever been to being taken down thanks to a Republican lawmaker’s proposal, though others in his party are fighting back.

LaMalfa knows times are changing. “I feel like just one anti-aircraft gunner with 10,000 enemy fighter planes coming at you at once,” he said.

It’s a safe position for LaMalfa, who’s coasting to his seventh […]

Full article: www.politico.com

Recent Posts

It’s Raining Stormwater NOVs in California

Photo: Adobe Stock / Romolo Tavani For many California industrial facilities, above average rainfall brought 60-day…

18 hours ago

Nature-based solutions: California wants to harness more than half its land to combat climate change by 2045.

U.S. Forest Service firefighters in the Angeles National Forest burn piles of forest debris below…

2 days ago

Conservation.gov — Showcasing, Supporting Rapid Acceleration of Local Efforts to Conserve, Protect and Restore USA Lands and Waters

New hub will connect communities with resources and funding available through President Biden’s Investing in…

3 days ago

Ocean Waves Mist Decades-Old PFAS into the Atmosphere

Sea spray rereleases large amounts of PFAS from the ocean into the atmosphere. Credit: Pexels/Jess Loiterton…

4 days ago

Meet the Las Vegas teens facing Western drought head on

(LtoR) Katie Kim, Fisher Parry and Kira Anderson with the Southern Nevada Water Authority's Youth…

5 days ago

Climate Change’s ‘Physical Risks’ Are Catching Up With Banks

A container ship navigates through the Miraflores locks of the Panama Canal on Nov. 3. Drought…

6 days ago