Regular readers of this blog will know that, in order for it to be implemented, the deal known as the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement or KHSA must be authorized by federal legislation. Enacting federal legislation is necessary because the KHSA abandons the normal legal process by which hydroelectric dams and related powerhouses are licensed, relicensed or decommissioned (removed or breached).
Promoters
argue that the KHSA is the swiftest, surest and best path to dam
removal; others reason that the normal process under the
Federal Power Act – a decommissioning deal supervised by the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) - is the best path to
removal.
While
it is impossible to know with absolute assurance which path to
decommissioning would prove quickest, surest and best, one thing is
clear: a decommissioning agreement ordered and overseen by FERC could
not include the costly and controversial water deal known as the
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement or KBRA.
Absent
inclusion in KHSA authorizing legislation, the KBRA would have to go
it alone in Congress and would likely face even greater hurdles in
the quest to become law. That's because most KBRA money provisions –
including multi-million dollar funding for federal irrigation
interests – will likely be seen in Congress as subsidies for
special interests. With a huge federal deficit and myriad corporate,
farm and other interests vying to maintain existing subsidies,
prospects for securing new taxpayer-funded subsidies appear slim at
best.
Even
the KBRA's restoration funding qualifies as a subsidy because the
KBRA directs that funding toward projects and locations favored by
those who signed the agreement. As has been proven time and again
(including in the Everglades, Great Lakes, Chesapeake Bay and the in
the former Klamath restoration effort), allocating restoration
funding based on political rather than scientific criteria is a
recipe for restoration failure.
What
if?
What
if, however, legislation to authorize and fund the KHSA overcomes all
obstacles and becomes federal law? Would that legislation lead to
speedy dam removal? KlamBlog thinks not and here's why:
Legislating
the KHSA Dam Deal would absolve PacifiCorp and its shareholders from
responsibility for removing or decommissioning the dams and
powerhouses it owns. KHSA legislation would also absolve the
Corporation from liability for toxic legacies. But the KHSA does not
name the organization or government agency which would take over the
task of facilities removal and assume legal responsibility for toxic
legacies.
One of PacifiCorp's aging Klamath Powerhouses
Instead,
the Agreement calls for a “Dam Removal Entity” or DRE which would
presumably step forward once authorizing legislation becomes law.
That begs two questions:
- What sort of organization or government agency would be willing and able to take on dam removal and to accept legal responsibility for PacifiCorp's toxic legacies?
- Even if a willing company, tribe or agency could be found, would that DRE be able to obtain bonding and insurance while accepting full responsibilities for dam removal and unassessed toxic legacies?
KlamBlog
suspects obtaining bonding and insurance under those conditions would
prove problematic. Bonding agencies and insurance companies are not
in the habit of bonding and insuring unassessed liability; if they do
it, the cost would likely be astronomical.
The
DRE of last resort
What
happens if KHSA-KBRA authorizing legislation passes but a capable,
bondable and insurable Dam Removal Entity can't be found? In the
absence of a capable DRE, the federal government is the Dam Removal
Entity of last resort. It would be necessary to go back to Congress
seeking authorization for the federal government to become the KHSA's
“Dam Removal Entity”.
A
federal DRE would mean a higher price tag for dam removal and
powerhouse decommissioning; cleaning up toxic legacies lurking around
100 year old powerhouses could prove particularly expensive.
Taxpayers would bear those costs. Avoiding potentially significant
costs to decommission their dams and powerhouses is likely a prime
reason PacifiCorp wanted a deal outside the FERC process.
As
KlamBlog editor Felice Pace pointed out in a recent editorial,
turning over toxic legacies to taxpayers is nothing new in the
American West:
“Walking
away
from
toxic
legacies
is,
of
course,
an
old
corporate
trick.
In
Northern
California
and
throughout
the
west,
timber
companies
'donated'
old
mill
sites
to
local
governments
which
later
found
that
the
fine
print
had
absolved
the
company
from
liability
for
toxic
legacies.
Taxpayers
had
to
pick
up
the
bill
for
cleaning
up
those
toxics.”
KlamBlog
suspects the KHSA's creators – including PacifiCorp – realize it
is unlikely a non-federal DRE capable of decommissioning PacifiCorp's
Klamath dams and powerhouses could be found. Have promoters
intentionally obscured the likely federal role in dam removal if the
KHSA is authorized by Congress?
Will
promoters explain?
KlamBlog
invites promoters of the KHSA Dam Deal - and especially PacifiCorp's
Klamath spokesperson VP Dean Brockbank – to explain on this blog
why their plan to have an unnamed “Dam Removal Entity” remove the
dams, decommission the powerhouses and accept responsibility for
toxic legacies is realistic. We offer to publish that explanation
here on KlamBlog.
What
do you think? If the KHSA is authorized by Congress will a Dam
Removal Entity be found and, if found, would such an entity be able
to secure insurance and bonding? Would the federal government be
required to step forward as the DRE of last resort? And was that what
KHSA promoters had in mind all along?
Leave
a comment below. Let the debate begin and stay tuned!
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