For more information on fish and wildlife issues,
contact:
Jack Wong, Director Fish and Wildlife Division 800-452-5161
For more information on power issues, contact:
Dick Watson, Director Power Division 800-452-5161
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I. ISAB: Do more to protect adult salmon at dams
In a report to the Council last week, the Independent Science
Advisory Board said more must be done to improve the survival of
adult salmon as they pass dams on the lower Columbia and Snake
rivers on their way to spawn. The scientists said:
- Adult salmon are more important biologically than juvenile
fish because adult fish carry the seeds of the next generations.
- There is a perception in the region - which is not accurate -
that adult passage has been "solved" when in fact it
has not.
- While there is no reason to modify or delete any of the
construction projects currently planned for the dams, in general
the Corps of Engineers' program has focused too narrowly on
juvenile fish survival. The Corps needs to step up research and
spending on adult survival improvements.
- Counting fish as they swim up fish ladders at dams, which
currently is the best source of enumerating adult fish, is
inadequate for research purposes - PIT tag detectors are needed
at every dam to get a more complete picture of survival.
The ISAB report on adult fish passage is the third in a series
that will form the basis of a report by the Council, requested by
Congress last year, on the effectiveness of fish survival
improvements at the dams. The report can be obtained by calling the
Council and requesting document ISAB
99-2.
II. ISAB points out agreements, disagreements among plans
The Independent Scientific Advisory Board, which advises both the
Northwest Power Planning Council and the National Marine Fisheries
Service, found substantial agreement - and also areas of sharp
disagreement - among five plans for land use or fish and wildlife
recovery in the Columbia River Basin. Reporting to the Council last
week, the ISAB found consensus among the five plans - state, federal
and tribal - on habitat improvements, harvest management and the
need for new fish and wildlife management practices. The ISAB said
the plans do not agree on how to use fish hatcheries, how to improve
fish survival at hydroelectric dams, the effects of flow
augmentation (boosting river flows during the spring and summer when
juvenile fish migrate to the ocean), whether to barge juvenile
salmon and steelhead past the dams and whether to draw down certain
reservoirs.
The paper can be obtained by calling the Council and requesting
document ISAB 99-3.
Plans reviewed by the ISAB included Return to the River (Independent
Scientific Group, 1996); Upstream (National Research Council, 1996),
An Assessment of Ecosystem Components in the Interior Columbia Basin
and Draft Environmental Impact Statement (U.S. Forest Service and
Bureau of Land Management, 1997), Wy-Kan-Ush-Mi Wa-Kish-Wit, Spirit
of the Salmon, (Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission, 1995),
and Proposed Recovery Plan for Snake River Salmon (National Marine
Fisheries Service, 1995).
III. Regional Technical Forum would advise on energy
conservation
The Northwest Power Planning is seeking public comments on the
structure, make-up and decision making processes of a proposed
advisory committee, called the Regional Technical Forum (RTF), which
would focus on helping secure energy conservation and renewable
resources in the Northwest. Congress recommended the Council create
the Forum to provide technical assistance and to track energy
conservation acquisition by the region's electric utilities. But
when the Bonneville Power Administration proposed a rate discount
for its customers that pursue conservation and renewables,
Bonneville turned to the RTF to assist that effort. As currently
proposed, the RTF would make recommendations to Bonneville regarding
conservation measures and programs, the estimated energy savings and
value to the regional power system, and methods for measuring energy
savings. It also would track conservation acquisition and develop
criteria for renewable energy projects. The paper proposes that RTF
members be chosen for their technical expertise from nominations by
the region's utilities, the states and others. It would be supported
by the Council, but its recommendations would be independent of the
Council. Comments on the paper are due by March 17. The paper can be
obtained by calling the Council and requesting Council issue paper 99-1.
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