Saving Snake River Water and Salmon Simultaneously: The Biological, Economic, and Legal Case For Breaching The Lower Snake River Dams, Lowering John Day Reservoir, and Restoring Natural River Flows

M. Blumm
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Snake River salmon, historically constituting the most abundant salmon runs in the Columbia River Basin, today teeter on the brink of extinction. Their decline has prompted federal, state, and tribal restoration plans, some of which advocate breaching the four federal dams on the lower Snake River and eliminating or lowering John Day reseroir on the Columbia River. These measures would restore natural flows in portions of the Columbia and Snake Rivers and significantly decrease salmon mortality, but opponents claim they are sceintifically unjustified and too costly. In this Article, the authors comprehensively review the major scientific and economic studies on breaching the lower Snake River dams and conclude that this option is not only scientifically sound, but also economically affordable. In fact, they assert that dam breaching may prove less costly, both economically and socially, for upriver interests than attempting to improve the current restoration program. Designed to have as little effect as possible on cheap hydropower generation, navigation, and irrigation, the current program relies on a trucking and barging program to transport salmon downstream. This program has proved to be a twenty-year failure. The Article also explores numerous legal mandates to restore Snake River salmon that make continuation of the status quo legally unacceptable.
同时拯救蛇河水和鲑鱼:破坏蛇河下游水坝、降低约翰·戴水库和恢复自然河流的生物、经济和法律案例
蛇河鲑鱼,历史上是哥伦比亚河流域最丰富的鲑鱼种群,今天却濒临灭绝。它们的减少促使了联邦、州和部落的恢复计划,其中一些人主张打破斯内克河下游的四个联邦水坝,并取消或降低哥伦比亚河上的约翰戴水库。这些措施将恢复哥伦比亚河和蛇河部分地区的自然流量,并显著降低鲑鱼的死亡率,但反对者声称这些措施在科学上是不合理的,而且成本太高。在本文中,作者全面回顾了主要的科学和经济研究,认为这一选择不仅在科学上是合理的,而且在经济上是负担得起的。事实上,他们认为,无论从经济上还是社会上,对上游的利益来说,决堤的代价可能比试图改善目前的修复计划要低。该项目旨在尽可能减少对廉价水力发电、航运和灌溉的影响,目前的项目依靠卡车和驳船将鲑鱼运往下游。这个项目已经失败了20年。文章还探讨了恢复蛇河鲑鱼的许多法律授权,使现状的延续在法律上不可接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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