California is engaged in the world’s largest dam removal project in hopes of letting nature rebound

This article has 880 words.  It talks about removing four dams, at a cost of billions of dollars.  Now a single word about replacing the lost water.  In other words, the real goal is not the environment, it is to impoverish the people of California.

“The massive project does come with a cost for local communities: $500 million paid for by taxpayers and those who contract with PacifiCorps, the local electric power company. Some homeowners expressed concern about decreased property values, now that their homes will no longer be on the waterfront. The Siskiyou County Water Users Association, which has been fighting the project for about a decade, filed a federal lawsuit to no avail. 

The Renewal Corporation, environmentalists and the tribes argue that the cost is worth to restore nature to its roots and they point to the success of the Elwha Dam Removal project on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state in 2011. That project restored the river’s natural flow, which enabled salmon to return almost immediately, and rebuilt a beach and lagoon that had been deprived of sediment for decades. 

This is how you make rural California poor.  Congrats to the National Socialist Newsom, he is killing off his State.

California is engaged in the world’s largest dam removal project in hopes of letting nature rebound

Aerial view of water carrying aqueduct in Outer Los Angeles, California.

A national push to “rewild” looks to restore natural environments that might help mitigate the effects of climate change.

By Maura Barrett, Jackie Montalvo and Cate Waters, NBC News,  9/20/23  https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/california-engaged-worlds-largest-dam-removal-project-hopes-letting-na-rcna107962

HORNBROOK, Calif. — This time next year, a series of massive dams that block off the Klamath River will no longer exist. The soil and rocks originally dug and transported from a nearby mountain in the 1950s will be returned to their home and the river will run freely again. 

The Iron Gate Dam, which opened in 1964 as the last of four dams that, at nearly 200 feet tall each, regulated the flow of the river and time releases for the local water supply in Northern California, is now part of the world’s largest dam removal and river restoration project. Iron Gate is scheduled to be the final stop for decommissioning crews. 

One of the dams, Copco2, was removed earlier this year in just a handful of months. It was a relatively quick undertaking, considering the construction of the Iron Gate Dam took nearly a decade. 

Mark Bransom, the CEO of the Klamath River Renewal Corporation, said the river will be able to flow freely once the dam’s infrastructure is removed. He also said they have plans to help nature take back the area.

“As soon as the reservoir is drained, we’ll get out on the footprint there and begin some initial restoration activity,” Bransom said. “We want to stabilize the remaining sediments using native vegetation.”

NBC News correspondent Maura Barrett speaks with Mark Bransom, CEO of the Klamath River Renewal Corporation, overlooking the Iron Gate Dam.NBC News

In the age of extreme heat, record-setting drought and catastrophic flooding linked to climate change, there’s been a national push to “rewild,” a movement rooted in restoring nature to the state it was before human intervention, hoping this helps mitigate the effects of climate change.

A big part of that effort is centered around dams, many of which were originally constructed when infrastructural development took priority over environmental protection. 

“One of the fastest ways to heal a river is to remove a dam,” Ann Willis, the California regional director for American Rivers, a nonprofit focused on protecting clean water, said. “The good news is, when you have the opportunity to unjam a river, the river can start to restore itself almost from the moment that the water starts flowing again.”

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the governing body responsible for maintaining the National Inventory of Dams, has flagged 76% of existing U.S. dams as having “high hazard potential,” a FEMA designation “for any dam whose failure or mis-operation will cause loss of human life and significant property destruction.” In the case of the Iron Gate Dam, Willis pointed out the green growth floating on the stagnant reservoir’s surface: toxic algae in what is supposed to be a water supply source. And because of aged-out infrastructure, some dams can put people in danger of catastrophic flooding, as more extreme climate events become more common. 

Advocates, largely driven by tribal activists along the Klamath River, have been pushing for these dams to be decommissioned for more than 20 years and have pointed out the potential determinants from the start — notably, the near extinction of the salmon in the river has forced an elimination of the Karuk, Yurok and Hoopa tribes’ sacred practice of salmon ceremonies. 

“Tribal input wasn’t sought,” said Barry McCovey Jr., the director of the Yurok Tribe Fisheries Department. “If we had input, we would have said, ‘No, this isn’t a good idea, you can’t cut a river in half with the dam. You can’t stop fish from migrating. It’s going to throw the ecosystem out of balance. You’re going to see a cascade of effects that’s going to last for generations.’”

McCovey expressed excitement now that the removal has finally begun, calling it “the biggest single restorative action that we can take to start to bring balance back to the ecosystem.” He warned that it could take considerable time to see the impacts. 

“But that’s OK. We’re in this for the long run,” he said.

The massive project does come with a cost for local communities: $500 million paid for by taxpayers and those who contract with PacifiCorps, the local electric power company. Some homeowners expressed concern about decreased property values, now that their homes will no longer be on the waterfront. The Siskiyou County Water Users Association, which has been fighting the project for about a decade, filed a federal lawsuit to no avail. 

The Renewal Corporation, environmentalists and the tribes argue that the cost is worth to restore nature to its roots and they point to the success of the Elwha Dam Removal project on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state in 2011. That project restored the river’s natural flow, which enabled salmon to return almost immediately, and rebuilt a beach and lagoon that had been deprived of sediment for decades. 

Advocates across the country hope to add the Klamath River as another success as they look ahead to even larger projects — like the current $33.5 billion federal proposal to breach four dams on the lower Snake River in eastern Washington.

7 thoughts on “California is engaged in the world’s largest dam removal project in hopes of letting nature rebound

  1. This should be put to the voters for a vote! The legislators, if you want to call them that, are killing this state! How do we stop this madness???

  2. California seems to be governed by a bunch of mindless democrats in Sacramento. We have water shortages which would suggest that more dams should be constructed which in turn would help to generate more electricity for running EVs, but no, destroy the existing dams. Destruction of dams will require more hydrocarbon fueled generating plants, but again no, you cannot charge your EVs between 4.00 and 9.00 o’clock. They are also trying to destroy the Second Amendment. Sure, never ever vote democrat again.

  3. Remember the Prop 1 Water and Dams we (except in the North…where we know better) voted for?
    MORE DAMS!
    MORE RESERVOIRS
    MORE MONEY FOR BULLSHIT….well THAT is what it really was, because where did all that money go?

    There should be no surprise.
    In the DRAFT of Prop 1, it read, “Remove Dams”.
    In the FINAL of Prop 1, it read, “Remove fish impediments”…which meant “remove dams”.

    It’s not the people’s fault for wanting water and reservoirs.
    But, if we refuse to pay attention, they are happy to take advantage of it.

    Now that our elections are corrupt…you won’t be voting your way out.
    Do you really think they give a rats ass if you ‘call’ or ‘write’ when your Election Official is the one who put them in Office?
    And, even if you can, look at what they are doing to School Districts and Counties like Shasta…yet THAT is what we need to do now.
    Take back your Local Government first.

    If you can’t take back your local Government; how the Hell can you expect to take back the State?

  4. It really does makes sense. People are leaving California, so we do not need as much water. Reducing water access will guarantee fewer people will want to come here. Farmers will continue to abandon their land because of lack of irrigation. Best of all, the Delta Shrimp will thrive (even though nobody even knows what they look like). Environmentalists RULE!
    Has anybody figured out how much water is needed to support 5 million illegals dumped into our communities?
    California Marxist democrat dystopia continues, unabated.
    We deserve what we vote for.

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