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http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/14/opinion/14TUE2.html?th

 

October 14, 2003Saving Salmon

Conservationists and business interests are at loggerheads so often these days

that it is heartening when they can reach an agreement that produces good

outcomes for both — and for the environment as well.

 

A coalition of environmental groups, an Indian tribe, government agencies and a

power company recently announced an agreement that could help save wild Atlantic

salmon, which are now on the endangered species list. Two dams on Maine's

Penobscot River will be torn down and a third decommissioned, opening up more

than 500 miles of river for fish returning to spawn. In exchange, PPL, the power

company, will receive cash and the right to increase power generation at other

dams that pose less threat to fish migration.

 

Apart from helping the fish, conservationists also hope that the deal will

restore momentum to the idea of removing dams whose environmental damage

outweighs their usefulness as generators of electricity. That idea took hold in

1997 when the federal government ordered the destruction of another Maine dam,

on the Kennebec River, leading eventually to the removal of more than 100 dams

elsewhere. Dam removal was vigorously supported by President Bill Clinton's

secretary of the interior, Bruce Babbitt, who actually kept a sledgehammer in

his office that he would carry around with him to decommissioning ceremonies.

 

Though it blessed last week's agreement, the Bush administration has not shown

the same enthusiasm for removing dams or, for that matter, saving salmon. In

August, hoping to polish up his environmental credentials, Mr. Bush visited

Washington State to claim credit for an upsurge in the number of salmon

returning to the Lower Snake River. The main reason for salmon recovery in the

Pacific Northwest is a cyclical improvement in ocean conditions, not Mr. Bush.

Indeed, his administration has fallen short of targets required under a plan

inherited from the Clinton administration for improving salmon habitats and

water quality. Wild salmon are still well below the levels necessary to ensure

their long-term survival, and a judge has ordered the entire rescue plan redone.

 

Saving the salmon of the Pacific Northwest will require a major political

commitment and may yet require the removal of four Snake River dams far larger

than any on the Penobscot. But it is enough, for now, to celebrate Maine's

encouraging example.

 

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

 

 

 

 

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