the film
forum
library
tutorial
contact
Commentaries and editorials

Breaching Dams Would
Do More Harm than Good

by Patricia Barclay
Idaho Statesman, May 26, 2007

The ultimate elitist campaign, an effort by chefs to lobby for tearing out the lower Snake River dams, has hit. Somehow, they think this will let them continue to serve wild Alaska salmon, mostly in San Francisco and Seattle. I hope these chefs know how to cook better than they know geography or the facts about the fish they want to serve.

Wild Alaska salmon are not endangered and they don't pass Snake River dams. They return to upriver spawning grounds in Alaska. Only four endangered salmon runs pass these dams out of 26 threatened and endangered runs. While the stunt got press, it didn't contribute to solutions. Perhaps these chefs should have been given some facts to go along with their recipes.

By 1883, there were more than 50 canneries on the Columbia and 42 million pounds of salmon were harvested. By the beginning of the 20th Century, fishermen were harvesting 80-88 percent of the runs. An estimated 12 to 15 million salmon in 1850 became just 348,000 counted at Bonneville in 1938. Overfishing had killed off the "mother herd."

If those dams were the only - or even the biggest - problem, we would not have any wild or hatchery fish here after 30 years. Instead, a change in ocean conditions starting in 1999 brought some record runs since 2000.

The dam bashers are promoting a study on removing the dams. That's already been done. The Corps of Engineers spent seven years and more than $20 million studying the issue and producing an environmental impact statement in 2002. It concluded that breaching would not recover the runs. Today such a study would cost more than $27 million. That's money that could be put to effective fish restoration on the ground.

The chefs should also consider:

Some 200 chefs might not be interested in the costs of their proposal. The rest of us should be. We will be paying the bill in higher power rates, more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and higher taxes to restructure our transportation.

Wild Alaska salmon may bring premium prices to these big city restaurants but they are not endangered. While this may be a cute way to get attention on behalf of the anti-dam activists, it is a silly campaign that seriously skirts the facts. Next they will probably lobby for the right to serve bald eagles for Thanksgiving dinner.


Patricia Barclay, executive director of the Idaho Council on Industry & Environment
Breaching Dams Would do More Harm than Good
Idaho Statesman, May 26, 2007

See what you can learn

learn more on topics covered in the film
see the video
read the script
learn the songs
discussion forum
salmon animation