White House recommends breaching four dams that provide energy to Pacific Northwest to save endangered species of salmon
The White House is recommending
breaching four dams in the Pacific Northwest to ensure the survival of an endangered species of salmon, a move that is likely to worsen
the country's energy crisis.
A draft report from the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which manages the protection of marine animals and endangered species, has suggested breaching
at least four dams in the Lower Snake River.
"Salmon recovery depends on large-scale actions," stated the NOAA report. "Inaction will result in the catastrophic loss of the majority of Columbia River basin salmon and steelhead stocks."
Brenda Mallory, the chairperson of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, supported the draft report and said this is the necessary action needed to restore salmon to healthy and harvestable numbers.
"Business as usual will not restore the health and abundance of Pacific Northwest Salmon," she said. "We need a durable, inclusive and regionally-crafted long-term strategy for the management of the Columbia River Basin."
In 2016, these four dams provided 3,033 megawatts of energy to the entire Pacific Northwest. Replacing these dams with other power sources would cost taxpayers between $415 million to $860 million per year until 2045, amounting to nearly $20 billion. It is also expected to increase electricity costs for households by between eight to 18 percent during the same period. (Related:
Biden and the globalists will destroy the oil industry and collapse the American energy grid.)
"Three thousand and thirty-three megawatts of capacity to the Pacific Northwest would evaporate, " noted David DuByne of Adapt 2030.
"I remember, as a child growing up, hydroelectric was the cell to the green era of my childhood. That was the solution for us earlier, now it's being rescinded. And where the power going to come from? We're already having
power outages and shortages … and they want to take further amounts of power away."
White House considering similar plan to save Maine salmon
The federal government is currently conducting a review
of four dams on the Maine River. The government could choose to breach these dams under the Endangered Species Act if the investigation finds that it would be necessary to save the last wild Atlantic salmon in the United States.
These four dams are owned by Brookfield Renewable U.S., a leading owner, operator and developer of renewable power. The company wanted to amend its federal licenses for these four dams and receive a new 40-year operating license for one of them. This requires a review of the impact these four dams had on salmon.
NOAA's review could result in Brookfield being forced to enact mitigation measures to protect wild salmon, including breaching one or more of the dams. Brookfield is pulling out all the stops to make sure this doesn't happen, including publishing a $40 million plan for structural modifications to its projects.
But scientists with the National Resources Council of Maine are pushing for the dams to be removed altogether. Nick Bennett, one of those scientists, said it would open up access to the Sandy River, a tributary of the Columbia River, which is prime salmon habitat.
"If we could get those four dams removed, the best big chunk of Atlantic salmon spawning and rearing habitat, which is the Sandy River and its tributaries, would be direct free swim from the ocean," said Bennett.
Learn more about the energy crisis in America at
EnergySupply.news.
Watch this video from David DuByne as he discusses, among other things, the federal plan to cripple hydroelectric power generation in the Pacific Northwest
during an energy crisis.
This video is from the channel
Adapt 2030 | Solar Minimum on Brighteon.com.
More related articles:
Glen Canyon Dam close to shutting down as Lake Powell water levels continue to drop.
Who is behind a series of "mysterious explosions" at natural gas facilities in the United States?
Texans urged to conserve energy as state wind farms CAN'T produce enough power to meet demand.
Blackouts loom as increased energy demand puts strain on energy grids this summer.
Green energy push to blame for coming wave of power outages across America.
Sources include:
Brighteon.com
DailyWire.com
SpokanePublicRadio.org
NewsCenterMaine.com