Since that time we have eliminated all the excuses except meeting power quotas. Basically the Corps is justifying destroying billions of gallons of fresh water and destroying the recreational infrastructure of our lakes because they "WANT TO" meet their power quotas. But if you look closely at what is involved that makes no sense.
- SEPA depends on our lakes for peaking power, not daily quotas.
- When you look at the impact on our recreational infrastructure from the horrible reputation we have due to poor lake level control it is far greater than any potential savings to the customer base of SEPA.
- Simple logic says it is foolish to destroy any more fresh water (it all ends up in the ocean as salt water) than you really need to.
- All other forms of renewable energy are limited to the laws of nature. When the sun doesn't shine solar power falls short. When there is no wind, wind power falls short. It only makes sense that hydropower should be treated the same because we have no way to produce water other than from rain.
In my opinion it is time for our politicians to wake up and come to our rescue. Please contact your congressman and your governor to let them know we need help now before the lakes are destroyed once again by foolish management practices. Technically what needs to happen now is for the Corps to immediately fall back to 3600cfs release rate any time the lakes fall below full pool. That release rate has been stated by the corps to have no significant environmental impact based on the many times we've actually operated at that level in past droughts. Hopefully the studies in progress will permit even lower release rates as long as we don't lock ourselves in due to power quotas.
You asked me to remind you.......One of the key factors in lake use dropping in times of low water (along with unusable ramps later in cycle)is newly created underwater hazards. This, for public good, the CORPS has responsibility for - without any ability to obfuscate, create studies to delay, etc. So do some good research on what the CORPS MUST DO by regulation to mark such hazards at what levels beneath surface. Extending ramps would come later with continuing drop of water elevation.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work.