Federal Regulators Recommend Denial of License for New Bear River Dam (ID)
Posted: 10/02/2015
By: Thomas O'Keefe
Citing a host of environmental concerns raised by American Whitewater and our partners, the
federal government has recommended denial of an application seeking to build a 109-foot-tall
hydroelectric dam on the Bear River in southeast Idaho.
In December of 2014 American Whitewater and Idaho Rivers jointly filed a motion before the
Federal Regulatory Commission in protest of the proposed Bear River Narrows Hydroelectric
Project on the grounds that the project would materially interfere with the substantial
mitigation completed by PacifiCorp for their existing project on the Bear River, the developer
does not possess and lacks the ability to secure the required water right to operate this
proposed project, and the Northwest Power and Conservation Council has established the reach as
a protected area from hydropower development.
This week the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission agreed with us and in their Environmental
Impact Statement recommended that the Commission not issue a license for the proposed project.
Commission staff agreed with our view that the Oneida Narrows represents a regionally unique
and important river recreational resource that would be destroyed by the proposed dam, for
which mitigation is not possible. The project would inundate nearly all of the Oneida Narrows
section of the Bear River under a 4.5 mile long reservoir. Oneida Narrows is a beautiful Class
I-II reach of the Bear River suitable for beginner and intermediate kayakers, canoeists, and
rafters. Increasingly, it is also used for tubing. It is distinct from other sections of the
Bear in many ways, including offering moderate whitewater, open canyon scenery, and daily
summer flows that support whitewater paddling. It is a recreational treasure that the proposed
hydropower project would destroy.
The following excerpt from the Environmental Impact Statement provides the reasoning behind the
Commission’s decision:
Based on our independent review of agency and public comments filed on this project and our
review of the environmental and economic effects of the proposed project and its alternatives,
we select the no-action alternative [not to build the dam] as the preferred alternative. The
overall public benefits of the no-action alternative would exceed those of Twin Lakes’
proposal [to build the dam], because of the unavoidable adverse environmental effects. These
unavoidable adverse effects would include:
1. loss of a 4.5-mile section of the Bear River with outstandingly remarkable recreational
values, as designated by BLM in its wild and scenic eligibility report (BLM, 1995), including a
regionally significant recreational river fishery and whitewater resource in an undeveloped
canyon with easy and open accessibility to the public;
2. substantial reduction in the size of the cutthroat trout fishery, a fishery of
recreational significance, because of the permanent loss of 4.5 miles of mainstem Bear River
fluvial BCT habitat;
3. substantial reduction in the diversity or population of up to 48 state-designated
sensitive wildlife species because of the permanent loss of about 425 acres of wildlife habitat
along the Bear River riparian corridor from inundation and proposed project facilities; habitat
that is seldom replicated along the 80-milelong reach between the Soda development and Great
Salt Lake;
4. permanent loss of 249 acres of designated PacifiCorp-owned conservation land that is a
critical component of the Bear River Project licensing settlement agreement, 202 acres of which
are within the existing Bear River Project’s project boundary;
5. permanent loss of 55 acres of designated Research Natural Area/Area of Critical
Environmental Concern land managed by BLM and designed to protect sensitive plants (e.g.,
bigtooth maple, box-elder riparian, Rocky Mountain juniper, and bunchgrass) and wildlife (e.g.,
bald eagle and rock squirrel habitats); and
6. degradation of aesthetics via the conversion of the scenic Oneida Narrows into a
hydroelectric project with a large dam, powerhouse, transmission facilities, and roads.
Although Twin Lakes proposes measures to mitigate some of the adverse effects described
above and staff recommends additional measures to provide additional mitigation for adverse
effects, those measures would not adequately offset the adverse effects of constructing and
operating a new major hydroelectric project on a currently scenic river reach in an undeveloped
canyon with remarkable recreational, geological, and wildlife values and public access, unlike
other reaches within a 2 to 3 hour drive (reaches of the Snake River are the nearest comparable
river reaches). Consequently, we conclude that issuing a license for the proposed project would
not be in the public interest.
While the recommendation to deny a license for this project represents an important victory
that we have worked for years to secure, the Commissioners at the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission still need to make a formal decision. The Commissioners generally defer to the
findings of staff, but our work will continue to make sure that this project does not receive a
license. Our goal remains to keep this reach of the Bear River free flowing for recreation,
native trout, and public use and enjoyment.
Additional Information:
Read the Environmental Impact Statement Here
Read the most recent comments of American Whitewater and Idaho Rivers United Here
Thomas O'Keefe
3537 NE 87th St.
Seattle, WA 98115
E-mail: okeefe@americanwhitewater.org
Phone: 425-417-9012
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