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Recovering a Lost River

Removing Dams, Rewilding Salmon, Revitalizing Communities

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A powerful argument for why dam removal makes good scientific, economic, and environmental sense—and requires our urgent attention

The Snake River, flowing through the Northwest, was once one of the world's greatest salmon rivers. As recently as a hundred years ago, it retained some of its historic bounty with seven million fish coming home to spawn there. Now, due to damming for hydroelectricity over the past fifty years, the salmon population has dropped close to extinction. Efforts at salmon recovery, through fish ladders, hatcheries, and even trucking them over the dams, have failed.
Hawley argues that the solution for the Snake River lies in dam removal, pitting the power authority and Army Corps of Engineers against a collection of conservationists, farmers, commercial and recreational fishermen, and the Nez Perce tribe. He also demonstrates the interconnectedness of the river's health to Orca whales in Puget Sound, local economies, fresh water rights, and energy independence.
This regional battle has garnered national interest, and is part of a widespread river-restoration movement that stretches from Maine's Kennebec to California's Klamath. In one instance, Butte Creek salmon rebounded from a paltry fourteen fish to twenty thousand within just a few years of rewilding their river, showing the incredible resiliency of nature when given the slightest chance. In this timely book, Hawley shows how river restoration, with dam removal as its centerpiece, is not only virtuous ecological practice, but a growing social and economic enterprise.
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    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2010

      In his debut, environmental journalist Hawley describes the populist movement to remove federally funded hydroelectric dams from America's waterways and the entrenched interests resisting this movement.

      Today, writes the author, the "oceanward progress of six hundred thousand linear miles of brook, creek, stream, and river has been retarded by the construction of 75,000 dams." Once touted as environmentally safe and economically beneficial, hydroelectric dams, particularly in the American West, have proven to be ecological disasters. Primarily focusing on efforts to remove four dams from the Snake River, a part of the Columbia River basin in the Northwest, Hawley details the damage. He begins with salmon. By the next century, they may be extinct, in large part because they cannot navigate dammed rivers like the Snake to return to their spawning grounds. In turn, fewer and fewer salmon make their way back down the Columbia to Washington's Puget Sound to provide food for orca whales. Also endangered are the fishing industry, tourism and the traditional, salmon-centered way of life of Indian tribes such as the Nez Perce. Whole towns such as Lewiston, Idaho—situated between the Snake and Clearwater rivers—face inundation as dams lead to the buildup of silt in the rivers, raising the water level to dangerous heights. Despite arduous effort by civic and environmental groups, the dams remain. The reason for this, argues Hawley, is the power of utility companies and their allies among innumerable federal agencies who derive short-run benefit from building, maintaining and operating these dams. A fascinating though confusing section of the book follows the machinations of these agencies and their allies as they fight to save their dams. Gradually, dam removal as a social movement is growing, and the positive results of removal can be seen along the Kennebec River in southern Maine. Fish and other wildlife have returned, as have outdoors enthusiasts, and river towns have returned to economic vitality.

      Both troubling and encouraging, a well-told tale of environmental activism and citizen action.

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2011
      Journalist Hawley tackles dam removal on the Snake River, veering from standard environmental fare by pointing out not just the obvious (dams are bad for salmon), but also the detrimental impact on so many other species, including humans. From the starving orcas of Puget Sound (whose ocean ecosystem has been damaged by the loss of Snake River salmon) to the townspeople of Lewiston, Idaho, who fretfully eye their inadequate levees and ponder the economic boom their dam never delivered, Hawley considers what the real power is behind a rivers promise. The myth of green dams is factually debunked, and Hawley blasts away the notion that hydroelectric power is cheap or clean with persistent questions and analysis. What Edward Abbeys infamous antidam novel, The Monkey Wrench Gang (1975), made a rallying cry is now good business as well. It doesnt mean dam removal is easy, but Hawley suggests that we are turning a corner in this hopeful and blistering critique of these concrete dinosaurs.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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