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Ka-bye to dam that had blocked fish runs

Explosives demolition starts in Oregon as utility turns to wind power

IMAGE: BACKHOES BREAK UP DAM
Don Ryan / AP
Heavy machinery begins to demolish the Marmot Dam on the Sandy River in Oregon Tuesday soon after explosives were detonated to weaken it.
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Dam demolition
July 25: Engineers in Oregon blow up the top level of a dam, the first step in a demolition to allow fish unrestricted access to the Sandy River. MSNBC.com's Dara Brown reports.

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updated 10:26 a.m. ET July 25, 2007

PORTLAND, Ore. - The largest dam removal in the Pacific Northwest in 40 years is under way, with 4,000 pounds of explosives used Tuesday to blast the top level of one structure into oblivion.

When the two dams are fully removed, one this summer and the other next summer, the Sandy River will be a free-flowing river for the first time in nearly a century — and no longer a hindrance to steelhead and salmon returning to spawn.

Eight feet of the 47-foot-tall Marmot Dam was removed Tuesday and over the next two months there will be five more blasts, along with jackhammers working daily, according to the dams' owner, Portland General Electric.

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Portland General Electric, the biggest utility in Oregon, is spending $17 million to remove the two dams in coordination with 23 environmental, governmental and civic organizations.

"Today, this partnership took a great step toward restoring a breathtaking river for fish, wildlife and people," Portland General Electric CEO and President Peggy Fowler said in a statement. "We celebrate the future of a watershed that will provide unimpeded salmon and steelhead passage from the slopes of Mt. Hood to the Pacific Ocean." (General Electric is the parent company of NBC, which is a partner in the joint venture that operates MSNBC.com.)

"It's incredibly significant for the entire Sandy River Basin; it's going to breath new life into the basin and it's going to provide new recreational and fishing opportunities," added Amy Kober, a spokeswoman for American Rivers, a conservation group. "This was a region that was built by dams, but we are realizing the benefits of healthy rivers. We are getting back into balance."

Free run to Columbia River
The Marmot Dam, located on the Sandy River about 40 miles east of Portland, was built almost 100 years ago along with the nearby 16-foot-high Little Sandy Dam, which will be destroyed next summer, the utility said.

Removing the two dams will allow the Sandy to flow freely from Mt. Hood to the Columbia River.

When the dams were built, they ruined a natural fish run that biologists say the fish will rediscover and repopulate once the dams are removed.

The river is home to winter steelhead, spring Chinook and coho salmon, all listed on the federal Endangered Species Act.

"Steelhead and salmon need free-flowing rivers to survive," said Mike Myrick, a member of the Sandy River Chapter of Northwest Steelheaders. "Removal of Marmot Dam is a historic moment in salmon recovery taking place in the backyard of metropolitan Portland."

The dam removal will take away 22 megawatts of power generation capacity from Portland General, leaving it with hydro capacity of 487 megawatts.

The Marmot Dam has a fish ladder but once the dam is destroyed, the fish will be able to pass without a ladder made by humans.

Though removing the dams will likely revive fish stocks over the next decade, there are risks. Silt has backed up behind the Marmot dam over the past century and biologists fear a harsh winter storm could wash nearly all the sediment — estimated to be nearly 1 million cubic yards of sand and gravel — down the river over several days.


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