Aging Dams and Clogged Rivers

Similar documents
AGING AND FAILING INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEMS: HIGHWAY BRIDGES

Overview of the Bureau of Reclamation. Michael L. Connor Commissioner Bureau of Reclamation

flickr/kevin h. Ties that Bind U.S.-Taiwan Relations and Peace and Prosperity in East Asia Winny Chen November 2010

OSAGE RIVER BASIN OPERATIONS WATER MANAGEMENT

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Reservoir Operations Maria Placht, Institute for Water Resources, USACE 49

Good morning, Chairman Yaw, Chairman Yudichak, Chairman Vulakovich, Chairman Costa,

Dam Safety Regulations & National Dam Safety Program

Santa Clara River Watershed Feasibility Study. Information Meeting City of Santa Clarita August 16, 2007

Inland Waters Research Institute. Kansas City, Missouri

Reducing Poverty Through Climate Action. A Strategy for Global Development Leaders. By Molly Elgin-Cossart, Cathleen Kelly, and Abigail Jones

From the thousands of miles of coastal shoreline

Dams: Conditions & Capacity

Florida, Rose: Post-Harvey, the city must reset its development trajectory

Releasing a River. Reading Selection

Dams and the World s Water

Ponds. Pond A water impoundment made by excavating a pit, or constructing a dam or an embankment.

Upper Mississippi River Conference 2016 Action Agenda: Raise the Grade

Presentation -- Three Gorges Dam (TGD) on the Yangtze River

Climate Change Adaptation Workshop September 2013

Avista Dam Relicensing Factsheet Commenting on the Draft License Application

East St. Tammany Storm Surge Protection Project Request

REPORT OF THE COLORADO RIVER COMMISSION OF NEVADA TO THE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC LANDS

laid in the early to mid 20th century with a lifespan of years. With utilities averaging a pipe

Herbert Hoover Dike (HHD), Florida Major Rehabilitation Project. The Challenges and Opportunities of Managing a Large Program NCER July 22, 2009

Toward More Sustainable Infrastructure: Project Evaluation for Planners and Engineers. Los Angeles, CA

Risk and Safety in Engineering: Lessons from Hurricane Katrina. Byron Newberry Mechanical Engineering

U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Charleston District Overview

Geneva Dam. Design of a Steep, Temporary, Riprap Ramp

WATER RESOURCE PROGRAM

CE Hydraulics. Andrew Kennedy 168 Fitzpatrick

Connecticut s Dam Safety Program Safer Dams Initiative & House Bill 6441 Art Christian, P.E.

Spring Forecast Based Operations, Folsom Dam, California

Hydropower & Dams Services

Green River Diversion Rehabilitation

Synergy: Addressing Combined Sewer Overflows and Nitrogen

SEATTLE DISTRICT CIVIL WORKS PROGRAM

Chehalis Basin Strategy Programmatic SEPA Draft EIS

US Army Corp of Engineers

Climate sciences: a return to relative obscurity or a rising relevance?

March 20, Dear Commissioners;

AGRICULTURAL DRAINAGE

TRANSFORMING U.S. FARM POLICY FOR THE 21ST CENTURY

Questions and Answers about the Water Supply and Water Quality bond act for the November, 2018 ballot. Updated November 17, 2017

Vulnerabilities to Climate Change Impacts and Strengthening Disaster Risk Management in East Asian Cities

TECHNICAL MEMORANDUM Summerhill Rd Texarkana, Texas fax

Chapter 1. Introduction

APPENDIX A. Project Scoping

Trails Permitting Process

Public Notice. Applicant: City of Dallas Project No.: SWF Date: April 18, Name: Chandler Peter Phone Number:

Climate Data Training Session April 26, 2017 Ontario Science Centre

When is water in an artificial reservoir in the economy / when is it a produced asset?

DES MOINES RIVER RESERVOIRS WATER CONTROL PLAN UPDATES IOWA ASCE WATER RESOURCES DESIGN CONFERENCE

draft Environment Strategy

Texas Water Resources Institute

Kansas Ponds, Lakes & Reservoirs

PROJECT INFORMATION DOCUMENT (PID) APPRAISAL STAGE Report No.: PIDA982. Project Name. Region. Country

Watershed: an area or ridge of land that separates waters flowing to different rivers, basins, or seas. It is the interdependent web of living

WATER SUPPLY NOW AND FOR THE FUTURE Steps toward sustainable water supplies

Honeysuckle Reservoir decommissioning

presented at 2015 Mississippi Water Resources Conference April 7, 2015

UNESCO EOLSS. The various methods available for the treating and disposing of treated sewerage in natural receiving water bodies are outlined.

Lecture Notes: Disaster Vulnerability and Resilience

Mediterranean Landscape Dynamics Project (Medland)

What Are Environmental (Instream) Flows?

Statement on Marine Transportation

Inner Harbor Navigation Canal Lock Replacement Project Public Scoping Meeting

ALL ABOUT WATER IN HOT SPRINGS VILLAGE

(additional)

Sea Level Rise: Impacts, Adaptation and Information Gaps

BUILDING LAND IN COASTAL LOUISIANA. Report Summary

LITTLE ROCK DISTRICT CORPS OF ENGINEERS WATER SUPPLY

Folsom Dam Water Control Manual Update

Guiding Principles on Sustainable Hydropower Development in the Danube River Basin

Rainfall, runoff and sediment transport in the Napa River watershed: now and a possible future

Event and Continuous Hydrological Modeling with HEC- HMS: A Review Study

Orange County Fertilizer Application Education Course for Citizens

March 16, The Honorable Donald J. Trump President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. Washington, DC 20500

The Hoover Dam By Michael Stahl

Rainy Season Preparation & Storm Channel Maintenance

Hydroelectric power. Made by: Kekoa, Sara, Kupaa and Bree

Pacific Northwest Challenges and Opportunities

Jen Powis The Powis Firm, PLLC

Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure Envision Sustainability Rating System

INTRODUCTION. NOS Priorities Roadmap, p. 3

EOP / ESF - 03 ANNEX / APPENDIX 3-1 / TAB B EVENTS AND ASSUMPTIONS TAB B EVENTS AND ASSUMPTIONS

The University has numerous athletic fields in its south campus complex. The varsity

L e s s o n 1 INTRODUCTION TO HYDROELECTRIC POWER

This is a digital document from the collections of the Wyoming Water Resources Data System (WRDS) Library.

November 24, The Honorable Shaun Donovan Director, Office of Management and Budget th Street, NW Washington, DC 20503

Oregon Department of State Lands. Protecting Natural and Fiscal Resources to Support Schools

Missouri River Basin Water Management

Porter County Soil & Water Conservation District Five Year Strategic Plan

CORPS OF ENGINEERS. Water Resource Activities in the ACF Basin May 18, 2007

DALLAS FLOODWAY PROJECT

Multiple Benefits as a Result of Mine and Mine Waste Reclamation

TRANSPORTATION PLAN Donald Vary

Reorienting the Bureau of Reclamation

Water in New Orleans. Jennifer Roberts. Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans

Suspended Sediment Discharges in Streams

Transcription:

AP PHOTO/THE NEWS TRIBUNE, DREW PERINE Aging Dams and Clogged Rivers An Infrastructure Plan for America s Waterways By Jenny Rowland October 2016 WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG

Introduction and summary U.S. infrastructure is in bad shape. Across the country, streets marred with potholes, overcrowded airports, and out-of-date school facilities have become the norm. But the United States failing infrastructure causes more than just commonplace inconveniences. Crumbling infrastructure poses real dangers to Americans health and safety, as illustrated by the contaminated water system in Flint, Michigan; flooding due to poor storm water drainage systems in Texas and Louisiana; the failing metro system in Washington, D.C.; and blackouts caused by extreme weather and outdated electrical grids in cities across the country. A new report from the American Society of Civil Engineers, or ASCE, quantifies how the United States chronic underinvestment in infrastructure spending only half of what is needed has created an investment gap that affects the economy, safety, jobs, communities, and health. As infrastructure continues to age without proper investment and upkeep, the costs to maintain and repair it continue to rise over time. The report found that if infrastructure deficiencies are not addressed, it could cost the economy almost $4 trillion in gross domestic product, or GDP, and 2.5 million jobs by 2025. 1 In short, policymakers short-term cost cuts will cause massive expenses in the long term. The country s dam infrastructure is not exempt from this underinvestment. With an ASCE grade of a D, the country s nearly two million dams are one of the most pressing infrastructure challenges for safety, the environment, and the economy. 2 While most of these dams were originally built for economic purposes including to power mills and factories developed during the industrial revolution and for flood and debris control, water storage and irrigation, hydropower, navigation, and recreation many of their original purposes and benefits have diminished. In fact, many dams are now obsolete, costly, aging, and unsafe. Despite a recent decrease in dam construction, the country has still built the equivalent of one dam every day since the signing of the Declaration of Independence. 3 These dams range from small embankment dams that are less than 25 feet high to the Hoover Dam, which is several hundred feet high. Most dams were built before the 1980s, and as technologies have improved and knowledge of the environmental 1 Center for American Progress Aging Dams and Clogged Rivers

impacts of dams has expanded, the need for many of these structures no longer exists. For example, now that there are more efficient ways to irrigate crops and store water, some small dams that were used for industrial factories or to power mills are no longer needed, and dams that are filled with sediment or that reduce fish populations can cost much more to maintain than to remove. 4 It is unsurprising, then, that the country has an abundance of dams that no longer serve the purpose for which they were intended and that are worthy of deliberate removal. In 2015, for example, government officials in Texas were forced to confront the dangers associated with failing dams in the state when a heavy rain exposed critical safety problems at Lewisville Lake Dam in Dallas. The 60-year-old dam is one of the riskiest in the nation. If it were to fail, it would cover the city of Dallas in 50 feet of water, resulting in significant loss of life. 5 A former U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dam safety coordinator described the potential failure of this dam as a much bigger magnitude to the Dallas area than Hurricane Katrina was to New Orleans. 6 Functional or not, the dams that dot the country cannot simply be ignored or forgotten. Indeed, these dams pose a significant safety problem: ASCE classifies nearly 4,000 dams as deficient. 7 Furthermore, these structures continue to block an estimated 600,000 miles of rivers in the United States. 8 A new analysis by the Center for American Progress for this report demonstrates that dams and reservoirs have modified the flow of 71 percent of Western rivers by length and that Western rivers are 66 percent more fragmented than they would be in their natural state. This report aims to outline the next phase in federal dam policy and update the values and goals surrounding dam infrastructure and healthy rivers. It offers a few policy solutions: 1. Incentivize the decommissioning and removal of obsolete and unnecessary dams: Include decommissioning and removal as a required option in National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, review, as well as in federal dam funding and permitting. Incentivize private capital to work on dam removal. Perform a comprehensive review of federal dams to address safety concerns and determine if they are providing a net benefit to taxpayers. 2. Modernize dams that are beneficial and needed: Fix safety problems through a federal Safe Dams Fund. Add sustainable hydropower, pumped storage, and small hydropower to existing dams where appropriate. Improve dam management and technologies to reduce environmental impact. 2 Center for American Progress Aging Dams and Clogged Rivers

Infrastructure problems often do not get the attention and funding that they deserve until they reach the level of disaster. Rather than jumping from crisis to crisis, policymakers should address America s dam infrastructure problem before the safety risks, costs, and environmental damage become worse than they already are. 3 Center for American Progress Aging Dams and Clogged Rivers

Our Mission The Center for American Progress is an independent, nonpartisan policy institute that is dedicated to improving the lives of all Americans, through bold, progressive ideas, as well as strong leadership and concerted action. Our aim is not just to change the conversation, but to change the country. Our Values As progressives, we believe America should be a land of boundless opportunity, where people can climb the ladder of economic mobility. We believe we owe it to future generations to protect the planet and promote peace and shared global prosperity. And we believe an effective government can earn the trust of the American people, champion the common good over narrow self-interest, and harness the strength of our diversity. Our Approach We develop new policy ideas, challenge the media to cover the issues that truly matter, and shape the national debate. With policy teams in major issue areas, American Progress can think creatively at the cross-section of traditional boundaries to develop ideas for policymakers that lead to real change. By employing an extensive communications and outreach effort that we adapt to a rapidly changing media landscape, we move our ideas aggressively in the national policy debate. 1333 H STREET, NW, 10TH FLOOR, WASHINGTON, DC 20005 TEL: 202-682-1611 FAX: 202-682-1867 WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG