Members of the Sea to the Source expedition are canoeing up the Columbia River 
from Astoria, Ore., to Canal Flats, B.C., to draw attention to the 
environmental health of the river. Along the way the group is building canoes 
at schools and getting students to join them on portions of the trip. 
With water treaty set to expire, future of Columbia River up for debate 
MARK HUME AND JUSTINE HUNTER 

VANCOUVER and VICTORIA - The Globe and Mail

Published Saturday, Sep. 28 2013, 8:00 AM EDT 

Last updated Friday, Sep. 27 2013, 9:00 PM EDT 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/debating-the-future-of-the-columbia-river/article14584669/
On an overcast day in early August, a flotilla of five canoes pushed away from 
a jetty in Astoria, Ore., near where the Pacific breaks on Desolation Point, at 
the mouth of the Columbia River.

Eight weeks later, the Sea to the Source expedition is approaching the last leg 
of a 2,000-kilometre trip that is taking the paddlers across dramatic 
landscapes and past more than 14 hydro dams to the river's headwaters in 
British Columbia.

The expedition was planned not to promote tourism or retrace the routes of 
explorers, but to focus attention on the environmental health of the largest 
river in the Pacific Northwest - and on an international water treaty that is 
set to expire. With 10 years' advance notice, either Canada or the United 
States can terminate the Columbia River Treaty in 2024, which means the 
deadline to renegotiate or abandon one of the most important water agreements 
in North America is fast approaching. And debate on it is heating up on both 
sides of the border.

Fifty years ago, the linked waterways that rise in the Rocky Mountains, near 
Invermere, B.C., were viewed as forces to be controlled, commodities to be 
developed. But as B.C. gets a second chance to negotiate the future of a 
crucial water resource, the values today are more complex: This time around, 
interested parties are talking about navigation, recreation, agriculture, 
fisheries, First Nations rights and climate change - the latter a preoccupation 
of the politically attuned paddlers.

Aligned against a powerful array of U.S. stakeholders, B.C. is seeking to 
defend a dominant source of the province's energy supply, as well as the 
dividends that have delivered billions of dollars to government coffers.

Premier Christy Clark will be talking about the treaty when she is in 
Washington, D.C., next week, as will a delegation from 15 tribes in the Pacific 
Northwest on hand to lobby the U.S. Congress.

"I'm pretty confident we'll be able to get a good deal for British Columbia," 
said Ms. Clark, who believes B.C. has a strong case. "Because here is the 
thing: 'No deal' is terrible for the United States. . Yes, there is a lot of 
financial interest in it for us, but if there is no deal for the United States, 
it will be an environmental and economic mess south of the border. So we have 
every interest in working together."

While officials are talking in Washington, Adam Wicks-Arshack and his four 
colleagues on the Sea to the Source expedition are working the grassroots, 
drumming up interest on the banks of the Columbia. "We've talked to thousands 
of people," he said.

The expedition, which wants environmental issues included in any treaty talks, 
launched on Aug. 2 and will end sometime next month in Canal Flats, B.C., where 
the great river begins. Along the way, the canoeists will have retraced the 
route that migrating salmon once took up the Columbia - until they were stopped 
by a series of impassable hydro dams.

"Near the ocean, salmon are present the whole time. Just constantly along the 
banks there are people fishing, native people netting as we were going by, so 
we were with salmon and the salmon culture the whole way," Mr. Wicks-Arshack 
said. But about 800 kilometres upstream from Astoria, the salmon disappear from 
the river, blocked by Chief Joseph Dam in central Washington State.

"You could feel it change," he said of the river above the dam. "Suddenly there 
just aren't any salmon."

When the treaty was ratified, environmental matters were an afterthought. The 
driving interests for governments were flood control, power generation and 
profit sharing. As part of the deal, BC Hydro built a series of dams to hold 
back water that is released to facilitate power generation in the U.S.

At a Vancouver signing ceremony in 1964, then-U.S. president Lyndon Johnson had 
a full honour guard as his treasury advanced the first cheque to B.C. - 
$253,929,534.25 to cover the initial 30 years of the agreement. "You Canadians 
went for that last 25 cents," he said, joking about the hard bargain Canadians 
drove.

B.C. premier W.A.C. Bennett would later call the signing the happiest day of 
his career. Since then, the treaty has delivered billions of dollars in revenue 
through annual payments that range from $120-million to $300-million, 
reflecting a yearly share of the additional downstream power that is generated 
in the U.S.

The deal was seen as a good one at the time, but both sides appear to be 
heading toward a modified, modernized treaty.

With its concentration on developing liquefied natural gas projects in B.C., 
the Clark government has not made the treaty a major talking point. But that is 
changing. The file now sits on the desk of Energy Minister Bill Bennett, whose 
Kootenay East riding lies in the Columbia River Basin, where constituents still 
recall the good land and small communities that disappeared when reservoirs 
filled. Across the border he faces an array of four states, 11 federal agencies 
and representatives for 15 tribal governments. And the U.S. interests are 
expected to push hard to reduce the annual power payments to B.C. by more than 
half - with some parties saying B.C.'s entitlement should be slashed by 90 per 
cent.

Mr. Bennett is dismissive of that position: "They can't substantiate that." But 
he also knows he is in for some tough negotiating. "Sure we have differences of 
opinion. There are folks that wish they didn't have to pay as much to B.C. for 
benefits. They are tough, they are smart - but there is goodwill on both sides."

Nancy Stephan is the program manager for the treaty review at the Bonneville 
Power Administration, which together with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 
operates the system south of the border.

"In 1964, it was a win-win for both countries," she said in an interview. But 
the concepts that guided it are now out of date and "we really think it is 
important to modernize it."

The idea of forecasting has changed much in 50 years, too. While the 
signatories in 1964 had confidence about how to promote development, today 
there is less certainty about what the future holds. With climate change 
promising more unreliable weather patterns, and a recognition that a nation's 
water supply is a more complex and fragile resource, Ms. Stephan suggested 
there is little appetite for another treaty that would lock the two countries 
in for half a century or more.

"The treaty has given us a lot of experience, and we've learned that sometimes 
our [energy] forecasts are not that great," she said.

In B.C., the Columbia Basin Trust has consulted with some 2,500 residents in 22 
information sessions and has drafted a report summarizing issues of concern. 
The report notes people identified "managing eco-systems . in a comprehensive 
manner across the border" as a key area of interest.

Last week, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bonneville Power Authority 
released draft recommendations that call for "ecosystem function" to be added 
to the treaty as a key, third component along with flood control and power 
generation.

Pat Ford, special adviser on Columbia River Treaty to Save Our Wild Salmon, a 
U.S. group that has been lobbying to have the agreement renegotiated, said the 
environment just wasn't on the agenda when the deal was first done.

"I think it came near the end of a period where [ignoring environmental issues] 
was acceptable behaviour," Mr. Ford said. "It would not have happened in the 
1970s, but in 1964 it did."

Mr. Ford said dams were built without fish ladders, destroying salmon runs, and 
water was released in ways that dramatically changed the natural flow of the 
river.

"The overwhelming impact . has been a tremendous deterioration, destruction of 
what used to be the largest and most productive salmon watershed in the world," 
said Mr. Ford, part of a delegation that recently met with Matthew Rooney, 
deputy secretary of the U.S. State Department. "We made plain in our 
presentation that in the Pacific Northwest, ecosystem function is economic 
function. If you don't have a healthy river, you are hurting all the users."


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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