Collaboration or
Confrontation?-- Take your pick.
Clark Fork Projects Hydro
Relicensing
Joe
DosSantos and
Tim Swant, Avista Corporation, P.O. Box 1469, Noxon, MT 59853
Abstract:
In the United States, privately owned hydroelectric facilities operate under
fifty year licenses issued and administered by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC). The usual
process of license renewal involves consternation, confrontation, and
litigation, resulting in delayed environmental mitigation and damaged
professional relationships. Faced
with the upcoming relicensing of two large hydroelectric facilities in the year
2001, Avista Corporation (formally Washington Water Power Company) knew that
there had to be a better way. In
February of 1999, Avista Corporation filed a renewal application culminating
seven years of environmental studies and consultation with state and federal
agencies, tribes, local government, landowners, and special interest groups.
The heart of the application is the Clark Fork Settlement Agreement,
representing consensus among 27 parties on all environmental and operational
issues. The Settlement Agreement,
based on the principles of adaptive management, provides for greater local
control, allows for early implementation of natural resource enhancements (March
1999), provides for the management of dynamic resources through the new term of
the license, and establishes long term, collaborative working relationships.
This Clark Fork collaborative is nationally recognized as a model for
FERC’s recently adopted alternative approach to relicensing. A better way.