Las Vegas Review-Journal

ENVIRONMEN­TAL, RECREATION­AL ISSUES CLOUD HOOVER DAM PLAN

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HOOVER DAM, FROM PAGE 1:

The net result would be a kind of energy storage — performing much the same function as the giant lithium-ion batteries being developed to absorb and release power.

The Hoover Dam project may help answer a looming question for the energy industry: how to come up with affordable and efficient power storage, which is seen as the key to transformi­ng the industry and helping curb carbon emissions.

Because the sun does not always shine, and winds can be inconsiste­nt, power companies look for ways to bank the electricit­y generated from those sources for use when their output slacks off. Otherwise, they have to fire up fossil-fuel plants to meet periods of high demand.

And when solar and wind farms produce more electricit­y than consumers need, California utilities have had to find ways to get rid of it — including giving it away to other states — or risk overloadin­g the electric grid and causing blackouts.

“I think we have to look at this as a once-in-a-century moment,” said Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles. “So far, it looks really possible. It looks sustainabl­e, and it looks clean.”

The target for completion is 2028, and some say the effort could inspire similar innovation­s at other dams. Enhancing energy storage could also affect plans for billions of dollars in wind projects being proposed by billionair­es Warren Buffett and Philip Anschutz.

But the proposal will have to contend with political hurdles, including environmen­tal concerns and the interests of those who use the river for drinking, recreation and services.

In Laughlin and Bullhead City, Ariz., and — sister cities on opposite sides of the Colorado, about 90 miles south of the dam — water levels along certain stretches depend on when dams open and close, and some residents see a change in its flow as a disruption, if not a threat.

“Any idea like this has to pass much more than engineerin­g feasibilit­y,” said Peter Gleick, a co-founder of the Pacific Institute, a think tank in Oakland, Calif., and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, internatio­nally known for his work on climate issues. “It has to be environmen­tally, politicall­y and economical­ly vetted, and that’s likely to prove to be the real problem.”

An idea comes of age

Using Hoover Dam to help manage the electricit­y grid has been mentioned informally over the past 15 years. But no one pursued the idea seriously until about a year ago, as California began grappling with the need to better manage its soaring alternativ­e-electricit­y production — part of weaning itself from coalfired and nuclear power plants.

In California, by far the leading state in solar power production, that has sometimes meant paying other states to take excess electricit­y. Companies like Tesla have gotten into the picture, making lithium-ion batteries that are deployed by some utilities, but that form of storage generally remains pricey.

Lazard Asset Management has estimated that utility-scale lithium-ion batteries cost 26 cents a kilowatt-hour, compared with 15 cents for a pumped-storage hydroelect­ric project. The typical household pays about 12.5 cents a kilowatt-hour for electricit­y.

Some dams already provide a basis for the Hoover Dam proposal. Los Angeles operates a hydroelect­ric plant at Pyramid Lake, about 50 miles northwest of the city, that stores energy by using the electric grid to spin a turbine backward and pump water back into the lake.

But the Hoover Dam proposal would operate differentl­y. The dam, with its towering 726-foot concrete wall and its 17 power generators that came online in 1936, would not be touched. Instead, engineers propose building a pump station about 20 miles downstream from the main reservoir, Lake Mead, the nation’s largest artificial lake. A pipeline would run partly or fully undergroun­d, depending on the location ultimately approved.

“Hoover Dam is ideal for this,” said Kelly Sanders, an assistant professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g at the University of Southern California. “It’s a gigantic plant. We don’t have anything on the horizon as far as batteries of that magnitude.”

Waiting for Washington

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, the nation’s largest municipal utility, says its proposal would increase the productivi­ty of the dam, which operates at just 20 percent of its potential, to avoid releasing too much water at once and flooding towns downstream.

Engineers have conducted initial feasibilit­y studies, including a review of locations for the pump station that would have as little adverse impact on the environmen­t and nearby communitie­s as possible.

But because Hoover Dam sits on federal land and operates under the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, part of the Interior Department, the bureau must back the project before it can proceed.

“We’re aware of the concept, but at this point our regional management has not seen the concept in enough detail to know where we would stand on the overall project,” said Doug Hendrix, a bureau spokesman.

If the bureau agrees to consider the project, the National Park Service will review the environmen­tal, scientific and aesthetic impact on the downstream recreation area.

If the Los Angeles utility receives approval, Park Service officials have told it, the agency wants the pumping operation largely invisible to the public, which could require another engineerin­g feat.

Among the considerat­ions is the effect on bighorn sheep that roam Black Canyon, just below the dam, and on drinking water for places like Bullhead City. Some environmen­talists worry that adding a pump facility would impair water flow farther downstream, in particular at the Colorado River Delta, a mostly dry riverbed in Mexico that no longer connects to the sea.

Another concern is that the pump station would draw water from or close to Lake Mohave, where water enthusiast­s boat, fish, ride Jet Skis, kayak and canoe.

Keri Simons, a manager of Watercraft Adventures, a 27-year-old rental business in Laughlin, said water levels already fluctuated in stretches of the Colorado close to the river towns.

The smaller Davis Dam, just north of Laughlin, shuts off the flow overnight.

One morning this year, the water level just outside of town dropped so low that you could walk across the riverbed, Simons said. “We couldn’t put any boats out until noon,” she said. “Half the river was a sandbar.”

Even if no water is lost because of the pumping project, the thought of any additional stress on the system worries Toby Cotter, the city manager of Bullhead City.

The town thrives on the summer tourism that draws some 2 million visitors to the area for recreation on the greenish-blue waters, Cotter said. “That lake is the lifeblood of this community,” he said. “It’s not uncommon to see 100 boats on that lake.”

A troubled relationsh­ip

Environmen­talists have been pushing Los Angeles to stop using fossil fuels and produce electricit­y from alternativ­e sources like solar and wind power. And Garcetti said he would like his city to be the first in the nation to operate solely on clean energy, while maintainin­g a reliable electric system.

“Our challenge is: How do we get to 100 percent green?” he said. “Storage helps. There’s no bigger battery in our system than Hoover Dam.”

But old wounds are still raw with some along the Colorado. A coal-fired power plant in Laughlin that the Department of Water and Power and other utilities operated was shut down in 2006, costing 500 jobs and causing the local economies to buckle. And a decision long ago to allot Nevada a small fraction of the water that California and Arizona can draw remains a sore point.

“There’s nothing going in California with power that has given people who are dealing with them any comfort,” said Joseph Hardy, a Nevada state senator. “I think from a political standpoint, we would have to allay the fears of California, Nevada and Arizona. There will be myriad concerns.”

The decision to close the coal plant angered many residents. They wanted the utility to simply add emission-control features known as scrubbers to reduce carbon pollution. The community later hoped a natural-gas plant would replace the coal facility, but Los Angeles could not agree with the local communitie­s on a site.

The 2,500-acre parcel where the coal plant stood remains largely vacant. “There’s still some sting here,” said Cotter, the Bullhead City official.

There have been local efforts to convert the site into a developmen­t of housing and businesses — or to build a solar farm on a plot of land, if Los Angeles would buy the power.

Garcetti said other states and cities had worked with Los Angeles to build economic developmen­t projects for their communitie­s, so he would like to consider similar ideas for the Hoover Dam project, as well as ways to benefit the entire region. “I’m all open ears to what their needs are,” he said.

Hardy is wary of big-city promises. The Department of Water and Power has treated Nevada so cavalierly, he said, that a security guard at the old coal plant site once refused to return a ball to children after it bounced over the property’s fence. He said the guard had told the children’s parents that they could file a claim to get it back — a process that would take two to three years.

“Not the kindest neighbor,” Hardy said.

But he said he was willing to meet with Los Angeles officials to make the project successful.

“The hurdles are minimal and the negotiatio­ns simple, as long as everybody agrees with Nevada,” Hardy said. “It would be nice if there was a table that they would come to. I’ll provide the table.”

 ?? AVID WALTER BANKS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Hoover Dam towers above the Colorado River southeast of Las Vegas. The dam is the focus of a new plan: turning into a vast reservoir of excess electricit­y, fed by the solar farms.
AVID WALTER BANKS / THE NEW YORK TIMES The Hoover Dam towers above the Colorado River southeast of Las Vegas. The dam is the focus of a new plan: turning into a vast reservoir of excess electricit­y, fed by the solar farms.
 ??  ?? Watercraft dot the Colorado River downstream from Hoover Dam. Water releases from the dam associated with an energy storage plan could have a detrimenta­l effect on recreation­al activities on the river.
Watercraft dot the Colorado River downstream from Hoover Dam. Water releases from the dam associated with an energy storage plan could have a detrimenta­l effect on recreation­al activities on the river.

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