Vancouver Sun

BC Hydro’s planned Site C dam threatens critical wildlife: report

Peace River region said to be a key link in continenta­l conservati­on effort

- LARRY PYNN lpynn@ vancouvers­un. com

The Peace River forms a critical part in a conservati­on puzzle spanning the Rocky Mountains of Canada and the U. S. and is at risk from rampant resource developmen­t, including BC Hydro’s planned Site C dam, a wildlife consultant’s report concluded Wednesday.

In a report for the Yellowston­e to Yukon Conservati­on Initiative, author Clayton Apps said the “ecological­ly diverse” Peace Break is considered a “key linkage ... a natural east- west break” in the Rockies.

It is one of 11 contiguous geographic areas extending from the greater Yellowston­e ecosystem in Montana and Wyoming north as far as the Mackenzie Mountains in Yukon and Northwest Territorie­s.

Unlike other areas of the Rockies, the Peace Break has relatively little protected area and a substantia­l footprint of human developmen­t, creating a “critical pinch- point” in the continuity of the Yellowston­e to Yukon initiative, Apps said in a report to a Joint Review Panel studying the Site C proposal.

The break also funnels warm, moist Pacific air through the Rockies, creating a microclima­te conducive to wildlife and farming.

“The tenuous continuity and unique ecological values of the Peace Break” stand to be impacted by the cumulative effects of resource developmen­t such as oil and gas along with BC Hydro’s planned $ 7.9- billion, 1.100- megawatt Site C dam, he said.

In his report, Apps looked at a regional area of 74,325 square kilometres, including a local area of 13,416 square kilometres defined by a 25- kilometre buffer surrounded the original course of Peace River. There are two existing dams upstream of Site C: W. A. C. Bennett and Peace Canyon, built in 1967 and 1980, respective­ly.

The impact of habitat loss and fragmentat­ion over the next 25 years varies by species under a model that assumes approval of the Site C dam, said Apps, noting the estimates are conservati­ve and cannot foresee all future impacts. Wolves are predicted to suffer a loss of 22 per cent of landscape productivi­ty, caribou 31 to 37 per cent, and grizzlies 42 to 44 per cent.

With its dams and transmissi­ons lines, BC Hydro says in its own documents submitted to the panel it is “not the lone organizati­on contributi­ng to the decline in wildlife resources” in the area, citing gas pipelines and plants, mining, wind turbines and forestry.

Hydro says the Site C reservoir “will not affect the wide ranging movement of grizzly bear and other large carnivores” because they will be able to swim across. It argued the valley does not support a resident grizzly bear population and that non- resident grizzlies move infrequent­ly through the valley, adding existing roads and livestock protection by farmers pose a greater obstacle.

Threatened caribou do not occur along or adjacent to the Peace River between Peace Canyon Dam and the Alberta border, hydro adds, saying constructi­on of the dam, reservoir, transmissi­on lines and upgrades to Highway 29 will not directly affect the existing caribou population.

Powell River- based Apps is a consulting research ecologist and is also principal investigat­or for the B. C. government on the southwest grizzly research project, aimed at recovery of at- risk population­s.

He said in his report that fishers, members of the weasel family, also are expected to suffer a major loss of habitat due to flooding for the dam. Bull trout and Arctic grayling will be negatively impacted by Site C, as well.

Apps concluded the cumulative impacts “are highly significan­t for all species.” While wildlife habitat is at risk of being increasing­ly fragmented even without Site C, “effective longterm conservati­on is a less likely outcome” if the dam proceeds.

New protected areas and improved land management, including additional research and inventorie­s of wildlife, are critical to reversing the trend, with involvemen­t of government­s, industry, private organizati­ons and individual­s, he said.

The Site C dam would flood 83 kilometres of the Peace River from approximat­ely Fort St. John to Hudson’s Hope. The dam would be 1,050 metres long and 60 metres high and would also flood 14 kilometres of the Halfway River, 10 kilometres of the Moberly River, eight kilometres of Cache Creek, three kilometres of Farrell Creek and one kilometre of Lynx Creek. About 5,500 hectares of land would be submerged.

The Joint Review Panel is expected to conclude public hearings on Jan. 23. The panel will have about 90 days to submit an environmen­tal assessment report to the federal Minister of the Environmen­t and the executive director of the B. C. Environmen­tal Assessment Office outlining its recommenda­tions and conclusion­s.

 ??  ?? Conservati­ve estimates outlined in a new report say grizzlies are expected to lose 42 to 44 per cent of their habitat if the Site C dam is approved.
Conservati­ve estimates outlined in a new report say grizzlies are expected to lose 42 to 44 per cent of their habitat if the Site C dam is approved.

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