Vancouver Sun

COLUMBIA RIVER TREATY ANOTHER TRUMP TARGET

U.S. thinks it’s time for cheaper power; B.C. government has other ideas

- VAUGHN PALMER vpalmer@postmedia.com

With talks underway between Canada and the U.S. on the future of the Columbia River Treaty, the B.C. New Democrats have launched public consultati­ons in the region most affected by the high-stakes negotiatio­n.

“We want to ensure Columbia basin communitie­s are consulted, kept informed and have their voices heard,” said provincial cabinet minister Katrine Conroy via a press release announcing meetings this month in Castlegar, Golden, Revelstoke, Nakusp, Nelson and other communitie­s.

As well as having cabinet responsibi­lity for the talks, Conroy’s Kootenay West riding includes several places that were inundated under the terms of the 1964 flood control and power generation treaty.

“We will continue to work closely with First Nations affected by the treaty, to ensure Indigenous interests are reflected in the negotiatio­ns,” she added by way of consolatio­n to Indigenous people who’ve been excluded from the negotiatin­g teams on both sides of the border.

The stakes are also significan­t for the province as a whole. The basics of the treaty saw B.C. build dams to store water on this side of the border, easing the flood risk in the U.S. and allowing the flow to be evened out through the year.

In exchange, B.C. was entitled to a share of the additional hydro power that could be generated in dams on the U.S. side.

B.C.’s sale of those downstream benefits to the U.S. has poured almost $1.4 billion into provincial coffers over the past 10 years, albeit at a declining rate these days because of depressed prices for cross-border electricit­y sales.

Politician­s on the U.S. side have long sought to reopen the treaty, believing there was now a case for reducing B.C.’s entitlemen­t.

They did not get across the threshold under president Barack Obama.

Then, last fall, his successor Donald Trump served notice of intent, initiating the formal negotiatio­ns that commenced with a two-day session last week in Washington, D.C. The next round is set for mid-August in B.C.

American objectives in the talks include “continued, careful management of flood risk; ensuring a reliable and economical power supply; and better addressing ecosystem concerns.”

“Economical power supply,” being a diplomatic euphemism for “cheaper electricit­y for consumers in the northwest states,” achievable by clawing back most of B.C.’s treaty entitlemen­t.

On taking office last summer, the NDP inherited a 14-point statement of principles setting out B.C. hopes for negotiatio­ns to “continue the treaty” while “seeking improvemen­ts within the existing framework” of the 54-year-old agreement.

The New Democrats have endorsed those principles in a spirit of bipartisan­ship.

“Those principles were developed with consultati­on from throughout the region,” as Conroy advised the legislatur­e this spring. “So I was involved, as well, in the process and knew what the issues were, right as they would come up.”

The New Democrats chose to put additional emphasis on some concerns.

“There is an increase in discussion with Canada and First Nations on the return of salmon to the river,” she advised the house, recalling how constructi­on of the enormous Grand Coulee Dam on the U.S. side in the 1930s wiped out salmon runs on the upper Columbia River. “There was no considerat­ion then for how incredibly important salmon was, especially to the First Nations people in our region. We have an advisory table that is made up of Indigenous representa­tion from our region, and also we are discussing with Canada that we need to see if there’s feasibilit­y here.”

As to feasibilit­y, the obstacles to salmon migration in the upper reaches of the Columbia include the 168-metre-high Grand Coulee and the 72-metre Chief Joseph dams on the U.S. side, plus the Keenleysid­e (52 metres), Revelstoke (175 metres) and Mica (240 metres) dams on the Canadian side.

Still, says Conroy “the First Nations from Canada and the tribes from the United States, have been working on scientific and technical documents and research to see if, first of all, the salmon can come up, how they can come up, and what the things are that have to be done to ensure that happens.”

The New Democrats also put more emphasis on preserving the ecosystem.

“I know that certainly didn’t happen in 1964, but that is something that’s very much on the minds of people in the Columbia basin,” said Conroy. “If we are going to tweak the treaty, what can we do to make sure the voices of the basin are heard and that things that were under no considerat­ion in the ’60s are now a topic for considerat­ion?”

With those new considerat­ions, there’s still the status quo concern of preserving the downstream benefits as a trade-off for the flooding and other impacts on this side of the border.

The B.C. position on that score is the same under the New Democrats as it was under the Liberals.

“The level of benefits to B.C., which is currently solely in the form of the (electricit­y) entitlemen­t, does not account for the full range of benefits in the U.S. or the impacts in B.C.,” says the statement of principle.

“All downstream U.S. benefits such as flood risk management, hydropower, ecosystems, water supply (including municipal, industrial and agricultur­al uses), recreation, navigation and other related benefits should be accounted for and such value created should be shared equitably between the two countries.”

No surprise if the Americans do not see it the same way. But that is a topic for another day.

We want to ensure Columbia basin communitie­s are consulted, kept informed and have their voices heard. KATRINE CONROY, Kootenay West MLA

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Dams on the Columbia River, like this one in The Dalles, Ore., are obstacles to the migration of salmon in the upper river. Canadian and U.S. Aboriginal groups want this issue examined if talks are opened up on the Columbia River Treaty.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Dams on the Columbia River, like this one in The Dalles, Ore., are obstacles to the migration of salmon in the upper river. Canadian and U.S. Aboriginal groups want this issue examined if talks are opened up on the Columbia River Treaty.
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