Arab Times

Oroville ‘crisis’ drives look at aging US dams

‘Tackle disaster risk’

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SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 12, (Agencies): One year after the worst structural failures at a major US dam in a generation, federal regulators who oversee California’s half-century-old, towering Oroville Dam say they are looking hard at how they overlooked its built-in weaknesses for decades.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is telling owners of the 1,700 other hydroelect­ric dams it regulates nationally that it expects them to look equally hard at their own organizati­ons and aging dams, in the wake of the sudden collapse of much of first one, then both spillways last February at the 770-foot-tall (235-metertall) Oroville Dam, the nation’s tallest.

Given that the average dam in the United States is in its 50s, like Oroville, it’s critical that owners and monitors of America’s 90,580 dams act on a main lesson of the neardisast­er, dam officials nationally say: Is the way a dam was built in the Cold War-era or earlier good enough to protect lives in 2018 and beyond?

The crisis in California, a state that had been recognized nationally for its dam-safety program, “makes very clear that just because a project has operated successful­ly for a long period of time, does not guarantee that it will continue to do so,” the federal dam regulators wrote late last month in an unusual, blunt open letter to US dam operators.

“We are focusing on how to improve our program to identify and prevent incidents, regardless of magnitude, that could result from similar dam safety and organizati­onal factors that contribute­d to the Oroville incident,” regulators wrote. “We expect our regulated dam owners to have similar internal discussion­s.”

Last Feb 12, residents across parts of three counties in the Sierra Nevada foothills fled their homes. Authoritie­s warned the chain reaction of structural failures at the Oroville Dam complex could send a wall of water gushing through their nearby Gold Rush-era towns within the hour.

Despite evacuation orders for nearly 200,000 people, however, the feared uncontroll­ed release of massive amounts of Oroville’s reservoir did not happen. California’s repair bills for the near-disaster have neared $1 billion. Residents downstream have filed more than $1 billion more in claims.

Last month, two national dam-safety organizati­ons focused the blame on the dam’s overseers. California’s Department of Water Resources, which owns Oroville; regulators; and consultant­s had focused on satisfying routine regulatory requiremen­ts for the dam — which anchors a water system that supplies more than half of California’s people — but never took stock of whether the dam complex was built well enough in the 1960s to stand up over time, their independen­t probe concluded.

Oroville shows “we got a little complacent with what we were doing” as an industry, “and now need to reexamine and identify some of the more subtle and latent problems,” John France, a Colorado-based dams expert who led the probe, says now.

Spragens

Implementi­ng

California’s Department of Water Resources declined to make an official available to comment for this article, but said in an email it is implementi­ng changes called for by France’s team.

The 19,000 residents of Oroville, the town that would have been first in the path of water from the reservoir, watch the year-round repairs at the dam in the hills behind them, uneasy still.

“I’m not sure how much we trust DWR, but that’s out of our hands,” said Julie Jackson, owner of a downtown Oroville flower store.

“It was pretty devastatin­g,” Jackson said of the fear that overrode tens of thousands of people stuck on evacuation-clogged roads as they tried to save families from what authoritie­s said could be imminent disaster.

“All our family members and friends we knew were in the path.”

For Lori Spragens, executive director of the national Associatio­n of State Dam Safety Officials, the Oroville spillway collapses were the biggest structural failures at a major US dam of her career.

The last comparable one was the US Bureau of Reclamatio­n’s Teton Dam in Idaho, which broke apart in 1976, killing 11 people. Teton was less than half the height of Oroville, at 305 feet (93 meters). Other US dam failures since the 1970s involved dams that were just fractions of Oroville’s size, but killed multiple people.

Oroville Dam, by contrast, is the height of a 70-story skyscraper. Its size, and the deep, snaking canyon that opened below it took France’s breath away when he drove to the foot of the dam after the spillways’ collapse.

“I can’t report exactly what I said without expletives,” the dam-safety expert said of his reaction. “It’s an enormous structure. The erosion was massive.”

Dam safety officials, regulators and watchdog groups call Oroville a wake-up call. Most say it’s being heard.

“Absolutely it’s changed things,” said Kevin Colburn, a national director of American Whitewater, which works on policy issues affecting rivers nationally.

“If I lived downstream of a dam, I’d be glad Oroville happened,” Colburn said.

Protecting people from natural disasters in fragile states and war zones can be done — and should be attempted despite the practical difficulti­es, UN officials said.

Functionin­g

Conflict-torn countries, like Syria and Afghanista­n, may lack functionin­g government­s, but pockets can be identified where it is possible to work with communitie­s to reduce the risks of floods, earthquake­s and other hazards, said Robert Glasser, head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction.

“It is hard because you don’t have institutio­ns in place when a civil war is happening,” Glasser told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on the sidelines of the World Urban Forum, the world’s biggest conference on sustainabl­e cities. “(But) there is still a lot you can do to improve resilience.”

Examples of approaches that would work at the local level include early warning systems that use mobile phones, harvesting water to combat droughts, and widening options for people to make a living, Glasser said.

Disaster risk reduction works best in a conflict zone when aid workers have an agreement with both warring sides, said Srinivasa Popuri, a senior officer for the Asia-Pacific region with UN-Habitat, the UN agency that works on urban developmen­t.

Programmes to build stronger homes, implemente­d after natural disasters struck conflict zones, have successful­ly lowered risks, he added.

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