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Summary
PACIFIC NORTHWEST ELECTRIC POWER PLANNING AND CONSERVATION ACT
16 U.S.C. ยง 839-839h, December 5, 1980.
Overview. The Act addresses the impact on fish and wildlife of
hydroelectric dams on the Columbia River. The Act establishes the Pacific
Northwest Electric Power and Conservation Planning Council and directs the
Council to adopt a regional energy conservation and electric power plan and
a program to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife on the Columbia
River and its tributaries. The Act also sets forth provisions the
Administrator must follow in selling power, acquiring resources,
implementing energy conservation measures, and setting rates for the sale
and disposition of electric energy. This summary focuses on the provisions
relating to the duties of the Council.
Purposes. The Act enumerates several purposes concerning the
supply of electric power in the Pacific Northwest. Among other things, the
Act is intended to: assure the Pacific Northwest of an adequate, efficient,
economical and reliable power supply; provide for the participation and
consultation of the Pacific Northwest states, local governments, consumers,
customers, users of the Colombia River System (including federal and state
fish and wildlife agencies and Indian tribes), and the public; ensure
development of regional plans and programs related to energy conservation;
renewable and other resources; protecting, mitigating, and enhancing fish
and wildlife resources; facilitating the planning of the region's power
system; and providing environmental quality. The Act also is intended to
protect, mitigate and enhance the fish and wildlife, including related
spawning grounds and habitat, of the Columbia River and its tributaries,
particularly anadromous fish. ? 839
Selected Definitions. ? 839a
Administrator - Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration
Conservation - reduction in electric power consumption as a
result of increases in the efficiency of energy use, production or
distribution
Consumer - an end user of electric power
Council - Pacific Northwest Electric Power and Conservation Planning
Council
Customer - anyone who contracts for the purchase of power from the
Administrator pursuant to this Act
Pacific Northwest, region or regional - the area consisting of the
states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho; the portion of the state of Montana
west of the Continental Divide; the portions of the states of Nevada, Utah
and Wyoming within the Columbia River drainage basin; and specified
contiguous areas
Plan - Regional Electric Power and Conservation plan
Secretary - Secretary of Energy
Establishment of Planning Council. The Act authorizes the
establishment of a Pacific Northwest Electric Power and Conservation
Planning Council to prepare and adopt a regional conservation and electric
power plan and a program to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife.
The Council must establish a voluntary scientific and statistical advisory
committee to assist in the development, collection and evaluation of
relevant statistical, biological, economic, social, environmental and other
scientific information.
The Council may be set up as a regional agency with two members each
appointed by the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington for
three-year terms. The appointment of six initial members constitutes an
agreement by the states establishing the Council. The Secretary must
establish the Council as a federal agency with state representation if it is
not timely established by the states or if provisions on the functions or
establishment of the Council by the states are declared unlawful by a
federal court. The Council may be terminated on request of the governors of
three of the states beginning one year after the Council adopts a regional
conservation and electric power plan and the fish and wildlife program. Upon
termination, the functions and responsibilities of the Council will be
transferred jointly to the Administrator, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Administrator of the National Marine Fisheries Service, who must carry
out these functions in cooperation with federal and state fish and wildlife
agencies and Indian tribes.
? 839b(a)-(c)
Regional Conservation and Electric Power Plan. The Act directs the
Council to adopt and transmit to the Administrator within two years a
regional conservation and electric power plan. The plan is to set forth a
general scheme for implementing conservation measures and developing
resources to reduce or meet the Administrator's obligations relating to
environmental quality and the acquisition of electric power resources. Among
other items, the Council must consider protection, mitigation, and
enhancement of fish and wildlife and related spawning grounds and habitat,
including sufficient quantities and qualities of flows for successful
migration, survival and propagation of anadromous fish. The Act sets forth
elements the plan must contain, including model conservation standards, and
authorizes the Council to recommend to the Administrator a surcharge on
specified customers. Following adoption of the plan, all actions of the
Administrator must be consistent with it. The Act also contains provisions
to ensure widespread public involvement in formulating regional power
policies. ? 839b(d)-(g)
Fish and Wildlife Program. The Act directs the Council to develop
and adopt a program to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife,
including related spawning grounds and habitat, on the Columbia River and
its tributaries. Because of the unique history, problems and opportunities
presented by the development and operation of hydroelectric facilities on
the Columbia River and its tributaries, the program is to be designed to
deal with the river and its tributaries as a system.
Prior to development or review of the plan, or a major revision, the
Council must request recommendations from federal and regional state fish
and wildlife agencies and Indian tribes in the region on:
measures that can be expected to be implemented by the Administrator and
other federal agencies to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife
affected by the development and operation of hydroelectric projects on the
river and its tributaries; objectives for developing and operating projects
on the river and its tributaries in a manner designed to protect, mitigate
and enhance fish and wildlife; fish and wildlife management coordination,
research and development that will assist protection, mitigation, and
enhancement of anadromous fish at and between hydroelectric dams. The
Council must develop a program based on the recommendations, supporting
documents, and views and information obtained through public comment and
consultation with the federal and state agencies, tribes and customers in
the region. The program must consist of measures to protect, mitigate and
enhance fish and wildlife affected by the development, operation and
management of the hydroelectric facilities while assuring the Pacific
Northwest an adequate, efficient, economical and reliable power supply.
Enhancement measures must be included in the program to the extent they are
designed to achieve improved protection and mitigation. The program must:
complement existing and future activities of the federal and state fish and
wildlife agencies and Indian tribes in the region; be based on the best
available scientific knowledge; use the least costly alternative means of
achieving biological objectives, where alternatives are equally effective;
be consistent with the legal rights of Indian tribes; provide for improved
survival of anadromous fish at hydroelectric facilities and sufficient flows
between facilities to improve fish production, migration and survival. The
Act also lists a number of principles the Council must consider in
developing the program. The Council is required to submit an annual report
to Congress that describes: the actions taken and to be taken by
the Council; the effectiveness of the fish and wildlife program; potential
revisions or modifications to the program.
The Act directs the Administrator to use the Bonneville Power
Administration fund and applicable laws to protect, mitigate and enhance
fish and wildlife projects of the Columbia River and its tributaries in a
manner consistent with the Act, the plan, and the fish and wildlife program.
The Act also directs the Administrator and other federal agencies
responsible for managing, operating or regulating hydroelectric facilities
on the Columbia River or its tributaries to provide equitable treatment for
fish and wildlife in comparison with the other purposes of the facilities
and take the Council's program into account as much as possible at each
stage of decisionmaking. The Administrator and other federal agencies are to
consult and coordinate activities with the Secretary of the Interior, the
Administrator of the National Marine Fisheries Service, state fish and
wildlife agencies in the region, appropriate Indian tribes and affected
project operators in carrying out their responsibilities.
? 839b(h)
Review of Administrator's Actions. The Act authorizes the Council
periodically to review the Administrator's actions to determine their
consistency with the plan and the fish and wildlife program and to assist
the Council in preparing amendments to the plan and program. The Council may
request the Administrator to take action to carry out the Administrator's
responsibilities under the plan. ? 839b(i)-(j)
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