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In Fiscal Year 2006, the Bonneville Power Administration incurred costs totaling $851.7 million to mitigate the impacts of hydropower dams on fish and wildlife of the Columbia River Basin. Of this amount, $137.9 million was for direct spending to implement the Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. The remainder was money for which Bonneville reimburses the Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation for fish-related dam operations ($60.7 million); interest, amortization, and depreciation (these are called “fixed expenses”) on capital investments in facilities such as hatcheries and fish passage at dams ($87.5 million); forgone hydropower revenues that result from dam operations that benefit fish and reduce hydropower generation ($397.4 million); and power purchases to replace the forgone hydropower ($168.2 million). Tables 2-4 of this report detail Bonneville’s direct spending on the Council’s program in Fiscal Year 2006. The Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority (CBFWA) also reports on Bonneville’s fish and wildlife expenditures, in its Status of Fish and Wildlife Resources in the Columbia River Basin (available November 2007). The 2006 expenditures bring the grand total of Bonneville’s fish and wildlife spending, from 1978 when the expenses began, through 2006, to $8,662,800,000. Here, in descending order, is a breakdown of the expenditures, 1978-2006, which are detailed in Table 1 of this report:
The Council thanks the Bonneville Power Administration for providing information about the agency’s fish and wildlife expenditures for this report. |
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