Dam Removal

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Dam Removal

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Prior to 1950s, most dams built for a single purpose. Agricultural or ... Restore fish passage. Restore habitat. Improve water quality. Improve visual amenity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dam Removal


1
Dam Removal -- Some Economic Issues
John J. Boland, Ph.D., P.E. The Johns Hopkins
University
2
Where Did They Come From?
  • From earliest European settlement, built by
  • Individuals
  • Firms
  • Public utilities
  • Governments
  • Real estate developers
  • etc.

3
Why?
  • Prior to 1950s, most dams built for a single
    purpose
  • Agricultural or urban water supply
  • Water power (e.g., grist mills, textile mills)
  • Hydroelectric generation
  • Flood control
  • Recreation
  • Navigation
  • Visual amenity
  • Fire protection

4
Why? (continued)
  • Later, large federal dams began to have multiple
    purposes -- e.g., water supply flood control
    hydroelectric generation recreation

5
What is the Problem?
  • Constructing a dam is a major intervention in the
    life of a stream
  • Dams impose costs and produce benefits for the
    dam owner
  • Owner's benefits may decline or disappear over
    time

6
What is the Problem? (continued)
  • External effects may be large and becoming more
    important over time
  • May have been inadequately considered when dam
    was built
  • But how do we know that removal is a good idea?

7
Why Remove a Dam?
  • Some dams no long considered desirable
  • Some possible reasons
  • Eliminate a hazard
  • Eliminate maintenance needs
  • Restore fish passage
  • Restore habitat
  • Improve water quality
  • Improve visual amenity

8
Hazard/Maintenance
  • Dams may present unreasonable risk of failure
  • Dams may require substantial and continuing
    maintenance to avoid the possibility of failure
  • Is dam failure the major concern?

9
Dam Break!
10
Historic Dam Failures
  • 1889, Johnstown, PA -- dam owned by sporting club
    fails, 2,200 die
  • 1924, San Francisquito Canyon, CA -- Los Angeles
    DWP dam fails, 450 die
  • 1928, Lake Okeechobee (FL) dike fails in San
    Felipe hurricane, 2,000 die

11
Historic Dam Failures (continued)
  • 20th century -- about 8,000 people died worldwide
    in dam failures
  • The probability of the average dam failing in a
    given year is about one chance in 10,000
  • However, substantial property damage

12
Economist's View of Dam Removal Question
  • Complex question involving many issues
  • Do the advantages of removal outweigh the
    advantages of continued operation?

13
Economic Analysis of Dam Removal
  • Benefit Cost Analysis --
  • a disciplined procedure for identifying,
    measuring, and comparing the expected beneficial
    and adverse consequences of an action
  • Long experience with using BCA to evaluate the
    construction of dams

14
"Principles and Guidelines"
  • Federal standard and procedures for application
    of BCA to water projects
  • Most large dams were originally justified under
    the PG or one of its precursors

15
Decision Criterion
  • Maximize National Economic Development (NED)
    (often reported as B/C ratio)
  • Subject to --
  • acceptable results for other accounts (EQ, RED,
    OSE, etc.)
  • current cost sharing policy
  • environmental regulations
  • etc.

16
NED Account
  • Objective MAX (Beneficial - Adverse)
  • Beneficial effects
  • Increased value of goods and services
  • Beneficial external effects
  • Adverse effects
  • Value of resources commited to project
  • Adverse external effects

17
Examples of Beneficial Effects
  • Value of hydropower (market value)
  • Value of flood control (avoided damage)
  • Value of water supply (willingness to pay for
    water)
  • Value of flatwater recreation (nonmarket
    valuation)

18
Examples of Adverse Effects
  • Construction cost (engineering est.)
  • Future OM costs (engineering est.)
  • Value of lost wild river recreation (nonmarket
    valuation)
  • Value of negative environmental impacts
    (nonmarket valuation)

19
Some Issues
  • Effects measured on with/without basis
  • Effects discounted to present value
  • Economic life may be 50 years

20
Some Issues (continued)
  • In most cases, only monetized effects figure in
    ranking or funding decisions
  • Nonmonetized environmental effects given lip
    service, but little role
  • Social and distributional effects hardly
    considered

21
BCA and Dam Removal
  • Similar procedures to a point, but many
    differences
  • NOT the inverse of dam building
  • "Without condition" - basis of comparison
    difficult to specify -- usually cannot be "no
    action"

22
Beneficial Effects
  • Avoided costs of safety-related rehabilitation
    and maintenance ()
  • Engineering cost estimates
  • Increased spawning and recruitment of migratory
    fish (?)
  • Commercial and/or recreational value
  • Highly uncertain
  • Moderately far in the future
  • May be dependent on other actions

23
Beneficial Effects (continued)
  • Ecological and water quality benefits (?)
  • Highly uncertain
  • Far in the future
  • May not be monetizable
  • Aesthetic issues (?)
  • May be offset by near-term undesirable effects
  • May be controversial
  • May not be monetizable

24
Adverse Effects
  • Cost of removal and site rehabilitation()
  • Engineering cost estimates
  • Loss of beneficial services of dam()
  • Hydroelectric generation, water supply
  • Recreation, etc.
  • Flood control
  • But most dams proposed for removal no longer
    serve any economic purpose

25
Adverse Effects (continued)
  • Changes in stream morphology from sediment flows
    (,?)
  • Cost of engineering intervention
  • Other costs may not be monetizable
  • Ecologic effects of sediment flows and loss of
    pool (?)
  • Medium-term future
  • Highly uncertain
  • May not be monetizable

26
Adverse Effects (continued)
  • Impacts on nearby land uses (,?)
  • Changes in property value
  • Social effects
  • Equity effects

27
Final Observations
  • Except for isolated cases involving public
    safety, dam removal was once unthinkable. Now it
    is thinkable, but we are still learning how to
    think about it.
  • Arguments of advocates have often been simplistic
    -- actual consequences of removal are many and
    complex.

28
Final Observations (continued)
  • In general, the beneficial effects of removal are
    more difficult to identify and measure than are
    the adverse consequences. This is a major
    challenge for objective analysis.
  • Dam removal efforts are accelerating development
    of rational policy is far behind.

29
Comparisons
  • Original project analysis uses well developed
    methods, engineering cost estimates, market data
    modest role for nonmarket valuation
  • Dam removal analysis includes items not
    previously evaluated, relies heavily on nonmarket
    valuation and nonmonetized values

30
Comparisons (continued)
  • With/without comparisons difficult to define,
    since "without removal" may involve a
    significantly higher risk of dam failure
  • Discounting remains an important issue, since
    some effects run far into the future
  • May be intergenerational equity issues

31
Conclusions
  • Compared to dam project evaluation, benefit cost
    analysis of dam removal, based on PG, involves
  • New or unfamiliar valuation problems
  • Greater reliance on nonmarket valuations, with
    attendant large error bars
  • Ambiguity concerning effect identification
    (with/without)
  • Possible intergenerational equity issues
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