Welcome to the first edition of
“Turning Points,” our new column examining critical moments in
environmental history when change occurred for the better — or worse.
More than 1,000 people lined the banks of the Kennebec River in
Augusta, Maine, on July 1, 1999. They were there to witness a rebirth.
The ringing of a bell signaled a backhoe on the opposite bank to dig
into a retaining wall. Water trickled, then gushed. The crowd erupted in
cheers as the Edwards Dam, which had stretched 900 feet across the
river, was breached. Soon the whole dam would be removed.
The Kennebec hadn’t run free here since 1837.
Those who advocated for the dam’s removal promised that devastated
fisheries would return, and the city of Augusta would benefit from new
recreational opportunities and a revitalization of the riverfront.
They were right. But it wasn’t just Augusta where change was felt.
The removal of Edwards Dam became a pivotal moment in the history of
the environmental movement and river restoration in the United States.
It was the first functioning hydroelectric dam to be removed — and the
first time the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ever voted, against the wishes of a dam owner, not to relicense a dam.
But most importantly the demolition signaled a shift in thinking
about how we balance environmental and economic interests — and that had
a ripple effect.
“It was the first big dam that came out that demonstrated to the
country that our rivers had other values beyond industrial use,” says
John Burrows, director of New England Programs for the Atlantic Salmon Federation,
which was a key player in the dam-removal effort. “It helped folks
recognize that our rivers, which we’ve not taken good care of for
several hundred years, could be a different asset for communities. And
for society.”
Killing a River
Building the Edwards Dam was never a popular idea. Even in the 1830s
there was concern that the robust fisheries of the lower Kennebec River
would be wiped out. But the cheerleaders of industrialism prevailed, and
the dam was built in 1837 to bring power to local mills.
The consequences were immediate.
The dam’s construction shut the door on the migration of nearly a
dozen sea-run fish species that used to swim up more than 40 miles from
the Atlantic Ocean in search of prime spawning habitat in the Kennebec
and its tributaries.
“The river was transformed from being a thriving producer of millions
of fish such as shad, herring, striped bass, Atlantic salmon, sturgeon
and alewives and supporting a wide cornucopia of other species ranging
from otters to eagles — into a wastewater drainage system,” Jeff Crane, a
dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Saint Martin’s University,
wrote in a paper published in 2009. Within
a few years, the alewife run on the Sebasticook River, a tributary of
the Kennebec just upstream from the dam, was gone. Where once you’d been
able to catch 500 salmon a season in Augusta, by 1850 you were lucky to
get five. The state reported that the shad industry there was
completely lost by 1867. And the sturgeon catch on the lower Kennebec
declined from 320,000 pounds a year before the dam to just 12,000 pounds
a year by 1880.
In the 1900s the river’s problems got even worse. The Kennebec River
became a dumping ground for toxic waste from paper mills and municipal
sewage. Log drives from the upstate timber industry choked the river’s
flow, and declining oxygen levels from sewage caused major fish kills.
By the 1960s no one wanted to fish or swim in the Kennebec anymore.
Brian Graber, who now works as the senior director of river restoration at American Rivers,
grew up in Massachusetts and spent his summers in a family cabin
outside Augusta. The Kennebec River of his childhood wasn’t a place to
have a good time — or even to live.
“I think what struck me the most as a kid was that all the buildings
in downtown Augusta were facing away from the river and were either
boarded up or just didn’t have windows at all along the river,” Graber
recalls.
But things began to gradually improve after the passage of the national Clean Water Act in 1972.
The state of Maine spent $100 million on water-treatment facilities
between 1972 and 1990 to clean up the river and meet modern
environmental laws. Improvements in water quality triggered a new
interest in expanding river restoration. The Kennebec wasn’t hopeless
after all.
But one hurdle remained.
Thinking Big
During the 1980s efforts to improve fish passage at dams and water
quality in the river continued. Even though many environmental groups
thought dam removal was the best ecological hope for restoring the
Kennebec, few believed it was a winnable campaign.
“At that time removal of dams was a pretty outlandish concept and
most people who we were interacting with did not see us prevailing,”
says Pete Didisheim, senior director of advocacy at the Natural Resources Council of Maine.
The only other talk of dam removal happening then in the United
States was across the country on Washington’s Elwha River. (The Elwha’s
two dams wouldn’t end up being removed, however, until 2011 and 2014.)
In 1991 the owners of the Edwards Dam, Edwards Manufacturing Company,
applied for a 50-year renewal license to operate it. The newly formed
Kennebec Coalition jumped in to convince the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, the agency in charge of the relicensing, to deny that
permit. The coalition was made up of the nonprofits American Rivers, the
Atlantic Salmon Federation, the Natural Resources Council of Maine, and
Trout Unlimited and its Kennebec Valley chapter.
“People began to not only imagine what dam removal would do for the
benefit of the fish, but also what it would do for the benefit of the
town if they had a functioning, free-flowing river running through it,”
says Andrew Fahlund, currently senior program officer at the Water
Foundation, who was working for American Rivers during the push for dam
removal.
The coalition had a strong argument. The dam produced only 3.5
megawatts of power, providing less than 0.1 percent of Maine’s
electricity. It employed only a few people and was aging and unsafe,
having been breached numerous times. It blocked critical upstream fish
habitat, including the migration of endangered sturgeon.
And a restored fishery would bring economic as well as ecological
benefits — profits that could be more widely shared than those of the
small company that owned the dam.
But taking down a functioning hydroelectric dam for the benefit of fish had never been done before.
“Initially the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission staff issued
their proposal that the dam should be relicensed,” says Burrows. “It
took our organizations doing a lot of work with some experts to actually
demonstrate that the ecological values of removing the dam outweighed
the power generation.” The coalition produced 7,000 pages of
documentation on the impacts of the dam and the economic importance of a
restored fishery.
At the same time, they worked to educate the public and earned
national attention and the support of Maine’s governor, Angus King, who
said that the removal of the dam would help the Kennebec “reclaim its
position as both an economic asset and an ecological miracle.”
Dam proponents countered that removal would be too expensive and
would cause riverbank erosion, bring more downstream floods and lower
property values for those along the riverfront.
But in 1997, after mounting evidence from the coalition, the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission voted to deny license renewal. It ordered
that the dam be removed. People campaigning for removal were ecstatic,
while dam owners across the country were shocked.
This was the first time the commission used its authority to deny a
permit against the wishes of a dam owner. And it hasn’t been done since.
It wasn’t just the commission’s ruling that was groundbreaking; it
was also the first time a dam was coming down on the main stem of a
river and not a smaller tributary, which Graber says was a significant
achievement. “It was a pivotal moment for us to build a national
movement to take out dams,” he adds. A crowd gathers on the banks of the Kennebec River of the breaching of Edwards Dam in 1999. (Photo by NRCM)
The battle wasn’t yet won, though.
It took another year for a negotiated settlement to be reached with
the dam owner, conservation groups and federal and state agencies that
managed to stave off the threat of lengthy lawsuits from Edwards
Manufacturing Company.
Much of the funding for the removal ended up coming from Bath Iron
Works, a downstream shipbuilder that was expanding its operations into
prime sturgeon habitat. The company paid into the dam-removal settlement
as part of its environmental mitigation.
The decision had far-reaching impacts.
“The success of this effort would serve as an example of what could
be accomplished for other river restoration activists around the nation,
thereby contributing to the dramatic growth of dam removal efforts and
fisheries restoration projects,” wrote Crane.
A River Reborn
The removal of Edwards Dam in July 1999 turned out to be a chance for Augusta to rebuild its relationship to the river.
“Like most towns in New England of that era, their backs had been
turned to the river for more than 100 years,” says Fahlund, who was on
the banks that day. He remembers it feeling electric and the atmosphere
festive — music played, commemorative T-shirts were sold and reporters
from around the world showed up.
It was also, he says, a day of mixed emotions for some residents. The
dam had been a piece of the town’s history for more than 160 years,
both infrastructure and monument, but part of the campaign to remove it
had been to counter the notion that dams are meant to last forever.
That echoed beyond the town limits. “Even though it wasn’t a huge
dam, it had somewhat of a seismic impact on people’s thinking about dams
that they’re not necessarily permanent fixtures in eternity on the
landscape,” says Didisheim.
As soon as the dam came down, the river rebounded. Fish immediately
had access to 18 more miles of habitat, up to the town of Waterville at
the mouth of the Sebasticook River. Atlantic sturgeon began to swim past
the former dam site, and alewife and shad soon returned. Within a year
seals could be seen chasing alewives, a type of river herring, 40 miles
upstream from the ocean. Alewives returned by the millions after the Edwards and Ft. Halifax dams were removed. (Photo by John Burrows/ASF)
And with alewives coming back, so did everything that eats them —
river otters, bears, mink, bald eagles, osprey and blue herons.
But the best indicator of the ecosystem’s recovery was the resurgence
of aquatic insects like mayflies and stoneflies, which signaled
improved water quality.
“They all rebounded and the diversity just skyrocketed,” says
Fahlund. “And so we knew something great was happening and that it was
going to lead to everything we had hoped.”
Within a few years the river began to meet higher water-quality standards.
“The water… is now that much healthier because it’s no longer sitting still and dead,” stated a 2009 editorial in the Kennebec Journal Morning Sentinel.
“Instead, it bubbles and spills its way downstream across rediscovered
gravel bars and river ledges, collecting and absorbing oxygen as it
moves toward the ocean. The river is alive in a way it hasn’t been for
generations.”
The benefits spread to the community as well. A park and trails were
built along the waterfront. “People are out on the water, mostly
paddling a kayak or canoeists,” says Graber. “The downtown is starting
to make use of the river more. The buildings that have been redeveloped
are now using the river as an amenity. The river’s really just come back
to life both for humans and the ecology.”
Ripple Effect
The success didn’t end in Augusta, though. The removal of Edwards Dam
ignited efforts to take out the next obstacle up-river, the Fort
Halifax Dam on the Sebasticook River in Waterville. After eight years of
work that dam was removed in 2008, further extending habitat for native
fish.
“We have species like sturgeon, striped bass, rainbow smelt and other
key sea-run species which now have access to all of their historic
habitat in the watershed,” says the Atlantic Salmon Federation’s
Burrows. The breaching of Ft. Halifax Dam on the Sebasticook River. (Photo by NRCM)
The removal of both dams, in conjunction with active stocking of
alewives into lakes and ponds upriver and in other parts of the
watershed, has helped the river herring population rebound dramatically.
The number of alewives returning to spawn jumped from 78,000 in 1999 to
5.5 million last year.
And the downstream estuary has reaped rewards, too.
When those billions of juvenile river herring leave the freshwater
lakes and rivers, they head for the sea and may spend between three and
five years in the marine environment. There they serve are a food source
for everything from cod and haddock to whales and seals.
“They are really a kind of keystone ecological species for the Gulf of Maine,” says Burrows.
The river herring are also a valuable source of bait for commercial
lobstermen, who in recent decades have had such a deficit in securing
local supplies that they’ve had to turn to importing bait from southeast
Asia, introducing a host of new environmental problems and costs.
“We’ve now got the largest river herring population on the east coast
of the United States, maybe even on the entire eastern seaboard of
North America, but that population could easily be three, four times
what it is now,” says Burrows. “And so we’re continuing to work on
restoring more habitat and we’re hoping to see those populations
continue to increase.”
Didisheim says an estimated 27 million alewives have reached spawning
habitat since the Ft. Halifax Dam was removed, and none of it would
have happened without first removing the Edwards Dam.
The Edwards Dam also helped propel a large restoration project a
couple hours northeast of Augusta on the Penobscot River. Conservation
groups worked with the dam operator on the Penobscot to increase
hydropower generation on some other dams and then remove a series of
lower dams that opened up more than 1,000 miles of river access for
fish, especially critically endangered Atlantic salmon.
While that project was being developed, its proponents could point to
the Kennebec River restoration as an example of what could be achieved.
“The Kennebec River activists and city and state leaders did not have
the advantage that later river restoration activists would have —
namely, the Kennebec River restoration itself as powerful example of how
quickly river restoration could work and how successful it could be,”
wrote Crane. “This is the one reason that the Edwards Dam removal is so
important; it showed other communities the process required and how
successful it could be.”
A Movement Grows
Dam removals followed outside Maine. When the Edwards Dam was
removed, about five dam removals were taking place nationwide each year.
Last year it was 80. Since Edwards, more than 1,100 dams have come
down.
Many of these have been small dams, but there have also been high-profile projects, like the two Elwha River dams that were the largest dam-removal project so far in the world.
The removal of the 125-foot-tall Condit Dam in 2011 on the White
Salmon River, a tributary of the Columbia River in Washington, was a big
step in aiding threatened salmon and steelhead. The Condit was removed
because adding modern requirements for fish proved to be uneconomical —
it was cheaper to remove the dam than build fish passage.
Overall there’s been a shift in public thinking about dams over the
past two decades. “It’s not just something that conservationists and
environmentalists are advocating for anymore,” says Amy Souers Kober,
communications director at American Rivers. “Dam removal also makes
sense for economic reasons and public safety in a lot of cases.”
That includes Bloede Dam on the Patapsco River in Maryland, where
nine people have drowned, she says. Efforts to remove the dam there began in September.
There are also a number of big projects on the horizon,
including on the Middle Fork Nooksack River, which Kober says is the
number-one salmon-recovery project on the Puget Sound that
conservationists hope will help struggling Southern Resident killer whales.
And all eyes are on the Klamath River as plans come together to remove four dams in 2021 in what would become the largest dam-removal and river-restoration project in the world.
Dam-removal proponents don’t think we need to take out all of our
dams, and of course we couldn’t. The United States has more than 90,000
dams, and many still serve crucial functions. But where dams have been
removed, the past two decades have shown the environmental results are
unparalleled.
“There’s no faster or more effective way to bring a river back to
life than taking out a dam,” says American Rivers’ Graber. “That’s why
we focused on it for 20 years. It’s a win for environmental reasons,
public safety and a relief from liability for dam owners.”
Ultimately, dam removals are much bigger than the dams themselves,
says Kober. “Dam removals are really stories about people reclaiming
their rivers.”
Those stories started with the Edwards Dam.
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