Regional businesses are squaring off against conservation groups over the federal relicensing of a 100-year-old dam on the Kennebec River in Benton.
The Shawmut hydroelectric dam is seen as an economic lifeline by some, and by others as a barrier to the recovery of endangered Atlantic salmon.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is soliciting comments on potential environmental consequences of relicensing the dam for the next 30 years, and conservation groups said FERC’s assessment is cursory at best.
“FERC’s analysis falls woefully short of what good science requires,” said Sean Mahoney, who directs the Maine chapter of the Conservation Law Foundation.
That’s one of several organizations that believe the Shawmut and three other dams owned by Brookfield Renewables taken together pose an insurmountable challenge for salmon trying to make it upstream to spawning grounds.
Mahoney points out that even federal scientists at the National Marine Fisheries Service say that FERC’s analysis is inadequate.
“And where it falls short, writ large, is the acceptance that fish passage is going to be enough to meet the requirements of not only the Federal Power Act but also the Endangered Species Act,” he said.
The conservation groups said a more rigorous analysis — a full environmental impact statement — would demonstrate that all four dams should be removed.
It’s a prospect that’s uniting opposition from the upper Kennebec River Valley businesses community.
“We are not anti-fish — we are pro-fish as well,” said Kimberly Lindlof, president of the Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce.
Lindlof said that the Shawmut dam can be modified to allow passage for salmon and aid their recovery. And that can be done, she said, without draining an impoundment just upstream that a Sappi paper mill — and its hundreds of jobs — depend on for water supply.
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