About dam time! The emergence of dam removal in river management policy : lessons from the Elwha River restoration project
(2012) In Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science MESM01 20121LUCSUS (Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies)
- Abstract
- Dams
are
pervasive
features
of
the
river
systems
in
the
United
States.
More
than
80,000
large
dams,
and
as
many
as
2.5
million
small
dams,
are
spread
throughout
every
major
watershed
in
the
country.
While
this
vast
number
of
dams
has
made
a
considerable
contribution
to
development,
recognition
of
the
environmental
impacts
has
significantly
increased.
Furthermore,
over
25%
of
the
nation's
dams
are
now
reaching
the
end
of
their
operational
lives,
facing
physical
deterioration,
risk
of
failure,
loss
of
economic
viability,
and
expired
federal
contracts.
The
convergence of these environmental, economic, social, and regulatory concerns is reflected ... (More) - Dams
are
pervasive
features
of
the
river
systems
in
the
United
States.
More
than
80,000
large
dams,
and
as
many
as
2.5
million
small
dams,
are
spread
throughout
every
major
watershed
in
the
country.
While
this
vast
number
of
dams
has
made
a
considerable
contribution
to
development,
recognition
of
the
environmental
impacts
has
significantly
increased.
Furthermore,
over
25%
of
the
nation's
dams
are
now
reaching
the
end
of
their
operational
lives,
facing
physical
deterioration,
risk
of
failure,
loss
of
economic
viability,
and
expired
federal
contracts.
The
convergence of these environmental, economic, social, and regulatory concerns is reflected in the sudden, remarkable emergence of Dam Removal in river management.
Dam removal represents a fundamental transformation in river management discourse, yet has been rarely studied. Through exploration and description of the emerging concept of dam removal, this thesis contributes to the discourse on river management. The transformation is further illustrated through a study of a pioneering dam removal project currently underway on the Elwha River in the Pacific Northwest United States. This monumental project is the country's largest dam removal and most expensive river restoration ever attempted.
The evolution of the Elwha River Dam Removal project is representative of the broad shift in river management and also indicative of the significant policy issues that still exist around dam removal. Analysis of the phenomenon of policy change applied to the Elwha River case reveals factors of political receptivity, physical complexity, and advocacy coalitions that have been critical in the policy change process. From this case, policy lessons are found regarding the implications of congressional intervention in dam removal proposals, and the need for reforming hydropower dam licensing procedures in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. These specific policy lessons are valuable for the integration of dam removal in lasting river management policy. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/2760244
- author
- Berg, Bjorn LU
- supervisor
-
- Mine Islar LU
- Sara Brogaard LU
- organization
- course
- MESM01 20121
- year
- 2012
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- river management, policy change, Elwha River, dam removal, river restoration, sustainability science
- publication/series
- Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science
- report number
- 2012:012
- language
- English
- id
- 2760244
- date added to LUP
- 2012-06-19 18:57:23
- date last changed
- 2012-11-26 10:18:54
@misc{2760244, abstract = {{Dams are pervasive features of the river systems in the United States. More than 80,000 large dams, and as many as 2.5 million small dams, are spread throughout every major watershed in the country. While this vast number of dams has made a considerable contribution to development, recognition of the environmental impacts has significantly increased. Furthermore, over 25% of the nation's dams are now reaching the end of their operational lives, facing physical deterioration, risk of failure, loss of economic viability, and expired federal contracts. The convergence of these environmental, economic, social, and regulatory concerns is reflected in the sudden, remarkable emergence of [i]Dam Removal[/i] in river management. Dam removal represents a fundamental transformation in river management discourse, yet has been rarely studied. Through exploration and description of the emerging concept of dam removal, this thesis contributes to the discourse on river management. The transformation is further illustrated through a study of a pioneering dam removal project currently underway on the Elwha River in the Pacific Northwest United States. This monumental project is the country's largest dam removal and most expensive river restoration ever attempted. The evolution of the Elwha River Dam Removal project is representative of the broad shift in river management and also indicative of the significant policy issues that still exist around dam removal. Analysis of the phenomenon of policy change applied to the Elwha River case reveals factors of political receptivity, physical complexity, and advocacy coalitions that have been critical in the policy change process. From this case, policy lessons are found regarding the implications of congressional intervention in dam removal proposals, and the need for reforming hydropower dam licensing procedures in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. These specific policy lessons are valuable for the integration of dam removal in lasting river management policy.}}, author = {{Berg, Bjorn}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, series = {{Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science}}, title = {{About dam time! The emergence of dam removal in river management policy : lessons from the Elwha River restoration project}}, year = {{2012}}, }