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9 26

Bang! Another Washington dam finally comes down to clear miles of salmon habitat.

The Nooksack River dam is the latest Washington State dam demolished to open miles of salmon habitat and help critically endangered Orca whales.

The 2nd video shows the dam explosion.

[qfox.com]

How a Dying River Came Roaring Back to Life

Since the removal of two dams on the Elwha River in Washington State in 20, salmon are spawning once again, animals large and small are returning to the river banks, and hundreds of acres of barren former lakebed are greening.

"In the Pacific Northwest, salmon are a linchpin in a healthy ecosystem. They carry critical marine-derived nutrients from ocean to forest, fertilizing riverbanks with their bodies as they die and decompose after spawning. Numerous animals rely on them, forming a chain of predation that circulates these critical nutrients throughout the forest."

Surrounded by pristine forest that jumpstarted recovery

"The Elwha isn’t a perfect rubric for dam removal everywhere. The upper river has long been surrounded by pristine forest — it sits within Olympic National Park, so it’s been insulated from development, which jumpstarted the ecological recovery. But restoration stories like the Elwha can serve as inspiration for other dam removal projects."

“The Elwha captured everyone’s imagination and shows that dam removal works,” says Amy Kober, the national communications director at American Rivers. “It’s exciting on so many levels for the ecosystem. You’re seeing the benefits from insects to salt water, which shows how connected rivers are, and the benefits that have a domino effect outward. It’s inspiring people all around the country to ask questions about their rivers.”

[saturdayeveningpost.com]

LiterateHiker 9 July 20
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9 comments

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3

Wonderful!

4

This very positive news for everyone ,letting river go back to it,s natural state both for the fish and other wild life but for the natives as well ,Bravo

@RoyMillar

""The Elwha isn’t a perfect rubric for dam removal everywhere. The upper river has long been surrounded by pristine forest — it sits within Olympic National Park, so it’s been insulated from development, which jump started the ecological recovery. But restoration stories like the Elwha can serve as inspiration for other dam removal projects."

3

should've never been built

4

I am so happy I have lived to see some turn arounds. This one has been a long time coming.

4

This is great news! 😉

2

That’s wonderful!!!

2

Did those two dams provide water to the local human population? What was done to recoup that lost water, I wonder? (just playing the devil's advocate a bit. LOL!)

@IAMGROOT

Area residents have more water than they need: heavy rainfall, Olympic Mountains snow-melt, and countless rivers on the Olympic Peninsula. It's in rainy Western Washington. The Quinault Rainforest get 10 to 15 feet of rain per year.

Functional in 1913, the Elwha Dam supplied energy for the pulp mill in Port Angeles.

Will any electricity be lost as a result of dam removal?

"The amount of electricity generated by the dams is minimal compared to both the region's needs and its power production capacity. The dams provide power equal to about one half the energy needs of just one local company, the Nippon Paper Industries mill. The mill is currently receiving all of its power from the City of Port Angeles via the regional electrical grid. The mill is currently seeking to construct a power facility at the mill that would exceed the amount of power the two dams produce on average."

Frequently Asked Questions about the Elwa Dam Removal

[nps.gov]

@LiterateHiker That's good. In CA we have the problem of a lack of dams Environmentalists push to remove dams here when we have plenty of rainfall and not enough storage, not to mention any hydroelectric benefit. Of course, there is also a huge difference in population. =]

3

Wow cool 😎

bobwjr Level 10 July 20, 2020
1

That's wonderful!! Woohoo!

Yay for the planet!!

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