[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 124 (Thursday, July 15, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4927-S4928]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mrs. FEINSTEIN (for herself, Mr. Padilla, Mr. Wyden, Ms.
Stabenow, Mr. Peters, Mrs. Gillibrand, and Mr. Bennet):
S. 2356. A bill to provide funding to rehabilitate, retrofit, and
remove the Nation's dams to improve the health of the Nation's rivers,
improve public safety, and increase clean energy production, and for
other purposes; to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I rise to speak in support of the
``Twenty-First Century Dams Act,'' which I introduced today. I would
like to thank Senators Padilla, Wyden, Stabenow, Peters, Gillibrand,
and Bennet, who have joined me in introducing the bill.
This bill represents a remarkable and historic coalition of groups
that are often at odds: environmentalists, the hydropower industry, and
dam safety advocates have come together to advance this proposal to
modernize our nation's more than 90,000 dams. This breakthrough
agreement is the result of a process launched three years ago and led
by Stanford University's Woods Institute and Steyer-Taylor Center for
Energy Policy and Finance, with additional direction from the Energy
Futures Initiative.
Our Nation's dams serve many important public purposes, including
water supply, flood control, recreation, and, where appropriately
mitigated, clean energy generation that will help slow climate change.
But the dams also block off key habitat for fish, and can reduce flows
needed for the health of rivers.
As a result, conservationists have often fought proposals to upgrade
older hydropower facilities or construct new water-powered energy-
storage projects, undertaking lengthy regulatory disputes over
environmental safeguards.
The historic coalition advocating for this bill has agreed to try a
different approach by working together. They jointly support three
principles for modernizing dams known as the ``3 Rs'': rehabilitate,
retrofit, and remove.
1) First, rehabilitate. Our bill increases investments in
rehabilitating dams to improve their safety. Many of our nation's dams
were built more than 50 years ago to safety standards that are
insufficient today, all the more so because climate change is
increasing the extreme weather events, like super storms, that dams
will have to withstand to avoid catastrophic failures.
2) Second, retrofit. Hydropower provides the United States with more
than seven percent of its electricity and over 90% of its current
electricity storage capacity. Both the private and Federal hydropower
fleet generate electricity, and hydropower facilities can complement
variable solar and wind power sources and provide long-duration energy
storage, critical to decarbonizing the grid. DOE estimates that by
maintaining and retrofitting existing powered dams, U.S. hydropower
electricity output could reduce carbon emissions by 5.1 billion metric
tons by 2050 while supporting nearly 200,000 clean energy jobs.
Retrofitting dams also includes measures to make them less ecologically
damaging.
3) Third, removal. There are ample opportunities to remove
unnecessary dams that no longer provide benefits to the population,
have safety issues that cannot be mitigated in a cost-effective way,
and/or have significant environmental impacts that cannot be addressed.
Dam removals can improve public safety, restore the natural functions
of rivers, help endangered fish species, create jobs, protect important
environmental and cultural resources, and increase the climate
resilience of U.S. rivers.
I would like to now talk about how the bill would advance each of the
``3 Rs:'' rehabilitations, retrofits, and removals.
Rehabilitations of dams to improve their safety has long been a goal
of mine. As Ranking Member of the Senate Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Subcommittee, last year I funded for the first time the
Army Corps of Engineers' loan program under the Water Infrastructure
Finance and Innovation Act, or WIFIA. This program focuses on dam
safety, and will use $14 million in federal appropriations to back
loans supporting approximately $1 billion in dam safety projects.
Dam safety has been underfunded at Federal, State, and local levels
for many years. There are nearly 6,000 non-federal high hazard
potential dams, which are at high risk of failure with probable loss of
human life if they were to fail. The Association of State Dam Safety
officials has estimated that the total cost of rehabilitating these
dams exceeds $20 billion.
The bill proposes a series of investments to meet this critical need:
[[Page S4928]]
FEMA's grant program for non-Federal high hazard potential dams would
be funded at $1 billion over 5 years, up from $10-12 million per year
in recent years.
2) USDA's Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act would provide
another $500 million for rehabilitating non-Federal dams over 5 years,
up from just $10 million in the most recent appropriations bill.
3) The Army Corps' WIFIA program, which I mentioned earlier, would be
funded at $250 million over 5 years, a 250% increase over the most
recent appropriations bill. This could support as much as $15 billion
in loans for non-Federal dam safety projects.
4) The bill would also authorize funds to building existing state
regulatory oversight capacity, mapping the potential consequences of
dam failure, and modernizing the National Dam Safety Program.
Dam safety funding in the bill totals $2.405 billion over five years,
plus $15 billion in lending capacity to rehabilitate dangerous non-
Federal dams.
While public safety is paramount, it is also critical that we manage
our dams as part of a comprehensive strategy to address climate change.
As I mentioned before, hydropower facilities can ``firm up'' variable
solar and wind power sources, critical to decarbonizing the grid, by
both producing 24/7 electricity and providing substantial electricity
storage capacity for variable resources.
The coalition proposal has a two-part strategy to advance the second
``R'' of retrofitting dams. First is investing in existing Federal
dams, which make up roughly 50% of all U.S. hydropower generation.
Federal dam investments are essential to maintain this energy resource.
The bill authorizes $11 billion over five years to improve the safety
and renewable energy generating capacity, and reduce environmental
impacts of federally owned dams across the United States. These
investments are focused on the largest Federal dam-owning agencies,
including:
1) $8 billion for the Army Corps of Engineers;
2) $2 billion for the Bureau of Reclamation;
3) $650 million for the Bureau of Indian Affairs; and
4) $350 million for the Forest Service.
The bill also authorizes $200 million for the Department of Energy
for research, development, and deployment to support innovative
waterpower technologies, technologies to improve retrofitting and
rehabilitating hydropower dams, and furthering the contribution of
hydropower to grid resilience.
The coalition has also proposed establishing a 30% tax credit for
investment at qualifying facilities in dam safety, environmental
improvements, grid flexibility, and dam removals, with a direct pay
alternative. Due to Senate rules regarding committee jurisdiction, it
makes sense to move this tax credit provision separately. Senators
Cantwell and Murkowski have introduced separate bipartisan legislation
regarding this tax credit proposal, which they are actively discussing
with the Senate Finance Committee.
Let me now turn to the third ``R''--removal of unnecessary dams.
Around the nation there are thousands of dams, in many cases built a
century or more ago, which no longer provide significant societal
benefits, but block fish passage to critical habitats and otherwise
harm river ecosystems.
A twenty-first century dam strategy would be wholly incomplete
without provisions to remove these unnecessary dams. The bill creates
an interagency council and a stakeholder advisory committee to help
administer funding to remove dams where appropriate. Identifying
candidates for dam removal will follow these guiding principles:
1) The dam owner must give consent;
2) The priority is to remove dams that pose a significant public
safety hazard, or non-powered dams whose removal would provide
significant ecological value; and
3) Consideration of the extent to which the dam provides critical
beneficial uses, the magnitude of public benefits from dam removal, and
the cost-effectiveness and technical feasibility of dam removal.
Because dam removal can be a difficult issue, I believe it is
critical to establish the framework in this bill for identifying which
dams are appropriate for removal, and which are not. Within this
framework, the bill authorizes $7.5 billion in funding over 5 years for
multiple Federal agencies with dam removal authorities, including the
Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, the Fish and
Wildlife Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
the Forest Service, and the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
The broad goal of these provisions is to reconnect 10,000 river miles
through the removal of 1,000 dams. In addition to ecological benefits
that could transform the prospects for many endangered fish
populations, these projects would also create over 100,000 jobs.
I want to again congratulate the hydropower industry, environmental
community, and dam safety advocates that have come together in the
coalition proposing this bill. This is an historic coalition, and the
coalition's proposal gives the Senate a remarkable opportunity to
advance three critical goals:
1) Rehabilitating aging dams that pose public safety risks and need
major investments to withstand the extreme flooding events that are
coming with climate change;
2) Retrofitting our Federal and non-Federal dam fleets to increase
clean energy generation and slow climate change, while reducing the
dams' environmental impacts; and
3) Removing unnecessary dams to open up critical habitat for
endangered fish populations and restore the health of our precious
rivers.
Our colleague, Representative Annie Kuster (NH-02), has introduced
this legislation in the House of Representatives together with
Representatives Don Young (AK-AL), Kim Schrier M.D. (WA-08), Julia
Brownley (CA-26), Jared Huffman (CA-02), Debbie Dingell (Ml-12),
Emanuel Cleaver (MO-05), Nanette Diaz Barragan (CA-44), Bonnie Watson
Coleman (NJ-12), and Scott Peters (CA-52). I look forward to working
with these House members to advance this important bill.
I hope my colleagues will join me in support of this legislation.
Thank you, Mr. President, and I yield the floor.
______