1 columbia river treaty overview of columbia river system water management presented at canadian...
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Columbia River
Treaty
Overview of Columbia River system water management
presented at Canadian Columbia River Forum
30 May 2007
Kelvin KetchumBC Hydro
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Columbia River
Treaty
Agenda
- Reservoir operating concerns
- Columbia River Treaty
- Non-Treaty Storage Agreement
- Kootenay Lake IJC Order
- other coordination agreements
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Columbia River
Treaty
Reservoir operating concerns
- Flood protection … people and property- Non-power constraints and targets (regulatory, water
licence, other)• fish flow requirements• recreation water-level requirements & targets• wildlife and vegetation issues• heritage site protection• industrial needs• Water Use Planning has helped to better define these
requirements
- Constraints imposed by the Columbia River Treaty and other coordination agreements
- “Keeping the lights on” at the least cost … minimizing electricity and gas purchase costs (over long-term) – Columbia region produces 50% of BC’s hydropower
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Columbia River
Treaty
Why do we have the Columbia River Treaty?
USA – has hydroelectric plants and flood control needsCanada – has good storage dam sites
• Canada has 15% of the basin area
• Canadian basin is mountainous, with much snow … produces 30-35% of the runoff for the entire basin
• 50% of the highest recorded flood flows at Portland came from Canada
• most hydropower production, and need for flood control, is in the USA
• best storage dam sites are in Canada
Columbia River – 4th largest in N. America average discharge = 7300 m3/s drainage basin area = 670,000 km2
installed capacity ~ 35,000 MW
Jasper
Banff
Vancouver
Whistler
Yellowstone
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Columbia River
Treaty
• Damaged homes, farms, and dykes in Canada and the USA all the way down the river to its mouth
• 1948 flood destroyed a city of ~ 35,000 people (suburb of Portland, Oregon)
• About 50-60 people were killed.
1948 Columbia River Flood1948 Columbia River Flood
Vanport, ORin 1948
Trail, B.C. in 1948 4
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Columbia River
TreatyWhat does the Treaty Do?
• The Columbia River Treaty required Canada to:
• construct the Mica, Arrow, & Duncan storage reservoirs on the Columbia River system (total storage of 19 km3)
• operate these reservoirs for optimum power generation and flood control downstream in both countries
• The Treaty required the U.S. to:
• pay Canada 50% of the estimated value of the future flood control benefits in the U.S.
• deliver to Canada 50% of the increased power capability at downstream at U.S. plants (payment for upstream regulation)
• The Treaty permitted the U.S. to:
• construct and operate the Libby project (6 km3 storage) on the Kootenai River … flooding some Canadian land, but also providing power & flood control benefits for Canada
Columbia River
Treaty
Jan.1961
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Columbia River
Treaty
Duncan and Arrow
Treaty Non-Treaty Generator DamCompleted ___ _Storage Storage Capacity Height
DUNCAN 1967 1.73 km³ None None 40 mARROW 1968 8.76 km³ 0.31 km³ None* 52 m* CPC built the 185 MW Arrow Lakes Hydro plant in 2002
Duncan Reservoir & Dam
Arrow Lakes Reservoir
Keenleyside Dam
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Columbia River
Treaty
Mica and Libby
Treaty Non-Treaty Generator Dam Completed ___Storage Storage Capacity __ _Height____ MICA 1973 8.63 km³ 6.17 km³ 1740 MW 198 m LIBBY 1973 6.14 km³ None 604 MW 113 m
Libby Dam
Mica Dam
KoocanusaReservoir
Kinbasket Reservoir
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Columbia River
Treaty
Treaty priorities for water usage
1. Domestic & consumptive uses (e.g. drinking water & irrigation) have the highest priority and are not restricted in any way
2. Flood control – rule curves provide an upper limit on reservoir levels, and have priority over energy production
3. Firm energy - must draft reservoirs as far as is necessary to meet the specified system firm energy requirement
4. Reservoir refill – target refill by 31 July to maximize firm energy capability for the following year (95% confidence of refill)
5. Secondary energy – lowest priority, since this “less reliable” energy cannot be guaranteed in every year
Other values (e.g. fisheries, recreation, etc) are not mentioned in the Treaty and must be managed by each country:- by using any “unilateral” flexibility under the Treaty, or,- by mutually-beneficial agreements between the two countries
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Columbia River
Treaty
Example of Flood Control Curves
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr
Req
uire
d st
orag
e sp
ace
(MA
F) 3.5 MAF
4.5 MAF
5.5 MAF
6.5 MAF
7.5 MAF
Apr-Aug Libby forecast
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Columbia River
TreatyFlood Control Benefits – an example from 1997
Columbia River at Birchbank (River flow gauge located between Castlegar and Trail)
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Hydrographs: Observed and pre-project flows for the year ending September 30, 1997
Dis
ch
arg
e (
10
00
cu
bic
fe
et
pe
r s
ec
on
d)
Pre-project flow Observed flow
<===== start of localized flood damage (170 kcfs)
<===== start of minor regional flood damage (225 kcfs)
<===== start of major regional flood damage (280 kcfs)
Note - Treaty storage reduced flood flows in Canada by about 50%
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Columbia River
TreatySupplemental Treaty operating agreements
Example: Non-Power Uses Agreement• adjusts Arrow outflows during Jan-Mar for whitefish
spawning, and during April-June for trout spawning (Canadian fish benefit)
• helps smooth the refill of Treaty reservoirs
• enables 1 MAF storage for salmon flow augmentation and helps meet downstream minimum fish flows (U.S. fish benefit)
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Columbia River
Treaty
Actual operations
- Biweekly Treaty study (TSR) provides the base monthly storage targets for all operations of Treaty projects
- U.S. & Canada can mutually agree to deviate from the TSR targets, typically using supplemental agreements
- Weekly conference call (Thursday morning) with U.S. and FortisBC to discuss the Treaty flow agreement for the upcoming week
- Treaty flow agreement is finalized by Friday Noon and implemented on Saturday morning
- Within-week flow shaping needs are accommodated whenever possible
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Columbia River
Treaty
Actual operations (cont.)
- Canada has unilateral rights to flexibility within Canada, i.e. transferring water between Mica, Revelstoke, Arrow, and Duncan reservoirs … limited by flood control curves.
- Examples of this flexibility:• running Mica/Rev more or less than that required by
the TSR study (no Arrow discharge adjustment)• running Duncan more or less than the TSR
requirement (Arrow discharges must be adjusted in this case)
- Activity under the Non-Treaty Storage Agreement is “superimposed on top of” Treaty activity for Mica, Rev, and Arrow
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Columbia River
TreatyLibby Coordination Agreement
- The disagreement:
• U.S. needs to operate Libby as necessary to meet U.S. endangered species law (for sturgeon, trout, salmon)
• Canada believes that it is entitled to a Libby operation which optimizes power benefits
- The solution: LCA, signed in Feb 2000:
• Agreed to disagree on the “legal question”
• Canada gets to provisionally draft Arrow and exchange power with BPA in compensation for the lost power benefits
• January Treaty discharge capped at 80 kcfs
• Canada gets option to do a Libby-Treaty swap
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Columbia River
Treaty
Treaty downstream benefits now return to Canada
- U.S. paid Canada a lump-sum in return for U.S. flood control benefits provided by Canadian Treaty reservoirs.
- In addition, Canada sold its first 30 years of downstream power benefits back to the U.S. to acquire the capital necessary to build the Treaty dams.
- As of April 2003, the 30-year sale was completed. All of the Canadian Entitlement energy and capacity now returns to the Canadian border and is owned by the BC government.
- For 2006-07, energy deliveries peak at 1244 MW and average 488 MW every month. In some hours, these deliveries are used to meet electrical demand within BC.
- Canada’s 50% share of downstream benefits is worth approx. $300 million per year
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Columbia River
Treaty
Treaty Term
The Treaty has no specified end date. However, either government has the option to terminate the Treaty after 60 years (2024) with 10 years’ advance notice (2014).
Upon termination:
• Mica, Arrow, Duncan, and Libby may continue to operate (subject to the Boundary Waters Treaty)
• Canada must provide a certain amount of flood protection for the U.S. for as long as the projects exist
• Canada may continue any Kootenay River diversions (although no diversions have been undertaken so far)
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Columbia River
TreatyNon-Treaty Storage Agreement (current agreement)
- NTSA was signed initially by BC Hydro and BPA in 1984, with two purposes:• to accommodate the filling of Revelstoke Reservoir …
one time benefit• to coordinate additional storage at Mica/Arrow (not
governed by the Treaty) to produce additional energy benefits in both countries … ongoing benefit
- NTSA was expanded by the two parties in 1990
- BCH and BPA have access to 2.25 MAF (each) of storage at Mica
- while the storage is nominally at Mica, NTSA activity affects reservoir levels and discharges at both Mica and Arrow due to Treaty flexibility
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Columbia River
Treaty
NTSA (cont.)
- the “release provisions” of the NTSA expired in June 2004
- both parties have until June 2011 to fully refill their storage accounts
- a significant amount of Non-Treaty storage was refilled during 2006 and 2007
- as of 31 May/07, the Non-Treaty storage space is 78% full (up from 23% full on 1 Jan/06)
- this storage activity improves reservoir levels for Mica &/or Arrow
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Columbia River
TreatyA new coordination agreement ?
- BC Hydro and BPA may consider an agreement to replace the NTSA. BC Hydro’s main goals are:• fair benefits for both countries,• more Canadian control over Kinbasket & Arrow reservoir levels
- A replacement coordination agreement must be flexible enough to meet all of the Water Use Plan (WUP) restrictions for Columbia projects and help meet WUP “soft constraints”
- Discussions are currently on hold. However, there may be an opportunity soon to consider alternatives for a new agreement.
- BCH has committed to Columbia basin stakeholders that it will:• conduct negotiations with recognition of all WUP objectives,• comply with all agreed operating constraints (e.g. WUP),• assess ability to meet WUP soft constraints with new agreement,• bring potential alternatives to stakeholders for comment prior to signing an
agreement
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Columbia River
Treaty
Kootenay Lake IJC Order
- Boundary Waters Treaty signed in 1909 … set up the International Joint Commission (IJC)
- IJC has jurisdiction over all transboundary waters, except where explicitly covered by another agreement (e.g. CRT)
- 1938 IJC Order on Kootenay Lake outlines rules for maximum lake levels
- Kootenay Lake IJC Order is held by FortisBC
- administered by the Kootenay Lake Board of Control
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Columbia River
Treaty
Kootenay Lake IJC curve
Kootenay Lake Flexibility
1735
1740
1745
1750
1755
1-Jan 1-Feb 1-Mar 1-Apr 1-May 1-Jun 1-Jul 1-Aug 1-Sep 1-Oct 1-Nov 1-Dec
Lake
Lev
el (f
t)
2000 2001 2002 Upper Limit Lower Limit
1745.321745.32
1744.00
1742.40
Variable
1739.32
1738.00
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Columbia River
TreatyCanal Plant Agreement
- between BC Hydro, FortisBC, Cominco, & CPC
- implemented in 1975 upon completion of BC Hydro’s Kootenay Canal powerplant
- agreement covers powerplants on the Kootenay and Pend d’Oreille rivers
- BC Hydro schedules releases from Kootenay Lake and directs the powerplant generation
- FortisBC (holder of the Kootenay Lk IJC Order) and other owners can override this direction as necessary to meet legal or reliability requirements
- FortisBC, Cominco, CPC receive fixed energy & capacity entitlement
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Columbia River
Treaty
Arrow Lakes Hydro Agreement
- between BC Hydro and CPC
- covers the Arrow Lakes Hydro (ALH) plant, which was completed in 2002
- BC Hydro directs the ALH generation pattern
- CPC can override this direction as necessary to meet its requirements
- CPC receives firm energy & capacity entitlement
- BC Hydro, in its role as the CRT Canadian Entity, continues to schedule total releases from Arrow Reservoir (via ALH and Keenleyside Dam)
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Columbia River
Treaty
• 1890’s – first powerplants built on Kootenay River
• 1938 - Kootenay Lake IJC Order - allowed storage in Kootenay Lake (Corra Linn)
• 1938-42 - Grand Coulee Dam built (U.S.)
• 1948 - Columbia River flood caused much damage in both countries
• 1961-64 - Columbia River Treaty signed and ratified- sale of first 30 years of Canadian Entitlement to the U.S.
• 1967-73 - Duncan, Arrow (Keenleyside), Mica, and Libby dams completed
• 1975 - Kootenay Canal built, Canal Plant Agreement implemented
• 1984 - Revelstoke project built and Non-Treaty Storage Agreement signed
• 1998-2003 - Treaty Entitlement energy returned to Canada (end of 30-year sale)
• 1999-2007 - Water Use Plan consultative process
• 2002 – Arrow Lakes Hydro plant completed
• 2011 - Non-Treaty Storage Agreement expires, all NTSA storage is refilled
• 2014 - 10-year notice for termination of Columbia River Treaty may be given by either Canada or U.S.
• 2024 - earliest termination date for Columbia River Treaty
Some key dates (historical & future)
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