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Idaho Statesman: Northwest leaders see bigger, greener power grid
Like the Great Depression that gave birth to hydroelectric dams, today's crisis could usher in a green energy revolution for the region.

Portland Tribune: Tax breaks for wind power irk some
Wind business thrives without subsidies, argues former teacher 

 The Oregonian: Land deal returns slice of Klamath tribal homeland

Kitsap Sun: Dispute Over Cushman Project Could Be Settled Soon

 Oregonian Editorial: Dams, wind, power and politics 

 Contra Costa Times: Feinstein: Delay new water restrictions for fish

Vancouver Sun: Seven killer whales disappear from B.C.'s south coast

Victoria Times-Colonists: Monitoring gaps endanger salmon runs:
Lack of accurate stock information leads to overfishing, scientists say

The Los Angeles Times: The spotted owl disappearing act

The Oregonian: Coastal salmon at center of forest debate

Indian Country Today: Awaiting Klamath Dam removal

The Missoulian: Group files suit to halt Forest Service's herbicide use

Toronto Globe and Mail: Environmentalists worried by fish-farm sector's push for expanding facilities

 

 


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Latest CBB News > Archives > Dec. 1, 2006
Dec. 1, 2006

RESEARCH COULD AID IN PREDICTING TIMING OF SALMON RETURNS
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
An increasingly volatile climate over the past decade provides environmental clues to better predict just when Columbia River basin spring chinook salmon will make their spawning surge upriver, according to a study conducted this year by University of Idaho researchers. Read More...  

FEDS DETAIL PLANS TO DISPERSE WORLD’S LARGEST TERN COLONY
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday announced that they had made official their intent to disperse a majority of the world's largest colony of Caspian terns from their East Sand Island nesting site in the Columbia River estuary. Read More...  

STATES SEEK LETHAL MEANS AS OPTION ON UPRIVER SEA LIONS
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
Fish management agencies from Oregon, Washington and Idaho announced this week that they have asked the federal government for permission to use lethal means, as a last resort, to remove individual California sea lions that prey on chinook salmon and steelhead below the Columbia River's Bonneville Dam. Read More...  

CORPS DETAILS EVENTS LEADING TO KOOTENAI RIVER FLOODING
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers admits in a recent report that spilling and flooding on Montana's Kootenai River last spring could have been avoided had Libby Dam operators followed a variable discharge protocol rather than trying to refill Lake Koocanusa. Read More...  

BUREAU, STATE MOVE FORWARD ON YAKIMA BASIN STORAGE STUDY
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
The Bureau of Reclamation and Washington Department of Ecology announced this week their decision to move forward into the feasibility phase of a storage study designed to bring more water to the Yakima River basin. Read More...  

WET NOVEMBER MIGHT HELP MITIGATE COMING EL NINO IMPACTS
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
A sodden November across much of the Columbia River basin may well have provided water users with a hedge against "El Nino" conditions that are expected to settle into the region for the winter. Read More...  

UW CLIMATE IMPACTS GROUP PROPOSES NATIONAL CLIMATE SERVICE
Posted on Friday, December 01, 2006 (PST)
It's time for the United States to have a national climate service -- an interagency partnership led by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and charged with understanding climate dynamics, forecasts and impacts -- say six members of the University of Washington's Climate Impacts Group. Read More...  

 

THIS MONTH'S MOST VIEWED CBB STORIES

Preseason 2009 Forecasts Show Big Returns For Upriver Spring Chinook, Fall Chinook 

 New Theory For How Salmon Find Their Birthplace: Reading The Magnetic Field 

NOAA To Launch ESA Review Of 100 Federally Funded Basin Hatchery Programs 

 University Of Idaho Research Looks At Adult "Fallback" Between Barged, In-River Fish

Fish-like Machine Turns Slow Ocean, River Currents Into Alternative Energy Source 

BiOp Challengers File Injunction Request Calling For Increased Spill, Flow, John Day Drawdown

NOAA Pesticides BiOp Says Three Chemicals Endanger Salmon; Calls For Buffer Zones

 Will Review Mandated By Congress Shift Columbia Basin Hatchery, Harvest Strategies?

 New Study: Salmon Smolt Survival Similar In Dammed Columbia, Undammed Fraser

 Study Establishes Formula For Predicting Climate Change Impact On Salmon Stocks

Climate, Streamflow Predictions For Winter 2008-2009? Hard To Say

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