The Alaska Energy Authority has responded to letters from the National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that questioned research being done on the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project.
Of the two federal agencies, the National Marine Fisheries Service took a stronger position regarding A-E-A’s ability to produce accurate models of salmon activity in the Susitna River. The NMFS letter cited fourteen areas of concern, including sampling methods and possible misidentification of juvenile fish. The agency says that the problems are significant enough that no further studies should be done until they are resolved.
On Wednesday, AEA labeled the criticism as inaccurate. In a news release, Susitna-Watana Project Manager Wayne Dyok says the NMFS letter, “relies on mischaracterizations and generalizations.” The actual response letter by AEA, which is signed by Dyok, goes even further, saying that assertions made by the Fisheries Service are “untenable, bordering on the absurd.”
AEA’s response letter to the National Marine Fisheries Service totals nearly fifty pages. Most of that is a line-by-line refutation of the concerns listed by NMFS. Many of AEA’s specific responses assert that NMFS is either ignoring the data or misunderstands the methodologies being used. The Alaska Energy Authority maintains that it is following the study plan approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
FERC will have the opportunity to hear out both sides, soon. Meetings are scheduled to start next week to discuss the Susitna-Watana field work. Part of the objective of those meetings is for FERC to decide what, if any, changes need to be made in future field studies.