The Department of Ecology (ECY) issues Clean Water Act water quality certifications to hydroelectric dam operators licensed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). After the FERC license and water quality certificate have been issued for a project, the water quality protection criteria are monitored, and permit condition compliance is overseen by the ECY and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW).
Most claimants to water intended to be used for power development are required to pay an annual fee to the ECY, which is deposited into the Reclamation Account. The fees for water power development are based on a two-step model that considers theoretical horsepower generated. The first step is the base fee paid by all water power claimants. Base fees are calculated using the following formula:
In addition to the base fee, all water power generation facilities that are required to be licensed by the FERC must, until June 30, 2017, pay an additional fee. The additional fees are calculated using the following formula:
The base fee and the second fee paid by facilities licensed by the FERC are additive until June 30, 2023, when the additional fee expires and all facilities are only required to pay the base fee. These funds are used by the ECY and the WDFW to assist power generation facilities in meeting environmental regulatory requirements and other requirements associated with the FERC licensing process.
The ECY submits a biennial report to the Legislature describing how license fees were spent on the ECY and the WDFW's water quality certification work for the FERC-licensed hydropower projects.
The secondary fee, paid by FERC-licensed water power generation facilities expires on June 30, 2029, rather than June 30, 2023.
(In support) The work that the WDFW and Department of Ecology do with energy utilities is vital to ensure dams minimize their impacts to salmon and water flows. The fee paid by Federal Energy Regulatory Commission-licensed hydropower facilities (FERC fee) made permanent in this bill helps modernize dam operations. The bill would allow the state to continue generating clean power and support salmon recovery. Washington has more hydropower generation than any other state, but there are also impacts to natural resources, and agencies play a critical role in mitigating those impacts. The FERC fee is working as intended.
(Opposed) The state has enough taxes and fees already. Having a sunset date for the FERC fee, as in current law, improves the accountability of all stakeholders. Discussions of the FERC fee sunsets over the years have allowed further Public Utility District participation. The FERC fee is not equitable, as some fee payers pay comparatively more than they receive in agency staff time. Public Utility Districts pay the FERC fee even when relicensing is far into the future. The FERC fee is important for the retention of Ecology staff but should be extended rather than made permanent.