HomeMy WebLinkAboutPlanning Processes for Development of Large Dams 2003Planning Processes for
the Development of
Dams and Reservoirs
A Framework for
Successful
Decision-Making
June 2003
Public Involvement
and
Alternatives Analysis:
Executive Summary
USSD
White Paper
Introduction
This Executive Summary is based on a USSD White Paper released in June 2003. The White Paper presents a
multidisciplinary decision-making process for the development of dams and reservoirs focusing on public
involvement and the analysis of alternatives.
Values and Importance
Water is a necessity for progress and quality of life for both society and the natural environment. It is perhaps
the most important commodity today to all people. Although always important, opinions about its use and
control are both universal and diverse. Water, although abundant when considered in the whole of the world or
the United States, is unevenly distributed in both space (location) and time. Both scarcity and flooding are
problems that can cause great harm both to society and the natural environment. Safe and reliable access to
water resources is a cornerstone of a society that is healthy and prosperous. Redistributing the availability of
water in either time or space, or both, is the primary purpose of dams and reservoirs.
However, the development of dams and reservoirs generally requires a major investment of public resources.
Usually both financial and natural resources are required. Because of this, successful decision-making and
credible project planning need to be founded on the values of equity, efficiency, accountability, sustainability
and participatory decision-making. These values were specifically identified in the report issued in 2000 by the
World Commission on Dams (WCD). These values, although not directly named, had begun to become the
foundation of planning reports for dams and reservoirs in the United States during the late 1980s and early
1990s.
Meeting the needs of a society and achieving the purpose of a project are more important than implementing a
particular project. A project sponsor must be accountable for efficient investment of public resources and equity
among those obtaining value from the project and those making investments and sacrifices to bring the project
about. The achievement of the project’s purpose must be balanced with the continuation and sustainability of
resources for other and future purposes of society. The balances required in modern planning and
decision-making processes can most effectively be achieved through participatory, multidisciplinary
decision-making processes.
The successful plan is one that can be implemented in a timely manner and sustained, even in the face of
future challenges. A good planning decision-making process can be compared to a process for determining the
most likely successful course of action.
Water is a necessity for progress and quality of life for both
society and the natural environment. It is perhaps the most
important commodity today to all people.
Public Involvement
A potential dam and reservoir project has a wide
range of stakeholders. In addition to the project
sponsor, stakeholders include policy makers,
regulators, investors, special interest groups and the
general public. A successful project will involve all of
these stakeholders so that their needs, concerns and
issues are met or addressed.
The core values identified in the WCD report —
equity, efficiency, participatory decision-making,
sustainability and accountability — can also be
applied to the public involvement component of a
project. These values lead to a public involvement
program that draws stakeholders and interested
members of the public into the project
decision-making process in order to develop a
shared solution. When practiced honestly,
consistently and in a timely manner, public
involvement helps ensure project acceptance and
implementation. The public involvement program
reflects the respect that the project sponsor holds for
the public or community served by the sponsor.
The first principle of a public involvement program is
that an informed laity is necessary for meaningful
public participation. Secondly, each discipline
represented on the project team needs to have an
understanding and appreciation of the roles,
responsibilities and legal requirements and
constraints of the other disciplines, including public
involvement. Public involvement is a valuable
component of project development that can support
the technical work, identify issues and potential
problems early in the process and assist a project
team in addressing and resolving issues at the
earliest stage. Third, societal and cultural values
must be identified and the project team should
assess how the project relates to those values so
that they can articulate the costs and benefits of the
project to the public. Finally, the value statement
expressed by these principles is that the public
involvement process will go beyond the minimum
requirements of law, since early and meaningful
public input is critical to efficient and effective
utilization of project team resources to maintain the
project schedule and manage the cost of the study.
A framework for evaluating the role of stakeholders
in project activities is presented in the table Nature
of Stakeholder Involvement, found on the following
page.
Need and Purpose
Water resource development projects evolve from
one or more water resource needs identified in any
given region. Establishing a well-conceived
statement of the need and purpose is a crucial step
in validating and fully defining the range of needs
and, ultimately, the plan for a water resource
development project. The process is interactive
throughout the project planning stage. Additional
needs may be revealed as project planning unfolds
and new facts, input from stakeholders, constraints,
opportunities, sources of funding or other factors are
revealed. Without a well-defined statement of need
and purpose, it becomes difficult to develop
practicable, prudent and reasonable alternatives.
Ultimately the cost (and consequences) of the
no-action (or denied project) alternative is defined by
the need and purpose of the project. Without a clear
statement of need and purpose, consequences of
no-action may be elusive to the public, regulatory
agencies and even the project sponsor’s own staff,
consultants and contractors.
Alternatives Formulation
The process of alternatives formulation is directly tied
to the need for and purpose of the project. Although
there are usually a number of different ways to meet
the stated needs of a project, it is not necessary to
consider every conceivable option. Rather, a
reasonable number of alternatives should be
identified among the broad range of available
options. The alternatives formulation process needs
to be carried out from two perspectives: a means and
analysis perspective, and a components and location
perspective. These two perspectives consider
structural and non-structural means of accomplishing
the need and purpose of the project, establishing
alternatives selection criteria, establishing data
collection requirements, producing the initial set of
potential alternatives, defining the location and basic
physical elements of project alternatives, and refining
the description of the initial alternatives.
Project Activity Project Sponsor Regulators Involved Public General Public
Need & Purpose Identify Acknowledge Advise Be Informed
Alternatives
Development Formulate Be Informed Advise Be Informed
Screening of
Alternatives Conduct Review Participate Be Informed
Project Selection Decide Review Advise Be Informed
Final Approval of
Project Decide Permit
Review &
Comment
Review &
Comment
Final Design
Implement
Commitments Review & Approve Advise Be Informed
Construction Implement
Commitments Monitor & Approve Express Concerns Be Informed
Operation Implement
Commitments Monitor & Cite Express Concerns Be Informed
•Involvement of the General Public is dependent on the type of project, whether there is a vote on the project or its
financing, and the proximity of the project to residents.
•Members of the General Public may move from a more passive “Be Informed” role to a more involved role if they are
directly impacted (for example, by construction).
•Individuals who were part of the Involved Public category may move into the General Public category if there are no
longer issues they care deeply about or they are not impacted by the project any longer (for example, a different site
was selected and they are no longer in close proximity).
Nature of Stakeholder Involvement
Stakeholders
Screening of Alternatives
The purpose of the alternatives screening (or
comparison) process is to systematically reduce a
relatively large number of alternatives to a final few.
The process must be objective, defensible and
unbiased. This process should be defined, in writing,
in advance of its application but after the general
range of alternatives is known. It is generally
finalized during the data collection stage of
alternatives formulation. A competent screening
process, such as diagramed below will:
•Include considerations that are important to
the project sponsor, regulatory agencies and
other stakeholders.
•Allow for comparison of alternatives that are
diverse.
•Allow for consideration of engineering,
environmental, social, operational and cost
factors.
•Allow for testing of screening results using
sensitivity analyses.
•Provide for public involvement in its function.
Screening Process
GENERAL
SPECIFICFramework for Screening Application to
One Alternative
Comparison
of Alternatives
Compare
Alternatives
Based on Their
Scores
Measurable
Criteria
Establish
Overall Goals
Measurement
Method for
Each Criterion
System to
Convert
Measurements
to “Scores”
Relative
Importance
of Criteria
(Baseline)
Relative
Importance
of Criteria
(Sensitivity)
Obtain
Measurements
for Criteria
Convert
Criterion
Measurements to
Criterion Scores
Calculate
Weighted
Score of Each
Criterion
Total Score
of Alternative
SPECIFIC
GENERAL
The Final Decision
The final decision as to whether to carry out a project
at all and which particular project alternative is to be
implemented rests with the project sponsor — the
entity that will perform (or construct) the project, will
be held accountable for the project’s success or
failure, and must be capable of obtaining the
resources (revenue and mitigation) to make the
investments required to implement the project. An
entity with such responsibilities cannot be an ad hoc
public participation group, a permitting agency or a
lending agency.
However, entities other than the project sponsor,
such as regulators, have a legitimate role,
responsibility and authority in meeting other societal
values in the protection of public resources — fiscal
and environmental, as well as individual rights. As
such, these entities will review the sponsor’s final
decision in their role as “secondary”
decision-makers. In this role, they can deny the
implementation of a project without otherwise rising
to meet the societal need and purpose of the project.
A competent decision-making process must
recognize both the responsibilities and limitations of
the “secondary” decision-makers and lend credibility
and accountability to their responsibilities.
“Secondary” decision-makers are generally involved
in one of three areas of project implementation:
Permitting, Financing or Property Acquisition.
Accountability During Project
Implementation
Project management processes for scheduling,
reporting and control during project implementation
have traditionally addressed only technical logic and
resource requirements. However, accountability of all
required societal investments in the project should be
maintained during the design, construction and
operation of a project. This means that the
implementation plan must account for all
commitments made during the planning phase of a
project. Failure of the project sponsor to provide
accountability for the commitments made to
“secondary" decision-makers risks the imposition of
penalties or suspension of the project. The
implementation plan, therefore, also needs to
account for and demonstrate compliance with all of
the environmental mitigation commitments made
during the planning phase. The evaluation criteria
used in the screening process can provide an initial
outline for key elements of project quality assurance
plans and mitigation monitoring and reporting plans
as elements of a project implementation plan.
Stakeholder participation needs to continue into
project implementation to demonstrate that
commitments made during the planning phase are
being adhered to, that good stewardship of societal
investments is being practiced, and that
requirements for societal investments are distributed
equitably. Even during implementation, the public
involvement program needs to emphasize the value
to society that will be achieved by the project in
meeting its need and purpose. And, conversely, it
also needs to point out the values that will be denied
to society if the project fails to be completed for any
reason.
Summary
Responsible planning for dams and reservoirs
requires decision-making and planning
processes that are founded on the values of
equity, efficiency, accountability, sustainability
and participatory decision-making.
Alternatives development and screening processes need to be based on a well-defined
statement of project need and purpose. The public needs to be directly involved in the
development and workings of both of these processes. The purpose of the planning phase
decision-making process is to effectively identify project alternatives that successfully meet
the identified societal need and project purpose with an efficient investment of public
resources. Accountability and public participation in this process lead to a decision that can
be implemented and sustained. The process supports our professional responsibilities for
stewardship and the sustainability of public resources in the development of dams and
reservoirs for promoting and sustaining a healthy and prosperous society.
The authors acknowledge and express their appreciation to the USSD Committee on Public Awareness for their
review and guidance in the preparation of the White Paper, to the San Diego County Water Authority for the
use of its Emergency Storage Project as case examples in the White Paper, and to C.V.J. Varma, President of
the International Commission on Large Dams, whose address to the 22nd Annual USSD Conference helped
form the introductory sections of the White Paper.
Thomas O. Keller, P.E., G.E.
Principal
GEI Consultants, Inc.
2141 Palomar Airport Road,
Suite 160
Carlsbad, CA 92009
760-929-9136
Kenneth A. Steele, P.E.
Principal Engineer
San Diego County
Water Authority
4677 Overland Avenue
San Diego, CA 92123
858-522-6600
Patricia A. Tennyson
Vice President
Katz & Associates, Inc.
4250 Executive Square,
Suite 670
La Jolla, CA 92037
858-452-0031
Jack L. White, M.A.
Vice President/Principal
EDAW, Inc.
1420 Kettner Boulevard,
Suite 620
San Diego, CA 92101
619-233-1454
The United States Society on Dams (USSD), a Member
of the International Commission on Large Dams, is a
professional organization dedicated to:
•advancing the technology of dam engineering, construction,
operation, maintenance and safety;
•fostering socially, environmentally and financially responsible water
resources projects; and
•promoting public awareness of the role of dams in the beneficial and
sustainable development of the nation’s water resources.
Membership in USSD is open to all professionals involved in dam engineering and
the associated management, environmental, financial and social disciplines. For
more information about USSD membership opportunities and the Society’s
Publications for Sale (including the White Paper Planning Processes for the
Development of Dams and Reservoirs — Public Involvement and Alternatives
Analysis: A Framework for Successful Decision-Making) contact:
U.S. Society on Dams
1616 Seventeenth Street, #483
Denver, CO 80202
Telephone: 303-628-5430
Fax: 303-628-5431
E-mail: stephens@ussdams.org
Internet: www.ussdams.org