While dams provide significant benefits, such as reliable water sources and energy with relatively low maintenance costs, these advantages often come at a cost to the environment. Dams can disrupt ecosystems, alter river flows, and generally diminish the natural capital that free-flowing rivers provide.
So what happens when a dam reaches the end of its useful life? Do the benefits still outweigh the environmental costs? By using a cost-benefit approach and considering the potential to restore natural capital through dam removal, we can help find answers to those questions.
Dams provide many important and valuable benefits to society. These benefits have made dams a cornerstone of our national infrastructure and somewhat of a national symbol for the economic innovation of FDR’s New Deal. These benefits include:
However, as these structures age, their long-term sustainability, maintenance costs, and environmental impacts should be carefully evaluated to ensure they remain as net-benefits rather than liabilities.
Dams have long been appreciated for the benefits mentioned above, but they also come with significant downsides, many of which are often overlooked.
As highlighted in this 2014 research paper from Colorado State University, water management decisions frequently fail to account for the hidden value of free-flowing rivers and their ecosystem services. This oversight has the potential to lead to long-term environmental and economic consequences.
Here are some of the significant but often overlooked downsides:
Over time, these water quality issues can threaten both wildlife and human health, driving up water treatment costs and even limiting access to clean drinking water. Many fishermen are probably aware of at least one spot where a sign like this is posted.
Combining these water quality issues with the other effects such as habitat fragmentation and increased risks of failure shows the need to reevaluate aging dams becomes even more pressing.
While dams have helped shape a century and a half of development, many are now potentially more of a burden than a benefit. Recognizing these downsides allows for smarter water management decisions that prioritize healthier rivers, stronger ecosystems, and more resilient communities.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers estimates there are around 90,000 inventoried dams in the United States. Other organizations like American Rivers suggest that the true number may be closer to 400,000 when smaller, undocumented dams are taken into account.
Many of these structures were built in the 1800s or early 1900s, during a period of rapid industrial and agricultural expansion. With an average lifespan of 100 years, countless dams are now aging and in need of repair, replacement, or removal.
Repairing or replacing these aging dams with ones that meet modern standards comes with considerable costs. For many communities, these costs may be completely impractical and offer too little of a return on investment. Dam removal is often cited as a more cost-effective and sustainable solution.
A 2009 report from the Association of State Dam Safety Officials estimated that it would cost around $417,000 (in 2025 USD) to rehabilitate a dam under 15 feet tall. In contrast, removing the same dam would cost about $194,000 (based on this study). Note that these numbers are likely conservative since dam projects often run into unexpected issues. This is especially true when dealing with built-up sediment or pollution left behind from earlier industrial use.
But beyond the lower initial cost, dam removal allows rivers to return to their natural, free-flowing state, gradually undoing many of the negative impacts mentioned earlier. One of nature’s most remarkable qualities is its ability to heal itself. Given the chance and a little time ecosystems can rebound and thrive once again.
The recent removal of four dams on the Klamath River in Oregon and northern California highlight how these additional environmental-based factors might tip the balance in favor of dam removal.
For nearly a century, the Klamath dams blocked salmon and steelhead trout from accessing a large portion of their historical spawning habitat. These dams also tended to cause harmful algae blooms and were one of the identified causes of a plummeting north pacific salmon population. Just to emphasize how dire the situation was for these populations, the current estimation is that they are just 5% of historic averages.
Upgrading these dams to allow for fish passage (an imperfect method) would have cost approximately $500 million. In contrast, removing them is projected to save PacifiCorp customers over $100 million. This value comes with the additional unaccounted for benefits of better water quality, restored habitat, and healthier salmon populations.
The Oregon dam removal is by far the largest dam removal effort in world history. On its completion in 2024, nearly 400 miles of river have been reconnected to the Pacific Ocean.
By removing barriers like these – even the smaller ones – we are making a major investment in the long-term health of our ecosystems, fisheries, and communities across the country.
Restoring and conserving land and freshwater ecosystems are essential for protecting our planet’s natural capital, and you can help make a difference. By supporting Unique Places to Save, you’re directly contributing to the protection of natural resources that benefit all of us. Your efforts help ensure these natural systems continue to provide clean water, fertile soil, and habitats for countless species.
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