Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 12H— - PACIFIC NORTHWEST ELECTRIC POWER PLANNING AND CONSERVATION › § 839b
Creates a Pacific Northwest Electric Power and Conservation Planning Council made up of two people from each of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington to write a regional conservation and power plan and a program to protect, mitigate, and improve fish and wildlife. Governors appoint members for three-year terms (initially one two-year and one three-year), a majority is a quorum, and plan approval needs a majority including at least one member from each State with members or at least six members. The Council must produce the regional conservation and electric power plan within two years and review it at least every five years. The plan must favor cost‑effective resources in this order: conservation, renewables, waste‑heat/high‑efficiency, then other resources; include a 20‑year demand forecast, conservation programs and model standards, research recommendations, methods to count environmental costs and benefits, and the fish and wildlife program. The Council may recommend surcharges of 10%–50% on customers who do not meet the model conservation standards. The Bonneville Power Administration (Administrator) will pay Council expenses from BPA funds up to 0.02 mill per kilowatt‑hour (which can be raised to 0.10 mill on justification), and member and officer pay cannot exceed the Federal GS‑18 step 1 rate. The Council must make a program for fish and wildlife only for the Columbia River and its tributaries. It must ask Federal, State, and tribal fish and wildlife bodies for recommendations (they have 90 days to reply unless extended), hold public review, and adopt the program within one year after getting recommendations. The program must use the best science, work with agencies and tribes, aim to improve anadromous fish survival and flows, and balance power needs. An Independent Scientific Review Panel of 11 scientists (from a list of at least 20 provided by the National Academy of Sciences) and Peer Review Groups will review proposed projects and make recommendations; their work must meet set deadlines and the provision’s annual cost is capped at $500,000 in 1997 dollars. The Administrator must respond in writing to Council requests within 90 days, and if the Administrator refuses, the Council may ask for an informal hearing within 60 days.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 839b
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83