NCACC Unanimously Adopts Resolution Urging Environmental Review Commission to Study Yadkin Project Licensing Options

Released on: August 26, 2008, 9:06 am

Press Release Author: MMI ASSOCIATES, INC.

Industry: Environment

Press Release Summary: Organization Expresses Statewide Support For Study Of Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project, Wants Legislators To Recognize Counties' Opposition To
Relicensing

Press Release Body: RALEIGH, N.C. - The North Carolina Association of County
Commissioners (NCACC) has unanimously passed a resolution supporting the state's
Environmental Review Commission (ERC) study to examine the effects of the Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project relicensing on issues vital to North Carolina's future clean
water supply. The resolution urges the ERC to study all available options to the
State of North Carolina, including the recapture provisions under federal law, as it
reviews the impacts on the State if Alcoa's application for a new 50-year license
for generating hydroelectric power on the Yadkin River, also known as the Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project, is granted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC).

The resolution was adopted at the 101st NCACC Annual Conference in New Bern, N.C. on
August 22. In July, both the General Assembly and Governor Mike Easley charged the
ERC with the task of studying and developing proposals in connection with the
federal relicensing proceeding, which will govern if Alcoa receives an exclusive
license for the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project located in Central North Carolina. At
stake is an estimated $45 million in annual electric power revenue and water rights
that Alcoa's opponents across the state believe should be subject to the control for
the people, not for the benefit of a private multinational corporation. The water
rights to generate electricity over the next 50 years are conservatively valued in
excess of $10 billion.

Over the last six months, resolutions opposing Alcoa's operation of the Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project have been signed by Davidson, Randolph, Iredell, Anson,
Cabarrus and Union County Boards of Commissioners, and the Centralina Council of
Governments. The Yadkin Hydroelectric Project has four hydroelectric stations, dams
and reservoirs along a 38-mile stretch of the Yadkin River, one of the longest
rivers in North Carolina and one of its greatest natural resources. The four water
reservoirs are High Rock, Tuckertown, Narrows and Falls. The Yadkin-Pee Dee
Watershed as a whole includes 21 counties and contains 93 state municipalities.

Alcoa's 1958 FERC license expired on April 30, 2008. Instead of granting Alcoa
another 50-year license, FERC decided only to allow the corporation a one-year
extension. The ERC is expected to issue its final report by Feb. 1, 2009.

The NCACC was established for the betterment of county government in North Carolina
and all 100 counties are represented by the organization. The NCACC serves as the
counties' advocate before the executive, legislative and judicial branches of state
government. The full text of the resolution adopted by the NCACC is as follows:

WHEREAS, the North Carolina General Assembly through Senate Bill 1046 has directed
the Environmental Review Commission to study the impacts on the State of North
Carolina of the potential issuance of a fifty-year license by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission for the operation of the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project by
Alcoa; and

WHEREAS, many of the Counties located within the Yadkin-Pee Dee Watershed have
requested the State of North Carolina to intervene in the ongoing licensing process
before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in opposition to a fifty-year
license being granted to Alcoa; and

WHEREAS, fifty years ago, the federal government allowed Alcoa to use the public
water to generate electricity and create jobs but now, Alcoa has essentially
disappeared as a major employer and provider of jobs, but wants to continue to reap
the benefits of the water that rightly belongs to the people; and

WHEREAS, if the federal government renews Alcoa's license, it will allow Alcoa to
generate power not for job creation but to be sold in the open electricity market
for a substantial profit; and

WHEREAS, essentially, if Alcoa obtains the license renewal, a public river will be
used for the next fifty years solely to maximize Alcoa's profits; and

WHEREAS, in addition to the economic issues, Stanly County is especially concerned
about the history of environmental contamination caused by Alcoa's operations in
Badin;

WHEREAS, all 100 Counties in North Carolina have experienced first hand the impacts
of a drought and given the continued severity of North Carolina's drought, our state
and local leaders must have the ability to make timely and event-specific decisions
about our water supply; and

WHEREAS, if Alcoa is granted another fifty-year license, and the State of North
Carolina wanted to make reasonable use of a reservoir licensed to Alcoa for the
purpose of protecting the public water supply, the State could be required to seek
permission from Alcoa or some other foreign or domestic entity that may acquire
Alcoa's license; and

WHEREAS, the Counties located within the Yadkin-Pee Dee Watershed are faced with the
single most important issue they have known with regard to their environmental and
economic future, the likes of which we will not see for another generation; and

WHEREAS, the Counties located within the Yadkin-Pee Dee Watershed needs our support
in order to ensure a prosperous and more importantly healthy future for their
children and those yet to come;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the North Carolina Association of County
Commissioners urges the Environmental Review Commission to study all available
options to the State of North Carolina, including the recapture provisions under
federal law, when it reviews: (1) the socioeconomic impacts of Alcoa\'s decision to
discontinue its job-producing manufacturing activities at its Badin facility that
relied on the use of low cost power from the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project; (2) the
assurance of an adequate, clean future water supply for the region; and (3) the
allocation of water for non power uses from the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project.

Quotes:
"It is a powerful statement for the North Carolina Association of County
Commissioners to make in encouraging the state to examine all available options
related to the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project relicensing and show respect for our
water rights and public resources," said Stanly County Manager Jerry Myers. "We are
very appreciative of this resolution, and we hope that members of the Environmental
Review Commission study how all counties in the watershed are and will be adversely
affected on many levels by this relicensing if Alcoa retains its monopoly on power
from the Yadkin River."

Related Links:
www.ncacc.org
www.ncwaterrights.com
www.mmimarketing.com/blog/?c=Yadkin-Hydroelectric-Project

About This Effort:
In 1958, Alcoa, the world's leading producer of primary aluminum, secured a federal
hydroelectric license for the Yadkin Project on the Yadkin River in Stanly,
Davidson, Montgomery and Rowan Counties in the Central Piedmont. In return, Alcoa
promised aluminum manufacturing jobs for Stanly County for years to come. Alcoa has
now essentially disappeared as a major employer in the region and shut down its
manufacturing plants, but it wants to continue reaping the benefits of the Yadkin
River after its license expired in April of this year. In addition, Alcoa
discharged hazardous pollutants into North Carolina air and waterways for decades
while harvesting immense profits from the Yadkin River, but has yet to finish
cleaning up that contamination. It has filed an application with the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC) to obtain another 50-year license. If Alcoa is
successful, one of North Carolina's most valuable water resources will be used to
maximize Alcoa's profits, instead of being used to benefit the people of North
Carolina, who themselves are in dire need of affordable electricity, local economic
development, and clean, adequate drinking water.

Patty Briguglio
MMI Associates, Inc.
(919) 233-6600
patty@mmimarketing.com
PR Firms Raleigh, NC

Web Site: http://WWW.MMIMARKETING.COM

Contact Details: Patty Briguglio
MMI Associates, Inc.
(919) 233-6600
patty@mmimarketing.com
PR Firms Raleigh, NC

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