Economists report on cost-effectiveness Of Columbia River Basin fish
hatcheries
July 19, 2002
YAKIMA ? As a first step toward developing a cost-effectiveness
review process for proposals to build new fish hatcheries in the
Columbia River Basin, a panel of independent economists reported to the
Council this week in Yakima on the costs of rearing and releasing fish,
based on a review of eight hatcheries. According to the report, the cost
of rearing fish ranges from a low of about eight cents per fish to a
high of about $2.60 per fish, but that the cost per surviving adult,
particularly those that are caught by fishers, is vastly higher. That is
largely because many more fish are released from hatcheries than return
as adults.
In the report, ?Artificial
Production Review ? Economics Analysis, Phase 1?, economists
recommended that the Council fund a second phase of the study to develop
a larger database of cost and fish production information.
The Independent Economic Analysis Board, which is headed by Daniel
Huppert of the University of Washington, studied a sample of hatcheries
? there are more than 100 in the Columbia River Basin ? that
differed in the type of facility and in their geography. The eight
facilities ranged from the mouth of the Columbia River, near Astoria,
north to the upper reaches of salmon and steelhead distribution on the
Columbia near Leavenworth, Washington, and east to the upper Salmon
River of Idaho. Annual costs for the hatcheries ranged from $527,000 at
the Priest Rapids hatchery in Washington to $5.25 million for the Nez
Perce Tribal Hatchery in Idaho. The Nez Perce hatchery costs are
estimates, as the facility is under construction.
Cost-effectiveness information could help decisionmakers analyze fish
harvest regulations as well the cost-effectiveness of hatcheries and
their specific purposes, Huppert told the Council. The economists
believe that an analytical approach, if expanded with a broader hatchery
cost database than currently is available, could be used to screen new
artificial production proposals as long as the goals for each new
facility are clear and quantifiable. Huppert said the panel also could
work on developing a separate type of analysis to evaluate the potential
economic benefits of fish hatcheries.
Currently, the Council is conducting an evaluation of hatcheries in
the Columbia River Basin, in collaboration with state and federal fish
and wildlife agencies and Indian tribes. Improving the database of fish
production and costs is one goal of that effort.
While the decision to build a new hatchery does not rest solely on
economics, a cost-effectiveness analysis of a new hatchery compared to
existing facilities and their known costs could help the Council and
other decisionmakers select projects that provide biological benefits at
the lowest cost to the public, the economists reported. But other
criteria are equally if not more important than cost-effectiveness. A
hatchery may be needed to help recover an endangered or threatened
species, or to provide fish for a particular fishery.
?No single number or analysis will provide a comprehensive review
of artificial production projects,? the panel reported. ?However, to
the extent that hatcheries have in common the production of fish, it
should be possible to make useful comparisons across artificial
production projects.?
The Council is an agency of the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington and is directed by the Northwest Power Act of 1980 to prepare
a program to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife of the
Columbia River Basin affected by hydropower dams while also assuring the
region an adequate, efficient, economical and reliable power supply.
Contact: John Harrison, Information Officer, 503-222-5161,
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