Engineering News-Record, one of the world’s leading
construction-industry journals, selected Cary Feldmann, senior fisheries
biologist for Puget Sound Energy, as one of the "Top 25 Newsmakers of
2008” for his role in helping PSE build an innovative system to aide
juvenile-salmon migration around tall hydroelectric dams.
The cover
story in the New York-based weekly magazine’s Jan. 12 issue said
Feldmann "supplied the institutional memory and the insights” from three
decades of salmon-enhancement work at PSE to guide the utility’s
development of a new, widely heralded "floating surface collector” at
PSE’s Baker River Hydroelectric Project in northwest Washington.
"This is a great honor not just for Cary and Puget Sound Energy, but for
the many other individuals – both inside and outside our utility – who
were involved in making our new fish collector a success,” said Paul
Wiegand, vice president of Power Generation for PSE.
Feldmann, who has a master’s degree in fisheries science from the
University of Washington, conducted statistical analysis for PSE in the
late 1970s that identified the need for new approaches to save Baker
River sockeye from possible extinction. He subsequently helped refine an
earlier, less sophisticated floating surface collector long used on the
Baker River, and then "guided, inspired, and coordinated development of
[the new] floating surface collector,” the News-Record wrote.
"I’m gratified that this effort has been recognized by the magazine,”
Feldmann said. "The project was a team effort from beginning to end. The
credit shouldn’t go to me; it belongs to a large and dedicated group of
contributors – hydraulic, mechanical and electrical engineers,
biologists, trades people, agency and tribal representatives, and
others.”
The 1,000-ton device floating above the Baker Lake reservoir’s
280-foot-deep bottom is designed to attract and safely capture young
salmon for downstream transport around PSE’s two Baker River
hydroelectric dams. In its first year of operation last spring, the $50
million apparatus induced the highest outmigration rate on record for
juvenile Baker River sockeye. An estimated 90 to 95 percent of the
watershed’s sea-bound sockeye were safely guided into the collector for
water-truck transport around the two North Cascades dams.
The National Marine Fisheries Service says PSE’s new system serves as a
model for other high-reservoir dam operators. Some two dozen domestic
and foreign utilities already have toured PSE’s Baker River operation,
and several are either exploring or actively pursuing fish-migration
systems based on PSE’s so-called "gulper.”
The new floating surface collector is a one-of-a-kind,
130-foot-by-60-foot barge equipped with a series of submerged screens,
water pumps, fish-holding chambers, a fish-evaluation station,
equipment-control rooms, and a fish-loading facility. PSE completed the
collector in March 2008, following several years of collaborative
discussions with outside stakeholders and 14 months of lakeshore
construction.
Government fisheries agencies expect PSE’s new floating surface
collector, together with more than $100 million in other PSE
fish-enhancement projects on which they’re collaborating, to in time
quadruple the Baker River’s already rebounding sockeye numbers.
Since 1964 Engineering News-Record editors annually choose 25
"Top Newsmakers” they collectively decide have served the best interests
of the construction industry and the public. No outside nominations are
allowed. To be eligible, a person, or the project they worked on, must
have been covered in the pages of the magazine or on its Web site. The News-Record
wrote a story
about PSE’s floating surface collector in January 2008.
Feldmann, 58, and the other 2008 Newsmakers all will be recognized by
the News-Record at a dinner in New York City in March or April.
One of the 25 will receive the magazine’s Award of Excellence for making
the most significant contribution to the industry during the past year.
For more information about PSE’s floating surface collector and to see a video
on its design and function, visit PSE’s Web site at PSE.com and click on
the Energy
& Environment tab.
About Puget Sound Energy
Washington state’s oldest and largest energy utility, with a
6,000-square-mile service area stretching across 11 counties, Puget
Sound Energy serves more than 1 million electric customers and nearly
750,000 natural gas customers.
PSE, a subsidiary of Puget Energy
(NYSE:PSD), meets the energy needs of its growing customer base
primarily in Western Washington through incremental, cost-effective
energy conservation, procurement of sustainable energy resources, and
far-sighted investment in the energy-delivery infrastructure. PSE
employees are dedicated to providing great customer service to deliver
energy that is safe, reliable, reasonably priced, and environmentally
responsible. For more information, visit www.PSE.com.