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 PGE Home >> Our Community & Environment >> Hydropower & Fish >> Deschutes River
Restoring Runs Above Pelton
Pelton in the news
  • 3/24/08 KOHD TV (video)
  • 3/24/08 The Oregonian

  • Pelton Round Butte resources
  • Fact sheet
  • Fish migration after improvements (map)
  • Lake Billy Chinook currents before the project* (PDF)
  • Lake Billy Chinook currents after the project* (PDF)
  • Illustration of current flow and tower
  • Underwater tower
  • Regional map* (PDF)
  • Photos
  • Fish counts
  • Steelhead release
  • Pelton Historically, both summer steelhead and spring Chinook salmon migrated to their spawning grounds in the upper Deschutes, Metolius and Crooked Rivers. Although Pelton Round Butte was constructed with fish-passage facilities, the downstream system failed.

    New Web site on Deschutes passage project
    PGE is working on a project that will allow salmon and steelhead to migrate past three Deschutes River three dams for the first time since 1968. For the full story and the latest news, explore DeschutesPassage.com, a PGE Web site dedicated to this project.

    The downstream fish passage problem was created in large part by the currents in Lake Billy Chinook (PDF*) swirling in eddies with no particular direction. Juvenile salmon and steelhead rarely found their way toward the Pacific.

    To address the problem, PGE and the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs will build a $108 million 273-foot underwater tower that rises from the lake bottom behind Round Butte Dam. A large V-screen at the top of the tower will allow the surface water to mix with colder Metolius River water, altering the current (PDF*) and attracting fish.

    Fish will be screened at the intake and trucked downstream of the dams for release on their journey to the Pacific. The tower will also allow PGE to better mimic pre-project temperatures in the Deschutes River.

    Steelhead and spring Chinook fry released
    In May 2007, tens of thousands of steelhead fry were released into Whychus Creek, a tributary of the Deschutes River. February 2008 saw 150,000 spring Chinook fry released into the upper Metolious River in collaboration with the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

    In spring 2009, when both species are ready to migrate to the Pacific, the new fish passage system will be completed. Adult fish should return above the project in 2010 or 2011.

    These improvements will potentially reopen a new fish passage area of 226 stream miles to salmon and steelhead migration.

    $130 million investment
    PGE and the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation will invest more than $130 million over the next 50 years for fish-related work in the Deschutes basin.

    *Note: You will need the Adobe® Acrobat® Reader to view and print PDF files. Visit the Adobe Web site for downloading instructions.