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Commission hears Pacific Salmon Treaty briefing as renegotiation approaches

Fish and Wildlife Commission · April 17, 2026

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Summary

Phil Anderson told the commission the Pacific Salmon Treaty guides cross-border salmon management, highlighted threats to Washington coastal Chinook, outlined renegotiation timing (bilateral talks expected in September) and described grant and endowment funding that supports conservation projects.

The commission heard a briefing on the Pacific Salmon Treaty from Phil Anderson, the U.S. commissioner representing Washington and Oregon and current chair of the commission. Anderson framed the treaty as a core instrument for coordinating international management of Pacific salmon stocks and described upcoming renegotiations that aim for implementation beginning in 2029.

Anderson reviewed treaty history and structure, noting 10-year agreements that currently run through Dec. 31, 2028. He described treaty chapters and stock-based management (Chinook, coho, Fraser River sockeye, etc.), and stressed that interception of Washington-origin salmon in northern fisheries is a central concern for coastal Chinook stocks.

Funding and outcomes: Anderson summarized finance mechanisms established during past renegotiations'two endowment funds (Northern and Southern) seeded with federal funds (cited $55 million for the Southern Fund and $65 million for the Northern Fund) that, by 2004, supported conservation grants; he said roughly $155 million in grants have been awarded to more than 1,900 projects since that time and cited a recent year in which the Southern Fund invested about $4.62 million across 47 projects. Anderson also said WDFW has increased PSC-related contributions and that he worked to secure more federal support for state implementation.

Process and timeline: Anderson said the U.S. must secure Section 107 approval before bilateral talks with Canada; that approval had not yet been received, and bilateral sessions are not expected to begin until early September. He described a negotiation timetable that would allow about 15 months to complete technical and legal reviews so a renewed set of agreements could be ready for implementation in January 2029.

Commissioners asked whether the negotiation agenda includes economic analysis; Anderson said an economic study is beginning to inform U.S. positions, and he emphasized that conservation is the primary priority, followed by fair allocation, with economics considered after those objectives. Commissioners also pressed about impacts from Alaska and Canadian fisheries; Anderson said quota reductions and tracking of exploitation rates are part of the negotiation dialogue and that impacts vary by stock and region.

Anderson closed by offering to return with updates and by encouraging continued stakeholder engagement, including with groups such as Wild Fish Conservancy and tribes that participate on PSC panels and technical committees.