Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumOh Well!! Louisiana Governor Doesn't Want Project To Rebuild His Sinking, Melting State, Because The Children
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry raised serious objections Thursday to a $3 billion project long hailed as key to restoring the states eroding coastline, decrying the growing cost and predicting dire harm to a coastal culture dependent on fishing, shrimping and oyster dredging. The Republican governors remarks to a Senate committee in Baton Rouge were his most extensive and most decisively negative on the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion project since he took office in January. They come a month after federal authorities warned that money for the project channeled to the state by the federal government would have to be returned if the state could not provide a clear commitment to the plan.
Landry stopped short of calling for an end to the project altogether but said a compromise must be reached with opponents of the project. The chair of the Senate Committee, Republican Sen. Pat Connick, said lawmakers would have to weigh the next move. The project would channel 75,000 cubic feet (2,100 cubic meters) of sediment per second from the Mississippi River into the nearby Barataria Basin in southeast Louisianas Plaquemines Parish to create between 20 to 40 square miles (52 to 104 square kilometers) of new land over five decades.
It has drawn opposition from some in Plaquemines Parish and now Landry. This project is going to break our culture, Landry said, likening the projected damage to shrimp and oyster harvesters to the diminishing of the Cajun French language generations ago when southwest Louisiana school children were forced to speak nothing but English.
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While Landry called the project experimental, Orgeron said other, smaller diversion projects have worked. As we continue to lose wetlands to open water, thats just less and less breeding grounds, less and less protection for all of our juvenile shrimp, crab, finfish, you name it, Corey Miller, community engagement director with the nonprofit Pontchartrain Conservancy, said in an interview. We have to figure out a way to reestablish that connection between the river and our estuaries in order to rebuild deltas to protect all of our communities.
The project was planned in response to a rapidly vanishing coastline caused by a variety of natural and man-made factors. Those include land subsidence, sea-level rise, the cutting of canals through coastal wetlands by oil and gas companies, and the artificial control of the Mississippi River via levee systems that protect populations from floods but also prevent the natural flow of water that would ordinarily deposit sediment and rebuild land. The conservation group Restore the Mississippi River Delta said Landrys remarks represent a dramatic shift in coastal restoration efforts: Not building this project as designed, permitted and funded will put citizens and businesses at increased risk from future storms.
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https://apnews.com/article/louisiana-coastal-wetlands-erosion-diversion-project-550436df014ae03f43512455778a0eb3
BOSSHOG
(40,270 posts)(Like me) but we once did, consider not buying cypress mulch. Its relative to eroding coastline. A small but helpful gesture.