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Mr. Go is Gone (Almost)

About thirty miles from my front door, heavy barges are dumping rocks into Louisiana's Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet (MRGO), hoping to permanently plug the de-commissioned shipping channel before the end of the next hurricane season. It's a big plug. The New Orleans Times-Picayune reports that the structure will weigh 430,000 tons, "with a base 450 feet wide, tapering to 12 feet wide at the top." The rock wall "will jut 7 feet from the water's surface and be 950 feet long. It will cover 10 acres of the channel bottom." The MRGO--or as locals say, "Mr. Go"-- opened some 45 years ago as a shipping shortcut – sort of like a highway bypass that, in this case, allows commercial river barges to avoid a winding part of the Mississippi and instead zip straight to New Orleans. Activists have been trying to close it down for almost as long, citing environmental, economic, and safety concerns. After Hurricane Katrina, an independent investigation by Louisiana State University in 2006 found that Mr. Go had amplified flood damage by funneling the storm's surge into the heart of New Orleans. "Surge elevations," it said, "peaked in Lake Borgne and the Inner Harbor Navigation Canal at nearly the same time, and at higher levels . . . than would have been true if the MRGO did not exist and had not caused so much wetland loss."  The Army Corps disputes the claim, arguing that Katrina’s surge was too large for the channel to have made a difference.  Last week a local environmental consultant suggested to me that Mr. Go could not have funneled Katrina's storm surge because the channel's earthen walls had disintegrated before the big water had even arrived. When failed levees are the good news, you know you're in trouble. We'll probably never know for sure how Mr. Go affected Katrina's path. But we know this: during its 45-year tenure Mr. Go demolished thousands of acres of protective wetlands and became one of the region’s most outrageous boondoggles. The construction of the channel, along with decades of erosion, have caused the loss of nearly 28,000 acres of cypress swamps and marsh and has converted another 38,000 acres to less stable, higher-salinity habitats. In some sections, Mr. Go is now more than 2,000 feet wide at the surface. Louisiana's wetlands are part of the Gulf's "green infrastructure," supporting fisheries, regulating salinity, and buffering inland communities from angry storms. For these reasons, the Army Corps is also developing a plan to restore surrounding marshland, build new barrier islands, and divert freshwater from the Mississippi River. (For an interactive map showing what needs to be done, go here.) Mr. Go has also been an economic burden. Despite the Army Corps's early optimistic forecasts, shipping traffic never did reach expected levels even as maintenance costs increased. Until recently taxpayers spent $22 million a year in dredging to accommodate a small number of shippers whose business contributed less than $1 million a year to the Port of New Orleans.

 

The saga of Mr. Go is just a tiny example of how Louisiana's watery savannas have been abused over the years. Louisiana’s coastal plain contains one of the largest expanses of coastal wetlands in the contiguous United States. They are, to quote from the Army Corps of Engineers, one of “the most productive and important natural assets” in the country. Twenty percent of the seafood consumed in the United States is taken from Gulf waters, most of it nourished by the wetlands. Millions of migratory birds, important to the birding and hunting industries, depend on the state's marshes for rest and refueling. Unbelievably, this titan among wetlands is disappearing before our very eyes. Today, the Army Corps Engineers believes Louisiana is losing about 6,600 acres coastal wetlands every year. Channels like Mr. Go are a major cause. Louisiana’s coastal plain is crisscrossed with a vast matrix of navigational canals, including ten major navigational channels and literally thousands of smaller access canals serving navigation, allowing oil rig access, and cradling oil and gas pipelines. From a skiff or canoe, these swamps look lusty and vital. But from a plane, the view is depressing—like green shag carpet being eaten by a Pac-Man.

 

To add insult to injury, while the entire nation benefits from all that transportation and energy production, it’s only Louisiana that foots the environmental cost. And when we demand that the federal government restore the wetlands erased by federal projects like Mr. Go, the feds demand state matching funds to demonstrate our “commitment” to having healthy resources. (For instance, the feds are willing to pay the full costs of Mr. Go’s rock barrier, but want the state to pay 35 percent of the costs to replace the wetlands.) Or when local activists demand that Big Oil contribute its share to restoring the wetlands that it has helped destroy, locals are told (by both industry and the state) that it is rude to "point fingers."

 

So please applaud the closing of Mr. Go. But don't forget that American's wetland has many more holes to plug. Who's willing to drop the next stone?  

Showing 2,822 results

Robert Verchick | February 9, 2009

Mr. Go is Gone (Almost)

About thirty miles from my front door, heavy barges are dumping rocks into Louisiana’s Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet (MRGO), hoping to permanently plug the de-commissioned shipping channel before the end of the next hurricane season. It’s a big plug. The New Orleans Times-Picayune reports that the structure will weigh 430,000 tons, “with a base 450 feet […]

Margaret Clune Giblin | February 6, 2009

The Scalpel or the Hatchet? Applying Common-Sense Planning to Water Management

One logical response to the constant news of the economic recession is cutting back on discretionary purchases and developing a household budget.  That is, if we know that times are tough and that we may encounter difficulties sustaining the lifestyle we’ve grown accustomed to, we take stock of our circumstances and plan for the future.  […]

Matt Shudtz | February 5, 2009

Out of Hibernation

More evidence that EPA is starting to find its bearings after eight years of hibernation: in an interim report on the year-old Nanoscale Materials Stewardship Program, EPA admits that asking companies who work on nanomaterials to voluntarily conduct and disclose research on health and environmental hazards isn’t producing much useful information. As a result, the […]

James Goodwin | February 4, 2009

Revoking EO 13422: An Important First Step Toward Fixing the Regulatory System

Observers concerned with the current dysfunctional state of the U.S. regulatory system will be letting out a collective sigh of relief following the publication of Executive Order 13497.  Among other things, this Order officially revokes the controversial Executive Order 13422, issued during George W. Bush Administration. Issued in 2007, Executive Order 13422 amended President Clinton’s […]

A. Dan Tarlock, Holly Doremus | February 3, 2009

Takings Claims in the Klamath Basin

Tarlock and Doremus are co-authors of Water War in the Klamath Basin: Macho Law, Combat Biology, and Dirty Politics, published by Island Press in 2008. Last week, the Oregon Supreme Court agreed to decide whether irrigators in the Klamath Basin "own" water delivered by the federal Klamath Reclamation Project. This latest development is one more […]

Sidney A. Shapiro | February 2, 2009

President Obama’s FOIA Order

On January 21, 2009, President Obama issued a Presidential Memorandum that I’m hopeful will be the start of undoing much of the excessive secrecy practiced by the previous administration. The memorandum, established that the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) “should be administered with a clear presumption: In the face of doubt, openness prevails.” A recent […]

Yee Huang | January 30, 2009

Digital Signals E-Waste: Not In My Backyard

When analog signals for broadcast television end on February 17, one problem of the digital signal switch for televisions will remain: what to do with older televisions that are incompatible with digital signals.  While the federal government is providing rebates to purchasers of converter boxes for older televisions, the boxes are simply a stopgap measure […]

Margaret Clune Giblin | January 29, 2009

Studies Highlight Need for Natural Resource Adaptation Measures

This week, there’s been good news from the Obama Administration regarding climate change policy.  California will likely get that waiver under the Clean Air Act allowing it to set stricter emissions standards for cars.  Additionally, Lisa Jackson, the new Administrator of EPA, indicated in an e-mail (subscription required) to agency employees that the agency will […]

Holly Doremus | January 28, 2009

More Accusations of Politics Trumping Science and Law at Interior

Cross-posted from Environment & Law.   The Washington Post reports that officials at the Department of Interior ignored “key scientific findings” and the views of National Park Service officials “when they limited water flows in the Grand Canyon to optimize generation of electric power there, risking damage to the ecology of the spectacular national landmark.” […]