Category Archives: BP Oil Disaster

Show your support for the RESTORE Act in our social media week of action

From Mobile to Metairie, many are gearing up for the grand finale of this season’s Mardi Gras celebrations next Tuesday. Even if you can’t make it to the Gulf Coast for the scheduled balls and bayou bonfires, you can still participate in an event that could have a lasting impact on Louisiana and its neighboring states.

For our RESTORE Act social media week of action, we encourage you to join the parade of citizens who are pressing Congress to commit oil spill fines from the BP oil disaster to environmental and economic restoration of the Gulf Coast. People across the political spectrum support this approach, but without congressional action, Clean Water Act fines from the spill may not be dedicated to economic recovery, wetland rehabilitation, beach cleanup, and other restorative initiatives that would be supported by the RESTORE Act.

Here are several ways that you can participate:

ONE: Send an email to your senator, asking them to make the RESTORE Act a priority and dedicate BP’s oil spill fines to restoration.

TWO: Use Twitter to tell Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) to pass the RESTORE Act.

Click to send this sample tweet: Speak up for the Gulf Coast! Tell @SenatorReid @McConnellPress to pass the #RESTOREAct NOW! #oilspill http://bit.ly/xYL6DW via @RestoreDelta

THREE: “Like” and “share” the Mississippi River Delta Restoration Campaign’s RESTORE Act Facebook image to make sure that Senate leadership knows that Americans want to see BP’s oil spill fines dedicated to Gulf restoration.

Please spread the word to your friends and contacts. We hope that by the time Mardi Gras rolls around next year, mechanisms will be in place to ensure that the damage from the spill and other recent environmental disasters is finally being resolved in the Gulf Coast.

Also posted in Congress, Deepwater Horizon, Events, Interactive Media, Oil Spill | Leave a comment

Regional industry, national impact: Duke University survey finds that firms from 37 states participate in Gulf Coast restoration efforts

Take a look at the map below from the Duke University study on linkages between Gulf Coast ecosystem rehabilitation and the American economy. It shows the geographical distribution of companies participating in dredging, machinery manufacturing, site design, and other industries related to restoration efforts in the region.

Louisiana, vessels, manufacturing, machinery, jobs, Gulf of Mexico, environment

Geographers from Duke University's Center on Globalization, Governance, and Competitiveness (CGGC) mapped out the headquarters of 140 firms involved in wetland rehabilitation in Louisiana and other Gulf Coast states. They also pinpointed satellite offices specializing in equipment repair, construction, and site design, bringing the total number of unique locations focused on ecosystem restoration to nearly 400. Note that the number of work sites (391) is less than the total number of places surveyed (449) because of category overlap (Source: Duke University)

 

What’s impressive is the breadth of Gulf Coast wetland regeneration’s impact on the wider national economy. Take a look at states like Maine and Minnesota. Each one is located hundreds of miles away from the Mississippi River Delta, yet companies like the Bath, Maine-based Bath Iron Works, which manufactures marine vessels, and the Winona, Minnesota-based Badger Equipment, which builds cranes, are both employing workers and generating jobs in their communities because of contracts for restoration work in coastal Louisiana.

Over the next few weeks, we plan to look at some of the regions shown above to see how their businesses are involved in, and could benefit from, Mississippi River Delta restoration efforts. If you happen to work for a firm engaged in beach restoration, habitat cleanup, or some other sector related to environmental work on the Gulf Coast, please let us know in the comments section below. You might just earn a profile spot on our blog.

 

 

Related Links

Ecosystem restoration a growing source of jobs [The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA)]

How the RESTORE Act could kickstart job growth along the Gulf Coast [Restoration and Resilience]

RESTORE Act fines could provide job opportunities in Gulf Coast, 32 other states [Delta Dispatches]

Restoring the Gulf Coast: New Markets for Established Firms [Duke University Center on Globalization, Governance, and Competitiveness]

Also posted in External Media, Green Jobs, Regional Economic Development, Targeted Jobs | 1 Response

Duke University report links restoration projects in coastal master plan with regional job growth

With support from Environmental Defense Fund, Duke University’s Center on Globalization, Governance & Competitiveness (CGGC) published a paper last month about the companies involved in Gulf Coast environmental rehabilitation. The report, titled “Restoring the Gulf Coast: New Markets for Established Firms”, was released on December 5 and soon attracted attention from print and TV journalists throughout the region, who highlighted the potential economic benefits of expanded ecosystem restoration in an area still wrestling with the aftereffects of the BP oil disaster and the recession that preceded it. In documenting the ways that dredgers, machinery manufacturers, and other firms have contributed to existing wetland regeneration work in Gulf Coast states, the report showed how investment in ecosystem restoration could translate into jobs and business opportunities.

The publication of the Duke study comes at an exciting time for wetlands policy in the Bayou State. The 2012 Louisiana Coastal Master Plan, introduced this morning in Baton Rouge, lays out a strategy of coastal protection coupled with environmental projects that has won early praise from experts in the scientific community. Implementation of the state master plan in Louisiana, along with expansion of environmental restoration projects in nearby states like Florida and Alabama, will mean more business for firms highlighted in the Duke study and more hiring by companies involved in construction, engineering, and manufacturing.

Over the next few months, we’ll be publishing a series of pieces looking at some of the most interesting factoids and insights from the CGGC report. We will also be revisiting the state master plan to discuss its economic implications and how they dovetail with analyses like the Duke study. Be sure to check back as we post more about these topics in the coming weeks.

 

 

Related Links

2012 Coastal Master Plan [Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority]

Environmental Organization Links Habitat Restoration to Job Growth in New Report [Restoration and Resilience]

Report: Federal RESTORE Act would generate many jobs for Florida businesses [WTSP-TV Tampa (CBS)]

Restoring the Gulf Coast: New Markets for Established Firms [Duke University Center on Globalization, Governance, and Competitiveness]

Also posted in Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA), External Media, Land Loss, Regional Economic Development, Wetlands | Leave a comment

Mired in the Middle: Why Restoration Jobs Matter for Mid-Gulf States

People living in Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi, which lie at the core of the five-state region bordering the Gulf of Mexico, are far more likely than average Americans to have been born and raised in the states where they reside as adults, according to an article published last month on The Atlantic's "Cities" blog. Data from the 2010 American Community Survey showed that an estimated 78.8% of Louisianans were born in the Bayou State (by comparison, only 58.7% of adults in the United States as a whole were born in the states where they presently live), and although Alabama (70.0% of adults born in state) and Mississippi (71.9%) also ranked high for the relative rootedness of their residents (10th and 6th, respectively), they both placed lower than Louisiana, which ranked 1st among all states.

Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Texas, Census, Birthplace, Economy

Sedentary Center: In 2010, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi ranked 1st, 10th, and 6th, respectively, for the proportion of residents born in state, making the mid-Gulf region one of the least transient sections of the United States. By contrast, Texas (25th out of the 50 states, with 60.5% of residents born in state) and Florida (49th out of the 50 states, with 35.2% of residents born in state) ranked much lower due to heavy influxes of Americans from other parts of the country and immigrants from abroad to fast-growing metropolitan areas like Houston and Miami (Sources: The Atlantic, U.S. Census Bureau)

 While some observers have lumped the central Gulf states together as the tail end of a socioeconomically stagnant “Stuck Belt” stretching from the Upper Midwest to the Deep South, it would be fairer to say that the entrenched settlement patterns of the mid-Gulf region have had both good and bad economic consequences. On the one hand, the region’s distinctive cuisine and culture, nurtured and preserved by its long-established residents, serves as an important driver for the central Gulf Coast’s multi-billion dollar tourism industry. On the other hand, the fact that area residents are disproportionately likely to depend on familial support networks tethered to the Gulf economy means that mid-Gulf staters are especially vulnerable to location-specific shocks like hurricanes and oil spills if and when they hit the region. Furthermore, when one considers that the central Gulf Coast, already one of the poorest regions in the country, has seen stable to increasing unemployment at a time when jobless rates have been falling in much of the rest of the nation, it becomes clear that there is a real need to do something about generating local jobs and making the mid-Gulf economy more resilient to ecological and economic stress.

One way to do this is to pursue a sustainable development strategy along the central Gulf Coast that provides opportunities for area residents to restore regional ecosystems. This would create immediate work for people living in counties recovering from the BP oil disaster, and it would improve the long-term prospects for habitat-dependent industries like tourism and commercial fishing that have been affected by years of wetland loss and industrial disasters.

There’s encouraging news that a comprehensive restoration program could be implemented in the near future. Earlier this month, the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force released its final report outlining strategies for reversing the deterioration of the Gulf Coast’s ecosystem, a transformative course of action that could help the mid-Gulf states emerge stronger from the present crisis. However, any progress on that front is contingent on congressional action to commit oil spill penalties from last year’s disaster toward environmental work, a move that would help the central Gulf Coast to remain a well-loved (and well-lived in) place for future generations.

 

 

Related Links

Data on Domestic Place of Birth in the United States, 1980-2010 [U.S. Census Bureau]

Lifetime Mobility in the United States: 2010 [American Community Survey Briefs]

The Geography of Stuck [The Atlantic Cities]

Unemployment Data Bolsters Case for Regional Restoration Jobs Bill [Restoration and Resilience]

Also posted in Demographics, Regional Economic Development, Unemployment | Leave a comment

Duck Hunting at Risk in the Mississippi River Delta?

Thousands of people streamed into the wetlands of southern Louisiana on Saturday for the annual waterfowl opener. While some hunters will inevitably end the fall shooting season far short of their targets, the local shops and companies that cater to these visitors will win big, as the influx of migrating mallards (and the men and women that hunt them) provides a much-needed respite each autumn from the post-summer lull in tourist bookings.

Yet despite the picture-perfect conditions that hunters enjoyed at the start of this year's duck hunting season in Louisiana, the future of the industry and the area businesses that depend on it could be jeopardized by the continued deterioration of the Mississippi River Delta, as we'll discuss in this post.

This Bird Has Flown?

Duck hunting, bird watching, and other forms of outdoor tourism are important economic drivers for rural communities in southern Louisiana. These nature-dependent activities would not be possible without the vibrant ecosystems that thrive in the wetlands lining the Gulf Coast. The local environment sustains invaluable feeding grounds for migratory birds and other species that act as the base for a multi-billion dollar hunting and fishing sector.

Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Duck Hunt, Hunting, Shooting

While numbers specific to the coastal counties and parishes of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas are not tabulated by the Department of the Interior, statewide surveys conducted in 2006 revealed that regional duck hunting revenues totaled $175 million that year (see top chart). Without a doubt, the ecosystems of Louisiana, by virtue of their location in one of North America’s most important migratory bird flyways, serve an outsized role in supporting the Gulf Coast’s bird hunting sector, as evidenced by the revenues per state square mile ($/sq. mi.) chart at the bottom of the above figure (Sources: Flickr (jacqueline-w), U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Department of the Interior)

 

The wetlands of coastal Louisiana, which provide wintering grounds for an estimated 10 million ducks and geese migrating along the Mississippi and Central Flyways, are disappearing at a pace of a football field per hour. As these swamps and marshes slip away, so too does the submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) that grows in these areas. It is this natural buffet that has drawn waterfowl to the Mississippi River Delta for thousands of years, but without this plant life, migratory birds might shift their paths away from the southeastern section of the Bayou State, imperiling the region’s duck hunting economy.

Dollars for Duck Habitats

That’s part of the reason why hunters, birdwatchers, and others who enjoy the natural endowments of the Gulf Coast’s wetlands are starting to recognize the importance of coastal Louisiana restoration. “Vanishing Paradise”, a national campaign dedicated to restoring Louisiana’s waterfowl and fishing habitat, works to educate hunters and anglers about the challenges facing the Mississippi River Delta and how they could affect the fate of migratory birds. In addition, the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force (GCERTF), established in the wake of the BP oil disaster, has made an effort to educate the public about the threats that ducks and other birds face from petrochemical spills and other environmental issues affecting coastal Louisiana.

Without the support of a wide variety of people from diverse backgrounds, we will not be able to save the Mississippi River Delta and protect the habitats and jobs that depend on its health. Concerted action to secure environmental restoration funding for coastal Louisiana could protect vital ecosystems for waterfowl and other birds that depend on the delta, ensuring the future of duck hunting in this section of the Gulf Coast.   

 

 

Related Links

Could House Budget Cuts Hobble Habitat Recovery in Coastal Louisiana? [Restoration and Resilience]

Economic Linkages Between Coastal Wetlands and Hunting and Fishing: A Review of Value Estimates Reported in the Published Literature [Louisiana State University (LSU) Agricultural Center]

Southeast Louisiana duck population viewed as 'average' as new season begins [New Orleans Times-Picayune]

The Rodney Dangerfield of Natural Spaces: Coastal Louisiana [Restoration and Resilience]

Also posted in Land Loss, Oil Spill, Recreation, Tourism, Wetlands, Wildlife | Leave a comment

What the Conservation Economy Means for the Mississippi River Delta

The following is a guest post by Jessica Goad and Kiley Kroh from the Center for American Progress (CAP). Ms. Goad serves as the Manager of Research and Outreach for the CAP’s Public Lands Project, and Ms. Kroh serves as the Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Washington-based organization.

Center for American Progress, Green Jobs, Rebuild the American DreamWhile coastal degradation is a serious concern for communities throughout the country, it poses a particular threat to the ecosystem and economy of the Mississippi River Delta. Louisiana is home to 40 percent of the wetlands in the continental United States but experiences about 80 percent of all wetlands losses across the country.  This not only harms habitats, but removes billions of dollars’ worth of natural flood protection and environmental services from coastal communities.  Further, the damage wrought by the BP oil spill continues to threaten industries such as tourism and fisheries that drive local economies throughout the Gulf Coast.  However, restoration projects and their recreation benefits are putting residents of the Mississippi River Delta back to work and rehabilitating these critical resources.

For example, the Central Wetlands Unit (CWU) is a 30,000-acre expanse of degraded marsh near downtown New Orleans.  As a new study conducted by Restore America’s Estuaries found, the $72-million project is on track to create 280 direct jobs and 400 indirect and induced jobs, for a total of 680 jobs over the project’s life.   Once restored, the project will provide long-term ecosystem services and economic benefits for the community – and is just one example of the vast potential offered by the conservation economy.

Center for American Progress, Restoration, Louisiana, Gulf Coast, Wilderness, NatureLast week, the Center for American Progress (CAP) released a report called “The Jobs Case for Conservation:  Creating Opportunity Through Stewardship of America’s Public Lands.”  The report lays out the employment and fiscal impacts of different categories of the conservation economy—recreation, restoration, renewable energy development and sustainable forest management.  We demonstrate that protecting lands and oceans creates jobs, that policymakers should promote policies that manage lands for the conservation value, and that the conservation economy has already created hundreds of thousands of jobs across the country.

Another CAP report released earlier this year with Oxfam entitled “Beyond Recovery” found that addressing the Gulf’s challenges with a regional plan for ecosystem restoration can directly create tens of thousands of jobs. As both publications highlight, restoration jobs also encompass a wide range of education and skill level, from construction workers to contractors to engineers to scientists helping ecosystems return to their undamaged states.

A handful of government and academic studies have attempted to quantify the jobs impacts from conservation, but in “The Jobs Case for Conservation,” we found from various analyses that in general, every $1 million invested in restoration activities creates between 13 and 30 direct, indirect and induced jobs, many in the private sector.  The same holds true for similar projects undertaken in the Gulf Coast region – analysis conducted in “Beyond Recovery” found that each $1 million in investment in wetland restoration can create 29 new jobs.  The design, construction, operation and monitoring of large-scale coastal and marine restoration projects bear the potential for sustaining job creation and increasing ecosystem services vital to supporting existing coastal industries such as fishing, tourism and shipping.

The myriad jobs that can be created from recreation are critical to the future of coastal Louisiana and the Mississippi River delta.  A recent report from the Department of the Interior found that recreation on its lands created 388,000 jobs in 2010 alone.  These jobs include direct, indirect and induced jobs, which in the Mississippi River Delta means work and revenue for outfitters and guides to take visitors to fishing in the Gulf; gear companies that sell equipment to hunters and anglers headed for the Delta National Wildlife Refuge; and the hotels, restaurants, gas stations and other service businesses that cater to visitors from around the world such as restaurants outside of the Big Branch Marsh National Wildlife Refuge.

As both CAP reports emphasize, economic and environmental recovery are not mutually exclusive.  In fact, investing in wetlands and coastal restoration creates nearly six times as many jobs as investments in traditional economic drivers such as oil and gas. In these tough economic times, facilitating coastal restoration presents a perfect opportunity to create jobs and support small businesses, while simultaneously protecting some of America’s most unique ecosystems and prosperous fishing and shellfish industries.

Policymakers both regionally and in Washington, D.C. have a clear opportunity to support the ideas suggested in both CAP reports.  In particular, we need to boost government capacity to conduct restoration activities, fully fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and pass the RESTORE the Gulf Coast States Act. The RESTORE Act would direct 80 percent of Clean Water Act fines charged to BP and other responsible parties directly to the five Gulf Coast states to immediately begin ecological and environmental restoration, and establish a National Endowment for the Oceans supporting ocean and coastal restoration efforts in all 35 coastal and Great Lakes states.  With these and more policies in place, coastal Louisiana will be poised to gain the jobs and financial benefits of the conservation economy.

Also posted in Congress, Employment Ratios, Green Jobs, Guest Post, Multipliers, Oil Spill, Regional Economic Development, Stimulus, Targeted Jobs, The White House, Water, Wetlands, Wildlife | 3 Responses

Unemployment Data Bolsters Case for Regional Restoration Jobs Bill

Is there a deepening jobs crisis in the Deep South? Judging by a recent chart from The New York Times, the answer might be yes.

As part of a story about the increasingly regional nature of joblessness in the United States, the Times featured an infographic that illustrated how unemployment rates have varied across America over the past four years.

The cartographic snapshots, sourced with information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Moody’s Analytics, show the level of joblessness in each state in December 2007 (considered the “start” of the Great Recession by the business cycle monitoring committee at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)), June 2009 (the “end” of the recession, as judged by NBER), and August 2011 (the most recent month of available data).

The data reveal that the southern United States, which had ridden out the early part of the recession better than other sections of the country, now seems to be experiencing worsening labor market conditions while jobless rates in other parts of America are trending downward.

Unemployment, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Labor, Statistics

Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Moody's Analytics, The New York Times

Here are three points worth mentioning:

  • If you compare the maps for June ’09 and August ’11, you can see that Louisiana is one of only 15 states that witnessed a rise in its unemployment rate after the end of the recession. As we noted in a post earlier this year, much of this increase may have been attributable to the BP oil disaster and its aftermath on the drilling, fishing, tourism, and oil servicing sectors.
  • The jobs situation hasn’t been much better elsewhere on the Gulf Coast. Of the 10 states in the top quintile for unemployment last month, three – Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi – border the Gulf of Mexico.
  • Three Gulf Coast states rank among the top 10 for jobless rate rises since the summer of 2009, with Florida (+0.5%) in tenth place for June ’09-August ’11 unemployment growth and Mississippi (+0.7%) in seventh place behind Louisiana’s western neighbor, Texas (+0.8%), where jobless rates rose from 7.7% in June 2009 to 8.5% in August 2011.

The spike in regional unemployment means that is all the more necessary for federal and local officials to craft policy solutions aimed at putting the Gulf Coast back to work. Luckily, there’s a bill in Congress right now that could do just that.

The RESTORE the Gulf Coast States Act will channel billions of dollars worth of Clean Water Act penalties from parties responsible for the Gulf oil spill towards restoration projects in states that were directly impacted by the Deepwater Horizon disaster. This funding will rebuild important natural habitats in and around the Gulf of Mexico, and it also will translate into jobs for construction workers, wildlife managers, engineers and scientific researchers.

A win for the environment and a win for a troubled economy: let’s just hope Congress can put this plan into action.

Also posted in Deepwater Horizon, Demographics, Oil Spill, Regional Economic Development, Unemployment | Leave a comment

Environmental Organization Links Habitat Restoration to Job Growth in New Report

The following is a guest post from Restore America’s Estuaries President Jeff Benoit.

Efforts to secure adequate federal funding for on-the-ground restoration of critical coastal and estuarine habitats has traditionally depended on arguments related to the ecological importance of these resources. We can no longer rely on good common sense conservation to prevail as we face harsh partisan politics that propose to randomly slash funding and programs that protect our health and contribute significantly to the economy. It’s the latter, the economy, that the conservation community needs to focus more attention on to stay in the game.   Restore America’s Estuaries recently released a report that clearly demonstrates that coasts and estuaries are not only essential to the nation’s economy, but that investments in coastal habitat restoration produce jobs in a cash-strapped, job-starved economy at a higher rate than many other sectors, including oil and gas, road-infrastructure, and green building projects.

The report, “Jobs & Dollars: Big Returns from Coastal Habitat Restoration,” lays out a powerful case for government and private investment in the nation’s coasts and estuaries, drawing on national and regional studies of coastal and estuarine restoration projects and setting out its findings in restoration case studies. As just one example, coastal habitat restoration typically creates between 20 and 32 jobs for every $1 million invested. In comparison, road infrastructure projects on average create seven jobs per million, oil and gas return just five jobs, and green building retrofits produce 17 jobs per $1 million invested.

I invite you to read the report and think about how it relates to your efforts.

Also posted in Congress, External Media, Green Jobs, Guest Post, Regional Economic Development, Stimulus, Targeted Jobs, Unemployment, Wetlands | Leave a comment

EPW Committee Approves RESTORE Act, Setting Stage for Senate Vote

Earlier today, the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee approved a bill that would direct 80 percent of Clean Water Act (CWA) penalty payments stemming from the 2010 BP Oil Disaster towards environmental restoration and economic development on the Gulf Coast. The RESTORE the Gulf Coast States Act (S. 1400) was co-authored by Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) and Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL). Seven of the remaining eight Gulf Coast Senators joined Landrieu and Shelby in co-sponsoring the bill, which was supported by EPW Chairwoman Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA).

Having passed through mark-up, the RESTORE Act will now move to the Senate. In the House, parallel efforts to draw up legislation for the CWA penalties have been taking place for months, with the ultimate goal of crafting bills that will be approved by both chambers.

This is great news for the Gulf Coast. The challenge of reversing the damage from the Deepwater Horizon disaster and the spill that followed remains, but funding from the RESTORE the Gulf Coast States Act will help Louisiana and its neighbors to push ahead with long-delayed wetland rehabilitation and barrier island reconstruction projects that will result in more resilient ecosystems for the region's unique plant and animal life. This work will translate into jobs for area residents and contracts for local companies, providing a much-needed boost to the regional economy.

Despite the rancor and division that have poisoned recent political debates in Washington, a bi-partisan group of committed politicians was able to find a point of common ground in shaping S.1400. We hope that today's victory will be the first step towards the passage of the RESTORE Act in Congress and the implementation of a comprehensive restoration program for the Gulf Coast.

Also posted in BP, Congress, Deepwater Horizon, Green Jobs, Targeted Jobs, Unemployment, Water, Wetlands | 1 Response

EPA Administrator Stresses Importance of Wetland Restoration for Gulf Recovery

Last week, hundreds of scientists, engineers, and policymakers involved in the rehabilitation of threatened environments gathered near Baltimore’s Inner Harbor for the 4th National Conference on Ecosystem Restoration (NCER). One of the featured speakers was Lisa Jackson, who also serves as the head of the Environmental Protection Agency and as the chair of the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force.

In her address, Jackson said that restoration of the Gulf Coast’s wetlands would be a major focus of the task force’s final report, which is slated to be released this fall. As the task force examines the long-term impacts of land loss in the region, it will work to address pressing questions about the management of the Mississippi River and the labor-intensive projects that have been proposed to restore its delta, the largest along the Gulf of Mexico.

Her words carry great weight. The RESTORE (Resources and Ecosystems Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities and Revived Economy of the Gulf Coast) Act promises significant funding for environmental work in areas affected by the BP oil disaster. The marshes and swamps of coastal Louisiana are vitally important for the overall health of the Gulf of Mexico, so it is particularly encouraging to hear that the Pelican State’s wetlands will receive special attention.

By emphasizing the link between Louisiana wetland restoration and Gulf-wide ecosystem recovery at NCER, Jackson provided affirmation for the central role that the Mississippi River Delta has played, and will play, in the region’s future.

Also posted in BP, Deepwater Horizon, Land Loss, Oil Spill, Water, Wetlands | Leave a comment