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Lt Gov Nungesser raises objections to Louisiana s coastal restoration project - again
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Lt Gov Nungesser raises objections to Louisiana s coastal restoration project - again
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Sensor data helps ports ensure efficient navigation -- GCN
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The projects are funded using $256.6 million of funds resulting from the Deep Water Horizon oil spill. Author: WWL Staff Updated: 6:20 PM CDT May 19, 2021
NEW ORLEANS Three large-scale coastal restoration projects are now in motion to restore 2,900 acres of beach, dune, marsh and ridge in four southeast Louisiana parishes, Governor John Bel Edwards announced on Wednesday.
Edwards said the Spanish Pass marsh restoration near Venice, The West Grand Terre barrier island restoration near Grand Isle and the Golden Triangle marsh restoration near New Orleans East will address “significant land loss due to erosion.”
The projects, which are funded using $256.6 million of funds resulting from the Deep Water Horizon oil spill, are estimated to restore nearly five square miles of Louisiana’s coast.
Work begins to restore Louisiana island that is home to thousands of brown pelicans
Settlement from 2010 Gulf oil spill funds $16 million project Rabbit Island, site of $16 million coastal restoration project (Source: WVUE) By John Snell | January 12, 2021 at 10:56 AM CST - Updated January 12 at 10:56 AM
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) - Restoration work has begun on Rabbit Island in Cameron Parish, the only brown pelican colony in Southwest Louisiana.
The $16.4 million project is funded with settlement money from from the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
“After a devastating hurricane season in Southwest Louisiana, this restoration project is even more important to the overall recovery of the region,” said Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority Chairman Chip Kline in a statement. “Rabbit Island is yet another example of our commitment to investing in and restoring Southwest Louisiana’s coastline.”