July-August 2007

Exchanging an Ocean View for a Water Shortage

Is urbanism threatening our coastal and marine resources? A NOAA report suggests the need for more sophisticated planning.

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By Penelope B. Grenoble

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Sewers are on the docket for five of the six Mississippi coastal counties online to receive post–Hurricane Katrina Housing and Urban Development funds. The state legislation has created five utility companies with broad powers over water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure. According to the state’s department of marine resources, one goal of the legislation is to replace aging septic systems with centralized treatment plants. A potential challenge will be Mississippi’s floating casinos, which the governor has approved to move on shore and will likely expand their existing hotel and recreation operations. Another complication may be that while the redevelopment effort will be centrally managed, local cities and counties will retain permit approval authority.

The NOAA’s planners emphasize the utility of a watershed-wide approach for coastal planning, a strategy that Joubert and her colleagues have utilized with good success in Rhode Island. The NOAA report recommends that an area’s natural hydrology is “a sensible foundation” for assessing coastal growth and managing coastal and marine resources. In fact, applying watershed rather than regional boundaries decreases both the area that must be considered in planning and the number of residents and the amount of commercial development, which must be regulated. In 2000, the year the agency’s watershed research was completed, applying watersheds as the defining boundary, the total population of the nation’s coastal areas amounted to 127 million, or 45 % of our total population, as opposed to 53 % identified using regional analysis. Population in these areas has increased by 24 million people since 1980, rather than the 33 million identified when regions were used as the unit of analysis.

Five of the country’s 10 most populated watersheds are located along the nation’s northeast coast from southern Virginia to New England. The Hudson River/Raritan Bay Watershed and the Chesapeake Bay Watershed are the country’s most populated, with 23 million and 10 million people respectively. When it comes to density, however, San Pedro Bay, which includes Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors, is the nation’s most densely populated watershed with 4,634 people per square mile. Population change during the time of the study was greatest in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, which grew by over 2 million, followed by San Francisco Bay, which grew by 1.8 million, and San Pedro Bay, which added 1.7 million. Not surprisingly, of the 10 most populated coastal watersheds, the greatest percent population changes were found in the Southeast and Pacific regions. The populations of St. Johns River and Cape Canaveral, FL, and Santa Ana, CA, each grew by over 70 %.

Substantiating the NOAA recommendations, the US Commission on Ocean Policy has recommended that management of coastal resources be undertaken on a watershed-wide basis. In the 2004 report, the NOAA’s demographers suggest that this shift in management is already taking place, as planners move away from political boundaries toward an ecosystem-based approach. To get a better idea of what’s happening, and to put a face on the NOAA’s statistics, future issues of Water Efficiency will examine how planning is being undertaken in a number of the country’s coastal regions. Our first stop will be Mississippi, where a massive effort to rebuild the coast’s potable water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure is under way.

Author's Bio: Penelope B. Grenoble is a contributor to environmental publications.

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