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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In the on-again, off-again debate about global warming, predictions of future catastrophe along our nation’s coasts have deflected attention from the existing effects of development. But even anecdotal evidence suggests that from Cape Cod to Oregon, our coastal areas are being settled in densities that strain existing public service infrastructure and affect the well-being of the nation’s coastal and marine environments.

Jan Boyd, director of coastal ecology for the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, the state agency charged with protecting coastal resources, aptly describes the dilemma. People in coastal areas, he says, have “run out of places to live.”

One factor that has confounded a cumulative view of what’s happening along our coasts is that we tend to think of our coastal regions as individually unique. New England is staid and sparsely settled. In California, life’s a (densely populated) beach while the Oregon the coast is empty and wild. Recreation is often the window through which we view our coasts, a vantage point that obscures the consideration that New York City and Chicago are both coastal cities.

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As a recent report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) suggests, demographics are a more accurate filter for evaluating what’s going on in the nation’s coastal communities. Since 1990, researchers in the Special Projects office of the NOAA’s National Ocean Service have been taking the temperature of coastal settlement in the United States with the objective of aiding coastal managers and resource protection agencies. The most recent report, issued in 2004, examines population trends from 1980 through 2008. And it’s an eye-opener.

Although Americans have long gravitated toward coastal living, since the 1970s the number of us who have opted to live near water has been increasing, to the extent that in some areas we have slipped toward the tipping point where growth is outstripping infrastructure and the ability of natural resources to adapt. The NOAA’s data suggests that without better planning, we run the risk of habitat loss and fragmentation and the attendant degradation of our water resources. In its own report on interactions between land use and environmental quality, the EPA notes that construction of impervious surfaces nationwide has led to alternations in natural water hydrology, which in turn has reduced groundwater recharge, stream sedimentation, and water acidity. Urban runoff is a major culprit, responsible for 55 % of the nation’s environmentally impaired ocean shoreline, 46 % of our impaired estuary miles, and 21 % of impaired lake miles. Next Page >

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