Invasive Species

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There are hundreds of these in the Great Lakes basin While over 150 live in the lakes themselves, some of us live on the shore!

 

Great Lakes Freighters, Environmental Quality, and Protectionist Policies

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Public Domain Photo from NOAA Archives

There are two types of commercial freighters that use the Great Lakes for moving bulk goods like iron ore, crushed limestone, and grain.  Salties, or the ships that come down the Saint Lawrence Seaway from the Atlantic Ocean; and Lakers, which are properly called boats and spend their working lives entirely in the Great Lakes.  (You can learn more about them at BoatNerd.com.)

In a post in 2009 titled, Just How Dirty Are Great Lakes Freighters? , I talked about the air pollution problems of Great Lakes Freighters.  Emissions of sulphur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) were addressed by US and Canadian governments for the Salties recently, but many of the Lakers were given a pass.  Ironically, the Salties already had cleaner burning power plants, and are by and large a newer fleet for a couple of reasons.

  1. The more straightforward reason is simply that fresh water isn’t as corrosive as salt water, so metal lasts longer on Lakers.
  2. The less intuitive reason is that it costs a fortune to make changes to a Laker due to cabotage laws.  On the Great Lakes in US waters this is governed by Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act, 1920, known as the Jones Act.

The Great Lakes Maritime Task Force, (GLMTF) encourages  “Strict adherence to all existing cabotage laws.” in a position paper found here>  In that same paper they describe how the Jones act works.

BACKGROUND: Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act, 1920 and other laws mandate that all cargo moving between U.S. ports be carried in vessels that are U.S.-owned, -built, and -crewed. Section 27 is generally referred to as the Jones Act. The Passenger Vessel Services Act (PVSA) sets the same requirements for the transport of passengers between U.S. ports. Other statutes apply the same ground rules to towing, dredging and salvage in U.S. waters.

They go on to point out that 54 other countries, including Canada, have cabotage laws.

This was an issue addressed by Congress in the late 1700′s, so it’s been on the books in one way or another for a long time.  But why do we need a protectionist law of this sweeping scope?  Again I’ll let the GLMTF explain that.

BENEFITS TO THE NATION: Total Jones Act commerce routinely tops 1 billion tons and 130 million passengers each year, yet the freight charges total less than 1 percent of the nation’s transportation bill. Nationwide, the Jones Act fleet has more than tripled in size since 1965 to 39,000-plus vessels and has quadrupled its productivity. The cabotage laws further ensure the United States has the ships, skilled mariners, and shipyards needed to supply American troops during a national emergency.

BENEFITS TO GREAT LAKES REGION: The cabotage laws are, first and foremost, guarantees that domestic waterborne commerce is carried in vessels built to the world’s highest safety and environmental protection standards and manned with crews whose skills and expertise are certified by the U.S. Coast Guard. Further, by guaranteeing a level playing field among the various transportation modes, Great Lakes Jones Act operators have been able to assemble the world’s largest and most diverse fleet of self-unloading vessels without one penny of Federal subsidies, either direct or indirect. For example, one iron ore cargo delivered in a 1,000-foot-long Jones Act “Laker” keeps a major steel mill in operation for 4-plus days. A single coal cargo in a 1,000-footer produces enough electricity to power a metropolitan area the size of Greater Detroit for a day.

But I take exception with their assertion that “The cabotage laws are, first and foremost, guarantees that domestic waterborne commerce is carried in vessels built to the world’s highest … environmental protection standards….”  No they’re not!  They are air pollution nightmares!

The EPA proposed designating the entire Great Lakes region as an Emmisions Control Area (ECA) because our air quality sucks in several areas and these areas aren’t separated by much distance.  According to the GLMTF

By declaring the Lakes an ECA, the EPA was banning the use of residual fuel on vessels by 2012. (Other users such as greenhouses could continue to use high-sulfur fuel.) This meant that 13 U.S.-Flag Lakers that carried 19 million tons of cargo in 2008 (nearly 20 percent of the U.S.-Flag total for the year) faced extinction. The EPA so misunderstood the realities of the marine industry that it did not know that what it proposed – burning distillate fuel on a steamship – could lead to an explosion and loss of life. The only option available to vessel operators would be converting the steamers to diesels, but that was an expensive proposition – the cost ranges from $15 million to $22 million per vessel – and physically unattainable by the 2012 deadline. The engines on large commercial vessels are all built to order, and the whole re-powering process can take nearly 30 months even if financing can be arranged.

These steamships are among the oldest ships in commercial use today anywhere.  The St. Mary’s Challenger is 115 years old!   So, because the EPA didn’t understand “the realities of the marine industry” these ships were given exemptions in a deal brokered By Congressmen Oberstar and Obey.

I take a different view (surprise!).  I’m disappointed that the owners and operators of the 110 or so Lakers in the Great Lakes Maritime fleet don’t understand the public health and environmental realities of releasing millions of tons of pollutants, including CO2, SO2 and NOx, into the air and waters of the Great Lakes region.  The cost in environmental impacts, human suffering and health care cost will run many millions of dollars beyond the cost of new engines.  But the Lakers’ owners don’t have to pay that bill.

Advocates of the Jones Act say that it is a national security necessity.  But for the shipping industry on the Great Lakes its in the same class of national security imperative as the giant anti-terrorist fences around every rural airport in the country.

The Act stipulates that cabotage be restricted to American Flag vessels, built in America, owned by Americans, and crewed by Americans.  It further requires work on these vessels be done in an American Shipyard.  But hey!  54 other countries (including our neighbor to the north, Canada) have all the same requirements, so we are just following internationally accepted standards.  And Canada is about to launch some new Lakers.

  • Canadian Mariner – built by Chengxi Shipyard of Jiangyin, China and schedule for delivery after April 2011 for Seaway Marine Transport.
  • Equinox Class – a new class of lake freighter (5 ordered from Mingde Shipyard of Nantong, China) and expected to enter service in 2013-2014 for Seaway Marine Transport.   -from Wikipedia

Oops!  Canadian shippers must not realize that when they buy Chinese boats, the Terrorists win.

Still, I understand that given the Jones Act’s requirement for work to be done in an American Shipyard, and the cost that comes with using an American shipyard, it may not be financially realistic to retrofit these old steamers.  But rather than give them pollution exemptions, why not give the ship owners Jones Act waivers and let them buy engines someplace else?  Or, they can cut the steamers up and make tug/barge combinations out of them, as has been done with other obsolete boats.  Or if supporting the national economy, security, and shipyards are more important, buy shiny new boats built in American shipyards to meet 21st century safety and environmental standards, and then cut the old boats up.  Make it a floating “cash for clunkers” initiative.  There isn’t a boatyard in any community in the country that wouldn’t jump for joy at getting that work today.

And while they are at it, build them to treat their ballast water so that they will cease to move alien invasive species (AIS) around within the Great Lakes system.  Because, even though these nasties come in with the salties, and the GLMTF supports requiring foreign salties to treat their ballast water, they oppose requiring Lakers to do the same because, well, the AIS are already in the lakes, and they are going to infest the entire system eventually anyhow, so why should they spend money to forestall the inevitable?

Well, because the lakes are enormous, and it isn’t a foregone conclusion that once an AIS shows up in Cleveland it is going to spread to Chicago and Duluth on its own.  Lakers provide a direct path for AIS from port to port.  They need to stop it and join the fight against the invasives that are choking the life out of the lakes, displacing native species, and costing industry, government, utilities, and private citizens billions of dollars annually.

The Jones Act certainly has some good points, but we can’t let an entire industry hide behind it in order to avoid meeting “…the world’s highest safety and environmental protection standards….”  That was not the reason the Act was adopted.

Clean, abundant freshwater is going to become increasingly valuable as it becomes more rare globally.  Soon having the largest pool of freshwater on the planet will be much more important to our national health and security than protecting a handful of old boats, no matter how cool they are.  But we must protect that water now, while we still can.  We can only do that by protecting or restoring the Great Lakes ecosystem, and that requires we eliminate threats to that ecosystem first.  It shouldn’t matter if those threats are land or water based, they all need to be addressed sooner rather than later.

That is a matter of national security of the most basic kind.

 

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Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Feedback

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Here are my recommendations to the GLRI folks.  You can give them your ideas at http://greatlakesrestoration.us

  • Construct wetlands to filter run-off and address water quality issues from urban and agricultural areas.  Use remediated brownfield sites where possible.
  • Develop and implement a comprehensive restoration plan for coaster brook trout throughout their historical range (not just Lake Superior).
  • Thoroughly regulate the practice of Hydraulic Fracturing in minerals extraction to eliminate both water quality and withdraw quantity issues, and to protect the public’s health, safety and property.
  • Work to prohibit metallic sulfide mining near waters tributary to the great lakes.  The lakes have no buffering capabilities and leachate washing into the lakes will have devastating effects.
  • Develop ballast water discharge and invasive species regulations with real teeth. Develop comprehensive control and eradication plans for invasive alien species in the great lakes.  Yes this is a huge job and will cost well into the billions of dollars.  Shoulda regulated ballast water and planned for invasion through the Welland canal.  Too late to go back and do that, and we do not accept “Woops!”  as an acceptable response.  RESTORE the lakes.  Don’t just work on them, FIX THEM!

I don’t know if anybody is going to read these things, or if they are like the old cartoon of the office suggestion box with a pretty sign and mail-slot on one side of the wall and a paper shredder on the other.

It is such a joke that they are making all this hoopla about a couple hundred million dollars when the task will run into the hundreds of BILLIONS at the least.  (Too bad the Great Lakes aren’t as important as Iraq to the well being of our nation, eh?)

If the federal government were a dog owner and the Lakes their dog, it would be as if they refused to feed us or take us to the vet, let us suffer with poisonings and parasites of all kinds, kicked us whenever they felt like it, and let their friends treat us as poorly as they pleased.  Then they throw us a Milk Bone from time to time and expect us to be satisfied and the ASPCA to leave them alone.

What jerks.

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Carp Hearing Today @ 3:30 EST

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Mail from Senator Debbie Stabenow

United States Senator Debbie Stabenow - Michigan
Dear Brian,

Two weeks ago, I wrote to you about new legislation I authored to permanently separate the Mississippi River system and the Great Lakes, to keep out Asian carp and other invasive species. This afternoon, as Chair of the Water and Power Subcommittee, I will be holding a hearing to make sure the federal government is doing everything in its power to address the threat of Asian carp.

The hearing will begin at 3:30pm and can be watched live online. To watch, click here: http://stabenow.senate.gov/carphearing. Testifying today before the Subcommittee will be:

The Honorable Nancy Sutley, White House Council on Environmental Quality

Dr. Leon Carl, United States Geological Survey

Mr. John Rogner, Illinois Department of Natural Resources

Mr. Tim Eder, Great Lakes Commission

From the beginning of this threat, Michigan’s Congressional delegation has been working closely together, across party lines, in a unified effort to stop the spread of Asian carp. I will continue working with my colleagues to protect Michigan and our Great Lakes.

Sincerely,

Debbie Stabenow

United States Senator

U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow
The United States Senate • Washington, DC 20510
stabenow.senate.gov

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Breaking Up Is Hard To Do!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

There is new legislation in Congress to push the Army Corps to engineer a permanent physical separation of the Mississippi River drainage and the Great Lakes at Chicago, reversing over 100 years of  diversion of Lake Michigan water out of the Great Lakes watershed and closing the door on invasive species, like the Asian carp, trying to enter the Lakes.  I’ve written on this several times, and a good general description of the problem is Carp Wars.

In an e-mail today Senator Debbie Stabenow writes:

Dear Brian,

I am writing to give you an update on my work to protect the Great Lakes from Asian carp. The recent discovery of an Asian carp in Lake Calumet, very close to Lake Michigan, should serve as a wake-up call to government agencies about the urgency of this situation.

Today, I introduced legislation to permanently prevent Asian carp and other invasive species from entering the Great Lakes. Congressman Dave Camp (R-Michigan) has introduced our bipartisan legislation in the House of Representatives as well. The Permanent Prevention of Asian Carp Act requires the Army Corps of Engineers to follow the recommendations of top experts in the field and expedite their study detailing the engineering options to permanently separate the Mississippi River from the Great Lakes.

In the Senate, my bill is co-sponsored by Senator Dick Durbin (D-Illinois), Senator Carl Levin (D-Michigan), and other Great Lakes Senators. A permanent separation of the waterways would allow cargo to pass through the Chicago locks, but would prevent the water itself, and any invasive species living in it, from entering Lake Michigan.

I also recently spoke about this issue on the floor of the Senate, so my colleagues would know how urgent this issue is for us in Michigan. You can watch the speech on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QY-Sy12t3qg.

The Great Lakes are Michigan’s most precious natural resource, and they are a part of our way of life. I will never stop fighting to protect them.

Sincerely,

Debbie Stabenow

United States Senator

Now where this goes, or how much support we can expect from the Chicago-friendly White House, is anybody’s guess.  But its a great effort, and I would encourage everyone to contact their Congress-person or Senator and encourage them to support this bill.  An e-mail or phone call to the White House wouldn’t hurt either.

Does it strike anyone else as wrong that we continuously have to fight Washington to step-up and do what is right for public health and the welfare of our shared environment?  Shouldn’t that be the default response?

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Why Illinois isn’t worried about Asian Carp in the Great Lakes

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

It just dawned on me that we have a sociological divide between the rest of the Great Lakes states (and our Canadian cousins, eh?) and Illinois.  We define our existence by the lakes and our cultures are deeply steeped in their lore and legend. (Well, not so much Indiana or Pennsylvania, but they aren’t being turds right now, are they?)  Illinois just wanted a port on the lakes to haul gravel and scrap metal though, and a lot of water to wash their shit down onto someone else.  They are much more interested in crops & commerce than carps, and would be just as happy if there were no fish in the lakes, they don’t need them.

That may seem sort of harsh, but that’s been their argument right along.  They have consistently couched this as a conflict between Chicago’s paltry amount of water-borne commerce and the desire of the entire population of the rest of the lake states and provinces for a healthy Great Lakes system.  They’ve suggested several non-solutions to eat up the clock and have cast doubt on the science suggesting the lakes may be in danger from a few fish.

So, in honor of our self-serving, obstructionist, Illinois neighbors I propose that we rename the “Bighead Carp” the “Chicago Carp.”  Then when they fuck-up the ecology of the largest freshwater lake system on the planet, everyone will remember who to thank.

But you know, they’d probably like that.  It’d be another way that they could show the world how much clout they have, and how they don’t care what happens outside of Cook and the collar counties.

Rat-bastards.

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Mr. Carp goes to Washington

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Rep. James Oberstar (D – MN8) did a nice job of chairing a hearing of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on the Asian Carp problem the Great Lakes faces.  It was the first time I have watched a webcast of a Congressional hearing, and I have to say I liked it a lot better than I thought I would.  I’ve worked in state, local and county government, and lobbied state legislatures, so this had a pretty familiar feel.

There were the elected officials being sufficiently non-committal (regardless of what they really thought) to encourage the panel of speakers.  The administration’s man, Cameron Davis, (late of the Alliance for the Great Lakes, now the EPA Great Lakes Czar) was holding up the framework from the Carp Summit the day before and politely pointing out that he had been trying to get action on the Carp issue for 5 years or so, but assuring everyone that the administration had the bit in their teeth and were now on the right track.  The guy from the Army Corps in full dress uniform assuring all assembled that they are studying the hell out of the situation, just like they were directed to do, and that their existing projects were really important and everyone should back off and let them engineer stuff.  Everyone else was predictable as well.  I want to congratulate Michigan DNRE Director Humphries for being very cordial, well spoken & sticking to her guns, insisting that the lakes must be physically separated from the Mississippi drainage permanently.  Period.  Another stand-out was Professor Lodge from Notre Dame, the guy who has been developing the eDNA techniques that let us know where fish have been even if we can’t find the fish (which, as any fisherman will tell you, happens more than we care to admit).  He appeared to be a careful academic, and chose his words carefully in answering questions, even though you could tell that he wanted to say something like, “Just fill the damn canal in, will ya?”

Rep. Oberstar runs a good hearing.  He was even-handed and was respectful to everyone there, even thanking them several times for braving the east coast blizzard and the likely-hood of being stranded in town for a while.

My favorite part of the whole affair was when Chairman Oberstar drew a parallel between the environmental and human suffering that was inflicted on New Orleans by the MRGO canal, which also only sees very light and easily re-routed shipping traffic, to the CSSC, and asked the USACE officer if he couldn’t see closing the Chicago canals as being as beneficial as the closing of MRGO .  The USACE officer completely avoided answering the question but talked instead of the complexity of the engineering issues involved in Chicago and ways that they might regulate the locks differently, but not necessarily better.  I got the impression that it hurt the Corps feelings to be told to shut down MRGO, and they don’t want to close another cool, old, canal just because it has some problems that they can engineer more solutions for, if we give them more money.  Unfortunately, the most recent plan to put $78 million into band-aids won’t fix the problem, and there is still no permanent solution to the trans-basin migration of invasive alien species.

The Army Corps reminds me of a gear-head neighbor I used to have.  He didn’t have lots of money, but he loved tinkering on old cars just to prove that he could make them run again, if only for a short time.  This wasn’t Jay Leno pouring all the money needed into a project car to restore it to better-than-new condition.  He would fix one thing only to find another problem.  But he kept at it, because that’s what he liked to do.  At one point his wife told me that his hobby was, “Buying old, junk cars and working on them until he had to pay someone to haul them away.”   It was dirty, smelly, and loud work carried on in and around his garage.  The projects would sit around for months with no discernible progress being made.  The neighbors all grumbled.  But at least  it was his place and his money.

The Corps, on the other hand,  isn’t playing with their own land & money, but ours.  It’s time they were told that their canal and diversion projects at the south end of Lake Michigan need to go because they’re an eyesore, are creating a public nuisance, and are a health hazard.  As Chicago’s neighbors on the lake, we need to put our foot down and not let the tiny bit of out-dated commerce created by these dinosaurs ruin our property values.  And Chicago needs to clean-up their sewage like the rest of us and put the water back where they found it in no worse shape than when they borrowed it.  This won’t just benefit the Great Lakes, but the waterways and communities downstream from Chicago all the way to and including the Gulf of Mexico who are now getting, literally, shit upon.  You’d think that not having 2 billion gallons of water a day flowing down the river might help with downstream flooding a little as well, wouldn’t you?

What is complicated about getting a big suction dredge to the south end of the lake and filling the places where Lake Michigan leaks out with sand?  There are only about 6 of them from Burns Harbor, IN  to north of Chicago.  They could do it in a couple months, tops.  Then we would have a permanent physical separation of the Mississippi and Great Lakes drainages with no easy way for invasive alien species to cross from one to the other.

Just like it was before 19th Century Chicagoans “improved” it by building the canal in the first place.

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Senator Stabenow & Representative Camp introduce the Carp Act. Finally!

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

This morning I found an email from Senator Debbie Stabenow’s office in my in-basket announcing that she and Dave Camp (R – Michigan), have introduced legislation to take immediate action against the Asian carp threat to the Great Lakes.

Here is an excerpt.

I have been working to ensure that federal and state experts have all the tools they need to protect the Great Lakes from the Asian carp, and so far, the efforts have been very successful. (?!?) However, the recent announcements by scientists are a troubling development that requires an urgent response. Therefore, the bills that Congressman Camp and I introduced call for immediate action to:

  • Immediately close the barriers and locks into the Great Lakes
  • Expedite the installation of interim barriers in rivers where no barriers currently exist
  • Enhance existing barriers and monitoring systems to prevent fish from crossing into the Great Lakes
  • Grant full authority to the Army Corps of Engineers to eradicate the Asian carp and prevent them from entering the Great Lakes.

As your Senator, I will continue to work to protect our Great Lakes, which are critical to our state’s livelihood. As always, please do not hesitate to contact me if I can be of assistance to you or your family.

Sincerely,

Debbie Stabenow

United States Senator

I would also like to see actions to permanently separate the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal from Lake Michigan and stop the out of basin diversion of 2.1 billion gallons of our water daily; and for authority to eliminate the Asian Carp to go to the US Fish & Wildlife Service, but this is a good first step.

Please join us in contacting your elected help in DC and urging their support of this legislation and it’s immediate passage.

As always, I’d love to hear your take.

JP

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Obama Unhappy With High Court’s Ruling

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Seems the Prez is not pleased with the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on campaign finance.

I know how he feels.  I’ve been disappointed by the High Court a couple times myself.  Once when I was trying to build a rail trail in Indiana, and most recently when they decided Asian Carp aren’t a clear and present danger to the Great Lakes.

Well, all I can offer the President is my condolences, and the hope that eventually the court will be more centrist and less activist on the right-wing fringe.  I’ve been waiting for over 20 years.  He might want to grab a chair.

A Chair

JP

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Army Corps failed to provide DNA evidence of Asian carp to high court

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

The US Army Corps of Engineers failed to inform the Solicitor General or the US Supreme Court that they had DNA evidence that the fish had entered Lake Michigan.  This was data that they had been sitting on for four days!  This makes it seem likely that they knew in time for the Supreme Court’s deliberations for a scheduled decision on Friday, January 15th, and didn’t pass it along then in an attempt to hide it from the Court.

For more details read this from the Detroit News.

Oh, the Army Corps!  Those scamps are always getting into trouble, aren’t they?  They need a firm hand to guide them back to the straight and narrow, because we know that left to their own devices they are bound for Hell in a basket.  Which is bad enough, but they are charged with looking after vast parts of our nation’s wetlands and waters, and their engineered solutions have not been generally good solutions (You can always tell an engineer.  But you can’t tell him very much!) for natural processes and biota. We can’t let the Corps take our wetlands and waters down with them!

The Corps needs to be under the oversight of Fish & Wildlife for all projects containing fish and wildlife.  When they are allowed to lead we get stuff like this, and the screwed-up plumbing nightmare that surrounds New Orleans.  They are good at engineering and building stuff, but they can’t be allowed to determine what they will build.  Unfortunately, they are often used by congress to send pork home to the district, when congress decides which projects get funding.  Either way, they fail to weigh the long-term ecological consequences almost every time.

JP

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Carp Wars

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Just before Christmas Michigan filed suit against the Army Corps of Engineers and the State of Illinois to stop the advance of Asian carp into Lake Michigan and to re-open a supreme court decree from the 1920′s allowing Chicago to divert billions of gallons from Lake Michigan Daily, the only major, permitted withdrawal of water from the Great Lakes watershed.  The water Chicago uses then flows down the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC) to the Illinois River, the Mississippi, and finally the Gulf of Mexico.  The diversion of this amount of water lowers the Lake Michigan / Lake Huron systems level by 3″.  But with a combined surface area of 117,400 square kilometers that equals over nine cubic kilometers, or about 2,403,965,676,459 gallons.  Now there’s a number even a congressman can see as significant.

The ultimate goal of the lawsuit, and of several regional and national environmental groups, is the closing of the CSSC and re-vamping of Chicago’s water treatment system to return the treated water into the Lake Michigan watershed, thus ending the diversion.  Sending their sewage down the Missippi made sense for Chicago and Lake Michigan in the 1900′s because the city generated an amazing amount of sewage that until the 1970′s was poorly treated at best.  (Probably not so good for the route to the gulf, though.)

The story of the threat of the carp to the Lakes has run in papers from the LA Times to the Wall Street Journal and on all the news networks.  The only people downplaying the risk are the Corps and some elected officials from Illinois who don’t want to change the status quo.  In the Washington Post’s December 22, 2009 edition they reported the following.

“They’ve been saying they have this under control, but they really don’t, and they’re going back to the status quo,” said John Sellek, a spokesman for the Michigan attorney general. “Their primary interest is keeping the waterway open, keeping that barge traffic on the canals. But Michigan’s interest is far larger than that. The Great Lakes fishing industry is worth $7 billion all by itself, let alone the hundreds of thousands of jobs that are connected to the Great Lakes.”

The Corps of Engineers and other federal, state and local authorities would probably be involved in closing the canals or other ecological separation measures, which could also be mandated through legislation.

If the canals were closed, barges could not travel from the Mississippi River into the Great Lakes. Freight would probably have to be transferred to trucks or rail cars and carried over land to Great Lakes ports. That would be a costly undertaking.

The national industry group for barge operators, which opposes closing the locks, says about a quarter-million truck trailers’ worth of goods make the passage annually on barges. But national environmental groups say the potential economic impact of Asian carp and other invasive species in the Great Lakes make freight reconfiguration worth the cost.

A 2008 study by the Alliance for the Great Lakes found that ecological separation could be economically beneficial and improve efficiency of freight transport.

The Natural Resource Defense Council has proposed that an environmentally sustainable intermodal freight facility be built to replace barge traffic into the lake, creating “green jobs” and curbing the invasive species risk.

“This way of moving goods may have made sense in the 19th century or 50 years ago, but are we still dependent on those same decisions?” asked Henry Henderson, NRDC Midwest program director. “We built a system without understanding the full implications. Now we have to design and build an engineered solution to a human-created problem.”

It’s time to bury the CSSC once and for all.  We can’t afford the ecological cost of the invasion of Asian carp or the loss of so much water.  And as I wrote in a previous post, Chicago is going to need more water soon, and they have established a precedent for out-of-basin diversion.  We must keep Great Lakes water in the Great Lakes, with no exceptions.

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