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Coastal Louisiana at Front...
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Coastal Louisiana at Front Lines of Global Warming Damage
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
(by Marya Fowler, Regional Representative (LA, MO, OK, TX))
Coastal Louisiana is
an ecosystem in peril and the nation is at
risk. On December 2, 2008, 30
Affiliate Leaders representing 29 states and 1
US territory
participated in a tour of coastal Louisiana as
part of the National Wildlife Federation’s
Affiliate Executive Directors’ Retreat.
These leaders witnessed first hand what is at
stake and new and bold restoration efforts that
the National Wildlife Federation and its
partners are proposing to help revitalize the
coast.
Part of the day was spent visiting the
Village of
Grand
Bayou, a community
that has subsisted in the marshlands for over
300 years. Community members welcomed the group
with open arms. The community fed affiliate
leaders pot after pot of boiled shrimp and
shared stories of their connection to the land.
They led boat tours of the marshes where they
live and showed how the construction of canals
and levees, the leveeing of the Mississippi
River, and saltwater intrusion, have led to the
gradual loss of the lands they once used to
wander as nomadic farmers and fisherman. The
existence that this community has known for
generations grows less tenable every day.
Grand Bayou is an example of just one of
the many communities in coastal LA that is
affected by these developments. Louisiana’s coast is home
to over 2.4 million residents (over half of
Louisiana’s
population), many with a unique cultural way of
life.
The assets at risk in coastal Louisiana are
economically and culturally irreplaceable and
are vital to the economic nation as a whole.
Southern Louisiana has the largest collective
port facility in the U.S.
It is home to 3 of the top commercial fisheries
ports, accounting for 30 percent of the
nation’s seafood catch, as well as the
country’s only offshore oil port and support
industry. Louisiana is
the country’s number one producer of crude oil,
and second in petroleum refining capacity –
much of it along the coast. The wetlands are
home to millions of migratory birds and
resident birds, commercial and recreational
fisheries and wildlife.
This ecosystem is also at the front lines
of global warming and we have to do everything
we can to save it. The restoration project that
NWF and our partners are involved in is a bold
and strategic land-building project. We need to
strategically build land to help our
communities, our wildlife and our national
infrastructure confront the sea level rise
associated with global warming.
National funding for this restoration
effort is essential and NWF has made
restoration of coastal Louisiana a
National priority. Just as NWF and our
Affiliates have worked together to save
the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the
Everglades, and other ecosystems of national
importance, we hope that we can count on
Affiliate support as we move forward with
this project.