Santa Fe New Mexican

House advances $34B Texas storm surge project bill

Goal is to protect key oil, gas facilities

- By Juan A. Lozano and Michael Phillis

HOUSTON — Fourteen years after Hurricane Ike ripped through thousands of homes and businesses near Galveston, Texas — but mostly spared the region’s oil refineries and chemical plants — the U.S. House of Representa­tives voted Thursday to authorize the most expensive project ever recommende­d by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to protect against the next raging storm.

Ike erased beachfront neighborho­ods, causing $30 billion in damage. But with so much of the nation’s petrochemi­cal industry in the Houston-Galveston corridor, it could have been even worse. That close call inspired marine science professor Bill Merrell to first propose a massive coastal barrier to protect against a direct hit.

Now, the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act includes authorizat­ions for a $34 billion plan that borrows from Merrell’s idea.

“It was quite different than anything we had done in the United States and it took us a little while to come around to it,” said Merrell of Texas A&M University at Galveston.

The House passed the

$858 billion defense bill 350-80. It includes major projects to improve the nation’s waterways and protect communitie­s against floods made more severe by climate change.

The vote advances the Water Resources Developmen­t Act of 2022. That lays out a sprawling set of policies for the Army Corps and authorizes projects that touch on navigation, improving the environmen­t and protecting against storms. It typically passes every two years. It received strong, bipartisan support and advances to the Senate.

The Texas coastal protection project far outstrips any of the 24 other projects greenlit by the bill. There is a $6.3 billion plan to deepen vital shipping channels near New York City and a

$1.2 billion effort to raise homes and businesses on the central Louisiana coast.

“No matter what side of politics you are on, everyone is interested in having good water resources,” said Sandra Knight, president of WaterWonks LLC.

Storm fears

Researcher­s at Rice University in Houston have estimated that a Category 4 storm with a 24-foot storm surge could damage storage tanks and release more than 90 million gallons of oil and hazardous substances.

The most prominent feature of the coastal barrier would be floodgates, including some 650 feet wide — roughly the equivalent of a 60-story building on its side — to prevent storm surge from entering Galveston Bay and plowing up the Houston Ship Channel. An 18-mile ring barrier system would also be built along the backside of Galveston Island to protect homes and businesses from storm surge. The plan took six years of study involving roughly 200 people.

There will also be beach and dune ecosystem restoratio­n projects along the Texas coast. The Houston Audubon Society raised concerns the project would destroy some bird habitat and harm fish, shrimp and crabs population­s in the Bay.

Next steps

The legislatio­n authorizes the constructi­on of the project, but funding will remain a challenge — money must still be allocated. The huge cost burden falls heaviest on the federal government, but local and state entities also will have to pitch in billions. Constructi­on could take two decades.

“It significan­tly reduces the risk of that catastroph­ic storm surge event that is not recoverabl­e,” said Mike Braden, chief of the Army Corps Galveston District’s mega projects division.

The bill also includes a range of policy measures. When future hurricanes hit for example, coastal protection­s can be rebuilt with climate change in mind. Designers will be able to think about how much seas will rise

when they draw up plans.

“The future for a lot of these communitie­s is not going to look like the past,” said Jimmy Hague, senior water policy adviser at the Nature Conservanc­y.

The water resources bill continues a push toward wetlands and other flood solutions that use nature to absorb water instead of concrete walls to keep it at bay. On the Mississipp­i River below St. Louis, a program will help restore ecosystems and create a mix of flood control projects. There are also provisions for studying long-term drought.

There are measures to improve outreach with tribes and make it easier to complete work in poorer, historical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

It can take a long time to study projects, move them through Congress and find funding. Merrell, who will turn 80 in February, said he hopes to see some of the Texas project be constructe­d but he doesn’t think he’ll be around to see it finished. “I just hope the end product comes and it protects my children and grandchild­ren and all the other citizens of this area,” Merrell said.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Debris is piled up on a seawall road in 2008 after Hurricane Ike hit the Texas coast in Galveston.
MATT SLOCUM/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Debris is piled up on a seawall road in 2008 after Hurricane Ike hit the Texas coast in Galveston.

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