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Environmental impacts and regulatory policy. Implications of spray disposal of dredged material in Louisiana wetlands

January 1, 1988

The capabilities of a new wetland dredging technology were assessed along with associated newly developed state and federal regulatory policies to determine if policy expectations realistically match the technological achievement. Current regulatory practices require amelioration of spoil bank impacts upon abandonment of an oil/gas well, but this may not occur for many years or decades, if at all. Recently, a dreding method (high-pressure spray spoil disposal) was developed that does not create a spoil bank in the traditional sense. Its potential for reducing environmental impacts was recognized immediately by regulatory agencies for whom minimizing spoil bank impacts is a major concern. The use of high-pressure spray disposal as a suitable alternative to traditional dreding technology has been adopted as policy even though its value as a management tool has never been tested or verified. A qualitative evaluation at two spoil disposal sites in saline marsh indicates that high-pressure spray disposal may indeed have great potential to minimize impacts, but most of this potential remains unverified. Also, some aspects of current regulatory policy may be based on unrealistic expectations as to the ability of this new technology to minimize or eliminate spoil bank impacts.

Publication Year 1988
Title Environmental impacts and regulatory policy. Implications of spray disposal of dredged material in Louisiana wetlands
DOI 10.1080/08920758809362067
Authors Donald R. Cahoon, J.H. Cowan
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Coastal Management
Index ID 1002532
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization National Wetlands Research Center; Patuxent Wildlife Research Center; Wetland and Aquatic Research Center