In the merciless August heat, associate professor of engineering Landolf Rhode-Barbarigos scaled an incline of honeycomb-shaped concrete tubes hugging the seawall. With a team of divers, he checked to make sure that all the 18-foot units were properly stacked and stable before donning his snorkel mask to make sure they were interlocking underwater, too. The… Read More
Fishermen are being asked to watch out for two robotic sailboats that will be cruising in the Gulf of Maine starting next week. The wind and solar-powered boats, called Saildrone Voyagers, will operate at low speeds between a series of predetermined survey lines. Officials with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the 33-foot unmanned… Read More
Cover photo: New barriers, called stone sills, rise from the Chesapeake Bay as part of the Barren Island restoration project in Dorchester County, MD. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) It’s hard to imagine that Barren Island was once inhabited by more than a dozen farmsteads, a church, a schoolhouse and a handful of stores. Now… Read More
We have used this space several times in recent months to address climate change and how this rapidly unfolding process has already affected the North Fork. In the coming months, we will continue to write about this issue on this page, as the shorelines of eastern Long Island — and, in particular, the narrow finger… Read More
Federal officials’ announcement of two draft wind energy areas off the Oregon coast poses danger to fisheries, jobs and the state’s coastal environment, the Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians say. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s proposal “was premature and threatens fisheries, local fishing jobs, and some of Oregon pristine… Read More
Outside the Timpanogos Special Service District’s wastewater treatment plant, a series of experiments are being conducted near the shoreline. One looks at invasive carp and their influence on the lake, while another looks at clams that used to be native to the lake as a way of cleaning the water. There are experiments reintroducing native… Read More
For more than 30 years, shrimpers who trawled the local waters at dawn ended their day by dropping off their catch at the Port Royal shrimp docks on Battery Creek. The sea bounties were processed in a small on-shore facility and sold to area restaurants. But in recent years, the old dock and the trawlers… Read More
South Carolina’s coast is one of the most beautiful in the world. It drives our economy, our cuisine and our lifestyle. But all of those things are under threat from extreme heat, flooding and damaging storms that have been on the rise and are projected to worsen. Luckily, we have the opportunity to invest in… Read More
After nearly 20 years of fighting to get the necessary permits, Bill Roe has succeeded in building a seawall on his oceanfront property in New Smyrna Beach. “Every time I would go to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection,” Mr. Roe said, “I asked them a simple question. What was the game plan to protect… Read More
A federal beach replenishment project, now delayed for over a year, will now likely begin “sometime” in 2024, Toms River officials said this week, as residents continue to express frustration over the deterioration of the sand on the beachfront in Ortley Beach. Toms River Mayor Maurice “Mo” Hill said Wednesday that the U.S. Army Corps… Read More
Beach replenishment is nothing new to beach towns like Ocean City. The Army Corps of Engineers perform beach replenishments every four years unless a natural disaster happens and they need to do it earlier. The last time Ocean City got replenishment was 2021 and for people who like to surf, the effects of that replenishment… Read More
The Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and Lloyd’s Register (LR)’s Maritime Decarbonisation Hub have garnered support for the Silk Alliance initiative, which aims to establish a Green Corridor Cluster beginning with intra-Asia container trade. Joining the alliance are Yara Clean Ammonia ASA, the Methanol Institute, National University of Singapore (NUS) Centre for Maritime Studies, and… Read More
It’s a first-time feat for Eurobodalla Council crews who created and stacked 400 sandbags to protect the shoreline at Long Beach. A geotextile sandbag structure has been installed to protect the shoreline and Bay Road against potential collapse. Project engineer George Workman said the sandbags are a medium-term fix until a more permanent solution occurs…. Read More
Dredging work near the Carolina Beach Inlet is scheduled to continue through August 31st. The dredge MERRITT arrived in Snows Cut on August 19th to begin the project. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wilmington District says the goal is to dredge the bar in Carolina Beach Inlet to a project depth of eight feet…. Read More
There’s a lot more to be settled besides an inter-agency tiff over financing and depth levels before the long-proposed St. Thomas Harbor dredge project becomes a reality. Among the issues are a shipwreck that may need to be relocated from the project area, endangered and threatened coral species that should be moved, and the replanting… Read More