Current:Home > reviewsReprieve for New Orleans as salt water creeping up the Mississippi River slows its march inland -Infinite Profit Zone
Reprieve for New Orleans as salt water creeping up the Mississippi River slows its march inland
View
Date:2025-04-26 09:58:26
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Salt water inching up the Mississippi River from the Gulf of Mexico is progressing more slowly than projected, authorities said Thursday, meaning water systems in the greater New Orleans area that draw drinking water from the river have additional weeks to prepare.
For some small systems downriver, the projected arrival of salt water was pushed back to later this month. For New Orleans and neighboring Jefferson Parish the threat to water system intakes was pushed back from late October to late November. Unexpected October or November rains could further delay and diminish the threat, said Col. Cullen Jones, commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ New Orleans District.
Typically, the Mississippi’s flow is sufficient to prevent salt water from moving far upstream. But for the second year in a ro w, hot and dry weather has lowered the river, allowing a denser, heavier layer of salt water from the Gulf to push inland.
State, local and federal officials discussed the latest projections at a news conference at the Corps’ New Orleans headquarters. Jones cited two factors in the latest projections: an underwater sill downriver has succeeded in impeding the heavy salt water’s flow upriver; and weather and river forecasts, while still showing a continued drop in the river’s usual downriver flow, are more optimistic.
Salt water that overtops the underwater sill is still lower in salinity than the water behind the sill toward the Gulf, Jones said.
“This updated projection is clearly a relief to all of us,” said Collin Arnold, New Orleans’ emergency director.
Salt water already has reached some Plaquemines Parish communities closer to the river’s mouth — Boothville, Port Sulphur and Pointe a la Hache. But communities such as Belle Chasse, Dalcourt and St. Bernard have gained another week or two to prepare. In the immediate New Orleans metro area, people who had been told their systems would be threatened by late October saw projections pushed back to Nov. 23 and beyond.
Officials said multiple efforts to provide safe water to the downriver systems continue, including barging large amounts of fresh water to the intakes and installing better filtration systems. For the heavily populated parts of New Orleans and neighboring Jefferson Parish, where barging water is not practical, plans continue for pipelines to shunt fresh water from farther upriver.
For New Orleans alone, the pipe system costs have been projected at $150 million to $250 million. Local and state authorities expect much of the cost to be covered by the federal government. President Joe Biden said late last month that federal disaster assistance would be made available to Louisiana.
Jones stressed that even the updated projections are worst-case scenarios. The threat could be further delayed and diminished if rain is added to the forecast for October and November.
State health officer Dr. Joseph Kanter used a familiar Gulf Coast analogy, likening the changed projection to a tropical storm altering its course in the Gulf.
In addition to being unsafe to consume, salt water poses another health threat in that it can corrode pipes. It’s especially a problem in older systems, like the one in New Orleans, that still have lead pipes in some areas.
According to the Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans, the majority of water mains in the city center were installed prior to 1940. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, homes built before 1986 are more likely to have lead pipes. Many homes built before the 1986 Safe Drinking Water Act have either lead pipes or lead solder in the plumbing systems.
Exacerbating problems posed by a diminished river flow is sea level rise.
The sea level around New Orleans is rising at a rate of as much as 9 millimeters per year, or three feet (91 centimeters) each century, much higher than the global average and the highest rate measured in the United States, according to experts at NOAA’s Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services. That is because the Gulf Coast region is a “hotspot” of subsidence, the experts said, meaning land is sinking even as the sea level rises.
___
Associated Press reporters Stephen Smith in New Orleans, Mary Katherine Wildeman in Hartford, Connecticut, and Camille Fassett in Seattle contributed to this report.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Caitlin Clark is best thing to happen to WNBA. Why are some players so frosty toward her?
- The Chiefs’ Rashee Rice, facing charges from Texas car crash, will participate in offseason work
- Outrage after Texas retiree hit with $10,000 in cosmetics charges after visit to mall kiosk
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Paris Hilton backs California bill to bring more transparency to youth treatment facilities
- Salman Rushdie’s ‘Knife’ is unflinching about his brutal stabbing and uncanny in its vital spirit
- Tax Day is here, but the expanded Child Tax Credit never materialized
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- O.J. Simpson’s Estate Executor Speaks Out After Saying He’ll Ensure the Goldmans “Get Zero, Nothing”
Ranking
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- 'Real Housewives of Miami' star Alexia Nepola 'shocked' as husband Todd files for divorce
- The Lyrids begin this week. How to see first major meteor shower of spring when it peaks
- The Most Popular Celebrities on Cameo That You Should Book ASAP
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Paris-bound Olympians look forward to a post-COVID Games with fans in the stands
- The Ultimatum’s Ryann Taylor Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With James Morris
- Who's in 2024 NHL playoffs? Tracking standings, playoff bracket, tiebreakers, scenarios
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
U.S. stamp prices are rising, but still a bargain compared with other countries
John Sterling, Yankees' legendary broadcaster, has decided to call it a career
WNBA commissioner sidesteps question on All-Star Game in Arizona - an anti-abortion state
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Nebraska teacher arrested after police find her, teen student naked in car, officials say
Jelly Roll says he's lost around 70 pounds as he preps for 5K race
Container ship seized by Iran's Revolutionary Guard near Strait of Hormuz amid tensions with Israel