Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration Act

With construction of the river levees, this overflow was cut off, leaving the wetlands to continue sinking with no source of renourishment.

Since the early 1900s, storms and anthropogenic impacts have compounded with subsidence to cause drastic land loss in coastal Louisiana.

In the 20th century, Louisiana has lost more than 1 million acres from its coast, 24 square miles annually, because of both human and natural factors that have disrupted ecological and economic stability.

Billions of dollars in seafood production, oil and gas revenue, and commercial shipping will be lost without Louisiana's coastal wetlands, which provide the basis and support for these industries.

Healthy marsh provides a buffer against storms, and its ability to absorb high water and slow wind is key to survival for coastal communities.

As land is lost, hurricanes and tropical storms hit shore ever closer to the two million people who live near the coast.

A wetlands restoration project
Rock revetments like these help defend the shoreline.
Terraces help trap sediment to build new land.
This hydrologic modification weir controls and regulates waterflow.
These images show BA-38 Barataria Barrier Island Complex Project: Pelican Island and Pass La Mer to Chaland Pass before and after restoration.