Proposed within the 2017 Coastal Master Plan with a maximum capacity of 25,000 cubic feet of water per second, the Union Freshwater Diversion is meant to deliver nutrient-rich freshwater from the Mississippi River to the fresh-forested, flotant and freshwater marsh environment in Maurepas Swamp to prevent saltwater intrusion and encourage vegetation growth. As proposed, it would be designed to operate at maximum capacity when the river’s flow reaches one million cubic feet per second.
The diversion would convey fine sediment to nourish existing wetlands and create new wetlands in Maurepas swamp, which has the ability to increase elevation and reduce inundation time allowing for vegetative growth.
Ascension, Livingston, St. James and St. John the Baptist Parishes are all expected to receive flood-reduction benefits from this project. The diversion would also divert water into the Lake Pontchartrain Basin upriver from the Bonnet Carre Spillway, allowing excess nutrients to filter out in the wetlands surrounding lakes Maurepas and Pontchartrain. This would reduce the potential of harmful algal blooms sometimes associated with opening the spillway.
Working alongside other diversions like the River Reintroduction into Maurepas Swamp Project, the Union Diversion will help maintain the Manchac Landbridge — a natural feature that provides critical storm surge protection to nearby communities, including Baton Rouge. Together, the two would also reconnect the river to disappearing forested habitats.
When operated in conjunction, the Union Diversion, River Reintroduction into Maurepas Swamp and the Ama Diversion planned downriver could divert up to 77,000 cubic feet of water per second from the Mississippi River. This, according to a recent Tulane study, would reduce the duration of Bonnet Carre Spillway openings by 47 days and the water quantity moving through the spillway between 57 to 61 percent.
Project ID: PO-0192
Parish: St. John the Baptist
Type: Freshwater Diversion
Union Freshwater Diversion: Diversion into West Maurepas swamp near Burnside to provide sediment for emergent marsh creation and freshwater and fine sediment to sustain existing wetlands, 25,000 cfs capacity (modeled at 25,000 cfs when Mississippi River flow equals 400,000 cfs; closed when river flow is below 200,000 cfs or above 600,000 cfs; a variable flow rate calculated using a linear function from 0 to 25,000 cfs for river flow between 200,000 cfs and 400,000 cfs and held constant at 25,000 cfs for river flow between 400,000 cfs and 600,000 cfs).
Diversions mimic nature’s historic land-building processes by using the power of the river to move sediment and fresh water from the river into nearby basins. This project type can not only build new land but also provide a sustainable source of sand and mud necessary to sustain and increase the health of existing wetlands over time. Sediment diversions can also re-establish or maintain the fresh end of the estuary, originally lost to saltwater intrusion, ensuring that the range of fresh to saltwater habitats that makes Louisiana’s estuaries so productive persists into the future. Sediment diversions also help sustain nearby marsh creation, barrier island and ridge restoration projects.
Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion | Mid-Breton Sediment Diversion | River Reintroduction into Maurepas Swamp | Atchafalaya Diversions | Central Wetlands Marsh Creation and Diversion | Manchac Landbridge Diversion | Three Mile Pass Marsh Creation and Hydrologic Restoration | Ama Diversion