Louisiana has lost more than 2,000 square miles of wetlands in less than a century—and the loss continues by the minute. A major cause of this land loss crisis is the leveeing of the Mississippi River, which cuts off the sediment that once built and sustained these wetlands. Reconnecting the Mississippi River to its wetlands is fundamental to restoring coastal Louisiana;

The Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion is Louisiana’s most critical restoration project, using the power of the Mississippi River itself to restore Louisiana’s natural land-building processes. It will reconnect the river to adjacent wetlands and restore the natural balance that built south Louisiana in the first place.

While concerns about potential impacts exist, the state is investing hundreds of millions in mitigation to address them. What is not an option is doing nothing—the cost of inaction is continued land loss, weakened storm protection and increased risk to communities.

Despite broad public support, including in coastal parishes, misinformation about the project has led to confusion. Some opponents have exaggerated concerns while ignoring the reality that no alternative can restore land at the scale and speed needed.

The fact is, Louisiana’s coast is vanishing, and the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion is a proven, science-backed solution to help save it.

Setting the Record Straight

Let’s take a look at some of the facts about the project and set the record straight.

Dredging alone won't solve our coastal land loss crisis.

The World Needs More Louisiana – Not Less

The overwhelming public support for the Mid-Barataria hasn’t changed. The need for Mid-Barataria has only become more urgent. Only the politics has changed – and that is deeply concerning for Louisiana’s future.

Coastal Louisiana is disappearing faster than anywhere else in the U.S. But we have the tools to rebuild it – and to save our unique cultures, critical wildlife habitat and nationally-significant industries and infrastructure.

The Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion (MBSD) is the single most important restoration project to protect our land, communities, and way of life. MBSD uses the power of the Mississippi River itself to rebuild Louisiana’s vanishing wetlands—mimicking the natural processes that built our delta in the first place.

 Louisiana’s coastal program was built on prioritizing science and public good over politics, but it is now in jeopardy.

Recent comments by Governor Landry signal a dramatic shift in that science-based philosophy and it’s time to step up to protect Louisiana’s coast. The MBSD is the most studied and most important project in Louisiana. This project will reconnect the Mississippi River with its sediment-starved wetlands to build new wetlands and sustain nearby marsh.

It’s time to step up to protect Louisiana’s coast. Sign the form and pledge your support for the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion. 


Add Your Voice In Support of the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion