Corps to construct underwater sill to halt saltwater intrusion on Mississippi River

USACE-MVN
Published Sept. 28, 2022
Updated: Sept. 28, 2022

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New Orleans District will construct an underwater sill across the bed of the Mississippi River channel to prevent further upriver progression of salt water from the Gulf of Mexico.

“Once the river volume begins to fall in low water season, we regularly monitor the progression of the saltwater wedge on the Mississippi river,” said David Ramirez, chief of the New Orleans District’s Lower Mississippi River Management Branch.  “This week, the projected location of wedge’s toe in combination with current National Weather Service forecasts we’ve reached our triggers for constructing the barrier sill.”

The Mississippi River’s volume of water has fallen to a level that allows salt water to intrude upstream.  The intrusion of salt water into the river is a naturally occurring periodic condition because the bottom of the riverbed between Natchez, MS, and the Gulf of Mexico is below sea level.  Denser salt water moves upriver along the bottom of the river beneath the less dense fresh water flowing downstream.   Under normal conditions, the downstream flow of the river prevents significant upriver progression of the salt water.  However, in times of extreme low volume water flow, unimpeded salt water can travel upriver and threaten municipal drinking water and industrial water supplies.

To arrest the upriver movement of the salt water and reduce the risk to freshwater intakes, USACE will construct an underwater barrier sill near Myrtle Grove, LA.  The sill will be creating using sediment dredged from an area designated for this purpose.  The sill will take approximately two weeks to complete but will demonstrate benefits in advance of completion.  The sill has been constructed on three previous occasions, in 1988, 1999, and again in 2012.

The greatest risk associated with the saltwater intrusion is the appearance of unsafe salinity levels at the intakes of municipal drinking water intakes in Plaquemines Parish.  The parish has implemented a proactive mitigation plan that will ensure safe and sufficient water supplies for parish residents.

“We have secured two reverse osmosis machines that will run at the Boothville and East Pointe à la Hache water facilities,” said Plaquemines Parish President Kirk Lepine.  “These plants will take the out the chloride in the water and still produce approximately 1 million gallons of water for everyday use.”

The Corps will continue to work closely with the Plaquemines Parish government to ensure the extreme low water is safely passed without significant impacts to residents and businesses.

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Release no. 22-023