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The NewsRoom
Release: #4061
Date: January 19, 2010
MMS Awards $67 Million for CIAP Grants in 2009
Funding Provided to
Eligible States, Political Subdivisions
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The
Minerals Management Service (MMS) announced today that it
awarded $67 million in grants to Alabama, Alaska, Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Texas and their political subdivisions in 2009
through the Coastal Impact Assistance Program (CIAP).
Created by the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the CIAP
provides funding to the six Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas
producing states to mitigate the
impacts of energy development on marine and coastal areas.
“The MMS is committed to protecting
our nation’s natural environments,” said MMS Director Liz Birnbaum.
“Under the CIAP, we funded important projects that promote
conservation, restoration and protection of natural coastal
resources to ensure that present and future generations will be able
to explore these environments for years to come.”
MMS awarded funds to the eligible
states in 2009 for 86 projects - Alabama, 3; Alaska, 14; Louisiana,
29, Mississippi, 20; and Texas, 20.
California’s first grant
award is expected in the coming weeks.
The majority of the projects focus on conservation,
protection and restoration of coastal areas, including wetlands,
which have been an important part of the states’ CIAP plans.
“MMS is proud to partner with the states on their
important coastal restoration projects, which is critical work for
the American people and for the Nation’s economy,” said Birnbaum.
Other projects that received funding included a wide
array of initiatives, such as protection of wildlife, conservation
education, building artificial reefs, and plugging abandoned wells
in coastal state waters.
Some specific CIAP projects include one in Louisiana,
the first state to receive funding under the CIAP in 2007, which was
awarded a $10.6 million coastal restoration grant for Grand Lake.
The grant will be used to construct a rock breakwater to halt
erosion on the south shore of Grand Lake, located in the Mermentau
Basin in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. Shoreline erosion rates in the
Grand Lake area can be as high as 32 feet per year.
Texas received a $1 million coastal protection grant
in 2009 for Pelican Island, a critical bird habitat located near
Corpus Christi. Funding from the grant provides erosion protection
for approximately 1,000-1,500 linear feet of the northeastern shore.
The MMS also awarded a $700,000 grant in 2009 to the
Alaska Department of Natural Resources for a project that will test
for environmental contaminants in fish populations throughout
Alaska, thus addressing ways to protect both fish and the wildlife
that consume them.
Shortly after Alabama’s
CIAP plan was approved in April 2009, MMS awarded
an $8 million grant to the state’s Department of
Conservation and Natural Resources for a conservation education
initiative in tandem with the restoration of the historic Gulf State
Park Pier. The grant is being used to construct 25 conservation
education exhibits and restore a portion of the boardwalk.
Similarly, Mississippi’s Department of Natural
Resources was awarded a $276,000 grant to construct a new Marine
Education Center in Ocean Springs that will allow hands-on
educational activities relating to ocean research.
Each state is required to submit a
plan for the MMS’s approval outlining the projects that would be
undertaken with the funds. The projects have to meet requirements of
at least one of the five authorized uses ranging from conservation
and education to environmental restoration and preservation. Once
the state’s plan has been approved, the individual projects can be
processed and begin receiving grant awards.
2009 CIAP Award
Projects
For a complete list of grants awarded
to each state in 2009, please visit
www.mms.gov.
News Media Contact:
MMS Public Affairs
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for America
U.S. Department of the Interior
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Last Updated:
09/17/2010,
05:10 PM
Central Time
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