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Great Lakes
Article:
Shallower Lake Erie spells deep trouble
By Owen Heary
The Buffalo News
Published August 29, 2006
Lake Erie's water level could fall by as much as 32 inches
by 2050, due to changes in global climate, according to
the latest estimates by Environment Canada, driving sweeping
changes through the region's environment and its economy.
Beaches that stretch hundreds of feet from the water's
edge.
Great Lakes shipping grinding to a halt.
Hydroelectric power plants left high and dry.
New wetlands unlike those seen in centuries.
Lake Erie's water level could fall by as much as 32 inches
by 2050, due to changes in global climate, according to
the latest estimates by Environment Canada, driving sweeping
changes through the region's environment and its economy.
All told, the lake could lose up to 15 percent of its
surface area. And though the figure represents only a
worst-case scenario, all of the latest scientific models
predict the lake will drop some inches in the coming decades.
The only question is how much.
"We should pay attention to what they're telling
us," said Joe Atkinson, director of the Great Lakes
Center at Buffalo State College. "That's not to say
they're perfect, and there's always room for uncertainty,
but . . . it's the best information we have at this point."
Ships carrying goods on the Great Lakes depend on a certain
amount of water between them and the lake bottom to travel
safely. If the water level falls just a single inch, a
typical ship will have to lose anywhere from 50 to 270
tons of cargo in order to maintain that safe distance.
And if it drops a few feet?
"That would just be an economic disaster,"
said Glen Nekvasil, spokesman for the Lake Carriers Association.
"Water levels are what make or break this industry,"
and a drop that large could render the business of shipping
goods on the lake "inviable."
Shippers already are coping with falling water levels.
An association survey reported that three out of every
four ships in the past five years were working below capacity.
Ships bearing coal bound for NRG Energy's Huntley Power
Station in the Town of Tonawanda, for instance, reported
dropping anywhere from 750 to 1,000 tons to safely navigate
the Black Rock Channel.
Nekvasil said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - whose
task is to maintain lake depths around harbors and shipping
lanes - has been underfunded for decades. He estimated
that it would take $200 million just to make up the present
dredging shortfall, not to mention future considerations.
The budget for operations and maintenance has been slashed
34 percent over the last four years, admitted Bruce Sanders,
spokesman for the corps' Buffalo District. Confronted
with the possibility of an almost 3-foot drop in Lake
Erie's water level, Sanders declined to speculate how
much it would cost the corps to keep shippers afloat.
"This is almost a doomsday scenario," he said.
"It would have a tremendous impact across the board."
A shrinking Lake Erie also could hold serious consequences
for hydroelectric facilities on the Niagara River. The
river currently flows at a little more than 200,000 cubic
feet per second, about half of which is diverted to power
generators on both sides of the border - leaving just
enough for tourists to enjoy the cascading falls. Millions
of homes currently enjoy electricity derived from the
river.
But the latest climate projections suggest that the outflow
of water could drop by as much as 26 percent over the
same time period - threatening the steady flow of water
that hydroelectric utilities have come to count on.
"Low lake levels can certainly affect the Niagara
[Power] Project's output," said New York Power Authority
spokesman Michael Saltzman.
Saltzman declined to estimate how significant the impact
would be, but as both the United States and Canada look
to shift toward alternative, cleaner sources of energy
- an Ontario power company recently began work on a 7-mile
tunnel to divert even more water from the falls - a short
supply of hydroelectric power may be facing even greater
demand in the near future.
Lake Erie's decline also could have repercussions for
the lake's toxic algae blooms and resident fish populations,
as well as regional snow packs and agricultural growing
seasons.
But forecasts of the dropping water level don't only
portend doom and gloom. Some scientists hope that the
lake's slow retreat will reveal a renewed lakeshore, with
wetlands similar to the ones the earliest European explorers
must have seen back in the 17th century.
"The potential to re-establish a natural shoreline
is there," said Jeff Tyson, a fisheries expert with
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. "Now's
a good time to think about what we could be doing . .
. to capitalize on possible opportunities or address negative
impacts."
The question of who owns those new lands has yet to be
resolved. Common riparian law suggests that private ownership
ends at the water's edge - but what happens if the water
moves?
"There may be some head-scratching in the courts,"
said Barry Boyer, former dean of the University at Buffalo
Law School, who specializes in environmental law. "Global
warming can possibly make a few new jobs for lawyers."
While some observers have made an effort to discredit
or downplay the findings, others increasingly are becoming
frustrated by what they see as equivocation and inaction.
"A 3-foot drop would be catastrophic," said
Reg Gilbert, senior coordinator for the environmental
watchdog group Great Lakes United. "It's very worrying,
and the fact that we are doing absolutely nothing to address
sources of climate change is absolutely irresponsible."
Dan O'Riordan, the Lake Erie specialist at the Environmental
Protection Agency's Great Lakes National Program Office
in Chicago, didn't discredit the reports' findings. But
he insisted that other concerns, such as water diversion
and pollution, are more pressing.
"The water being lost through climate change is
not in our top 10," he said. "We have other
fish to fry, so to speak."
John J. Freidhoff, a researcher with the Great Lakes
Center at Buffalo State College, also is not convinced.
"It's really just too early to make a decision,"
he said. "Water levels have fluctuated a lot in the
last [few] hundreds of years, so it's hard to put that
to global warming."
e-mail: citydesk@buffnews.com
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