CDFW Announces Funding Multiple Wetland Projects: California State Coastal Conservancy to Get Over $800,000 for Restoring Wetlands in Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge Area

Humboldt Bay slough

White Slough [Photo from here]

Press release from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW):

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) [Yesterday] announced the selection of seven projects to restore wetlands that will reduce the emission of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and provide other ecological co-benefits.

The awards, totaling $11.35 million, were made under CDFW’s 2019 Wetlands Restoration for Greenhouse Gas Reduction Program Proposal Solicitation Notice. The seven projects will restore or enhance approximately 1,700 acres of wetlands and mountain meadows and sequester an estimated 67,400 metric tons of carbon dioxide (MTC02e).

The Wetlands Restoration for Greenhouse Gas Reduction Program focuses on projects with measurable objectives that will lead to GHG reductions in wetlands and watersheds while providing co-benefits such as enhancing fish and wildlife habitat, protecting and improving water quality and quantity and helping California adapt to climate change. Wetlands have high carbon sequestration rates that can store carbon for decades.

“These projects will significantly benefit climate science and ecosystems representing the coast, the Central Valley and the Sierra Nevada,” said CDFW Director Charlton H. Bonham. “We are excited to continue the momentum to restore California’s wetlands while making a demonstrable impact to greenhouse gases.”

To improve efficiency and alignment with program priorities, a new two-phase application process involving a pre-application and final application was implemented for 2019 solicitation.

The following projects are approved for funding:

 

  • The White Slough Tidal Wetlands Restoration Project ($852,113 to the California State Coastal Conservancy) will restore 40 acres of coastal tidal wetlands on diked historic tidelands in the White Slough Unit of Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge in Humboldt County. The project will have an estimated GHG benefit of 17,073 MTCO2e.
  • The Light-handed Meadow Restoration in Faith Valley and Log Meadow ($475,675 to American Rivers) will restore and protect 138 acres of mountain meadow at two high-priority sites, Faith Valley in the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest and Log Meadow in Sequoia National Park. The project will have an estimated GHG benefit of 7,644 MTCO2e.
  • The Hill Slough Restoration Project ($5,577,413 to Ducks Unlimited, Inc.) will restore 603 acres of managed seasonal wetland to tidal wetland and restore 46 acres of existing upland to tidal wetland in the Suisun Marsh. The project will have an estimated GHG benefit of 25,242 MTCO2e.
  • The City of Newman Inland Wetland Restoration Project ($610,000 to the City of Newman) will restore a 10-acre parcel of land owned by the City of Newman, Merced County. The project will provide multiple environmental, economic and public benefits and will have an estimated GHG benefit of 78 MTCO2e….
  • The Upper Truckee River and Marsh Restoration Project ($895,000 to the California Tahoe Conservancy) will restore 13 acres of wetlands in the Upper Truckee River in El Dorado County by grading back to historic topography, removing invasive species and revegetation. The project will have an estimated GHG benefit of 6,545 MTCO2e.
  • The Lower Walnut Creek Restoration Project ($950,000 to Contra Costa County Flood Control and Water Conservation District) will restore and enhance approximately 183 acres of tidal wetlands and tidal channel, 17 acres of non-tidal pickleweed marsh and 36 acres of adjacent lowland terrestrial ecotones, and create and enhance approximately 60 acres of uplands. The project will have an estimated GHG benefit of 5,690 MTCO2e.
  • The Ocean Ranch Restoration Project ($1,998,282 to the California State Coastal Conservancy) will restore the natural tidal prism and improve connectivity of tidal and freshwater habitats within 571 acres of Ocean Ranch in Humboldt County. The ORRP will have an estimated GHG benefit of 5,223 MTCO2e.

CDFW’s Wetlands Restoration for Greenhouse Gas Reduction Program is part of California Climate Investments (CCI), a statewide program that puts billions of cap-and-trade dollars to work reducing GHG emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment – particularly in disadvantaged communities. The cap-and-trade program also creates a financial incentive for industries to invest in clean technologies and develop innovative ways to reduce pollution. CCI projects include affordable housing, renewable energy, public transportation, zero-emission vehicles, environmental restoration, more sustainable agriculture, recycling, and much more. More information about the CDFW program can be found at www.wildlife.ca.gov/conservation/watersheds/greenhouse-gas-reduction.

For more information about cap-and-trade funding and efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, please visit the CCI website at www.caclimateinvestments.ca.gov.

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stuber
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stuber
4 years ago

Exactly how do you “restore” these wet lands? Are the wetlands dry now, and they are getting them wet? Natural tidal prism? Lowland terrestrial ecotones? And taxpayers are funding this stuff? No thanks. How do you prove, with a machine or other device, that you are removing carbon? And isn’t carbon important for us? This is just a hussle. We teach the kids in our freedom schools that these envirowackos are only interested in your tax dollar. If they really cared about the environment, they would stop the container ships, which produce 270 million tons a year of pollution. We make our stuff here, we can have an impact. Our kids know they are being bullshitted by these people.

Ullr Rover
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Ullr Rover
4 years ago
Reply to  stuber

You coat wetlands in 1 dollar bills to restore them… to do it really well you need $20’s.

Mr. Bear
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Mr. Bear
4 years ago
Reply to  stuber

You realize the link to the project is right in the article?

tech
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tech
4 years ago
Reply to  stuber

It’s voodoo economics of the leftist sort.

cu2morrow
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cu2morrow
4 years ago

wonderful ! more habitat for our feathered friends

Mr. Bear
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Mr. Bear
4 years ago

I sure hope they leave vehicle access through Ocean ranch when they are finished with that project

Jeffersonian
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Jeffersonian
4 years ago

More nonsense on white slough and ocean ranch. Good freshwater habitat for waterfowl and agriculture will be wiped out with little benefit for the environment. Same thing on Salt River and other local areas. You can see the failures already. Needless taxpayer expense.

disgruntled duck hunter
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disgruntled duck hunter
4 years ago
Reply to  Jeffersonian

Agreed. Every time the government does a project out here to create “tidally influenced wetlands” they just destroy a more good habitat for migratory birds. Breaching the levee at the ocean ranch pond, letting the Humboldt Bay NWR go back to a quasi-natural area without freshwater inputs, and the lack of management of the Eel River Wildlife Area has destroyed habitat for migratory birds by getting rid of freshwater ponds and allowing thick native or non-native grasses to take over, preventing new grass shoots from growing (which ducks and geese love and thrive on). This project mentioned in the press release will just allow more saltwater into previously freshwater areas. Some criticize this negative thinking towards these projects because it only supports duck/goose hunting but guess what, hunters are paying fees/taxes for these funds to create and protect lands for ducks and geese primarily. Basically there has been a bait and switch pulled on hunters, the primary source of revenue for these projects. What once was supposed to promote migratory habitat for duck/goose hunting is being used on other projects that jsut do the opposite.

tax payer
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tax payer
4 years ago

and more reasons california is expensive… something something sea level rise. oh wait if there is sea level rise why do we need this. wont we have more wetland if the sea level is rising?

Daniel Edrich
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Daniel Edrich
4 years ago

When the Conservancy came to Manila, they ran Porter/Cologne wetland and wildlife enhancement money through Friends of the Dunes.
Friends of the Dunes said that by removing non-native vegetation they could enhance our wetlands.

The opposite occurred, they removed vegetation so carelessly that ponds, marshes and wetlands dried-up,
wildlife disappeared and our previously fixed dunes became destabilized.
When asked to plant and repair the Friends play stupid and ignore the massive damages while wasting processes
destroy habitat.