New Orleans' levees got a $14.5 billion upgrade. Will they hold?
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[August 30, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - Shortly after Hurricane Katrina
devastated New Orleans in 2005, the city went to work on building a
$14.5 billion system of gates, flood walls and levees that would protect
it against another once-in-a-century storm.
Its first big test came on Sunday, when Hurricane Ida, a ferocious
Category 4 storm, plowed through the Gulf of Mexico into Louisiana.
The storm's torrential rain, powerful winds and surge waters - a
potentially catastrophic combination - are precisely the kind of threat
New Orleans officials hoped the 350-mile (560- km) defensive ring
surrounding the city could withstand when completed in 2018.
So far, officials said the system, one of the largest public-works
projects in the world, was performing as designed, even as they
cautioned it was too early to declare all was clear.
"The levee system and the flood system today is much, much better and
much, much stronger than it was in Katrina," said Kelli Chandler,
regional director of the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority,
which operates the system.
"We don't anticipate a breach."
New Orleans was put under a flash-flood warning on Sunday afternoon due
to a heavy, persistent downpour and neighborhoods outside the protective
system were at greater risk of being hit by water surges from the coast.
Still, Chandler said she believed the system would prevent the kind of
water levels seen during Katrina, when failures of levees led to
catastrophic flooding. She said some localized flooding would have to be
cleared out by pumps.
"The primary purpose of the system is to reduce the risks of flooding,"
she said. "The water is not coming into the city."
Katrina left some 80 percent of New Orleans flooded, inundating
historically Black neighborhoods and causing more than $100 billion in
damage. More than 1,800 people died.
'BUILT FOR THIS MOMENT'
Aiming to avoid a similar disaster, the U.S. Congress authorized $14.5
billion for the Hurricane & Storm Damage Risk Reduction System of
levees, gates, walls and pumps. It is designed to protect against the
level of flooding with a 1% probability of occurring in any year.
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A view from the top of the levee that protects the Ninth Ward from
the Industrial Canal is pictured as Tropical Storm Barry approaches
land in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. July 11, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan
Bachman/File Photo
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards also expressed
confidence the system would hold against what he described as one of
the strongest storms to hit the state in modern times.
While water levels would likely surge over some levee systems in the
southeast, he told a briefing on Sunday that the new system covering
New Orleans and surrounding suburbs was "built for this moment."
"All the models that we've seen from the Army Corps of Engineers and
from our own CPRA (Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority)
show that hurricane storm damage risk reduction system will hold and
perform as intended," he said.
The Army Corps of Engineers, which built the system, also said on
Sunday it expected it to perform well.
But even if the new network of levees and flood walls does its job
in this storm, there are risks on the horizon.
In 2019, the Army Corps warned of the need to reinforce the earthen
levees, which have been losing height due to settling in the soft
soils of the region and as sea levels rise, highlighting the effects
of climate change.
"Everyone who cares about New Orleans is worried," said Andy
Horowitz, a history professor at Tulane University who wrote
"Katrina: A History, 1915-2015." "With climate change and the
collapse of the wetlands, the system is inadequate over time."
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut, and Rich McKay in
Atlanta; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Peter Cooney)
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