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Environment

Engineers are diverting Mississippi river to restore Louisiana’s coast

South of New Orleans, a project to divert the Mississippi river could restore ecosystems destroyed by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and build new land to protect against sea level rise

By James Dinneen

8 March 2024

Silt from the centre of the US runs down the Mississippi river to the sea

Gerald Herbert/ AP / Alamy

The Mississippi river flows past New Orleans, Louisiana, at an average rate of about 17,000 cubic metres per second, carrying more than a hundred million tonnes of sediment from the middle of the US into the Gulf of Mexico each year. Standing along its shore on land made of such sediment, I watch the silt spin in brown eddies in the river. That mud might soon be put to use.

A construction team not far…

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