Coordinating Dredged Material Management in the Pacific ...

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Coordinating Dredged Material Management in the Pacific Coast’s Largest Estuary with Construction of the Pacific Coast’s Largest Tidal Wetland Restoration Project

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Dredging 2012 Conference October 23, 2012

Overview „

South Bay Salt Ponds Restoration Project – –

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Dredged Material Management in SF Bay – –

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Background Constraints Constraints DMMP-based solutions

Mutual Resolutions

South Bay Salt Ponds Project Background „

Largest tidal wetland project on West Coast

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15,000 acres of industrial salt ponds

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Three pond complexes acquired by USFWS and CDF&G in 2003

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Adaptive management plan adopted in 2008

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Preliminary restoration efforts began in 2009

03M-0097.5

South Bay Salt Ponds Project Background „

Adaptive Management – –

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90/10 50/50

Phase I complete – – –

2,500 acres marsh 1,000 acres ponds 7 miles of trails

South Bay Salt Ponds Project Background

Managed Pond Emphasis

Tidal Marsh Emphasis

South Bay Salt Ponds Project Constraints „

Habitat trade-off concerns

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Concerns over cost-sharing with Corps

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Contaminants, especially mercury

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Need for fill – Subsidence = need for large volumes – Cost – Availability – Source contaminants

Dredged Material Management in SF Bay - Dredgers „

Corps of Engineers – – – –

11 Channels 2.2 MCY annually 4 In-Bay aquatic disposal sites Ocean Disposal: 60 miles offshore

Dredged Material Management in SF Bay - Dredgers „

Ports: 1.3 MCY annually – – – – –

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Oakland San Francisco Richmond Redwood City Benicia

4 MCY Total Annual Dredge Volume

Private Facilities & Municipal Marinas: 0.5 MCY annually

Dredged Material Management in SF Bay - Constraints „

Long-Term Management Strategy (LTMS) – –

Environmental Work Windows 40-40-20 Plan ™ ™

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Reduce in-Bay disposal to 1.25 MCY annually Maximize beneficial use

Cost – –

Flat-line Corps of Engineers O&M budget Impacts of LTMS

Future Beneficial Use Shortfall Annual Need* vs. Placement Today

12

12 Annual Disposal to Ocean

Volume (CY) Millions

10

Annual LTMS In-Bay

10

8

8

6

6

4

4

2

2

0

0 2000

2005

San Francisco Bay Regional DMMP

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

Volume (CY) Millions

Annual Beneficial Use Capacity

2035

* Need = Federal + Permitted Dredging

SUMMARY

$20-30/c.yd.

Approved for Unconfined In-Bay Disposal

$22-32/c.yd.

Ocean Disposal 03M-0097.13

What is a USACE DMMP? ƒ Mandated by USACE Engineering regs where federal projects have insufficient placement capacity ƒ A planning document that ensures O&M dredging activities are environmentally acceptable, use sound engineering, and are economically justified ƒ Assesses a full range of placement/disposal options, so final plan ensures capacity for the next 20 years ƒ Justifies follow-on site-specific Feasibility Studies ƒ Typically 100% federally funded

Benefits of a DMMP ƒ Predictability − Schedule − Budget

ƒ Budget Optimization ƒ Regulatory buy-in − EIS process allows agency “co-ownership” − Mutual environmental goals

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Dredged Material Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Dredged Material Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Dredged Material Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Dredged Material Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Dredged Material Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Objectives ƒ Determine Sediment Budget − Identify dredging requirements − Identify existing site capacity

ƒ Key Factors − Sediment transport − Dredged material characteristics − Potential new work − Biological resources − Equipment availability

DMMP Study Flow Chart NEPA Notice of Intent

Public Meetings

Primary Screening

Alternatives Identification

Geographic Areas Identification

Initial Alternatives List

Alternatives Development

Screening Criteria Development

Preliminary Assessment

Public Input

Public Input

Suite of Alternatives

Alternatives Evaluation

Trade-Off Analysis

Public Input EIS & Implementation Plan

Draft DMMP

Final DMMP

Record of Decision

DMMP Study Flow Chart NEPA Notice of Intent

Public Meetings

Primary Screening

Alternatives Identification

Geographic Areas Identification

Initial Alternatives List

Alternatives Development

Screening Criteria Development

Preliminary Assessment

Public Input

Public Input

Suite of Moratorium Alternatives on Earmarks EIS & Implementation Plan

Alternatives Evaluation

Trade-Off Analysis

Public Input Draft DMMP

Final DMMP

Record of Decision

DMMP Progress „

Quantification of capacity deficit – –

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25-year projected dredge volume: 114 MCY 25-year projected capacity w/out ocean: 69 MCY

Economic justification for all federal projects Identification of, and screening of 244 potential beneficial use options – –

Policy criteria Gross feasibility criteria

Beneficial Use Type

SUMMARY

Count

Beneficial Use Type

Count

In-Bay Disposal

12

Landfill Capping

14

Ocean Disposal

4

Levee Rehabilitation

7

4

Mudflat Creation

1

Agricultural Placement

7

Mudflat Restoration

1

Brownfields Capping

10

Manufactured Goods

3

Beach Nourishment

18

Public Access

9

Construction Fill

5

Port Expansion

4

Flood Control

7

Rehandling Basin

10

Habitat Creation

9

Shoreline/Bank Stabilization

1

Habitat Restoration

54

Wetland Creation

8

Island Creation

4

Wetland Restoration

52

Mine Reclamation/Restoration

TOTAL

244

DMMP Progress „

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Preliminary screening results in 42 potential beneficial use sites Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis 1. 2. 3. 4.

Technical advisory group assembled to participate with the analysis Specific environmental benefit criteria under 10 distinct categories Toggle scoring and benefit weighting Final ranking for all four regions

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan

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Contracted w/portion of single project O&M funds

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Interim recommendation of RDMMP sites

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Reconnaissance Level Investigation of So. Bay sites

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Preliminary Ecosystem Restoration Feasibility Study

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan

DMMIP Reconnaissance Study

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South Bay Salt Ponds

Fine-tuned capacity evaluation of SBSP Project ▬

Analysis of LIDAR data



Used average elevation for adjacent wetlands



Capacity estimate =

(assumes 90/10 scenario)

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan „

Evaluation of alternative dredged material delivery measures ▬

Aquatic Transfer Facility



Submersible pump



Dedicated off-loader

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan „

Development of potential innovative contracting solutions ▬





Independent financing involving tipping fee to recoup infrastructure costs Narrower scope cost-sharing Programmatic contracts

South Bay Dredged Material SBSP Project Deep Management Implementation Plan

Water Transfer Points

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan „

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Projected dredged material delivery costs ▬

Hauling distances to varying ponds



Three off-loader scenarios



Pumping costs to varying ponds



Total costs

Letter of Intent to Corps of Engineers

South Bay Dredged Material Management Implementation Plan Eden Landing Complex Total Costs per Cubic Yard from Oakland Harbor Pond NCM E14 E6A E6B E8 E6 E1 E7 E5 E2 E6C E4 E4C E2C E1C E5C

SF – DODS Disposal Cost per CY = $25.31 Offloader 1 Offloader 2 $ 22.39 $ 29.06 $ 22.17 $ 28.84 $ 22.37 $ 29.03 $ 22.20 $ 28.86 $ 21.98 $ 28.64 $ 22.15 $ 28.81 $ 21.62 $ 28.28 $ 21.77 $ 28.43 $ 22.02 $ 28.68 $ 21.32 $ 27.99 $ 21.96 $ 28.62 $ 21.65 $ 28.32 $ 22.06 $ 28.73 $ 21.77 $ 28.43 $ 21.71 $ 28.37 $ 21.88 $ 28.55

$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $

ATF 22.55 22.33 22.53 22.36 22.14 22.31 21.78 21.93 22.18 21.48 22.12 21.81 22.22 21.93 21.87 22.04

SUMMARY „

Quantification of the South Bay Salt Ponds fill capacity to meet high-end marsh goal

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Roadmap for Corps and SBSP Project

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Tool box to navigate the roadmap – – –

Available dredge material delivery methods Haul and pump distances to and from deep water access channels Potential contracting mechanisms