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Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Kevin Bodge, Ph.D., P.E. Port & Coastal Engineer Senior Vice President.

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Presentation on theme: "Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Kevin Bodge, Ph.D., P.E. Port & Coastal Engineer Senior Vice President."— Presentation transcript:

1 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Kevin Bodge, Ph.D., P.E. Port & Coastal Engineer Senior Vice President -- Olsen Associates, Inc.

2 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts 1.River hydraulics (flow, levels & sedimentation) Deeper, hydraulically-efficient artificial channel -- increases upstream salinity -- increases water levels -- changes flow patterns

3 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts 1.River hydraulics (flow, levels & sedimentation) Deeper, hydraulically-efficient artificial channel -- increases upstream salinity -- increases water levels -- changes flow patterns 2.Storm water levels -- Tide ranges increase up to 0.4 feet -- Storm tides not described

4 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts 1.River hydraulics (flow, levels & sedimentation) Deeper, hydraulically-efficient artificial channel -- increases upstream salinity -- increases water levels -- changes flow patterns 2.Storm water levels -- Tide ranges increase up to 0.4 feet -- Storm tides not described 3.Salt water intrusion -- impacts to aquifer... not included

5 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study SOME OF THE STUDIES NOT IN THE DRAFT REPORT FOR PUBLIC REVIEW & COMMENTS

6 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts, Cont’d 4. Salinity -- The Corps claims that natural changes in salinity cause more stress than the project’s changes. -- The impacts are real, but not clearly presented -- Fish & shrimp studies etc. are still ongoing

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8 NO ACTION (No Project) 50-Ft PROJECT

9 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts, Cont’d 5.Ship Wake and Bank Erosion -- Corps study claims no increase in ship wake, but that is based upon the current design vessel. -- Deeper channel  Bigger Ships  Greater Ship Waves 970’ ship length at 15 knots: wake = 3.7’ 1260’ ship length at 15 knots: wake = 6.8’ (84% increase) 970’ ship length at 10 knots: wake = 0.4’ 1260’ ship length at 10 knots: wake = 1.0’ (150% increase)

10 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Physical Impacts, Cont’d 6.Offshore Disposal Area -- Construction requires disposal of 18 million cubic yards (mcy) -- Existing offshore disposal area capacity = 3.3 mcy -- Expanded offshore disposal area close to sand borrow areas.

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12 Coastal & Port Engineering Considerations of the Jacksonville Harbor Deepening Study Fiscal Impacts 1.Initial Construction Cost Fed: $350M (48%) Local: $384M (52%) 2.Maintenance Dredging Costs -- Fiscal projections are not included in report -- Local cost-share increases from 0% to 50% ! Dredging requirements will increase by 130,000+ cy/yr or, about $1.2M per year. Probable annual dredging req’t = 1,540,000 cy/yr Probable equivalent total cost = $14 million / year Probable NON-FEDERAL cost = $7 million/year. My estimates, not in report


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