GALVESTON, TX — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Galveston District (SWG) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Texas General Land Office (GLO) for design work on the Coastal Texas Project's (CTX) ecosystem restoration measures and the coastal storm risk management measure on South Padre Island. This MOU represents a continued partnership between USACE and GLO, the non-federal sponsor for the one of the largest civil works projects in the history of the Corps of Engineers.
The Coastal Texas Project represents a systemwide risk management strategy for Texas' coastline, employing multiple lines of defense to reduce the risk of coastal storm surges and restore degraded coastal ecosystems. The proposed system of improvements will increase the state’s ability to withstand and recover from coastal storms, adapt to storm surges, and maintain the social, economic, and coastal preservation systems that serve the state and the nation.
The Coastal Texas Project was signed into law through the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2022 to deliver critical protection from coastal storm surges for the communities, nationally important industries, and vital ecosystems of the Texas coast. The passage of WRDA 2022 authorizes the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and its project partners to continue implementation activities.
The GLO is the non-federal sponsor for eight Coastwide Ecosystem Restoration and South Padre Island Beach Nourishment and Sediment Management measures of the CTX, which include the creation of 114 miles of breakwaters, 15.2 miles of bird rookery islands, 2,052 acres of marsh, 12.32 miles of oyster reef, and 22.4 miles of beach and dune.
“[This] signing marks a major milestone in our persistent march to restore and protect Texas’s coastline,” said Col. Rhett Blackmon, SWG District Commander. “This collaboration with the GLO advances the essential design work necessary to restore critical ecosystems, which will ensure a stronger, more resilient Texas for generations.”