Bolsa Chica, a haven for wildlife
Jenny Marder
By 2007 a vast portion of Bolsa Chica will have been transformed from
1,300 acres of dry, neglected land dotted with oil rigs to a lush,
tidal marsh -- a watery haven for endangered birds, fish and other
wildlife.
The eight groups manning the long-awaited restoration project are
poised to move forward with construction, state and federal officials
told a group of nearly 200 residents at a town hall meeting Thursday.
“I think it’s a wonderful project,” said Jack O’Brien, 65, a Surf
City resident who takes frequent walks along the wetlands. “A lot of
effort has gone into it and I’m looking forward to seeing it come to
fruition.”
Funded largely by the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach,
restoration of the Bolsa Chica Wetlands calls for 370 acres of full
tidal and 180 acres of muted tidal habitat.
A digital representation of water ebbing and flowing with rise and
fall of the tides was shown at the meeting.
“It’s a dynamically changing habitat condition that’s related to
the tides,” said Jack Fancher of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
“The sea is life. The sea brings organisms and growth and activity.”
The wetlands will look like a lake at extreme high tide and like a
salt marsh at other times, he said.
The project will involve cutting a tidal inlet through the south
end of Bolsa Chica State Beach and across Pacific Coast Highway,
allowing ocean water to flow into the degraded marshes at the
long-neglected Bolsa Chica lowlands.
Bids for construction, which is slated to begin in October, will
go out in early June. Plans call for a dike to contain the full tidal
range, a bridge over Pacific Coast Highway to cross the tidal inlet
and physical barrier surrounding the wetlands to prevent seawater
from creeping inland. The gas line will also be relocated along AERA
Energy’s oil lines.
“The groundwater barrier will prevent the tidal restoration from
influencing the groundwater under houses,” Fancher said.
Of 56 oil wells and rigs, 36 have already been abandoned.
The abandonment process involves removing surface pumps and tubing
beneath the surface and plugging the mouth of the well with cement to
keep oil from escaping into soil or groundwater. Each well will take
anywhere from three days to a week to decommission.
AERA Energy operates three kinds of wells in the Bolsa Chica --
active producers, electrical submersible wells and injectors. The
wells, which have a producing life of 20 to 25 years, pull about 150
to 200 barrels a day. The first were drilled in 1951.
The oil company has been working closely with state and federal
agencies on the abandonment project.
While construction of the bridge and inlet are underway, Pacific
Coast Highway will be detoured to a narrow strip between the oil
wells and the highway. Work on the highway will involve raising the
road bed up to the level of the bridge.
“While building the bridge over the inlet, we’ve got to keep
Pacific Coast Highway operating,” Fancher said.
A 20-foot bike path will also be rerouted over the bridge.
Several scenic overlooks will be created for pedestrians. The
outlooks are intended “to give a visual panorama, a place to look at
the beauty of our restoration,” Fancher said.
Fancher said the project could be finished by as early as Spring
of 2006.
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