Water storage project expected to help Caloosahatchee

Enviro-Tech Systems, Inc. is proud to have been awarded the construction portion and to have preformed the construction work for the Nicodemus Slough Project. We feel honored to have been apart of the team that will help the Caloosahatchee River and its estuary during heavy rain events and flooding conditions. See article below for more information on this project.

State water managers are putting the final touches on a storage project that should help the Caloosahatchee River and its estuary during heavy rain events and flooding conditions.

Called Nicodemus Slough, the $28 million project sits on 16,000 acres northwest of Moore Haven, just west of Lake Okeechobee. Water, upward of 11 billion gallons, will be stored on this land, mostly during late summer and fall. The idea is to pull billions of gallons from Lake Okeechobee so that coastal estuaries such as the Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie (on the east coast) won’t be hit so hard during large releases from the lake.

Large releases can kill sea grasses and oyster beds, feed algal blooms and cause fish kills.

The Caloosahatchee and St. Lucie rivers were artificially connected to Lake Okeechobee as a way to drain the lake and open the Everglades to development. Water laden with nutrients flows into the lake each year from the north. The water contains so much nutrients that it can’t be legally discharged onto another property — so water that would be going to Everglades National Park is instead going west and east to the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean.

“We raise the water, and as the water works its way west, we’re basically pushing water uphill and letting gravity do the rest,” said Jeff Needle, an engineer and project manager for the South Florida Water Management District. “We’re restoring a slough and providing more habitat for birds.”

A pair of sandhill cranes feed in the Nicodemus Slough in Glade County. Water was pumped from Lake Okeechobee into the slough to help with storage. (Photo: Andrew West/The News-Press)

A pair of sandhill cranes feed in the Nicodemus Slough in Glade County. Water was pumped from Lake Okeechobee into the slough to help with storage. (Photo: Andrew West/The News-Press)

Construction started in November 2013 and is in the final stages. District engineers, along with help from the property managers (most of the land is leased from the Lykes Brothers Inc. at $2 million a year) started pumping water to Nicodemus earlier this year. The project is now fully functional and is taking Lake Okeechobee water while the Army Corps continues releases to prepare for the coming rainy season.

“This is a temporary step in the right direction,” Needle said. “But this is the best we have right now.”

These types of projects are designed to mimic historic conditions by keeping water on the landscape for as long as possible. An elaborate drainage system has been built over the past century to send fresh water to coastal areas as fast as possible. Turns out that strategy is good for farmers and some landowners but terrible for the environment, so taxpayers are spending billions of dollars to replumb the Everglades.

Water quality scientists and advocacy groups are hoping the project will help ease the freshwater load on the Caloosahatchee estuary during large rain events.

A large alligator basks in the sun next to a canal that is part of a project on the Nicodemus slough in Glades County. Water is being pumped uphill into the slough by the South Florida Management District to alleviate Lake Okeechobee water levels and to keep water from being sent down the Caloosahatchee River. (Photo: Andrew West/ The News-Press)

A large alligator basks in the sun next to a canal that is part of a project on the Nicodemus slough in Glades County. Water is being pumped uphill into the slough by the South Florida Management District to alleviate Lake Okeechobee water levels and to keep water from being sent down the Caloosahatchee River. (Photo: Andrew West/ The News-Press)

“We’re interested in (Nicodemus) and any storage to prevent excess amounts of water flowing down the Caloosahatchee,” said Rick Bartleson, a water quality scientist at theSanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation. “It’s sort of a drop in the bucket for how much storage we need, so we’re trying to help them find more projects like that.”

Bartleson said the Nicodemus project will remove about 50 cubic feet per second of water flows at the Franklin Lock and Dam in Olga. During extremely heavy flows in 2013, flows at Franklin Lock were over 10,000 cubic feet per second.

Looking ahead, some environmental groups lauded Nicodemus Slough, saying these types of projects are needed to ensure the health of coastal estuaries such as the Caloosahatchee.

“We’ve been very impressed with the design and we certainly hope it works,” said Eric Draper, director of Florida Audubon. “It’s a big chunk of water, and that will help because every bit of water we can take off the lake and store is good for the estuaries.”

Conditions in the Caloosahatchee are rarely right — there’s either too much water blasting down the river (enough to send freshwater plumes 15 miles off Sanibel) or so little flow that salt water works its way inshore.

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Water pumped in from Lake Okeechobee fills the Nicodemus Slough in Glades County. (Photo: Andrew West/The News-Press)

Nicodemus and other, smaller water storage projects should help cut down on future heavy releases from Okeechobee.

The reconstructed Nicodemus Slough is also connected to a canal that feeds into Lake Hicpochee, the former headwaters of the Caloosahatchee and another water management district water project for this region.

The project is also a public-private partnership, where the state pays Lykes Brothers for the use of the land and to operate the pumps. Draper said this style of water management is good for taxpayers because it lowers the cost and speeds up the process.

“The public is getting the benefit of this storage faster and cheaper than if the government built the project,” he said.

Connect with this reporter: ChadGillisNo1 on Twitter.

Nicodemus Slough by the numbers

  • 16,000: acres in size
  • 11: Billion gallons of water of storage
  • $28: Million in costs
  • 8: Years land will be leased from Lykes Brothers Inc.
  • 6: Weeks it takes pumps to fill the slough
  • 2,000: Acres of the slough are protected wetlands

Chrysler Super Bowl Commercial


“God Made a Farmer” by far our favorite Super Bowl Commercial here at Enviro-Tech Systems, Inc. The two-minute ad features stunning still images from a few noted photographers, inlcuding William Albert Allard, who has long documented the American Midwest; and Kurt Markus, who made his name with his depictions of cowboy life. The ad is part of a Dodge Ram partnership with the National FFA Organization (formerly the Future Farmers of America) aimed at “highlighting and underscoring the importance of farmers in America,” according to a statement from Dodge parent company Chrysler.

BioNitrogen To Issue Bonds For Florida Fertilizer Plant

BioNitrogen Plant FL I, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of BioNitrogen Corp., has received approval from the Board of County Commissioners of Hardee County on Thursday, November 1, 2012 for the Florida Development Finance Corp. to issue up to $150 million in bonds for the construction of the Hardee County plant. A critical hurdle was cleared in the process of receiving a Major Special Exception that allows construction of the plant to proceed without re-zoning. As part of the process, the planning and zoning board issued its unanimous approval and recommendation of the Major Special Exception at a hearing held on the same date.

Construction on the site is slated to commence in early 2013. The proposed plant will be able to produce 15 tons of urea fertilizer per hour, or 124,200 tons annually.

“The County’s approval sets the stage for the initiation of the construction process of what will be the first environmentally-friendly plant in the United States that converts biomass into urea fertilizer,” said Carlos A. Contreras, President and CEO of BioNitrogen. “We are excited to be another step closer to providing domestically produced urea fertilizer for the North America market.”

For more information on the subject, please visit our source site: http://www.croplife.com/article/31706/bionitrogen-to-issue-bonds-for-florida-fertilizer-plant

Two-day Fair Teaches Teens about Careers in Construction

SunSentinel.com

South Florida Construction Career Days, a two-day fair aimed at teaching teenagers about careers in the highway and bridge industry, ended on Wednesday, October 26th. The 10th annual event allowed students from more than 50 schools throughout South Florida to spend a school day immersed in every aspect of the construction industry, from safety to communications. “It’s important to raise the level of awareness to high school kids that construction is a viable career,” said Pete Nissen, a district construction engineer for the Florida Department of Transportation. Acknowledging the down economy and how it has affected the industry, Nissen said it’s all about looking ahead. “Construction will be back and we’ll need more people again, so part of what we are going here is planning for the future.”

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/fl-construction-careers-20111026,0,887701.story

Biofuel Developers Use Federal Funding to Move Forward

Source: EnergyBoom.com

INEOS New Planet BioEngery (INPB) announced that financing has been finalized for its Indian River BioEnergy Center biofuel refinery. The facility will be the first commercial scale waste to biofuel facility in the United States. In January 2011, INPB was granted a $75 million loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to support development and construction of the BioEnergy Center. Now, eight months later, the company has secured private loans backed by the loan guarantee. With this announcement INPB says it has the funding needed to complete the project.

“We want to commend the USDA on its partnership with us in advancing this bioenergy technology and making it commercially available,” said Peter Williams, CEO of INEOS Bio and Chairman of INPB.

With the loan guarantee in hand, INPB began constructing the plant in February. The company reports that construction is 20 percent complete and is on schedule to be finished April 2012. Located in Vero Beach, Florida, the facility will convert agricultural, construction, municipal, and forestry waste into eight million gallons of advanced biofuels and six megawatts of renewable energy.

http://www.energyboom.com/biofuels/biofuel-developers-using-federal-backing-move-forward