'Sustainable Dredging' at the Port of Oakland
February 13, 2025
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The Port of Oakland deepens its commitment to sustainability by sending more dredged sediment from the Oakland Seaport to a Solano County wetland restoration site. Montezuma Wetlands will receive an approximately $2.1 million grant over the next three years to allow more Port-dredged sediment to go towards restoring wetlands and endangered species habitat. Regulations require a minimum of 40% of sand, silt, and mud dredged from berth maintenance to go towards beneficial reuse. Berths and approach channels must be up to 50 feet deep to accommodate the big vessels that call the Port today.
“We are committed to expanding our sustainable dredging initiative,” said Port of Oakland Director of Environmental Programs and Planning Colleen Liang. “Restoring and maintaining the Bay’s ecosystem provides many environmental benefits to the region.”
Montezuma Wetlands LLC, located in Suisun Bay, is a private initiative focused on wetland restoration using the millions of cubic yards of sediment dredged annually from Bay Area ports, harbors, and shipping channels. Due to its one-of-a-kind location within the SF Bay Estuary, the restoration of tidal wetlands at the Montezuma Wetlands Project
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