Three years after Katrina, Gulf ports at risk

Thu Aug 28, 2008 1:07pm EDT
 
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By Kathy Finn

PORT FOURCHON, Louisiana (Reuters) - The drive south from New Orleans toward the Gulf of Mexico is a study in coastal vulnerability.

As the road winds through marshes and skirts bayous, dry land grows sparser by the mile.

Soon, water dominates the landscape, and the danger that a storm surge from a hurricane coming ashore would pose becomes clear.

At the far edge of this web of wetlands, roughly 60 miles south of New Orleans, lies one of the most strategically important ports in the United States.

Nearly three years to the day after hurricane Katrina plowed into the Louisiana coast on August 29, 2005, Port Fourchon is still a glaring Achilles heel in the vulnerable U.S. energy supply chain.

Now Port Fourchon and coastal cities like New Orleans are staring down the barrel of Tropical Storm Gustav, which could come ashore next week as the worst hurricane since 2005.

The 1,600-acre (647-hectare) complex is the support nerve center for over half of all offshore drilling operations, and serves 90 percent of the Gulf's deepwater oil installations.

Hundreds of large workboats chug between Port Fourchon and the rigs every day, carrying workers, heavy equipment and necessities that range from pipe, drilling mud and diesel fuel to groceries and drinking water.

All those supplies come to Port Fourchon by truck or barge via Louisiana Highway 1 and a waterway called Bayou Lafourche.

The exposure of those routes to a surge from the Gulf worries the port's executive director, Ted Falgout.

'CRITICAL ROLE'

"We play a critical role in 15 to 18 percent of the entire nation's oil supply," Falgout said. "If the Lafourche corridor takes a severe hit, everyone in this country will feel the impact."

Falgout, who rode out Hurricane Katrina in 2005 in the port's bunker-like executive office building 20 miles north of the Gulf, says the port took only slight damage from the storm. But Highway 1, which floods even in mild storms, had to be cleared of debris that included power poles and houseboats before traffic could move again.

Luckily, Falgout said, Katrina spared Port Fourchon from a direct hit.

But continuing erosion of the surrounding wetlands is increasing the danger of a more serious disruption in access.  Continued...

 
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