Press Release | July 12, 2019

NC to Remove Swamp Waters Classification Cape Fear River

CHAPEL HILL, N.C.–North Carolina’s Environmental Management Commission today granted a petition from environmental groups to remove the “swamp waters” classification from 15 miles of the Lower Cape Fear flowing past Wilmington. The commission also directed the Division of Water Resources to develop a new management strategy for the Lower Cape Fear River.

Waterkeeper Alliance and Cape Fear River Watch, represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center, petitioned the Environmental Management Commission in January to remove the classification.

The Cape Fear, the state’s largest and most industrialized watershed, has the highest concentration of hogs on the planet. Those five million hogs produce roughly the same amount of waste as all the humans in the entire New York City metro area. The Cape Fear River basin also has the state’s highest concentration of industrial poultry operations.

Waste from industrial animal operations, when it enters a river, can reduce the dissolved oxygen and increases acidity, making it difficult for fish to live and shellfish to form healthy shells. This segment of the Cape Fear is a primary nursery area and provides critical habitat for endangered Atlantic sturgeon.

Under industry pressure, the state reclassified the Lower Cape Fear as “swamp waters” in 2015, over the objections of environmental groups, academic experts, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. EPA rejected North Carolina’s classification in July 2018, in part because the state failed to include data about the river’s velocity. The lower Cape Fear is a fast-moving river, but under state law, swamp waters are defined largely by “very low velocities.”

EPA also found that the state failed to consider, as required by federal law, whether water quality in the river could be improved to support uses including healthy fisheries.

In the 2015 reclassification, the state also failed to subject the watershed’s industrial animal operations to meaningful scrutiny, relying on a model that assumed the operations have no impact on water quality, despite extensive evidence to the contrary.

“Logic and law beat industry pressure today,” said Kemp Burdette, Cape Fear Riverkeeper. “This decision should begin the process of imposing pollution limits on the industrial animal operations choking our river.”

“The state has a legal obligation to curb upstream pollution,” said Will Hendrick, senior attorney for Waterkeeper Alliance and manager of its North Carolina Pure Farms Pure Waters campaign. “Today’s decision sets the table for this essential work to begin.”

“The state now gets another chance to create a management plan that fully protects the Cape Fear River,” said Brooks Rainey Pearson, attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.

Following the groups’  petition for the classification change in January, they presented to the Environmental Management Commission’s Water Quality Committee on May 8.

###

Southern Environmental Law Center

For more than 30 years, the Southern Environmental Law Center has used the power of the law to champion the environment of the Southeast. With over 70 attorneys and nine offices across the region, SELC is widely recognized as the Southeast’s foremost environmental organization and regional leader. SELC works on a full range of environmental issues to protect our natural resources and the health and well-being of all the people in our region. www.SouthernEnvironment.org

About Waterkeeper Alliance
Waterkeeper Alliance is a global movement uniting more than 300 Waterkeeper Organizations and Affiliates around the world, focusing citizen action on issues that affect our waterways, from pollution to climate change. The Waterkeeper movement patrols and protects over 2.5 million square miles of rivers, lakes and coastlines in the Americas, Europe, Australia, Asia, and Africa. For more information please visit: waterkeeper.org.

About Cape Fear Riverwatch
Cape Fear River Watch is a nonprofit organization with a mission to protect and improve the
water quality of the Lower Cape Fear River Basin through education, advocacy and action. Cape Fear River Watch is the sole Riverkeeper for the entire Lower Cape Fear and advocates on behalf of the river basin at the local, state, and national levels. For more information, please visit: capefearriverwatch.org

Are you a reporter and would like more information? Please visit our press contact page for a full list of SELC’s press contacts.

Press Contacts

Kathleen Sullivan

Senior Communications Manager (NC)

Phone: 919-945-7106
Email: [email protected]