October 2017 Discover

(Jeff_L) #1
October 2017^ DISCOVER^61

JAY SMITH


and David Hand, chair of the Department of Civil and
Environmental Engineering at Michigan Technologi-
cal University. Hand had worked on water purification
systems for the International Space Station that can turn
sweat and urine into tap water.
“This,” Hand told the group of the ballast problem, “is
not rocket science.”
Two weeks later, Isle Royale’s passenger ship had a
crude ballast treatment system that used chlorine to fry
viruses and other life lurking in its 37,000-gallon ballast
tanks, and then vitamin C to neutralize the poison so the
water could be harmlessly discharged into the lake. Green
didn’t stop there. She leveraged her authority as protec-
tor of Isle Royale to block all freighter ballast discharges
within a 4.5-mile radius of the island, which happened to
cover shipping lanes used by freighters sailing to and from
the Canadian port of Thunder Bay.
The Park Service has since installed a permanent bal-
last treatment system on the Ranger III that uses filtration
and UV light, a first for the Great Lakes. Although the
Isle Royale boat is almost toy-sized compared with the
freighters that ply the Great Lakes, Green contends the
relatively simple chlorine treatment could be scaled up
to the biggest boats on the lakes as an emergency line
of defense that would be far stouter than the saltwater
flushing — the only protection for the lakes until ballast
treatment systems are required for all overseas ships,
which likely won’t be until 2021 at the earliest.

STOP THE SALTIES
The Great Lakes are wrapped by thousands of miles
of shoreline. But unlike on the Atlantic, Gulf or Pacific
coasts, there is, literally, a door through which every
foreign Seaway ship must pass. Stop the overseas ships
known regionally as “salties,” and you can stop their
ballast invasions.
“Offload the cargo in Nova Scotia and ship it down
through rail,” an exasperated former Chicago Mayor
Richard Daley once told me. “That will protect the Great
Lakes forever. That will protect local and state govern-
ments from spending hundreds of millions of dollars.”
He is not alone. Conservationists agree this low-tech
solution for the Great Lakes could prove far cheaper
than installing ballast treatment systems that could cost

well over a million dollars on each ship.
But what might it cost?
In 2005, two Michigan logistics experts took the first
crack at putting a price tag on bringing in the Seaway’s
overseas cargo into the region by other means. The figure
they came up with was $55 million annually. That’s what
it would cost to transfer the salties’ cargo from a coastal
port to trucks, rail or regional boats.
The overall toll just to municipalities and power com-
panies trying to keep their pipes mussel-free over the last
quarter century tops $1.5 billion. And in terms of damage
to fisheries and other recreational activities, the dollar toll
for the ecological unraveling of the lakes due to ballast
invasions was pegged in a 2008 University of Notre Dame
study at $200 million annually — a number the study
authors predicted would grow as new invasive species are
discovered.
The question now is: How will the public respond once
the next new invader turns up?
Cleveland’s industrially fouled Cuyahoga River burned
over and over throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
As late as the 1950s, the flames on the oily surface of the
water were still viewed as business as usual. But eventually
the public had enough, and when the river was set ablaze
in 1969, it turned a nation livid and led to passage of the
Clean Water Act.
Isle Royale’s Green predicts similar fury with the ship-
ping industry when the next ballast invader turns up.
“The industry has had this grace period to find solutions,”
she says. “The grace period they have been given will hit
the fan when they find the next one.”
She tells me this on a raw, rainy day in 2014 at her
park headquarters not far from the shoreline of Lake
Superior, and my notes are a smudgy mess. When I go
back to them later, I can’t tell from my scribble if she
said “if ” or “when” a new invasion happens. So I call her
back to get clarification. She chuckles ruefully.
“No,” she tells me. “I said ‘when.’ Definitely ‘when.’ ”^ D

Reprinted from THE DEATH AND LIFE OF THE GREAT
LAKES by Dan Egan. Copyright © 2017 by Dan Egan.
With permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton &
Company, Inc. All rights reserved.

1989 2002 2017

Zebra mussels (orange) quickly colonized the Great Lakes and other waterways after they were first found in 1988. Quagga mussels
(purple), which thrive in deeper waters, now cover vast regions of lake bed as well.
Free download pdf