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News brief: Illinois releases strategy to reduce pollution in the Gulf

URBANA, Ill. — Illinois may be hundreds of miles from the Gulf of Mexico, but it’s a key contributor to the “dead zone,” a section of water the size of Connecticut devoid of oxygen that forms every summer. The culprit is millions of pounds of nutrients from farm fields, city streets and wastewater treatment plants entering the Gulf each year through the Mississippi River system.
The state of Illinois has released a plan, the Illinois Nutrient Loss Reduction Strategy, to keep those nutrients out of the water. The collaborative effort began almost two years ago in response to the federal 2008 Gulf of Mexico Action Plan, which calls for all 12 states in the Mississippi River Basin to develop plans to reduce nutrient losses to the Gulf.
The process was spearheaded by the Illinois EPA and Department of Agriculture and facilitated by Illinois Water Resources Center (IWRC) and Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant (IISG). The approach outlines a set of voluntary and mandatory practices for both urban and agricultural sources for reducing the primary drivers of the algal blooms – phosphorus and nitrogen – that  lower oxygen levels.
By targeting the most critical areas and building on existing state and industry programs, these practices are expected to ultimately reduce the amount of nutrients reaching Illinois waterways by 45 percent.


7/29/2015