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The NewsRoom
Release: #3706
Date: September 26, 2007
Federal Offshore Sand to Build-Up
South Carolina Beaches
Up to 3 Million
Cubic Yards to Bolster 25 Miles of the Grand Strand
WASHINGTON – South Carolina’s Grand Strand
will receive Federal sand conveyed by the U.S. Department of
Interior’s Minerals Management Service (MMS) to help shore up its
eroding beaches. Up to 3 million cubic yards of Federal Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) sand will be used to renourish 25 miles of
storm-damaged beaches in North Myrtle Beach, Myrtle Beach, Surfside
and Garden City in Horry County, South Carolina.
“I am pleased to say this is the second time in a
decade that MMS has helped provide Federal OCS sand to renourish these
storm damaged Grand Strand beaches,” said MMS Director Randall Luthi.
“Helping to restore South Carolina’s Grand Strand is a prime example
of government, through MMS serving the citizens of South Carolina and
the U.S.”
In 1998 Federal sand was placed on Surfside and
Garden City beaches.
MMS today issued three separate non-competitive
lease agreements for the use of federal OCS sand for the Myrtle Beach
Storm Damage Reduction Project. North Myrtle Beach will receive
703,000 cubic yards of sand from the Little River Borrow Area. Myrtle
Beach will receive 1,442,500 cubic yards of sand from the Cane South
Borrow Area, and the Surfside and Garden City beaches will receive
778,600 cubic yards of sand from the Surfside Borrow Area. All three
borrow sites straddle the State/Federal line about 3 nautical miles
offshore South Carolina.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Charleston
District, is partnering with the local and county governments for the
design of the project and the removal and placement of sand. The sand
will be dredged from the three borrow sites, transported to the
project sites, and hydraulically pumped from the dredge ship to the
beach nourishment handling areas.
Over a decade ago, MMS and coastal states recognized
that sand resources from the OCS are a viable and critical source for
protection of the nation’s shores and wetlands. MMS, through
partnerships with 14 coastal states, identified over 2 billion cubic
yards of OCS sand resources available for beach nourishment and other
coastal restoration uses. To date, the MMS has conveyed more than 25
million cubic yards of sand for projects that have restored over 100
miles of the nation’s shorelines.
Media Contacts:
Nicolette Nye,
703-787-101
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for America
U.S. Department of the Interior
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