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The NewsRoom
Release: #4018
Date: July 29, 2009
MMS Awards $700,000 Grant to Alaska
Provides funding through the Coastal Impact Assistance Program
ANCHORAGE
– The Minerals
Management Service (MMS) has awarded a $700,000 grant to the Alaska
Department of Natural Resources through the Coastal Impact
Assistance Program (CIAP) for a project that will test for
environmental contaminants in fish populations throughout Alaska.
The project will assess the impact of possible
contaminants, such as heavy metals and pesticides, on the coastal
and marine ecosystems in Alaska by testing muscle tissue from a
variety of fish species. By testing the fish samples, scientists
will be able to locate areas in Alaska where there may be high
concentrations of contaminants, thus addressing ways to protect both
fish and the wildlife that consume them.
“MMS is proud to partner with the State of Alaska in
its conservation efforts,” said MMS Alaska Regional Director John
Goll. “We are committed through the Coastal Impact Assistance
Program to support our partners with important projects that will
not only promote conservation, but protect the fish and wildlife
that are dependent upon the land.”
Alaska’s CIAP plan was approved by
the Minerals Management Service on September 30, 2008.
The CIAP was created by the
Energy Policy Act of 2005 and provides $250 million in grants
annually, from 2007-2010, to six eligible Outer Continental Shelf
oil and gas producing states – Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Alaska,
California, and Mississippi. The funding to Alaska included $37.5
million for each of the fiscal years 2009 and 2010.
Contact:
Nicholas
Pardi
(202) 208-3985
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for America
U.S. Department of the Interior
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Last Updated:
09/11/2009,
01:05 PM
Central Time
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