Features
Announcing the availability of EPA’s 2008 National Coastal Condition Report III
Announcing the availability of EPA's 2004-2006 National Estuary Program (NEP) Implementation Report (PDF) (14 pp, 1MB, About PDF)
Estuaries are places where rivers meet the sea. Estuaries are critical to the health of coastal environments and to our enjoyment of them.
EPA's National Estuary Program was established by Congress in 1987 to improve the quality of estuaries of national importance. The Clean Water Act Section 320 directs EPA to develop plans for attaining or maintaining water quality in an estuary. This includes protection of public water supplies and the protection and propagation of a balanced, indigenous population of shellfish, fish, and wildlife, and allows recreational activities, in and on water, requires that control of point and nonpoint sources of pollution to supplement existing controls of pollution. In several cases, more than one State is participating in a National Estuary Program. Each program establishes a Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan to meet the goals of Section 320.
NEPs are effective, efficient, collaborative, and adaptive community-based programs. To find out more, see the vibrant NEP booklet below.
EPA's National Estuary Program is proud of its progress and has had many successes. The NEPs have succeeded because:
- they focus on the watershed,
- use science to inform decision-making,
- emphasize collaborative problem solving, and
- involve the public.
The successes of the National Estuary Program are largely a result of the programs' ability to develop long term, sustainable finance strategies.