As you may
have heard, there is a truly epic project brewing in Utah Valley. In 2017, a limited liability company proposed to build 20,000 acres of
artificial islands in Utah Lake, claiming this would somehow help the ecosystem. In 2018, the Utah legislature passed House Bill 272, which opened the door to transferring the lakebed from the people of Utah to a private corporation. Since that time, the lake developers have been solidifying political support and lining up financing, including a $10 million loan guarantee approved by the legislature last year without any public vetting. They are having a major lobbying dinner at the state capitol next week. The company says they are motivated by a desire to restore the lake, describing
their project as a “comprehensive restoration.” Here is the full
text of their proposal.
After interacting with
them for years, I have major doubts about their intentions and methods. While
there are literally hundreds of ecological, financial, and legal problems with
their proposal, I’ve summarized seven of my main concerns below. If you want to
dig deeper, check out
this new article called “Getting to know Utah Lake.” There are also several op-eds
that have been written on this topic, including The present, future and past of Utah
Lake
in the Deseret News and Keep Utah Lake shallow and wet in the Salt Lake Tribune. If you prefer video format, here is a
presentation I gave at the Salt Lake Watershed Symposium earlier this month: Is Utah Lake a Steaming Failure or a
Gleaming Success?
Buckled ice on Utah Lake (Justin Lehman)
Problem
#1. The project is built on false premises. The developers claim that 1. Utah Lake’s condition is
bad and getting worse, 2. The lake needs to be dredged, and 3. The lake used to
be deep and clear. These claims couldn’t be farther from the truth. Utah Lake has
always been shallow and cloudy. In fact, these are some of the attributes that
make the lake so remarkably resilient. Multiple studies have found that Utah
Lake’s status is better than most water bodies in the U.S., and its sediment is
not contaminated—it is clean and crucial to the health of the lake. Dredging
would cause immense damage to the lake ecosystem while not providing any ecological
benefit.
Hundreds of
science-based restoration projects have put the lake on the road to recovery.
Cooperative agreements with farmers and other water users have restored river
flow to the lake, and upgraded wastewater treatment plants are decreasing
nutrient flows to the lake. Invasive species removal has been effective,
reducing carp biomass by 80% and restoring native plants along the lakeshore.
The Hobble Creek and Provo River Delta restoration projects have been immensely
successful, increasing public access to the lake and improving habitat. In
response to these efforts, algal blooms are decreasing, native species are
returning, and public use of the lake is on the rise. Thanks to this progress,
the native June Sucker was downlisted from endangered to threatened just this
year. Why would we make such a drastic change when things are finally going the
right direction?
A juvenile June Sucker. This endemic fish went from no reproducing adults in the late 1990s to more than 4,000 spawning in 2021 (Riley Nelson)
Problem
#2. Building islands would destroy the attributes that make Utah Lake resilient
and reduce ecosystem services it freely provides. The unique characteristics of Utah
Lake have helped it maintain much of its function despite decades of abuse. First,
about a third of the water that enters the lake evaporates to the atmosphere. This
causes the constant formation of calcite (the source of the lake’s beautiful
cloudy color), which makes nutrients in the lake unavailable to algae. Second,
the water’s cloudiness slows the cyanobacterial blooms that affect most water
bodies more often and intensely than Utah Lake. Third, the lake’s shallowness
prevents the worst effects of algal blooms when they do occur. In deep lakes,
blooms consume all the oxygen in the deep water, which causes fish kills and
massive release of pollutants from the sediment.
The islands
proposal would destroy all three of these attributes: reducing the lake’s
surface area, allowing more light to stimulate algal growth, and creating
multiple deep channels in the lakebed. This would damage the invaluable
ecosystem services the lake freely provides us, including increasing local
precipitation, cooling the valley during summer extremes, removing nutrients, providing
world-class opportunities for recreation and photography, and creating habitat.
Indeed, the lake is currently a hot spot of biodiversity, providing habitat for
nearly 1,500 species, including 10 million fish, 35 million water birds, and 69
kinds of mammals, amphibians, and reptiles. How would a project that directly
destroys the resilient qualities of the lake make things better?
Lights reflect off the water while Mount Cascade looms in the background (Chuck Castleton)
Problem
#3. This proposal would permanently deface our valley and dishonor the legacy
left by our ancestors. Anyone
who has hiked Timpanogos or any of the surrounding mountains knows that Utah
Lake is the centerpiece of our community. The developers propose to build
massive islands housing half a million people in the shape of arches, beehives,
railroad spikes, and seagulls. This would destroy views of the lake and make
our valley unrecognizable to our ancestors. Before European contact, Utah Lake
supported the Timpanogos Nation for generations—we now know that people have
been living in this area for more than 20,000 years. When the Mormon Pioneers
arrived, fish from the lake saved the settlers along the Wasatch Front during
crop failures in 1855 and 1856. After disasters during the Dust Bowl, our
ancestors carefully regulated water diversions to make sure Utah Lake would be
preserved. Will we honor that legacy or desecrate a lake that so many have
worked to protect?
Harvest of June Sucker and other native fish from the shore of Utah Lake in 1855. Courtesy of the June Sucker Recovery history. Problem
#4. The project is very likely impossible. It is very common for developers to underestimate the
technical challenges and economic costs of projects they are pitching. The
larger the project, the greater the potential for overconfidence. Let’s compare
this proposal to similar large projects. The world’s largest dredged island is
the Kansai International Airport, which was built in Osaka Bay in Japan. The
island is around 2,500 acres. It took 23 years to plan, permit, and build, costing
around $20 billion. Despite careful engineering and environmental surveys, when
they began building on the island, it sunk 27 feet into the sediment. The Utah Lake
islands would be 20,000 acres: 8-times larger than Kansai island. Additionally,
the bed of Utah Lake is unconsolidated marl—which has much less structural
integrity than the Holocene clay in Osaka Bay.
On the
dredging side, the Hudson River Cleanup currently holds the record for the
largest freshwater dredging project: 2.7 million cubic yards of sediment
removed over 10 years for a cost of $1.6 billion. According to the island developers, dredging
Utah Lake would involve removing 1 billion cubic yards of sediment, making the
project 370-times larger than the already enormous Hudson River project.
Despite the
truly unprecedented size of this project, the developers are claiming they can
do it for $2.6 billion in just 8 years. This seems like either a textbook case
of engineering hubris or intentional false advertising. Independent estimates
suggest the project could cost $10 to $90 billion while providing no ecological
benefit to the lake system.
The Executive Summary from the islands project, showing the size and shape of the proposed work.
Problem #5. The project is very likely illegal and will probably never get permitted. By law and precedent, Utah Lake must be managed according to the public trust doctrine. This legal framework requires the state of Utah to act as a trustee to hold the lake (and other waterbodies) for the benefit of all Utahns—present and future. This doctrine has been challenged multiple times in other water bodies around the state, but the Utah Supreme Court and U.S. Supreme Court have defended it quite fiercely. This is why the island developers’ first step was to lobby the legislature to change the law. In January of 2018, Representative Mike McKell of Spanish Fork introduced the Utah Lake Restoration Act (H.B. 272), which would allow the state to dispose of sovereign lands in exchange for “comprehensive restoration” of the lake system. Despite the law’s clear constitutional problems and the infeasibility of the island proposal, H.B. 272 passed with overwhelming support in both the house and senate. This law hasn’t yet been tested in court, but if the legislature attempts to transfer large portions of the lakebed to private parties, they would almost certainly be sued.
Previous disputes
over Utah Lake and other nearby waterbodies provide a hint of how that might go.
In 1990 the Utah Supreme Court ruled that the “essence of [the public trust]
doctrine is that navigable waters should not be given without restriction to
private parties and should be preserved for the general public for uses such as
commerce, navigation, and fishing.” The
court specified that even leasing of these lands can be challenged. A 2019
ruling by the Utah Supreme Court specified that “the abdication of the
general control of the state over lands under the navigable waters of an entire
harbor or bay, or of a sea or lake. . . is viewed as a gross infringement of the
public trust doctrine.”
Even if the
project didn’t get tangled in state and federal court, there is still the
question of permitting. All such projects are required to do an environmental impact
study, which typically takes 10 years or more (this legal panel at the Utah Lake
Symposium discussed the law and permitting challenges this project will face).
A juvenile northern harrier learns to hunt near Utah Lake (Travis McCabe).
Problem
#6. The project has no scientists on its team. This is one of the strangest and
most troubling aspects of this proposal. For any legitimate restoration
project, you assemble a team of researchers, engineers, and legal experts to
ensure an efficient, effective, and safe process. While there are several
engineers and lawyers involved, the team appears to be primarily real estate
entrepreneurs. There are no PhD-level environmental or ecological scientists on
the team, though their “senior scientist” did earn a master’s degree in biology
in 1996. The developers know this is extremely unusual for a project this size because
they have been trying to recruit researchers from all over Utah. They have made
job offers to several faculty at BYU and even tried to snatch a graduating
Ph.D. student from my department to lend some credibility to their proposal.
The fact
that no researchers are willing to take their generous salary highlights another
particularity about this project: no one in the research or management communities
thinks it is a good idea. With most environmental proposals, there is heated
debate and disagreement about pros and cons. I have spoken with more than 100
researchers from across the state and beyond, and all of them think this
project is a horrible idea. It has dozens of poison pills and no upside for Utah
Lake or the people of Utah.
Utah Lake as seen from Mount Timpanogos (Jeff Beck).
Problem
#7. The project has shady foreign funding. The developers claim to have $6.4 billion lined up in
investments. This money ostensibly comes from Dubai, where the famous Palm
Islands were constructed in the early 2000s. Those islands have been both a,
ecological and economic failure. They have caused massive erosion of Dubai’s
coastline, extensive algal blooms, and widespread asphyxiation of corals and
other marine life. Though $6.4 billion is woefully inadequate to complete the
described work (see problem 5), it would still make the Utah Lake islands the
largest private restoration project in history. More to the point, if they have
so much money lined up, why are they still fundraising? Last year, they tried
to raise $15 million on the SEC but ended up with only $200,000—potentially from
a single investor. They told the state legislature that they had applied for $200
million from the EPA (rejected this fall), which helped them get a $10 million
loan guarantee slipped into the Utah state budget last year. Now they are
working with a PR firm Halcyon host a series of fundraising events with celebrity
concerts costing $1 million.
These kinds
of “moonshot” projects with outside investors have been proposed before. Right
here in Utah Valley, we flirted with the idea of a ski resort behind Y Mountain
for more than 30 years. The investors never showed up and the proposal ended with
nothing but bankruptcy and a heap of wasted taxpayer dollars to show for it.
These large miracle solutions are always just what they seem: too good to be
true. True ecological restoration takes scientific evidence, community
engagement, and persistent collaboration. If we allow the island developers to
start this project, we may end up with an injured lake and an enormous mess of
half-built islands to clean up.
Light from Saratoga Springs reflects off a partly frozen
Utah Lake (Mandy Jensen).
So what
can we do? The best
way to permanently stop this dangerous proposal is to repeal H.B. 272. This is
the law that allows the legislature to dispose of our public trust lands in
exchange for the islands project. It was passed in 2018 without much opposition or fanfare (coverage here), but it has left the door open for foreign investors to .
A more complicated issue is the Utah Lake Authority bill, which failed earlier this year. A revised version will be considered in the 2022 session starting in January. The bill would create an independent body, similar to the Inland Port Authority, to oversee projects within and around Utah Lake. It is not associated with the islands project, but my concern is that it completely reworks the governance of Utah Lake right when we are making measurable progress. While the revised bill has not yet been made public, I worry that it could threaten the
important gains that have been made over the past decade. While increased coordination among stakeholders around the lake could be a plus, the authority could also make modification of the lakebed and surrounding area more likely. Utah Lake has been saved from the costly and damaging alterations that have been made to the Great Salt Lake (diversions, causeways, and artificial bays have resulted in major hydrological and toxicological problems).
Perhaps most
importantly, we need to share the positive message of a lake in recovery. Utah
Lake is a beautiful and sacred place, and it needs our support and love. We
will only convince the legislature and the people of Utah Valley to turn their
hearts back to the lake if we can show them its value and central role in our
history and future. Please share the Getting to know Utah Lake article with your family, friends,
and representatives at the city and state level. Please visit Utah Lake and share its unique beauty with all you know.
Utah, I ask that you please take heed to what the experts opposing this project have to say. Our people and the reeds around this lake give you your name. We stand in favor of restoring the lake to its natural beauty but have to oppose privatizing and desecrating this historic sacred site.
-Mary Murdock Meyer, Chief Executive of the Timpanogos Nation, August 2021
Utah Lake Sunset (Preston Holman).
Sign this petition by Conserve Utah Valley and a coalition of community and conservation groups to stop the island developments.
Ben Abbott is a professor of aquatic ecology at Brigham Young University. He has been studying reservoirs, lakes, and river networks throughout Utah and Idaho since 2009. The scientific and legal claims made in this blogpost are based on a synthesis of over 70 studies and reports on Utah Lake, which was published this August: “Getting to know Utah Lake.”