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How wet must a wetland be to have federal protections in post- <i>Sackett</i> US?

Adam Gold

2024Science12 citationsDOI

Abstract

In 2023, the US Supreme Court’s majority ruled in Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency that only wetlands that are “indistinguishable” from federally protected waters “due to a continuous surface connection” are federally protected. This study estimates the potential impact of interpretations of the ruling on federal wetlands protections, using a qualitative measure of wetland “wetness” as a proxy for the new requirement. An estimated area ranging from ~17 million acres (19%) to nearly all 90 million acres of nontidal wetlands in the conterminous United States could be without federal protections, and variability in state protections creates hotspots of risk. The high-level estimates provided here represent a first step toward understanding the long-term impacts of Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency on federal wetlands protections and highlight the uncertainty introduced by the ruling.

Topics & Concepts

Clean Water ActWetlandAgency (philosophy)Proxy (statistics)Supreme courtEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental planningEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementPolitical scienceGeographyLawWater qualityEcologyMachine learningEpistemologyBiologyComputer sciencePhilosophyEnvironmental Conservation and ManagementEconomic and Environmental ValuationLand Use and Ecosystem Services
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