FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, April 15, 2026
Contact:
Rachel Silverstein, Miami Waterkeeper, [email protected], (305) 905-0856
Elise Bennett, Center for Biological Diversity, [email protected], (727) 755-6950
Nicole Russell, Diving Equipment and Marketing Association, [email protected], (858) 616-6408 ext.1007
Danika Desai, Earthjustice, [email protected], (415) 217-2009
Morgan McClure, Florida Wildlife Federation, [email protected], (863) 286-9095
Army Corps Withdraws State Application for Port Everglades Dredging That Threatened Reef, Signaling Major Shift
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. --
In a major development, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has withdrawn its state permit application for the Port Everglades Expansion Dredging project. The withdrawal is the most significant progress in more than a decade of advocacy to protect Florida’s Coral Reef from this harmful project, which the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has said would result in “the largest impact to coral reefs permitted in U.S. history.”
More than 35,000 people have already signed a petition calling on regulators to stop the dredging project. Now, the Corps has indicated that elements of the project description are being reconsidered, which may result in changes to the project’s scope.
For the past 10 years, conservation groups — along with scientists, community members, and advocates — have raised concerns about the deep dredge. The pause is a critical opportunity to reevaluate a project that would put more than 10 million corals at risk — including some of the last remaining wild stands of threatened staghorn coral in the region — as well as queen conch, dolphins, turtles, and fish.
Florida’s Coral Reef is the only nearshore coral reef in the continental U.S. and supports fishing and diving, and reduces wave energy by an average of 95%. This equates to an estimated $675 million in coastal protection every year. However, coral reefs have declined rapidly in recent years, with coral cover declining over 80% since the 1970s.
“This hard-fought pause is more than a decade in the making — and couldn’t have come at a more critical time for the future of our coral reefs,” said Dr. Rachel Silverstein, Chief Executive Officer and Waterkeeper at Miami Waterkeeper. “This is meaningful progress. Our advocacy is working, and our voices are being heard. But until there is clear confirmation that this project will not move forward in a way that harms our reefs and water quality, we must remain vigilant, engaged, and keep the pressure on. ”
Florida’s Coral Reef stretches along the Atlantic coast from Monroe to Martin counties. Staghorn coral, once abundant throughout the Caribbean and Florida Keys, has been listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act but was recently declared functionally extinct. Some of the only known survivors live next to Port Everglades. Advocates also warn that the project could impact a threatened queen conch breeding site just south of the Port Everglades channel. Blasting activities to remove rock in the project area also pose a threat to the area’s dolphins.
“I’m cautiously optimistic that federal officials are rethinking this devastating dredging project, which could be the final nail in the coffin for our incredibly imperiled staghorn corals,” said Elise Bennett, Florida and Caribbean director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The amount of harm this project could do to our corals is staggering and really unprecedented, so I hope the Army Corps follows this withdrawal by going in a completely different direction. Our corals, queen conch, and other vulnerable coastal creatures help make Florida a special place, and we can’t let them be annihilated by reckless dredging.”
The push to halt Port Everglades dredging is rooted in hard lessons learned from PortMiami. During the 2013–2015 PortMiami dredging project, sediment plumes likely killed millions of corals and smothered over 278 acres of reef, far exceeding the environmental impacts predicted in the Corps’ environmental analysis.
Our organizations are treating this permit withdrawal as a critical inflection point in this project, not an endpoint. We plan to remain vigilant to ensure that any redesigned project is held to the highest scientific and transparency standards, and must not put our corals at risk.
“This milestone is the product of years of determined work by those who refused to accept the destruction of one of Florida's most extraordinary ecosystems. We are energized by this progress, although we recognize we are not at the finish line yet,” said Sarah Gledhill, CEO of the Florida Wildlife Federation. “FWF remains fully committed to seeing this through: ensuring that staghorn corals, reef fish, and the coastal wildlife that depend on them are protected, so that future generations of Floridians can experience this irreplaceable treasure.”
“With this good news, the Diving Equipment and Marketing Association (DEMA) and its hundreds of scuba diving business members, and the thousands of scuba divers in Florida they represent, know that the battle is not over,” said Nicole Russell, Interim CEO and President of DEMA. “DEMA encourages the many divers from Florida and all over the U.S. who enjoy seeing this incredibly beautiful array of coral reefs in Ft. Lauderdale to get involved and continue to contact Florida state and federal officials to put an end to this harmful dredging project, both on their behalf and on behalf of their own children who they hope will have the same opportunity to see these protected species of coral first hand.”
“Hopefully, this pivot means that the Army Corps has finally recognized the extent of the harm this massive dredging poses to the many species that depend on this reef tract, including some of the very last staghorn coral colonies in Florida,” said Danika Desai, Senior Attorney with Earthjustice. “We will continue to monitor the situation to make sure the relevant agencies comply with their obligations to protect the vulnerable species and habitat at risk from this project.”
Our organizations will remain engaged in any future rescoping efforts for the Port Everglades expansion project. We are also actively monitoring the Sand Bypass dredging project currently ongoing at Port Everglades near the staghorn and queen conch populations, where large plumes of sediment documented near the project threaten to suffocate the area's marine life.
Take action and stay informed by visiting StopTheDredge.com.
Header Photo Credit: Shireen Rahimi for The Washington Post
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Ted Weber commented 2026-04-15 18:28:21 -0400If nothing else, this buys some time. -