Photo © J. Carl Ganter/Circle of Blue Lake Erie is sick. According to assessments by five federal agencies and every state in the Great Lakes basin, Lake Erie is among the country’s most visible examples of waters fouled by toxic algal blooms. Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations may be largely to blame. In 2017 alone, these industrial livestock farms spread untreated animal wastes on 1.75 million acres across Michigan and Ohio. That waste runs off farm fields and into nearby waterways, leaving the 11 million people who rely on Lake Erie for drinking water in a constant state of anxiety, waiting to learn every year just how large, and dangerous, the summer bloom will be. Hundreds of millions of federal dollars have been spent on cutting-edge technology and potential solutions. Yet, after five months of investigation, Circle of Blue found that—with a few exceptions—much of it isn’t working. Powerful resistance to oversight from the $1.1 trillion-a-year U.S. farm sector and surprising public tolerance have made toxic blooms a hazardous summertime mainstay of shoreline communities. An equally powerful shift in America’s approach to overseeing production agriculture is needed to rid Lake Erie of the pollution. Still, solving harmful algal blooms may not be as much of a reach as we thought just a few months ago. In approving legislation this year to rebuild infrastructure and fund significant expansion of clean energy and electrified transportation to reduce climate-changing emissions, the U.S. Congress is displaying fresh resolve to fix systemic challenges. This is the first in a six-part series, “Danger Looms Where Toxic Algae Blooms,” Circle of Blue’s penetrating assessment of the causes, impediments, and solutions to harmful algal blooms that are more numerous and in many cases getting more dangerous in Michigan, Ohio, and the other Great Lakes states. |