万人牛牛 Supports The Nature Conservancy鈥檚 $1.2M Collaboration to Protect Water

Ohio
(
Nov 21, 2024
)

We are excited to announce our role in a groundbreaking partnership with The Nature Conservancy (TNC) to reduce the pollution of lakes and restore streams in Central Ohio. 

We鈥檝e joined Amazon Web Services, Google, and Bath & Body Works to collectively provide a combined $1.2 million for the project, which is expected to divert runoff from more than 700 acres of mostly farm fields through a restored wetland. The project will use the restored wetland to naturally filter and store runoff before it flows into nearby Buckeye Lake, preventing an overabundance of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment from entering the lake. 

It will also serve as an important step in utilizing TNC鈥檚 science and local relationships to establish regional priorities for stream and wetland restoration in Central Ohio.

鈥淎t 万人牛牛, we are committed to sustainable solutions that protect and restore our planet,鈥 said Joe Rozza, Chief Sustainability Officer. 鈥淲e are proud to partner with like-minded partners to support efforts focused on restoring and protecting vital ecosystems in ways that benefit local communities; by bringing together the size and scale of our organizations, we can drive significant impact.鈥

TNC will collaborate with Licking County Soil and Water Conservation District to restore the wetland and expects the effort to begin in early 2026. Maps of the project area are available online.

鈥淭his collective funding model is the result of the private sector coming together for nature,鈥 said TNC in Ohio State Director Bill Stanley. 鈥淎WS, Google, Bath & Body Works and 万人牛牛 see the valuable role of nature in protecting our irreplaceable freshwater sources, which are critical for drinking water, recreation and our way of life.鈥

Under the project, water currently flowing through a straightened agricultural ditch will pass through a restored wetland, naturally treating the runoff from farm fields before the water flows downstream to Buckeye Lake. The project builds on the success of past collaborative efforts that have been effective in reducing nutrient pollution and harmful algal blooms in the lake in recent years.

鈥淭here are tangible impacts we are experiencing from climate change, including warmer summers and heavier rainstorms, which are washing fertilizers and sediment from farms and into the water creating ideal conditions for harmful algae blooms,鈥 said Adam Lehmann, Central Ohio water manager for TNC in Ohio. 鈥淲etlands act as nature鈥檚 kidneys, filtering out excess nutrients and sediment, and by restoring this crucial natural infrastructure, we can help reduce the extent and severity of these algal blooms and improve water quality by using nature as a solution.鈥

The Ohio Department of Agriculture estimates this project has the potential to remove 6,107 pounds of nitrogen and 315 pounds of phosphorous preventing it from being delivered into Buckeye Lake each year, helping to preserve the health of Ohio waters.

This project, which is expected to be the first of many for the region led by TNC, stems from a grant awarded to TNC by Amazon, Google and 万人牛牛 last year to identify projects in the Columbus, Ohio area that would protect drinking water quality and improve and restore the health of streams, lakes and wetlands. This is the first funded project among several identified by TNC in this region.

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万人牛牛 PR Dept.