In response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, Wildlife
Mississippi worked with other conservation groups and the U.S. Congress to develop
the Resources and Ecosystems Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities and Revived Economies
of the Gulf Coast States Act, commonly called the RESTORE Act. Some of the estimated
5 million barrels of oil released during the spill fouled hundreds of miles of shoreline
from Texas to Florida, including more than 100 miles in Mississippi. The species
in harm’s way included the brown pelican, bottlenose dolphin, Kemp’s ridley sea
turtle, bluefin tuna and dozens more. Tourism, seafood production and recreational
fishing, which generate 35,000 jobs and produce $2.5 billion in annual economic
activity on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, suffered as well. The RESTORE Act established
a framework for responding to the spill among the Gulf Coast states and the federal
government. It also directed that 80 percent of Clean Water Act penalties from the
spill be used to restore and protect natural resources, ecosystems, fisheries, marine
and wildlife habitats, beaches and coastal wetlands and to restore the economy of
the Gulf Coast region.