Chevron gas station located near a Louisiana wetlands restoration project site along the coast, for article on Louisiana wetlands restoration

Chevron ordered to pay $740 million to restore Louisiana coast in landmark trial

A Louisiana jury has ordered Chevron to pay $744.6 million to restore damaged coastal wetlands in Plaquemines Parish — the first major verdict in a wave of lawsuits holding oil companies accountable for decades of environmental harm along one of America’s most vulnerable shorelines. The April 2025 C.E. ruling is the first of dozens of pending cases to reach trial, and it could set a legal precedent that puts billions more in damages on the table for other energy companies operating along the Louisiana coast.

At a glance

  • Louisiana wetlands restoration: The jury awarded $575 million for land loss, $161 million for contamination, and $8.6 million for abandoned equipment — with interest pushing the total above $1.1 billion.
  • Coastal land loss: Louisiana has lost more than 2,000 square miles of coastline over the past century, with the U.S. Geological Survey identifying oil and gas infrastructure as a significant contributing factor.
  • Pending litigation: Dozens of similar lawsuits against major oil companies are waiting in the wings, and legal experts say this verdict could shape those cases for years to come.

Decades of damage, one historic ruling

The case centered on Texaco, which Chevron acquired in 2001 C.E. Jurors found that Texaco had spent decades violating Louisiana’s coastal resource regulations — dredging canals, drilling wells, and dumping billions of gallons of industrial wastewater into the marsh without proper permits or meaningful cleanup.

A 1978 C.E. Louisiana coastal management law required oil company sites to be “cleared, revegetated, detoxified, and otherwise restored as near as practicable to their original condition” once operations ended. Witnesses for the plaintiffs testified that Texaco knew of established best practices and chose to ignore them, prioritizing profit over the marsh from the 1940s C.E. onward.

Plaquemines Parish, the rural district straddling the final miles of the Mississippi River before it meets the Gulf of Mexico, filed the lawsuit in 2013 C.E. and had sought $2.6 billion in damages. The jury awarded less — but still delivered the largest environmental accountability verdict of its kind in Louisiana history.

Why the coast matters — and who it protects

Southern Louisiana’s wetlands are far more than an ecological resource. They form a living buffer between the Gulf of Mexico and some of the nation’s largest ports, major energy infrastructure, and the communities — many of them low-income, Black, and Indigenous — who have called this coast home for generations.

When oil companies dredge canals through marshland, they fragment the wetlands and accelerate saltwater intrusion. Industrial wastewater from drilling degrades the soil and kills the vegetation that holds land in place. The result is land that simply disappears — and with it, natural protection from hurricanes and storm surge.

NOAA estimates Louisiana loses roughly a football field of land every 100 minutes. The state’s own coastal protection agency has warned that an additional 3,000 square miles could vanish in the coming decades. Plaquemines Parish — a majority-Black, low-income district — sits on the front lines of that loss. That the communities most harmed by the damage are also the ones who fought hardest, and longest, for this verdict is a meaningful part of the story.

A precedent with reach

Because this is the first of dozens of pending cases to go to trial, the verdict carries implications well beyond one parish. Environmental law advocates say the jury’s reasoning could shape similar litigation against other major oil companies for years. Louisiana’s state government has backed the lawsuits, including Republican Gov. Jeff Landry, who supported the litigation during his time as attorney general.

“Our communities are built on coast, our families raised on coast,” state attorney Jimmy Faircloth Jr. told jurors. “The state of Louisiana will not surrender the coast.”

The case also reflects a wider global shift: communities and governments increasingly turning to courts to force polluters to pay for environmental harm. From climate litigation in Europe to Indigenous land claims across the Americas, 2025 C.E. is shaping up to be a consequential year for environmental accountability in courtrooms.

What comes next

Chevron has announced it will appeal the verdict, calling it “unjust” and arguing the 1978 C.E. law should not apply to conduct predating it. The company reported more than $3 billion in earnings in the fourth quarter of 2024 C.E. alone, meaning the financial pressure from this ruling, while real, is unlikely to threaten its operations in the near term.

The restoration plan proposed by the parish — removing contaminated soil and rebuilding fragmented wetlands — will likely face continued legal challenge. Chevron has argued the plan is impractical and pointed to the Mississippi River levee system, which prevents sediment from replenishing delta land, as the primary driver of coastal erosion. Scientists do acknowledge levees as a genuine contributing factor.

Still, the jury affirmed something important: that oil companies operating in Louisiana’s coastal zone had legal obligations they did not meet, and that the communities left holding the ecological and economic consequences have standing to demand redress. Whether the money ultimately reaches the marsh — and how quickly — will determine whether this landmark ruling translates into real-world restoration of a disappearing coast.

As one of the nation’s most erosion-threatened communities waits to see what comes next, the verdict stands as the clearest signal yet that accountability for coastal destruction is no longer just a political question. It’s a legal one.

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For more on this story, see: Los Angeles Times

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