
By Jennifer Singleton
The Ashepoo, Combahee and Edisto Rivers join to form the larger St. Helena Sound, creating 350,000 acres of marshes, wetlands, hardwood forest and rich wildlife habitat.
The ACE Basin is one of the largest undeveloped estuaries along the Atlantic Coast and one of the most pristine in the United States. The primary counties it encompasses are Charleston, Beaufort and Colleton. The Ashepoo, Combahee and Edisto Rivers join to form the larger St. Helena Sound, creating 350,000 acres of marshes, wetlands, hardwood forest and rich wildlife habitat.
Just minutes from Charleston, locals and tourists escape here to breathe, recharge and experience a piece of nature that still feels untouched. Wildlife abounds. Serenity lives here.
In the 1970s and ’80s, development pressure sparked concern. Citizens stepped up, petitioning local, state and federal leaders to preserve it. In 1988, their efforts formed the ACE Basin Task Force, which evolved into the ACE Basin Project, driven by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; South Carolina Department of Natural Resources; The Nature Conservancy; Ducks Unlimited; and private landowners. Their work secured protected lands that ensure “quiet access” and long-term conservation, including:
Additional properties include Edisto Beach State Park, Edisto Interpretive Center, Great Swamp Sanctuary, Hunting Island State Park and Ravenel Caw Caw Interpretive Center. A lot of people invested time, money and heart to protect this place. It was meant to last.
Or so we thought…
Weyerhaeuser,one of the largest timber companies in North America, owns approximately 12.4 million acres of U.S. timberland and manages another 14 million in Canada. Much of their South Carolina acreage lies in Colleton County near Walterboro, the headwaters of the ACE Basin. On Cooks Hill Road, in the heart of it all, developersThomas & HuttonandEagle Rock Partnersare seeking an exception to current zoning restrictions in order to build a data center there.
Data centers come with real, measurable risks:
If we don’t protect the ACE Basin now, we risk losing it forever.
For starters, rural communities surrounding Walterboro rely on well water. These wells could run dry. Wildlife faces similar threats through pollution, habitat disruption and energy demands that chip away at fragile ecosystems.
The people and wildlife of the ACE Basin do not want and cannot sustain:
As a concerned citizen and property owner who is passionate about the outdoors, I am shouting from the rooftop to STOP THIS EFFORT before the protected walls of the ACE Basin fall leaving us prey to a new environmental predator: the data center.
What can you do? Show up and be heard. Bring a friend. Bring ten. Bring your neighbors. Spread the word. We need to pack the room and stand in opposition to this existential threat. If we don’t protect the ACE Basin now, we risk losing it forever.
Editor’s note: The editor, Robin Gibson, is married to the author, Jennifer Singleton.