Federal Court Blocks Navy's Use of High-Intensity Sonar in Massive
Hawaiian War Games
Judge Grants Restraining Order to Protect Marine Mammals, Other Species
From Unnecessary Harm Caused by Deadly Sonar Near President's New
National Monument
Natural Resources Defense Council, July 3, 2006
LOS ANGELES (July 3, 2006) - In an emphatic stroke for the rule of law,
U.S. District Judge Florence-Marie Cooper today issued a temporary
restraining order blocking the use of high-intensity, mid-frequency
sonar by the U.S. Navy during sprawling international war games now
taking place in waters around Hawaii. This type of sonar has been
directly associated with repeated occurrences of mass strandings and
deaths of whales, dolphins, and other marine species in U.S. waters and
around the world. The court's order comes three days after the Pentagon
took the unprecedented step of declaring the Navy exempt from the U.S.
law requiring steps to avoid harm to marine mammals.
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and other organizations
filed suit asking for the restraining order last Wednesday, saying that
use of mid-frequency sonar during the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2006
naval exercises posed an unnecessary and avoidable threat to marine
mammals and violated two fundamental environmental laws: the Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA). Before filing, the plaintiffs had tried, unsuccessfully, to work
with the Navy to develop a series of common sense protective measures
for use during the exercise.
"We are pleased, but not surprised, by the court's emergency
intervention. This ruling underscores that no one, not even the United
States military, is above the law," said Joel Reynolds, a senior
attorney at NRDC and director of its Marine Mammal Protection Project.
"Last Friday the Navy did an end run around the law protecting marine
mammals, but fortunately this country has more than one law against the
needless infliction of harm to endangered whales and the environment. We
sincerely hope the Navy will now choose to comply."
"We've requested and the court has ordered that the parties meet and
confer, and we are prepared to begin that conversation immediately,"
said Richard Kendall, senior litigation partner at the law firm of Irell
& Manella, which is serving as co-counsel to NRDC in the lawsuit.
On Friday, the Navy received an unprecedented exemption from the
Department of Defense granting it permission to ignore the MMPA for six
months in its use of sonar. The MMPA is this country's foremost law
protecting marine mammals from "take," a legal term meaning to harass,
hunt, capture or kill.
However, the U.S. District Court today recognized the validity of the
lawsuit's claims under NEPA. According to the court in a seven-page
order, "Plaintiffs have submitted considerable convincing scientific
evidence demonstrating that the Navy's use of MFA sonar can kill,
injure, and disturb many marine species, including marine mammals....
The issuance of this Temporary Restraining Order . . . serves the public
interest by ensuring the protection of endangered marine species
threatened by the Navy's proposed MFA sonar training and testing
activities off the coast of Hawaii." On this basis, the court ordered
that "the Navy is hereby enjoined from using mid-frequency active sonar
during its Rim of the Pacific 2006 training exercise...for 10 court days
from the date of this Order, pending a hearing on the Order to Show
Cause why a preliminary injunction should not be granted." The hearing
is scheduled, and the TRO remains in effect, until July 18, 2006.
RIMPAC 2006 is taking place in a 210,000 square nautical mile area
around Hawaii, comprising some of the richest marine habitat in the
world, including waters near the newly established Northwestern Hawaiian
Islands Marine National Monument, created just two weeks ago by
President Bush. Under the original authorization for sonar use during
RIMPAC 2006, issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), the
Navy had been allowed to "take" as many as 25,000 protected marine
mammals by blasting high-intensity, mid-frequency sonar during the
biennial naval exercise.
Despite a recent report by NMFS saying that sonar was a "plausible, if
not likely" cause of a mass stranding of 150 melon-headed whales during
RIMPAC 2004, the Navy had steadfastly resisted adopting any significant
precautions for mid-frequency sonar use during RIMPAC 2006. Such
measures include establishing a larger, permanent safety zone around
mid-frequency sonar sources, as the Navy uses for other sonar systems;
adding an extra marine mammal spotter on board ships during all sonar
training; reducing the sonar power level at night or at other times when
spotters' visibility is compromised; and avoiding areas in or near
significant marine mammal habitat, like whale breeding and feeding
areas, and migratory routes.
Whales exposed to high-intensity mid-frequency sonar have repeatedly
stranded and died on beaches around the world (including Hawaii,
Washington State, North Carolina and the Bahamas), some bleeding around
the brain and in the ears, with severe lesions in their organ tissue. At
lower intensities, sonar can interfere with the ability of marine
mammals to navigate, avoid predators, find food, care for their young,
and, ultimately, to survive. There is no scientific dispute that intense
sonar blasts can disturb, injure, and even kill marine mammals.
Biologists worry that whales found dying on beaches are only the tip of
an iceberg, and that many more are dying at sea.
One of the best-documented incidents took place in the Bahamas, in 2000,
when 16 whales of three species stranded along 150 miles of shoreline as
ships blasted the area with sonar. The U.S. Navy later acknowledged in
an official report that its use of sonar was the likely cause of the
stranding.
The lawsuit was brought by NRDC in conjunction with the International
Fund for Animal Welfare, the Cetacean Society International, the Ocean
Futures Society, and Jean-Michel Cousteau. Plaintiffs are represented
by NRDC and by Richard Kendall, senior litigation partner at the law
firm of Irell & Manella in Los Angeles, California.
# # #
The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit
organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists
dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in
1970, NRDC has 1.2 million members and online activists nationwide,
served from offices in New York, Washington, Los Angeles and San
Francisco.
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