Showing posts with label National Science Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Science Foundation. Show all posts

Friday, August 21, 2015

No Justice for the Ocean

The NJDEP withdrew their lawsuit against the National Science Foundation (NSF), Lamont-Doherty Earth Science Observatory, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The lawsuit sought to challenge the legality of the Rutgers University led seismic surveying expedition off the coast of Long Beach Island, which concluded in July. The stipulation of dismissal was filed at close of business today.


“It is very frustrating the ocean did not have her day in court with judge and jury. Strong-arm tactics by federal agencies trumped a state’s ability to protect whales, dolphins, and fish at the peak time of their biological activity; Rutgers University valued the schedule of a few above the livelihoods of hundreds of fisherman and ignored  thousands of citizens; and an extraordinary roster of federal, state, and local elected leaders. If this was the oil industry it would be a national scandal.   Clearly, we urgently need to establish a Clean Ocean Zone, strengthen our laws protecting the ocean, and warn other states about this threat.” Said Cindy Zipf, Executive Director of COA.

NJDEP and NSF, NOAA, and LDEO agreed to dismiss the suit without prejudice, preserves NJDEP’s ability to challenge any future seismic surveying.

“We are disappointed that the merits of NJDEP’s complaint focusing on the many deficiencies in the environmental permitting process, and the impacts of seismic surveying on New Jersey’s coastal interests, were never adjudicated. Even more disturbing, is that the several issues related to the Coastal Zone Management Act and a State’s ability to use these federal laws to prohibit environmental harmful activities outside of their state waters were never heard. These issues are acutely relevant right now, as the Obama Administration has opened up the Mid-Atlantic to widespread seismic surveying for oil and gas exploration. What could have been a clear path for Mid-Atlantic States to oppose these harmful activities has now become decidedly murky.” Said Zachary Lees, policy attorney for COA.

BACKGROUND:

Since 2014, Rutgers University had led the NSF funded study that was staunchly opposed by the State of NJ, state and federal elected officials, thousands of citizens, commercial and recreational fishing groups, and members of the public.  All were concerned that, based upon 20 years of study, the seismic blasting would have impacts on New Jersey’s marine resources.  The 2014 and 2015 Rutgers’ study was design to emit 250 decibel blasts every 5 seconds, 24 hours a day, for 30 days in a small are of ocean off Long Beach Island during the peak migration and biological activity for marine resources including endangered species.  Throughout the two years that this expedition was reviewed, permitted, and undertaken, there have been manipulations, deficiencies, and flaws in the process including:
-          No public hearings were scheduled to educate the public or allow a meaningful opportunity to review and comment on the project.

-          In 2014, Rutgers and company failed to notify the State of New Jersey as to its blasting plans, and then successfully argued to the federal permitting agencies that New Jersey was time-barred from being able to review the project.

-          In 2015, study proponents changed the way they characterized the study (from a state agency project to a federal project) to prevent New Jersey from having veto power over the authorization process.  The structure, means, and methods of the project had not changed.

-          NSF engaged in negotiations with the State, even while preparing to carry on with this project behind the DEP’s back. NSF had no intention to modify the project, leading the DEP on while it prepared its’ final permitting documents.

-          The summer months ahead of the critically important time of year for marine life, and the livelihoods of commercial fishermen.  In 2014, Rutgers and NSF argued that boat availability was a key factor in the timing the project for the summer months.  When the study was rescheduled for the Summer of 2015, it became more apparent that the timing of the study was being driven by the schedules of its expedition members—university faculty and graduate students—rather than the schedule of the boat.

-          In 2014 and 2015, final permits and authorizations were literally issued as the boat was leaving the dock.  This compressed time frame between final approvals and the commencement of blasting left little to prepare legal challenges, particularly with respect to the thousands of pages of legal and permitting documents.

-          The number of “take” estimates was increased dramatically between the proposed and the issued permits.   For example, the allowance to harm dolphins went from over 400 to 18,000.  Notwithstanding this exponential increase, and a plea from U.S. Senator Corey Booker to the head of NOAA, the public and elected leaders were denied the opportunity to submit comments on the number of dolphins authorized to be harmed.  

-          In 2015, the final permit issued by NOAA was significantly flawed, as it vastly underestimated the number of endangered Fin Whales that the survey would encounter. NSF had to go back to NOAA in order to get a revised permit – even while the survey was ongoing—because they exceeded the “take” limit within a week of blasting.

-          COA repeatedly asked NOAA to include the endangered Atlantic Sturgeon in the analysis of impacts, and was ignored, even while COA submitted numerous studies that placed this endangered species within the survey area.

-          NSF included an abstract for the 2014 expedition which included an admission that the data they obtained would be “of relevance for hydrocarbon exploration industry.” The 2015 abstract was edited to state that the data “may help improve strategies for hydrocarbon exploration in the Gulf [of Mexico]. 


The Clean Ocean Zone (http://www.cleanoceanzone.org/) is an initiative to permanently protect the waters from Montauk to Cape May, NJ; this legislation would lock out harmful activities and lock a future for a healthy and clean ocean

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

LAMONT-DOHERTY: A HISTORY OF HARASSMENT

In response to recent criticism about their Summer 2015 Rutgers Seismic Study, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (L-DEO) has often said that their past studies have not led to marine mammal strandings. Clean Ocean Action expressed concerns during the project’s comment period this Spring regarding the project and the potential for marine mammal beachings. In response, L-DEO stated in its study’s 2015 Issued Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) “that Lamont-Doherty has not ever experienced a stranding event associated with their activities during the past 10 years that the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) has issued Authorizations to them. In the past decade of seismic surveys conducted carried out by the Langseth, protected species observers and other crew members have neither observed nor reported any seismic-related marine mammal injuries or mortalities.”

This statement fails to consider the repercussions of different studies conducted by the Observatory’s other boats over a lengthier period of time. In 2002 (13 years ago), L-DEO was taken to a U.S. District Court by the Center for Biological Diversity regarding the strandings of a pair of Cuvier beaked whales in the Gulf of California. These whales, which are widely known as the deepest diving marine mammals, often frequent depths of over 3,300 ft and typically avoid ships. However, their lengthy deep dives and ship avoidance were not enough to protect them from the impacts of seismic airgun blasting in the area. The off-duty NMFS scientists that found the beached whales found no physical indication of harm, but rather reddening of the cheeks, a symptom of physiological distress, hinting that the whales likely died due to burst blood vessels in their heads. As a result, a U.S. Magistrate Judge issued a temporary restraining order against the project, and all machinery was shut off immediately.

In this particular case, Lamont-Doherty was not using the Langseth, but rather the Maurice Ewing. However, despite the name difference, the project’s purpose closely resembles their proposed study off of the Atlantic coast. Beginning September 18, 2002, the research vessel started conducting seismic testing by traveling in a zigzag pattern off the shore of the Baja peninsula in an effort to map a rift that had been caused by continental plate shifts. Similar to the conducted 2014 study and the proposed 2015 study off of the coast of New Jersey, the National Science Foundation (NSF) was a sponsor to the 2002 Pacific Ocean study.

In the 2002 case, the Center for Biological Diversity claimed that the NSF’s seismic study violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) as well as the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), which require the government to analyze the ecological impacts of studies as well as minimize the potential disruption of marine mammals. The NSF argued that due to the study’s location in Mexican waters, the NEPA and MMPA would not apply. However, it became clear quickly that the effects of the study would have implications for marine life far beyond international borders.

In 2005, the Maurice Ewing was used in a seismic study off of the Yucatan Peninsula for a project under the NSF, Lamont-Doherty and the University of Texas. Concerned scientists and environmentalists pointed to the 2002 California whale beachings as a cause for concern regarding the project in the Gulf. In addition, Rosario Sosa, former president of the Association for the Rights of Animals and their Habitat, said that activists had come across dead dolphins and turtles in Campeche, where seismic pulses were used to explore for oil.

L-DEO’s response to Clean Ocean Action’s concern fails to consider a wealth of information that can drastically affect how the project is perceived by the public. By only analyzing data within the last decade, they fail to include the previous strandings that were on record. In addition, they fail to consider harm done by other NSF vessels, and mention only the Langseth. While at the surface, these might appear to be minor oversights, the lack of consideration and analysis pose a significant threat to marine mammal, turtle and fish stocks off of the coast of New Jersey.


Monday, March 23, 2015

NJ Seismic Study is Back!

Despite opposition from New Jersey, federal, state, and local officials and thousands of citizens, NOAA Fisheries recently published a proposed Incidental Harassment Authorization in the Federal Register for the taking, harm or harassment, of marine mammals for the seismic survey offshore of New Jersey scheduled for June through August of 2015. This seismic study conducted by Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and National Science Foundation along with University of Texas and Rutgers University lead researchers, was supposed to take place last summer, but due to public opposition and vessel issues, the study was delayed. The authorization allows over 32 marine mammal species, six of which are endangered, to be exposed to seismic air guns and three other acoustic blast technologies, all are known to be harmful to marine life. Clean Ocean Action has been working vigorously to stop this dangerous seismic study and we encourage you to join us in the fight.

Public comments on the Incidental Harassment Authorization can be submitted by April 16th. Instructions on how to send in your comments:

Mail Comments to:
Jolie Harrison
Supervisor, Incidental Take Program
Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources
National Marine Fisheries Service
1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910.

Email Comments to:
ITP.Cody@noaa.gov.
Please include 0648-XD773 in the subject line.