Bush exempts Navy from environmental law

By DPA

Washington : US President George W. Bush has exempted the Navy from an environmental law regulating the use of sonar off the California coast, the White House said.


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Bush is determined that the Navy needs to use the mid-frequency sonar to effectively train for anti-submarine warfare “in support of worldwide operational and combat activities, which are essential to national security”.

The law is designed to protect marine life from what environmentalists believe are the harmful effects of sonar that can be lethal or cause whales to beach themselves.

The Navy and environmental activists have been in a legal dispute over the practice for years. The Navy maintains that it takes steps to minimise the risk to marine life.

Bush’s decision exempts the Navy from a Jan 3 decision by a US District Court that would require surface fleets to maintain a 12-nautical mile buffer zone along the California coast, and to shut down the sonar when marine mammals are spotted within 2,000 metres.

“By exempting the Navy from basic safeguards under both federal and state law, the president is flouting the will of Congress, the decision of the California Coastal Commission, and a ruling by the federal court,” said Joel Reynolds, the director of mammal protection at the National Resources Defence Council.

The Navy said it already has 29 measures in place to protect sea life, including lookout stations, passive acoustic monitoring for marine mammals and setting up safety zones to reduce the sonar power or shut it down if marine life is spotted.

The secretary of the Navy, Donald Winter, announced Wednesday the Navy would also begin conducting more research and data collection, and adjust the procedures of sonar exercises whenever backed by the evidence.

“We are already taking extensive measures to protect marine mammals, and we have had positive results from those measures,” Winter said.

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