Navy sonar training OK’d; environmentalists sue
SAN DIEGO – The Navy’s five year-plan to use sonar in training exercises off Southern California and Hawaii was approved Monday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
But several environmental groups, anticipating the approval, immediately filed a lawsuit in Hawaii federal court to block the training on grounds that the underwater noise poses an unacceptable threat to marine mammals.
NOAA, after a review by its fisheries division, concluded that the promised mitigation measures by the Navy will “minimize effects on marine mammals.”
The Navy insists that the sonar training is crucial to prepare sailors to detect the super-quiet submarines owned or being developed by adversaries such as Iran, particularly in shallow waters like the Persian Gulf.
Environmentalists assert that the training could be conducted in places without large numbers of whales and other mammals and by avoiding the use of sonar sending out loud noises that subject the mammals to hearing loss, lung injuries and death.
NOAA, in its decision, noted that the Navy has promised to shut down use of sonar and explosives if marine mammals are spotted “within designated mitigation zones.” The Navy has promised to designate a “humpback whale cautionary area” around Hawaii during winter months.
Also, NOAA’s approval requires the Navy and federal fisheries’ officials to meet annually to “discuss new science” and review whether additional mitigation measures are needed.
The environmental groups’ lawsuit asserts that the Navy’s measures are inadequate given the imperiled status of many of the species.
“Some of the marine mammals threatened by Navy activities are already on the brink of extinction, such as the Hawaiian monk seal, (which is) our state mammal and one of the world’s most endangered species,” said Marjorie Ziegler of the Conservation Council for Hawaii.