Photo by: Canadian Wildlife Federation
Yesterday, a status conference on seismic litigation revealed that the industry will not pursue efforts to employ seismic blasting to search the Atlantic Ocean for offshore petroleum deposits this year, and possibly for several years.
The hearing marked a victory for dozens of organizations and thousands of coastal communities and businesses in a years-long legal and public battle challenging the government’s issuance of Incidental Harassment Authorizations, or IHAs. Those authorizations were needed because the airgun bombardment of the seafloor would have hurt marine animals, including the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale.
The developments included:
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Recognition by government attorneys that the IHAs would expire on Nov. 30, and there was no mechanism to extend them.
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Acknowledgment that seeking new permits would move the lengthy process back to square one.
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A concession from lawyers representing the seismic industry that it is not feasible to launch boats this year.