Left image credit: Clearwater Marine Aquarium Research Institute, taken under NOAA permit #26919. Right image credit: Forever Hooked Charters of South Carolina.
An Oceana analysis uncovered that nearly 80%of ships violated mandatory speed zones in the weeks leading up to the discovery of a maimed North Atlantic right whale calf off the coast of South Carolina.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)confirmed that the calf was spotted on January 6, 2024, with life-threatening injuries consistent with a boat strike. Oceana’s analysis shows that in the weeks prior to the boat strike, the majority of boats in the area were speeding through mandatory slow zones designed to protect critically endangered North Atlantic right whales.
Oceana says President Biden and Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo failed to do their jobs to protect North Atlantic right whales, and demands they immediately issue the updated vessel speed rule and fully enforce speed limits.
Using Ship Speed Watch, an innovative tool launched by Oceana to monitor ship speeds in slow zones in the U.S. that were established to protect North Atlantic right whales, Oceana documented that during the period between December 9, 2023, (the last confirmed sighting of the healthy, uninjured mom and calf pair) and January 3, 2024:
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79% of boats 65 feet and greater (454 of 575) exceeded the speed limit in the mandatory slow zones in the U.S. southeast.
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One boat was found traveling as fast as 35.8 knots,more than 3.5 times the speed limit.