Vessel Strike Protections Sought For Critically Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales By November 1st
Karen Lapizco
Earlier this month, conservation groups requested that a federal judge impose a November 1st deadline for the long-overdue federal action needed to finalize expanded vessel strike protections for critically endangered North Atlantic right whales. With calving season approaching, it is crucial to implement new speed limit protections to prevent harm to right whale mothers and their calves.
The conservation groups also challenge the government’s delay in acting on a 2022 proposal to update the rule. Since 2012, these groups have petitioned to expand the rule to include smaller vessels and additional areas, but their calls went unanswered until they filed suit.
The right whale is approaching extinction, with only around 360 of them surviving today, including around 70 reproductively active females. Vessel strikes are a leading cause of death and injury for the species, with mother-calf pairs and juveniles at disproportionate risk. Seven mortalities and serious (likely lethal) injuries from vessel strikes have been documented since conservation groups filed suit, all during the species’ November-April calving season.
“The right whale has no more time to wait for National Marine Fisheries Service foot-dragging” said Jane Davenport, senior attorney with Defenders of Wildlife. “We are watching this species’ extinction unfold in real time on this administration’s watch. We’re asking the court to enforce the law because the Service clearly isn’t up to the task.”
The updated rule would establish new seasonal speed zones in times and places right whales are most at risk of vessel strikes, based on extensive data on the overlap of right whales and vessel traffic in U.S. waters. In these zones, vessels 35 feet and longer would be held to a mandatory speed limit of 10 nautical miles per hour. Temporary dynamic speed zones would be triggered by visual or acoustic right whale detections. The updated rule would contain safety exemptions that would not require any regulated vessel to slow down if doing so would put human health or lives at risk or interfere with navigational safety.
Speed limits are the only known way to minimize lethal collisions between large whales and vessels. Although future technologies may be developed to enhance right whale detection, reduce collision risk, and improve safety for both mariners and right whales, no such technologies exist now.
“North Atlantic right whales are hovering on the brink of extinction, and the last thing they need is more delay in reducing vessel speeds in some of their most important habitat,” said Kristen Monsell, oceans legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “It’s been abundantly clear for a long time that slowing vessels down saves whales, so it’s frustrating that the Fisheries Service has dragged its feet on such a straightforward solution. It’s time to get this done before it’s too late.”
“We have lost 2% of the right whale population just this year, and the most tragic aspect of that statistic is that these losses were preventable. Pilgrim’s 2023 calf was only a year old when a vessel struck and killed her, fracturing her skull. She didn’t even live long enough to get a name, never mind have a family of her own. Right whale #1950 was hit so hard that her back was blown open and her spine was fractured. Her newborn calf can’t survive without her so that’s a double loss from a vessel strike,” said Regina Asmutis-Silvia, WDC-NA executive director.
“It’s becoming a tragic joke: How many dead whales does it take to get a regulation in place? At the rate we are losing right whales, the punchline is all of them, and that is not acceptable,” continued Asmutis-Silvia.
The lawsuit is titled Whale and Dolphin Conservation v. National Marine Fisheries Service, Civ. No. 1:21-cv-112, and is in federal district court for the District of Columbia. The current litigation briefing schedule runs through September 12th.