WASHINGTON, Oct. 8, 2008

High Court Divided On Whales Vs. Sonar

Supreme Court Justices Reticent To Tell Navy To Limit Sonar Use Near Marine Mammals

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    Sonar can interfere with whales' ability to navigate and communicate.  (iStockphoto)

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(AP)  The Supreme Court appeared divided Wednesday over judges' authority to limit the Navy's use of sonar to protect whales.

The court heard arguments in a dispute between the Bush administration and environmental advocates over court rulings that restrict sonar in naval training exercises off the coast of Southern California.

The administration says the training is vital for teaching sailors how to find enemy submarines.

"I see an admiral come along and say you have to train under these circumstances," Justice Stephen Breyer said. "I'm very nervous about it."

Sonar can interfere with whales' ability to navigate and communicate. There is also evidence that the technology has caused whales to strand themselves on shore.

The exercises have continued since the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled in February that the Navy must limit sonar use when ships get close to marine mammals.

Richard Kendall, representing the Natural Resources Defense Council, told the justices that the Navy is managing under the restrictions, noting that eight of 14 planned exercises have been completed since the restrictions took effect.

This round of training is scheduled to be complete by January.

Separately, the Navy has agreed to similar limits on anti-submarine training off the coast of Hawaii to settle a lawsuit.

But Solicitor General Gregory Garre said the issue for the court is whether federal judges should have stepped in to force changes to the training when the government's first environmental assessment found there was little prospect of harm to whales and dolphins.

The Navy's own environmental assessment of using sonar during the 14 training exercises off the California coast found that it could disturb or harm an estimated 170,000 marine mammals, including possible temporary hearing loss in at least 8,000 whales.

But only five whales have been stranded and 37 whales have died because of sonar since 1996, the Navy says.

In addition, Garre said, the Navy has used mid-frequency sonar in training exercises off Southern California's coast for 40 years.

The Bush administration also says the president has the power to override federal court rulings on environmental laws during emergencies that include harm to national security. The Navy says it has already taken steps to protect beaked whales, dolphins and other creatures and is balancing war training and environmental protections.

Justice David Souter ridiculed the idea that the administration could declare an emergency to try to get around complying with environmental laws. The Navy opted not to conduct a more rigorous environmental study before beginning the long-planned exercises, Souter said.

"If there's an emergency, it's one the Navy created simply by failing to start EIS preparation in a timely way," he said.

Justice Samuel Alito suggested that he found little evidence in the court record that the marine mammals would be harmed by the sonar use.

Alito also said there was "something incredibly odd" that a single federal judge, who issued the first order against the Navy in this case, would be able to force changes in the exercises.

An injunction by U.S. District Judge Florence-Marie Cooper in Los Angeles early this year created a 12-nautical-mile no-sonar zone along the coast and ordered the Navy to shut off all sonar use within 2,200 yards of a marine mammal.

The 9th Circuit sided with the lower court and said the Navy must abide by the injunction. However, while the litigation was under way, the appeals court gave the Navy permission to use sonar closer than the restrictions allow during critical maneuvers.

The case is Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 07-1239.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by yongamerica October 10, 2008 7:03 PM EDT
The World and the US Navy must come to terms that thier sonar is the equivalent of the kid in the adjacent apartment cranking out at high volume, rap songs that completely mask his neighbors classical music.

The Navy must get off this frequency band, which can be done easily. The Navy must learn to live as a guest in its underwater environment.

Consider the 37 whales died by the loud noise from sonar; that number is 37 of the 83 in the area during one test. That is almost half.
Reply to this comment
by tallyman2008 October 9, 2008 7:07 PM EDT



Am Navy Vet in Sonar and Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW)

Apparently with some others also posting here



Now Hear This


Active Sonar today is a myth perpetrated by Military Industrial Complex



Any Sub Commander, with any brains at all, will not be found with Active Sonar

Too easy to avoid, too easy to hide

Good example - finding fish with your fish finder

And that kind of ''fish'' is not known for their intelligence or stealth

Stop wasting money, energy, and hopes on tactics and technology gone with the Cold War

Stop thinking LOUDER is better




Now - as an American - Hear This


This is not new

130 years ago Our Government, Our Nation, We The People

We committed a Sin of Historic Proportion and Great Shame

We wiped out the Buffalo


Many at that time justified the slaughter by claiming ''Military Necessity''

Sounds like a whale of a precedent





Reply to this comment
by thevicar1 October 9, 2008 4:24 PM EDT
The Supreme Court appeared divided Wednesday over judges authority to limit the Navy''s use of sonar to protect whales - - - -


Were these guys appointed Zoo Keepers, or Court Judges???
Reply to this comment
by hbevis October 9, 2008 2:59 PM EDT
in the 80''''s active sonar was already on its way out. When you put a quarter of a million watts of sound into the water you tend to announce your exact location to every ship and submarine in the area.

Posted by jon_mccain at 08:57 PM : Oct 08, 2008

How about half-way around the world..?
Reply to this comment
by swingset4u October 9, 2008 2:15 AM EDT
Hmmm.... STOPPPPPPPPPPPP! there is a whale crossing with a dolphin.
Reply to this comment
by jon_mccain October 8, 2008 11:57 PM EDT
in the 80''s active sonar was already on its way out. When you put a quarter of a million watts of sound into the water you tend to announce your exact location to every ship and submarine in the area.
Reply to this comment
by downtowner97 October 8, 2008 11:38 PM EDT
Have you ever noticed how Cher sounds just like whale song?
Reply to this comment
by libluv2cnsor October 8, 2008 9:52 PM EDT
Let''''s set up an AC/DC tour to play in every Admiral''''s back-yard and see how they like it.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by usclimey at 06:48 PM : Oct 08, 2008
+ report abuse
*********

dont you have an AC/DC concert playing inside your mind all the time??
Reply to this comment
by usclimey October 8, 2008 9:51 PM EDT
Asking a bunch of Supreme Court judges to rule on a scientific matter lacks logic.
Reply to this comment
by libluv2cnsor October 8, 2008 9:51 PM EDT
save the whales..collect the whole set
Reply to this comment
by usclimey October 8, 2008 9:48 PM EDT
Let''s set up an AC/DC tour to play in every Admiral''s back-yard and see how they like it.
Reply to this comment
by donevis-2009 October 8, 2008 7:24 PM EDT
The sonar the Navy uses now can be escalated to an incredibly high/low pitch. Normal sonar systems didn''t have near this range and powerful effect on whales/dolphins. Do other species mean anything to our great and powerful Military? I''m in a horrible dream please wake me up to I can go downstairs, watch Howdy Doody, Winky Dink, and Rin Tin-Tin.
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