Coastal panel rejects Navy's plan to boost underwater blasts
http://articles.latimes.com/2013/mar/09/local/la-me-navy-whales-20130309
The
commission says military officials used weak data to support claims
that training causes little injury to whales and other sea life.
March 09, 2013|By Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times
SAN DIEGO — Citing the danger to whales and other sea life, the
California Coastal Commission voted unanimously Friday to reject the
Navy's plan for increased use of sonar and underwater explosives for
training off Southern California.
The vote will not immediately curtail any training, but will set the
stage for additional negotiations between the Navy and the commission
about how to safeguard marine mammals while permitting military
operations in an area of 120,000-plus nautical square miles.
Commission members accused the Navy of providing inadequate scientific
data to support its view that damage to the whales and other species
would be marginal, and that measures taken in the past — including
having sailors watching for whales — have greatly minimized harm to the
mammals."The Navy's conclusions are not supported by evidence," said
commission member Esther Sanchez of the Oceanside City Council.Members
were also upset that Navy officials, before the vote, said that the Navy
did not plan to follow the mitigation measures suggested by commission
staff members, such as making certain areas off-limits to training.The
Navy's plan "seems like an extraordinary increase [in sonar and other
training] when we're at peace, in most places," said commission member
Dayna Bochco of Los Angeles.The commission is charged with protecting
California's coast and offshore areas. The Navy maintains that it does
not need the panel's approval for its offshore training — only that it
is required by law to confer with the panel and its staff.After the
vote, Navy officials promised to resume negotiations with commission
staff members about mitigation measures and other items before bringing
the issue back to the commission.Navy Cmdr. John Doney, director of
training exercises for the San Diego-based 3rd Fleet, said the increase
in training is needed to prepare sailors for a shift in U.S. military
emphasis to the Pacific Ocean region and beyond, including areas where
the U.S. could be in conflict with North Korea and Iran.The California
coast is the best training area available for the Pacific Fleet for
individual ships and multi-vessel task forces, Doney said.America's
adversaries, he said, are building super-quiet submarines and U.S. Navy
sailors need to train to detect these submarines through sonar. "I would
submit the threat is real and the threat is out there," he said.The
Navy estimated that the training, at most, could kill 130 marine mammals
in five years and lead to hearing loss for 1,600, although the
environmentalists branded that a gross underestimate.Michael Jasny,
director of the marine mammal project at the Natural Resources Defense
Council, said the increase in sonar, explosives and other aspects of
training would disrupt the foraging and breeding of several kinds of
whales and destroy the hearing of many, leaving them to die.
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