The Maui News - Weekender

Judge says failure to protect right whales skirts Endangered Species Act

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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — A judge has ruled the federal government failed to adequately protect endangered whales from lobster fishing activities, sending the industry and regulators scrambling to figure out what the future holds for one of America’s most lucrative marine industries.

Environmen­tal groups sued the U.S. government claiming regulators’ failure to protect the North Atlantic right whale from harm was a violation of the Endangered Species Act. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled Thursday that the National Marine Fisheries Service did just that by understati­ng lobster fishing’s ability to kill the whales via entangleme­nt in ropes.

Boasberg’s ruling states the service found the “American lobster fishery had the potential to harm the North Atlantic right whale at more than three times the sustainabl­e rate,” but did not take appropriat­e action about that risk. A remedy will come in the future, the ruling states.

Environmen­tal groups, including the Center for Biological Diversity, which filed the lawsuit, heralded the ruling as a victory in the fight to protect the whales, which number only about 400.

“This decision should send a clear signal that federal officials must take immediate action to protect these amazing animals from suffering more deadly, painful entangleme­nts before it’s too late,” said Kristen Monsell oceans legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity.

Boasberg’s ruling could mean changes for the management of the lobster industry, which was worth more than $600 million at the docks in 2018 and is based mostly in Maine and Massachuse­tts.

Right whales were one of the whale species most heavily exploited during the whaling era, when they were hunted for oil and meat.

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