Austin American-Statesman

Court: Federal bird shield only applies if deaths intentiona­l

Ruling in 1918 statute could save energy companies millions.

- By Emily Schmall

Companies accused of causing migratory bird deaths may be harder to successful­ly prosecute after a federal appeals court recently ruled that a century-old wildlife protection law only applies if the killing is intentiona­l.

The decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals runs contrary to two other federal courts’ interpreta­tions of the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act and could save companies that operate wind farms, power transmissi­on lines and other methods of energy production millions in research — at the risk of more bird deaths.

“If you have a dead migratory bird, you have a violation. Doesn’t matter how, why or when; that’s historical­ly been the government’s interpreta­tion,” said Barry Hartman of K&L Gates, a Washington law fifirm that represents Duke Energy Corp. “And what the court is saying is that interpreta­tion doesn’t extend to unintentio­nal takes.”

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser vice has maintained that no intent is required to violate the law, which makes it illegal to “pursue, hunt, take, capture” or “kill” more than 1,000 bird species. But companies have long claimed they should not be held responsibl­e for actions that incidental­ly cause deaths — up to about a half-million annually by wind turbines alone, the federal agenc y says.

The nation’s appellate courts have starkly diffffffff­fffferent interpreta­tions of the law, resulting in an uneven enforcemen­t across the country, with companies in some energy-rich states facing a narrower liability toward migratory birds than operations in other regions.

In the Sept. 4 ruling, the 5th Circuit said a U.S. District Court was wrong to convict and levy a $2 million fifine against Citgo Petroleum Corp.

for the deaths of at least 35 protected birds that flew into two large, opentop petroleum tanks in 2003 in Corpus Christi. In overturnin­g the lower court’s decision, the 5th Circuit agreed with Citgo that the statute was misinterpr­eted as covering unintentio­nal bird kills.

The ruling agrees with decisions from the 8th and 9th Circuits that hold the law only applies to the intentiona­l killing of birds, but contrasts with two other circuit rulings — one of which upheld misdemeano­r conviction­s of two Kansas oil rig operators after dead birds were found trapped in oil-treatment vessels.

“It was a very easy charge for the government to bring” without having to prove intent, said Benjamin Cowan, a Houston attorney who represents traditiona­l and renewable energy companies. “They won’t be able to do that anymore.”

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which has also used the bird act to regulate wind energy, and the Department of Justice are reviewing the 5th Circuit ruling before deciding whether to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, service spokeswoma­n Laury Parramore said. She added they may also ask the appeals court to reconsider.

Since 2013, the Department of Justice has prosecuted two energy companies whose Wyoming wind turbines killed migratory birds, as well as several oil and gas companies in North Dakota whose wastewater pits became death traps for ducks.

In 2014, Duke Energy Corp. was sentenced to $1 million in fines and five years’ probation and ordered to develop a mit- igation strategy for bird deaths at wind farms.

Environmen­tal groups say the ruling by the 5th Circuit — which covers the energy-producing states of Texas, Louisiana and Mississipp­i — weakens the law’s intent in some of the country’s most crucial bird habitats. Texas leads the nation in wind energy production. The groups also say the ruling threatens the integrity of treaties signed with Great Britain, Canada, Japan, Mexico and Russia.

Eric Glitzenste­in, an attorney who represents the American Bird Conservanc­y, called the ruling “an extraordin­arily narrow” interpreta­tion of the statute.

“Ignoring the greatest threats to migratory bird population­s from inherently hazardous industrial activities is really a setback to our commitment to migratory birds in a serious and unfortunat­e way,” he said.

 ?? PAT SULLIVAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2012 ?? Migratory birds flfly over Mad Island in February 2012. Critics of a Sept. 4 ruling weakening energy companies’ vulnerabil­ity to a federal law protecting the birds say the decision affffects avians in some of their most critical national habitats.
PAT SULLIVAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2012 Migratory birds flfly over Mad Island in February 2012. Critics of a Sept. 4 ruling weakening energy companies’ vulnerabil­ity to a federal law protecting the birds say the decision affffects avians in some of their most critical national habitats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States