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World

Navy gets OK for exercises, says little effect on orcas

Phuong Le - Associated Press

SEATTLE — The National Marine Fisheries Service said Thursday it has authorized the U.S. Navy's proposal to expand sonar testing and other warfare training off the Northwest coast, after determining the exercises would not have major impacts on endangered orcas and other marine mammals.

The Navy said the exercises are need to ensure its forces are ready for conflicts and noted that it has trained for decades in the area without significant effects on the animals.

"We're not saying that there's no impact," said John Mosher, Northwest environmental program manager for the U.S. Pacific Fleet. "We're saying that in most circumstances, they don't rise to the level of significant impacts. Most will be low-level disturbances."

The fisheries service renewed the Navy's five-year permit to conduct the activities in areas from the inland waters of Puget Sound in Washington state to the northern coast of California.

Environmentalists have fought to limit the areas and times when the Navy trains, saying the activities can kill and harass whales and disrupt the ability of marine mammals to forage for food and communicate with one another.

They worry the Navy is increasing training exercises without trying to ease the impacts or restricting activities in areas that are biologically important for the animals.

"The ocean is a big place and the Navy can find areas that are not really important areas to marine mammals to conduct their exercises," said Miyoko Sakashita, senior counsel with the Center for Biological Diversity.

The fisheries service, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, agreed with the Navy that no marine mammal deaths were expected from the training activities. NOAA officials acknowledge thousands of marine mammals could be affected, but they expect mostly short-term behavior changes such as animals curtailing swimming or avoiding a particular location.

Sakashita, however, said new studies are finding that sonar is more harmful to marine mammals at lower levels than previously believed.

Under the permit valid through November 2020, NOAA will require the Navy to make efforts to avoid marine mammals that include establishing safety zones around vessels that use sonar; deploying lookouts who can shut down operations if marine mammals are in the area; and ensuring explosives aren't detonated when animals are within a certain distance.

Environmental advocates have fought to limit areas in the Pacific Ocean, including waters off Hawaii and Southern California, where the Navy can train and test sonar.

BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY

HAWAII AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

JOHN MOSHER

MAMMALS

MARINE

MIYOKO SAKASHITA

NATIONAL MARINE FISHERIES SERVICE

NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION

NAVY

PACIFIC FLEET

PACIFIC OCEAN

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