Twisted love letters from PFOWolf

Photo
taintedsound:

mohandasgandhi:nrdc:


Will the Federal Agency Charged with Protecting Whales and Dolphins Stand Up to the Navy? 
The National Marine Fisheries Service announced that it received requests from the Navy for authorization to take 33 MILLION whales and dolphins over the next five years to training and testing activities off Southern California, Hawaii, and the East Coast.
Yesterday, the National Marine Fisheries Service – the federal agency charged with protecting whales and dolphins – announced that it received requests from the Navy for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to training and testing activities off Southern California, Hawaii, and the East Coast, including the Gulf of Mexico, for the five-year period starting in January 2014.  It all sounds very innocuous until you dig a little deeper and discover that the Navy is asking for authorization to take 33 million (yes, that’s not a typo:  33,000,000) whales and dolphins over the next five years, including more than 5.23 million instances of temporary hearing loss; almost 16,000 instances of permanent hearing loss; almost 9,000 lung injuries; and more than 1,800 deaths.  It’s a staggering and unprecedented amount of harm that should give any federal agency involved, be it the Navy or the National Marine Fisheries Service (“NMFS”), pause.
Yet, the Navy is not pausing, apparently has no plans to go back to the drawing board, and instead continues to rely on a mitigation scheme – centered on the ability of lookouts to detect whales and dolphins and then limit the use of sonar when they get too close – that is demonstrably ineffective and inadequate.  It’s ineffective because, as the Navy admits, lookouts on Navy ships only detect about 9 percent of whales and dolphins in the best of conditions.  It’s inadequate because the Navy’s own analysis shows that some of the most severe impacts, such as permanent hearing loss, will occur well beyond the Navy’s “too close” zone.  How else then does the Navy propose that the harm from its activities can be limited?  It doesn’t.  Its analysis and application to NMFS fail to present decision makers with any alternatives or mitigation measures that would appreciably reduce the harm to whales and dolphins.
So what’s an agency like NMFS to do when the Navy – no small fry in the Executive Branch – comes calling?  Follow.  The.  Law.
Under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, NMFS has a legal obligation to minimize the harm to whales and dolphins from the Navy’s proposed activities.  If the Navy’s application and draft Environmental Impact Statements fail to offer a path forward for minimizing harm – as they do – NMFS is required to develop alternatives and mitigation measures of its own that limit impacts to marine mammals, while still meeting the Navy’s training needs.
Comments to NMFS on the Navy’s application and request are due November 5.  NRDC will be submitting comments urging NMFS to meet its obligations under the MMPA – develop and adopt alternatives and mitigation measures that appreciably reduce the harm to whales and dolphins from the Navy’s activities.

What?

I feel fucking sick.

I am … stunned.  This is disgusting. Zoom

taintedsound:

mohandasgandhi:nrdc:

Will the Federal Agency Charged with Protecting Whales and Dolphins Stand Up to the Navy?

The National Marine Fisheries Service announced that it received requests from the Navy for authorization to take 33 MILLION whales and dolphins over the next five years to training and testing activities off Southern California, Hawaii, and the East Coast.

Yesterday, the National Marine Fisheries Service – the federal agency charged with protecting whales and dolphins – announced that it received requests from the Navy for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to training and testing activities off Southern California, Hawaii, and the East Coast, including the Gulf of Mexico, for the five-year period starting in January 2014.  It all sounds very innocuous until you dig a little deeper and discover that the Navy is asking for authorization to take 33 million (yes, that’s not a typo:  33,000,000) whales and dolphins over the next five years, including more than 5.23 million instances of temporary hearing loss; almost 16,000 instances of permanent hearing loss; almost 9,000 lung injuries; and more than 1,800 deaths.  It’s a staggering and unprecedented amount of harm that should give any federal agency involved, be it the Navy or the National Marine Fisheries Service (“NMFS”), pause.

Yet, the Navy is not pausing, apparently has no plans to go back to the drawing board, and instead continues to rely on a mitigation scheme – centered on the ability of lookouts to detect whales and dolphins and then limit the use of sonar when they get too close – that is demonstrably ineffective and inadequate.  It’s ineffective because, as the Navy admits, lookouts on Navy ships only detect about 9 percent of whales and dolphins in the best of conditions.  It’s inadequate because the Navy’s own analysis shows that some of the most severe impacts, such as permanent hearing loss, will occur well beyond the Navy’s “too close” zone.  How else then does the Navy propose that the harm from its activities can be limited?  It doesn’t.  Its analysis and application to NMFS fail to present decision makers with any alternatives or mitigation measures that would appreciably reduce the harm to whales and dolphins.

So what’s an agency like NMFS to do when the Navy – no small fry in the Executive Branch – comes calling?  Follow.  The.  Law.

Under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, NMFS has a legal obligation to minimize the harm to whales and dolphins from the Navy’s proposed activities.  If the Navy’s application and draft Environmental Impact Statements fail to offer a path forward for minimizing harm – as they do – NMFS is required to develop alternatives and mitigation measures of its own that limit impacts to marine mammals, while still meeting the Navy’s training needs.

Comments to NMFS on the Navy’s application and request are due November 5.  NRDC will be submitting comments urging NMFS to meet its obligations under the MMPA – develop and adopt alternatives and mitigation measures that appreciably reduce the harm to whales and dolphins from the Navy’s activities.

What?

I feel fucking sick.

I am … stunned.  This is disgusting.

via queerencia-deactivated20130103
Posted on Sunday, October 7 2012. Tagged with: MMPANMSFUS NAVYmortal injury to MILLIONS of whales and dolphins
102
Notes
  1. i-kariko reblogged this from myimpress
  2. fromstarstostarfish likes this
  3. greenhopenetwork reblogged this from nrdc
  4. veggiedinopunk reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  5. lelefey reblogged this from trebaolofarabia
  6. finalheavenseven likes this
  7. myimpress reblogged this from alice44
  8. readinglist32 likes this
  9. theycallmeponcho likes this
  10. carnivorae reblogged this from theotherwindow
  11. speak1014 likes this
  12. onespecies reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  13. blackanthropologie likes this
  14. thinkingbeing likes this
  15. phanapoeia reblogged this from your-ridiculous-lies
  16. bilt2tumble reblogged this from randomactsofchaos and added:
    WTF?! 33M?! What for?….. & why not 30M? My BS sensors are blipping but if this is real? WTF does the Navy need with...
  17. comix likes this
  18. blufiresprite reblogged this from randomactsofchaos
  19. dontcallmecliff likes this
  20. amysphoenix reblogged this from nrdc
  21. themovedmind reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  22. silas216 reblogged this from nrdc
  23. silas216 likes this
  24. alabasterandchrome reblogged this from nrdc
  25. jo-discontent reblogged this from nrdc
  26. notyourtypicaltreehugger reblogged this from nrdc
  27. dancefloortigerlady likes this
  28. randomactsofchaos reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  29. randomactsofchaos likes this
  30. pfowolf likes this
  31. barefootinarowingboat likes this
  32. blissandzen likes this
  33. chacb reblogged this from wespeakfortheearth
  34. soiledpointsofview reblogged this from neuroticnewsjunkie and added:
    WTF Navy… this is sooooo wrong.
  35. soiledphotos likes this
  36. gracefree reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  37. imhisonelove143 likes this
  38. jazzchandler likes this
  39. listomanialove reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  40. naturalanomaly reblogged this from wespeakfortheearth
  41. naturalanomaly likes this
  42. castillolaw likes this
  43. schoolofstitchcraft reblogged this from industrolation and added:
    I read this article through 3 times and I don’t understand. Take them where? Where are we taking the whales? Does the...
  44. pookiekat reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  45. neuroticnewsjunkie reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  46. joshcarvell reblogged this from cheekyjordanbaker
  47. cheekyjordanbaker reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  48. your-ridiculous-lies reblogged this from sergeantsweater
  49. gruzmi-muzmi reblogged this from nrdc
  50. florabog reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  51. Show more notesLoading...
Twisted love letters from PFOWolf Greetings my sexy and artful friends!

You have found the den of the Wolf. This is my place to enjoy the splendor of the male form, especially blond males, post my poems and parade my comic and drawings. I produce a Gay oriented science fiction comic called "Praying for Obsolescence"!

PFO Book II : Oasis can be read from the beginning at http://pfo.comicdish.com/index.php?pageID=112
Come in and flop down. The usual disclaimer applies : most pictures are not mine and should any belong to you and you want them taken down, just tell me.
Ask me anything! I'll answer truthfully. Submit
Previous Next