China-US Naval Confrontation in the South China Sea

CNSNews.com

Naval Confrontation: China Pushing U.S. Further Away From Its Territory

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

By Patrick Goodenough, International Editor

(CNSNews.com) – Disputes between the United States and China over naval movements in the South China Sea are not likely to end anytime soon, analysts say, as the two sides are divided over what activities are allowed. International law on the matter is vague.

Beijing said Tuesday that a U.S. naval ship confronted by Chinese ships earlier this month had been carrying out “illegal surveying in China’s special economic zone,” in contravention of Chinese and international laws.

The Pentagon said the USNS Impeccable, an unarmed ocean surveillance vessel, was harassed for several days by five Chinese ships, including a navy ship, in international waters about 75 miles south of China’s southern Hainan Island.

In the most serious incident, Chinese vessels “shadowed and aggressively maneuvered in dangerously close proximity” to the U.S. ship on Sunday, coming as close as 25 feet away, the Pentagon said. The U.S. has formally protested to the Chinese government, and says its ships “will continue to operate in international waters in accordance with customary international law.”

China’s reference to its economic zone arises from the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which recognizes exclusive economic zones (EEZ) stretching 200 nautical miles (about 230 miles) from a country’s coastline. The U.S. has not ratified UNCLOS.

EEZs aim to balance the desire of coastal states to control and exploit offshore resources beyond their 12 nautical mile territorial limit against other maritime powers’ interests in maintaining freedom of navigation. Experts say ambiguities in UNCLOS language, which is open to differing interpretations by different countries, have given rise to numerous disputes.

Beijing has long sought to prevent other countries from carrying out surveillance or surveying operations within its EEZ, and in 2002 enacted a law outlawing such activities without authorization. (At the same time, however, China frequently sends survey vessels into areas that Japan considers to be within its EEZ; the two countries have clashed for decades over surveying activities in waters both claim.)

Ron Huisken of the Strategic and Defense Studies Center at the Australian National University said Wednesday that “both sides have dug in” and he did not expect that appealing to the “law” would help to resolve the issue.

He said he expected that China, “within the substantial gray areas in international law,” would want to reach informal understandings with the U.S. Navy that “err on the side of China’s interests in pushing the U.S. further away from its territory.”

“Traditionally, however, the U.S. has been fiercely protective of the freedom of the high seas,” he added. “A betting man would anticipate a steady diet of such incidents.”

Is intelligence-gathering a peaceful or threatening activity?

UNCLOS provides for “freedom of navigation and overflight” in EEZs. It says military activities inside a country’s EEZ must be “peaceful” and may not adversely affect the environment or economic resources of the coastal state.

Whether surveillance or surveying activities constitute “peaceful” acts is a matter of dispute, however.
In 2002, officials and scholars from the U.S. and several Asian countries, including China, met on the Indonesian island of Bali for a dialogue on “military and intelligence-gathering activities in EEZs,” co-sponsored by the East West Center in Hawaii and an Indonesian institute.

According to a East West Center report summarizing the dialogue, participants grappled with issues such as at what point a coastal country can reasonably regard intelligence-gathering to be a threatening activity.

One area of consensus was the determination that “no specific rules exist governing military activity in the EEZ except that they be peaceful, that is, non-hostile, non-aggressive, that they refrain from use of force or threat thereof, and that they do not adversely affect economic resources or the environment.”

But the many disagreements included different views of the meaning of terms like “peaceful” and “threat of force.”

China’s view on the matter was spelled out in a paper written in 2005 by two Chinese scholars, one of them a senior colonel in the armed forces, which stated unambiguously that “military and reconnaissance activities in the EEZ … encroach or infringe on the national security interests of the coastal State, and can be considered a use of force or a threat to use force against that State.”

Submarine detection

The USN Impeccable is a twin-hulled ocean surveillance ship designed to detect quiet foreign diesel and nuclear-powered submarines and to map the seabed for future antisubmarine warfare purposes, according to U.S. Navy data.

Towed behind and below the vessel are two sonar systems – an active one that emits a low frequency pulse and a passive one that listens for returning echoes. The system is known as SURTASS (surveillance towed-array sensor system).

“The SURTASS mission is to gather ocean acoustical data for antisubmarine warfare and rapidly transmit the information to the Navy for prompt analysis,” the Military Sealift Command said in a statement when the Impeccable was christened in 2000.

“China certainly would realize what this ship is up to, and would view its presence in those waters as threatening,” Jon Van Dyke, professor of law at the University of Hawaii School of Law – and an expert in maritime disputes and military activities in EEZs – said Wednesday.

“The U.S. anti-submarine low frequency active sonar is deemed vital by the United States in the event of a Chinese attack on Taiwan, because we would then need to be able to find and destroy China’s subs, which are increasing in numbers,” he said.

During Sunday’s confrontation in the South China Sea, the Impeccable’s towed sonar systems appeared to be a particular target.

One of three photographs released by the U.S. Navy of the incident shows a crewmember on one of the Chinese vessels using a grapple hook in what the Navy said was “an apparent attempt to snag the towed acoustic array” of the Impeccable.

Hainan Island is home to a strategic Chinese Navy base that reportedly houses ballistic missile submarines.

Last May, the Jane’s group of defense publications released new commercially available satellite images which it said confirmed reports about the existence of an underground submarine base near Sanya, on the island’s southern tip.

It said 11 tunnel openings were visible at the base, as was one of China’s advanced new Type 094 nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs), known by NATO as the Jin-class and reportedly boasting 12 missile silos.

The U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence in 2006 said China would probably aim to build and deploy five Jin-class submarines in order to have “a near-continuous at-sea SSBN presence.”

Resolving differences

Van Dyke, who played a key role in the EEZ dialogue in Bali in 2002, said Wednesday that in the course of those meetings it emerged that the Chinese Navy was behaving towards Japan and other neighbors in the same way as the U.S. Navy behaves towards China, “with regard to coastal surveillance etc.”

In trying to find a way to resolve its differences with China over permitted activities in EEZs, Van Dyke said, “the U.S. will probably try to convince China that it is in China’s interest – as an emerging naval power – to support the [U.S.-held] view that international law permits naval activities in the EEZs of other countries.”

Another factor that could “reduce the urgency of this confrontation” would be improving relations between China and Taiwan, he said.

Hainan island was also the location of an earlier, serious military-related incident involving the U.S. and China, which also raised questions in international law about legitimate activities in EEZs.

In April 2001, a U.S. Navy EP-3 spy plane on a “routine surveillance mission” was involved in a mid-air collision with one of two Chinese F-8 fighter jets which had been deployed to intercept the slow-moving aircraft. The Chinese pilot was killed.

Following the collision, the EP-3 issued a mayday warning and made an emergency landing at a military airfield on Hainan. The 24-person crew was held there for 11 days before being permitted to leave, and China only allowed the plane to be dismantled and airlifted home months later.

Director of National Intelligence Adm. Dennis Blair told the Senate Armed Services Committee Tuesday that the harassment of the Impeccable was the “most serious” military dispute between the U.S. and China since the 2001 mid-air collision.

Source: http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=44839

Proposed Navy range in Florida threatens whales

Source: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/state/orl-whales2208dec22,0,6938912.story

Published on Monday, December 22, 2008

Would Hunt for Subs Kill Whales?
by Ludmilla Lelis
Orlando Sentinel
The U.S. Navy wants to teach sailors how to hunt submarines off the coast of Jacksonville, but it’s trying to prove its proposed undersea-warfare-training range won’t hurt the world’s most endangered whale.

Concern about harm to the North Atlantic right whale from military sonar, vessels and torpedoes might pose a stumbling block to the proposed $100 million training range, which could be built near the whale’s protected calving area.

The U.S. Navy announced earlier this year that it wants to build the undersea-warfare-training range in a 662-square-mile zone nearly 58 miles off Jacksonville. The proximity to Mayport Naval Station, water depths and the climate make it an ideal location over three alternate sites, according to a draft Navy environmental report.

The military complex would feature a network of 300 sonar sensors buried in the ocean floor that would monitor the fighting scenarios among submarines, ships and helicopters. Nonexplosive torpedoes and sonar would be used during 470 military exercises each year.

Navy officials say the range will be key to preparing its sailors for deployment in shallower waters, such as the Arabian or South China seas, against elusive, extremely quiet diesel submarines. But environmentalists fear whales could die from being run over by ships or becoming disoriented from the sonar.

“Trying to find a submarine is very difficult. The type of training this range will provide is critical,” said retired Navy Cmdr. Jene Nissen, project manager for the range proposal. “This training will enhance their readiness and ensure they will be the most prepared when they are deployed overseas in harm’s way.”

Federal reviews of the project are under way. The Navy analyzed how the range could affect endangered marine wildlife and concluded it wouldn’t be significantly harmed.

“Under federal law, environmental issues have to be placed on par with other national interests, including economic concerns and military training,” said Michelle B. Nowlin, supervising attorney for the Environmental Law and Policy Clinic at the Duke University School of Law. “The courts have been very clear there must be a balance of those interests.”

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to lift some restrictions on anti-submarine training off the California coast, allowing the exercises to continue while their environmental effects are reviewed.

Seen off Volusia, Brevard

Off the East Coast, the right whales’ pregnant females migrate south to southern Georgia and northern Florida to birth and nurse calves. The pairs sometimes can be seen from Volusia and Brevard beaches.

Federal officials have protected the right whale by prohibiting vessels from approaching the whales too closely. Several teams of whale watchers fly over the ocean, and a network of beachfront volunteers survey from land to spot whales and warn boaters.

This year, the National Marine Fisheries Service instituted a 10-knot speed limit for vessels in the habitat zone. Ship strikes kill at least one or two right whales a year. Scientists say the species can’t sustain that kind of death toll. Federal reports say the death of even one pregnant female could risk the species’ survival.

That’s why more than a dozen conservation groups have opposed a permanent range for the sonar-based warfare training near the calving grounds. Military sonar, broadcasting an active midfrequency signal at 235 decibels, has a lethal history, with a dozen cases worldwide of mass whale and dolphin strandings and evidence of damage to their hearing after underwater exercises.

But there’s little research on how these large whales might be disturbed by the sound, whether it causes them to avoid feeding areas or disrupts other normal behavior, said Brandon Southall, who runs the ocean-acoustics program for the National Marine Fisheries Services. Southall said the actual effects depend on many factors, including the distance between the sonar source and the animal, water conditions, multiple sources of sound, the duration of the sonar and whether animals are in an area where they can’t easily move away.

“The potential for direct injury in terms of damaging hearing happens when the whales are really close to the source, and the one advantage of right whales is that they’re fairly easy to see,” Southall said.

And there isn’t enough information on how often the whales at the calving grounds might frequent the proposed range. Aerial surveys don’t cover the training area. Nissen said the Navy hopes to fill that gap with consultant studies on how whales, and other endangered animals, use the range.

Navy vows protections

The Navy plans to set up lookouts and monitor the whales. Officials also promise to lower or shut down active sonar as whales get close.

According to the Navy’s environmental analysis, the whales won’t suffer hearing damage. But the study estimated there might be as many as 48 times a year when migrating right whales will be near military exercises and could hear enough sonar to affect their behavior.

What worries conservation groups is how military sonar could disrupt the mothers and newborns.

“These relationships are so delicate that it wouldn’t take much for a mother and calf to be separated,” said Zak Smith, attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council. “A temporary hearing loss or any kind of disruption could potentially lead to the calf’s death.”

Conservation groups have asked for changes, but Nissen said limitations could hamper deployments.

The National Marine Fisheries Service will analyze the species risk during the next few months. The public will have a chance to comment.

Nissen said final environmental reports and other federal reviews could be done by May. The range could be in operation as early as 2013.

Tell it to the Whales

The Los Angeles Times printed this thoughtful and informative editorial that criticized the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down restrictions imposed by a Federal judge on the Navy’s use of sonar in training exercises in California waters.

Tell it to the whales

The Supreme Court was wrong to eliminate some of the Navy’s precautions that help protect marine life.

November 15, 2008

National security is the most crucial responsibility of the federal government, taking precedence over most of its other functions — including the protection of wildlife and the environment. So when a narrow majority of the Supreme Court ruled this week that military readiness is more important than the safety of whales and other marine life, many people, especially on the right, cheered.

But the case of Winter vs. the Natural Resources Defense Council isn’t quite that simple.

At issue were 14 training exercises off the Southern California coast being conducted by the Navy, which was sued after it refused to prepare an environmental impact study. The reason isn’t hard to guess: Evidence is accumulating that the high-powered sonar used in these exercises causes hearing loss, panic and death among whales and other marine mammals, and the Navy didn’t want to have to take steps to minimize the damage. After a few legal twists, a U.S. district judge issued an injunction ordering the Navy to take six precautions anyway.

Even though the Navy has already performed 13 of the 14 exercises using the precautions, with no apparent effect on sailors’ readiness and few disruptions, a 5-4 majority of the Supreme Court bought the Navy’s argument that the restrictions pose a threat to national security. So the two strongest precautions — ordering the Navy to turn off the sonar when a marine mammal is spotted within 1.25 miles of a ship, and during certain atmospheric conditions that allow the sound to carry farther — were eliminated. The Navy still has to abide by the other four when it conducts its final exercise in December.

Aside from the faulty logic of the majority, which blithely ignored the Navy’s record of successfully conducting exercises in Hawaii and off the Atlantic coast using precautions very similar to those ordered in California, it’s questionable whether the ruling will have much effect because it was narrowly tailored to this particular case. It doesn’t get the Navy off the hook for performing environmental studies preceding future exercises — although, if the Navy or other branches of the military decide to ignore such regulations again, it might make it harder for judges to issue injunctions to restrict their activities. Courts traditionally give broad deference to the military when it claims that national security is at stake, and the Supreme Court seems to have made that deference a little broader.

Still, the zeal with which the military wields such powers depends on who’s sitting in the commander-in-chief’s chair. We trust President-elect Barack Obama to take a wiser course when balancing biological diversity against a few inconveniences for the Navy.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-ed-sonar15-2008nov15,0,7572460.story

Military training in the NW Hawaiian Islands

National Monument, watery grave?

What does the U.S. Navy have against whales?

Joan Conrow
Mar 19, 2008

When President Bush signed a proclamation June 15, 2006 making the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and surrounding waters a national monument, many Islanders believed the region would be kept safe from harm.

But conservationists contend that the triad of state and federal agencies charged with overseeing Papaha-naumokua-kea-the nation’s first marine monument and world’s largest marine conservation area-has been lax in developing a management plan and enforcing regulations, while largely excluding the public from the decision-making process.

As a result, environmentalists say, hundreds of persons-including participants in an extreme canoe paddling event-have been granted access to the remote, fragile, 137,797 square mile ecosystem over the past 21 months, and scientists on one of the first research expeditions cultivated coral disease aboard their vessel and dumped contaminated water overboard.

And now, critics say, the Monument Management Board (MMB) that oversees Papahanaumokuakea is standing idly by while the monument faces perhaps its biggest threat: Military activities staged by the U.S. Navy.

“This is like the next thing and I thought surely they [MMB]‘d say something about this,” says Marti Townsend, program director for KAHEA, the Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance. “But no, they said it was out of their jurisdiction.”

Military activities that could be conducted within the monument include shooting down aerial targets and using high- and mid-intensity sonar, which has been linked to death and stranding in whales and other marine mammals.

“I was very shocked to hear that the Navy plans to use the monument for training exercises,” said Jessica Wooley, an O’ahu attorney and member of the Reserve Advisory Committee (RAC). The panel-created to provide public input into plans to make the NWHI a marine sanctuary-was shelved, but not disbanded, when it became a monument instead. “It’s a complete mystery to me why they chose that area.”

Capt. Dean Leech, environmental counsel for the U.S. Pacific Fleet, says the Navy wants to operate in the monument, which lies within the Hawai’i Range Complex, “because when these guys are training, they need a lot of space.” And they can’t train outside the monument’s boundaries, he says, because the Navy often is “integrating a number of exercises simultaneously” within the Range that must be proximate to one another.

Wooley, Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff, KAHEA members, former commercial fisherman Buzzy Agard and others who worked for years to gain protective status for the NWHI say they never dreamed things would turn out like this. “How did we go from trying to define how many more years some very minor commercial fishing interests could fish to allowing the military to move in? It’s not looking good for the resource,” Wooley says.
Where’s the public input?

Conservationists pin much of the blame on the MMB, which includes members from the federal Departments of Commerce and Interior, the state Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR) and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. The panel meets in private to vet use permits and develop management and use plans. “It doesn’t seem there is any interface with the public,” Atchitoff says. “The whole focus now seems to be to let scientists do research and the military do what it wants.”

Dan Polhemus, director of the DAR, responds that he understands “the frustration” of those who worked to protect the NWHI and now feel excluded. MMB recognizes the need for a community advisory council, he says, but the Monument was created under the federal Antiquities Act, which includes no provision for citizen participation. “So we’re trying to figure out how to do that,” Polhemus says, noting that the public does have the right to comment on use permits that go before the state Board of Land and Natural Resources.

The public, though, has little time to respond to permit applications once they go before the Land Board, where only very broad conditions can be imposed, KAHEA’s Townsend says, adding, “These are public resources and they need public oversight and transparency.”

Polhemus says public hearings will be held on the management plan, due out in April. However, he isn’t certain when the MMB will create a mechanism for ongoing public involvement in Monument affairs, largely because the panel has been focused on other issues, he says. These include adapting a management plan originally developed for a sanctuary into one that is suitable for a monument-all while meeting National Environmental Protection Act regulations. “We had a monument handed to us and overnight we had to figure out how to manage it,” Polhemus says, comparing the process to living in a house while installing the electricity and plumbing.

As for military activities, Polhemus says he agrees that “that could be a major issue,” but noted that the proclamation establishing Papahanaumokuakea “does give the military some pretty broad exemptions in terms of what it can do.” The decision on whether to take a stand regarding military activities likely would be made by the “senior executive board,” which includes top officials from each participating agency, rather than the MMB, Polhemus says. The MMB “might provide candid analysis and comment,” to the executive board, Polhenums says, while noting, “I haven’t looked at the military’s plan in detail and it hasn’t been sent to me.”
Navy seeks authorized takes

Last August, the Navy released its draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Hawai’i Range Complex-encompassing 235,000 square nautical miles, all 18 Hawaiian Islands, Ka’ula rock and Johnston Atoll. It has already completed public hearings on the draft, and is now staging informational meetings on a draft supplement that deals specifically with the use of sonar (see sidebar). That issue has been the subject of litigation both in California and Hawai’i, where federal district Judge David Ezra issued an injunction on Feb. 29 prohibiting the Navy from carrying out its undersea warfare activities without adding measures to protect marine mammals. The ruling, issued in response to a suit brought by Earthjustice on behalf of several plaintiffs, also requires the Navy to prepare a new and separate EIS on the impacts of its high-intensity, mid-frequency active sonar.

The Navy’s draft EIS “does not predict any marine mammal mortalities” or serious injuries from sonar activities, while it does concede that mammals may die during the training. “However, given the frequency of naturally occurring marine mammal stranding in Hawai’i (e.g. natural mortality), it is conceivable that a stranding could co-occur within the timeframe of a Navy exercise, even though the stranding may be unrelated to Navy activities.” But because the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) advised the Navy to consider “scientific uncertainty and potential for mortality,” according to the draft EIS, the Navy is requesting that it be granted 20 serious injury or mortality “takes” over five years (from July 2008 to July 2013) for seven species of marine mammals-including melon-headed whales, bottle-nosed dolphins, pygmy killer whales, short-finned pilot whales and three species of beaked whales.

The draft supplement also acknowledges that sonar exercises within the Range will result in marine mammal behavioral changes that NMFS classifies as “harassment.” That doesn’t sufficiently convey the potential harm, according to Atchitoff. “The Navy still refuses to acknowledge the potentially lethal behavioral impacts [on marine mammals]. It’s basically the Navy and Navy-funded research against the world,” Atchitoff says.

Capt. Leech says that while the Navy is allowed to conduct sonar activities within the monument, “I don’t foresee guys going up there much, if at all,” because most of the acoustic monitoring devices are placed on the ocean floor off the west coast of Kaua’i.

Navy activities that likely will be conducted within the monument, according to Leech, include “sink exercises,” in which old boats and other unmanned craft are destroyed with missiles or torpedoes, and using missiles launched from Kaua’i to shoot down targets over Nihoa and Necker (also known as Mokumanamana).

“Who knows what kind of contamination this [missile destruction] will rain down on the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands?” Townsend asks. Leech dismissed concerns that shoot-downs could be detrimental to reefs and ocean water quality, saying, “Any of the contaminants would be destroyed when the missile hits. The amount of energy that’s released when those go off is extraordinary. We don’t even use explosives. It’s sheer kinetic energy.”

There will be debris falling, however, according to the draft EIS, which states, “Some current flight trajectories could result in missiles such as the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) flying over portions of the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument. Preliminary results of debris analysis indicate that debris is not expected to severely harm threatened, endangered, migratory or other endemic species on or offshore of Nihoa and Necker Islands. Quantities of falling debris will be very low and widely scattered so as not to present a toxicity issue. Falling debris will also have cooled down sufficiently so as not to present a fire hazard for vegetation and habitat.”
Training in NWHI doesn’t make sense

Mimi Olry, the state’s Marine Conservation Coordinator and a Hawaiian monk seal expert, was surprised to learn the military is planning activities within the monument-the primary breeding habitat for monk seals. Such exercises “would be detrimental,” she says. “The seals are in a crisis situation already. Any more disturbance, introduction of invasive species and diseases or disruptions of the reef system and ecology there would further harm the population.” Although the monk seal population in the main Hawaiian Islands is slowly increasing, Olry says, “We’re losing the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands population at a greater rate. The young seals [in the monument] aren’t making it the first year. They’re starving. Something’s not right in the ecosystem up there.”

According to the most recent report of the Monk Seal Recovery Plan, the current population of 1,200 seals is “predicted to fall below 1,000 animals within the next three to four years. This places the Hawaiian monk seal among the world’s most endangered species,” the document states. Olry also expresses concern about military activities involving Nihoa and Necker, because seals reside on those two small islands and swim between Ni’ihau and Kaua’i. It’s unclear why seals are coming to the main Hawaiian Islands, Olry says, but it’s certain that they face grave risks here. A number of seals have died in recent years after contracting bacterial diseases carried by livestock, cats and dogs and others have drowned in gill nets.

With regard to the fragile Monument ecosystem, Wooley says that military activities within Papahanaumokuakea are a particular concern because they violate the “precautionary principle,” a concept that served as the fundamental premise in drafting plans to protect the NWHI. “The idea was to not take any action unless you know it’s not going to cause harm,” she says. “The military makes mistakes. It’s pretty much impossible to restore or replace resources that exist in the monument.”

Leech says he believes military uses are compatible with the Monument’s role in preserving a unique marine ecosystem “and here’s the reason why. Our people have incredible resources in place to protect those areas so they can continue training. When it comes to these live fire areas, we have a vested interest in taking care of them. We know there won’t be any more created, but they’re critical for our people to train in.”

Others point out that the military may, to say the least, have different priorities when it comes to preserving areas for training. “The military has done a lousy job of protecting the environment. I’ve seen what the military has done to Pearl Harbor, Makua Valley, Kaho’olawe. We no need screw up our islands any more,” Ray Catania, a member of the Kaua’i Alliance for Peace and Social Justice, said in testimony delivered at last week’s Navy hearing on Kaua’i.

Regardless, Leech says the military can’t be excluded from operating within the Monument. “Not the way the proclamation [creating the monument] is written now,” he says. That may be true, Townsend responds, “But those same regulations also say that the military has to minimize and mitigate their activities to the maximum extent practical. But enforcing that comes down to political will on the part of the Monument co-managers. And only public support for the protections will create that political will.”

Townsend, Wooley and others aren’t convinced the MMB has the political will to stand up to the military or monitor its compliance with mitigation measures, given that it’s already approved permits for research, ecotourism and recreational activities that, they contend, also violate the precautionary principle.

“People think they’re doing no harm,” says Agard, who spent years fishing in the NWHI until rapidly declining fish populations prompted him to become an ardent conservationist. “But every time the human presence occurs out there, it has caused a problem. I think a better criteria would be no human footprint.”
The cost of preservation

Critics also are concerned about the $2 million to $3 million in federal funds allocated annually for research in the Monument, saying permits are being granted without full public review or adequate oversight, and without adoption of an overall research plan. “That money is an added incentive for people to develop an idea in the name of research so they can visit the place, take in the sights and get bragging rights,” Agard says. “People are sitting down dreaming up ways to get in there.”

Townsend agrees. “When you have millions of dollars in federal research money coming in, it creates an opportunity for everybody to go astray.

Polhemus counters that the MMB has provided good oversight and the research is needed because “it’s very difficult to manage what you don’t understand. I’d say we can use all the information we can get at this time.”

But according to Agard, in order for the Monument to regenerate and ultimately help repopulate depleted fisheries in the main Islands, “people need to stay away and leave it alone.” His views are shared by Dr. Carl Safina, founder of the Blue Ocean Institute, who wrote in Eye of the Albatross (Henry Holt & Company, Inc. 2003) about the NWHI: “These tiny sites are the reproductive generators of wildlife inhabiting many millions of square miles of ocean … without these safe havens wildlife populations throughout the North Pacific would shrivel.”

“Surely,” Agard says, “one little place in the world ought to serve as an example of what we should or might do.”

For more by Joan Conrow visit [kauaieclectic.blogspot.com].
Take that, monk seals! Hard rain gonna fall

State and federal processes that address U.S. Navy plans for the Hawai’i Range Complex, including the Papaha-naumokua-kea National Marine Monument, are currently under way.

The Office of State Planning is reviewing the Navy’s Draft EIS for the Range to determine if proposed activities are consistent with the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA). As part of that review, it can impose additional mitigation measures.

Meanwhile, the Navy conducted public information meetings throughout the state on a Supplemental Draft EIS that specifically addresses the use of sonar within the Range.

At the first session, held last Thursday on Kaua’i, a resident of that island expressed confusion at how military activities could occur in a national monument. “What [President] Bush just declared is protected lands, you’re gonna start bombing on them,” said Craig Davies. “Things are all mixed up.”-J.C.

Comments on the CZMA can be submitted through March 24 and the Navy’s supplemental EIS through April 7. Visit [govsupport.us/navynepahawaii] or [kahea.org] for details.

Source: http://honoluluweekly.com/cover/2008/03/national-monument-watery-grave/

 OpenCUNY » login | join | terms | activity 

 Supported by the CUNY Doctoral Students Council.  

OpenCUNY.ORGLike @OpenCUNYLike OpenCUNY

false