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Vol. 28, No.9 Week of February 26, 2023
Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry

Alaska sues feds re ice seals

State contends NMFS is over designating seals’ critical habitat — 324,105 square miles along North Slope coastline and adjacent OCS

Kay Cashman

Petroleum News

The State of Alaska filed a complaint Feb. 15 against the National Marine Fisheries Service, or NMFS, asking a U.S. District Court to vacate the critical habitat designations for ringed and bearded seals. The area designated for the two seal species is much larger than the state of Texas and includes approximately 324,105 square miles of coastal waters along the North Slope and the adjacent Outer Continental Shelf, or OCS.

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy sees the science giving way to politics. “Washington D.C. continues to see our state as the nation’s sole wildlife preserve, to the detriment of the opportunities we were promised at statehood to be able to build a robust economy,” Dunleavy was quoted as saying in a Feb. 16 press release.

“Nearly the entire Alaska coastline and vast offshore areas are designated as ‘critical’ for one species or another, ranging from whales to sea ducks to seals and sea lions. No other state is burdened by the same level of federal overreach created by unnecessarily large critical habitat designations. If other states had the same level of federal designations, the law would be rewritten,” the governor said.

Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor says the designation is not based on reason. “These ice seals are important to the state, and actually are among the most common marine mammals found in the Arctic. However, to designate virtually all of the seals’ range within the U.S. as ‘indispensable’ to the recovery of the species is an abuse of federal power,” he said.

“These designations of vast areas, beyond what could ever reasonably be considered ‘critical’ to a species’ recovery, was not intended by the drafters of the Endangered Species Act. Unfortunately, though, designations such as these have all too often been the norm for endangered species in Alaska,” Taylor said.

Under the Endangered Species Act only those specific areas that are “indispensable” to the conservation of the species can be considered “critical habitat.”

Alaska Commissioner of Fish and Game Doug Vincent-Lang also refutes the species’ listings in the Feb. 16 press release. “I struggle to believe that a species with a healthy, robust population of millions can be considered threatened with extinction,” said Vincent-Lang.

“The best available scientific information indicates ringed seals are resilient and adjust well to varying conditions across their enormous range and are likely to continue. ESA listings should be reserved for imperiled species,” he said.

The complaint lays out how:

- NMFS failed to articulate how these areas meet that definition.

- NMFS contradicts the very purpose of designating critical habitat; its final rule asserts that no project changes or other critical habitat protections will result from the designation of critical habitat.

- NMFS’ designation shows that the critical habitat designations were not necessary for the animals’ recovery and that the designations are not essential to their conservation.



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