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Bush Eyes Unprecedented Conservation Program PDF Print E-mail

from http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9076623

 All Things Considered, May 23, 2008 · The Bush administration is considering launching one of the biggest conservation programs in U.S. history.

If implemented, President George W. Bush could, with the stroke of a pen, protect vast stretches of U.S. territorial waters from fishing, oil exploration and other forms of commercial development. The initiative could also create some of the largest marine reserves in the world — far larger than national parks like Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon.

The White House is thinking about taking "big steps, not small ones," says Jack Sobel, a senior scientist at the Washington-based Ocean Conservancy, an environmental group.

A spokesman for the White House Council on Environmental Quality confirmed that the administration is considering the initiative but declined to discuss details, saying they are still under review.

The idea is drawing strong support from conservationists who typically have been harshly critical of the Bush administration's overall environmental record. But some of the possible reserves are already attracting opposition from local leaders and industry groups and from some members of Congress.

National Monuments in the Sea

Conservationists say that CEQ officials last year invited a small number of ocean advocates to an unusual, closed-door meeting to discuss the idea. The White House asked them to help identify potential reserves in waters within the United States' "exclusive economic zone," which extends 200 nautical miles out from the mainland and U.S.-owned islands around the world.

The idea, says Sobel, was to highlight areas where President Bush could create "marine monuments" under the Antiquities Act of 1906. This law gives the president broad powers to protect areas of "historic or scientific interest" without congressional approval.

Administration officials said they wanted things they could do before they left office, says Sobel. "They [also] wanted things that they could do without tremendous political blow back … [but] would have a conservation impact."

The groups took the invitation seriously, in part because Bush, in 2006, used the Antiquities Act to create one of the world's largest marine reserves, around the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.

The groups — along with government agencies and other interested parties – ultimately developed a "wish list" that included about 30 potential marine monuments. They ranged from small reserves in U.S. coastal waters to vast swaths around U.S. territories in the distant Central Pacific. The candidates stretched "from Bar Harbor, Maine, to Dutch Harbor, Alaska" and beyond, says Jay Nelson of the Washington-based Pew Environment Group.

On the Short List

The White House has now shortened that list to about five finalists, say scientists involved in the process. The list hasn't been released to the public, and a CEQ spokesman says changes are still possible. But conservation groups have identified some of the leading nominees.

By far the most ambitious proposal is to protect more than 600,000 square miles around a number of small, mostly uninhabited islands in the Central Pacific. The islands — including Palmyra, Howland and Baker — are surrounded by biologically rich coral reefs and are home to huge seabird colonies. If implemented, the reserve would be among the largest in the world and about three times as large as the Hawaiian monument.

Another proposal calls for protecting more than 100,000 square miles of notoriously rough waters around the Northern Mariana Islands, in the Western Pacific. The area includes the 36,000-foot-deep Marianas Trench.

"It's the deepest point in the world," says Nelson. "If you dropped Mt. Everest in it, there would be a mile of water above the mountain."

Another proposal is to place a 500-square-mile reserve around Rose Atoll in the South Pacific east of Australia.

Nelson says it's important to protect these areas before fishing or energy companies begin to exploit them. The same argument is being made in favor of two other potential monuments closer to the U.S. mainland. One would protect a massive network of deep-water corals off the coasts of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. The other would protect coral reefs and ridges found mostly in the Gulf of Mexico.

"Once somebody's fishing there it will be a difficult and contentious fight," says Mike Hirschfeld of the nonprofit group Oceana. "It's simpler to set these areas aside when there isn't a problem rather than wait for one to develop."

 read more at: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9076623

 

 
Senate Commerce Passes Sanctuary Expansion Bills PDF Print E-mail

from: The CSO Weekly Report, May 16, 2008  / Issue 08.15, Coastal States Organization,

http://www.coastalstates.org:

 

The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation unanimously endorsed the plan, which would roughly double the size of the Gulf of Farallones and Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuaries. H.R. 1187 would add more than 1,000 square nautical miles to Northern California's extensive network of marine sanctuaries. The proposal would nearly double the size of the Gulf of Farrallones and Cordell Banks sanctuaries, expanding their boundaries westward and northward off the coast of Sonoma County, California.  A popular nesting ground for elephant seals and sea lines, the protected area hosts more than one-third of the world's whale and dolphin species including the largest concentration of endangered blue whales.  The second sanctuary bill, S. 2281, would give an eightfold expansion to Lake Huron's Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. The sanctuary, known as "shipwreck alley," currently contains 116 wrecks preserved in the lake's cold, fresh waters. The expansion pushes the boundary eastward to the international boundary to protect another 178 shipwrecks. The designations do not prohibit commercial fishing but do bar oil drilling and other development.

 
Revised Draft MPA Framework Available for Public Comment PDF Print E-mail

from the NOAA National Marine Protected Areas Center:

 

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Department of the Interior (DOI) are pleased to announce the release of the Revised Draft Framework for Developing the National System of Marine Protected Areas for a 30 day comment period ending April 16.  You can find electronic copies of the draft framework and associated documents at http://www.mpa.gov.

The release of this revised draft framework reflects continued dialogue with federal, state, tribal and territorial resource managers; fishery management councils; inter-state fishery commissions; anglers; conservation organizations; the energy industry; commercial fishermen; coastal communities; scientists; divers; and others. At the end of the public comment period, the MPA Center will address all comments received, and begin working with government partners to establish the national system.

The revised draft framework addresses comments from the public and the Marine Protected Areas Federal Advisory Committee on the first draft of the Framework, published in September 2006.  It aims to simplify, streamline and strategically focus the document, which proposes collaborative efforts to build a initial national system of MPAs. The revised draft outlines key components of the national system, including a set of overarching national system goals and priority conservation objectives; MPA eligibility criteria and other definitions, a nomination process for existing MPAs to be included in the national system; a science-based, public process for identifying conservation gaps; and a process for improving regional, national and international coordination.  Please forward this to others who may be interested.

All comments regarding the Revised Draft Framework should be submitted to Joseph A. Uravitch, National MPA Center, N/ORM, 1305 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Maryland 20910.  Comments submitted by email are preferred; however, those submitted by mail and fax will also be accepted.  Comments send via email should be sent to
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , and all comments send by fax should be sent to 301-713-3110.  Email and fax comments should state "Revised Draft Framework Comments" in the subject line. 

Please direct all questions concerning the Revised Draft Framework or requests for paper copies to Lauren Wenzel, at 301-713-3100 x136, or via email at mpa.comments.noaa.gov.  Email requests should state either "Question" or "Paper Copy Request" in the subject line.

 
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Welcome to the Marine Sanctuary Economics Community of Practice PDF Print E-mail

Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary

Welcome to COVC's Marine Sanctuary Economics Community of Practice (MS CoP).  The MS CoP has been created for marine sanctuary professionals who need economic information, have questions about how to get it, and want to know how they can use economic data in their management plans.  Once registered, members can ask questions of each other and experts in the Policy Forum.  The MS CoP is facilitated by Dr. Linwood Pendleton, Senior Fellow at The Ocean Foundation, Chris LaFranchi, Social Science Coordinator for the West Coast Region, and Dr. Vernon R. (Bob) Leeworthy, Chief Economist at NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary Program.  Their Blogs will provide timely information and insight on new areas of interest, recently completed studies, and announcements for RFPs.

Register as an MS CoP member and you can access journal articles, reports, working papers, survey tools, and methods in our Documents Library.  Registration will allow you to connect with other members listed in the Community Builder, to submit news articles, reports and analyses, and weblinks for our Resources page.  Please monitor the News and our Events pages for upcoming webinars.

We look forward to working with you to help make your marine sanctuary management efforts more successful.

All photographs used on this website are from the National Marine Sanctuaries photo gallery.