Whales could face sonar threat

Navy has new proposal to develop large training range off nation's Southeast coast

By Bo Petersen
The Post and Courier
Wednesday, September 17, 2008



Public hearing

What: Navy Undersea Warfare Training Range revised draft environmental impact statement

When: 6 p.m. Oct. 6

Where: Sheraton North Charleston, Convention Center, 4770 Goer Drive.

More information: Go to Charleston.net to read the environmental impact statement.

The imperiled right whale might soon have more to watch out for than containerships.

The U.S. Navy has come back with a new proposal to build a massive sonar training range along the ocean bottom off the Southeast coast, after the first plan was opposed by wildlife agencies and conservation groups worried about the whales and other marine species.

The second proposal isn't much different from the first. Using "new science" to study environmental impact, the Navy has concluded again that the 575-square mile grid of sonar noisemaking devices wouldn't do any more than temporarily disrupt the whales.

"The environmental impact study does show there are some behavioral reactions to sound. But the effects are low level and temporary. There's no permanent damage," said Jene Nissen, study projects manager.

Conservationists worry that sonar and other man-made noises could be deafening and frighten the whales into lethal beach strandings and rapid surfacing. Whales are thought to communicate and navigate using whistles and echoes like sonar. The new Navy study follows a 2006 study that met solid opposition from conservation and fishing groups.

The Navy's continuing position that sonar doesn't damage whales, despite scientific studies proving otherwise, "is almost stupefying," said Michael Jasny, of the environmental advocate Natural Resources Defence Council. With the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration about to slow down shipping to protect the species, "something doesn't compute," he said.

The new study moves the Navy's "preferred location" from off North Carolina, where three dozen whales of different species beached and died on the Outer Banks in 2005 after sonar blasts offshore, to off Jacksonville, Fla., considered the heart of the winter calving grounds. The ocean off Charleston is one of two other alternatives in both studies.

Jacksonville is preferred because it's closer to helicopter bases whose anti-submarine equipment would be used in training, Nissen said. The range would also start 30 nautical miles farther out to sea than the designated critical habitat for the whale.

Public hearings on the environmental impact statement will be held in four cities, including Charleston on Oct. 6.

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ironhorse (anonymous) says...

The whales have nothing to fear!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcU4t6...

September 17, 2008 at 6:32 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

number1volsfan1 (anonymous) says...

"The Navy's continuing position that sonar doesn't damage whales, despite scientific studies proving otherwise,"

These are probably the same "doom-and-gloom" liberal scientists who think the earth will be swallowed-up by water from the Arctic and Antarctic Ice Cap melt.

September 17, 2008 at 8:15 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

WSM (anonymous) says...

You. Have. Got. To. Be. Kidding?

Whales are going to be a fat lot of good against a wholly capable Chinese sub fleet that has more than embarrassed us by popping up in the middle of carrier battle groups undetected, as well as a reemergent Russian navy.

Believe it or not, there are people in the world who care more about destroying you, your nation, and everything else you enjoy, and really don't care much about the whales.

September 17, 2008 at 10:15 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

iceman1978 (anonymous) says...

The technology we use in sonar today is much more advanced than it was in previous generations. Imagine what the whales must have went through during the second world war when you had over 600 U-boats spread across the Atlantic. I'm not saying that they won't be affected by this, only that I think the Navy uses good equipment and takes the safety of the whales into consideration.

September 17, 2008 at 10:21 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

nikkiP (anonymous) says...

hey, maybe it'll keep the whales out of our ports and solve the problem with ships, also.

September 17, 2008 at 10:24 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

ironhorse (anonymous) says...

What about whales with laser beams instead of using submarines? Both problems solved.

September 17, 2008 at 10:35 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

zekemire (anonymous) says...

The Navy as well as all branches of the military must train every day under simulated combat conditions in order to protect and defend! Ask the chicken and turkey farmers in Georgia who complained and fought the tree top runs of mock strafing and bombing runs by Air Force, Navy and Marine pilots! When some of them, including some of the media, were given a demonstration, by flying some of these simulated runs, of the intracacies of such flying, THEY WITHDREW THEIR COMPLAINTS! The readiness and competency of our military superseeds all other concerns!

September 17, 2008 at 10:23 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

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