Feds Want More Time to Study Polar Bear Listing; Enviros Say It's All About the Oil

Attorneys for the Interior Department have asked a federal judge to give officials until June 30 to make a final decision on whether to protect the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act because of climate change.

Environmentalists immediately accused government bureaucrats of dragging their feet to avoid any interference with oil explorations planned for the bears’ habitat. 

The lawyers representing Interior and its Fish and Wildlife Service asked U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken of Oakland, Calif., to give the service about 10 additional weeks to make up its mind whether to list the bear under the law (see text here). Officials have already taken preliminary steps to list the animal as “threatened” but no final action has occurred.

Any decision to protect the bear under the endangered species statute could have widespread ramifications, by bringing the law into play in a variety of government decisions potentially affecting global warming, and more locally on such issues as oil and gas development in the Arctic. The lawsuit noted that earlier this year, the federal government held a lease sale offering about 30 million acres “of prime polar bear habitat” in the Chukchi Sea for oil and gas development. 

Wilken is presiding over a lawsuit brought by environmental groups who contended that the government, as a result of prior litigation, was supposed to have formally issued its decision by Jan. 9 (see text of lawsuit here; see Climate Law Update story here; ). More recently, the environmentalists filed a summary judgment motion asking Wilken to order officials to act within a week of the next hearing on the matter, now scheduled for May 8 (see motion here).

In court filings Thursday, Justice Department lawyers representing Interior argued that Wilken should grant the plaintiff’s motion – but “adopt the [wildlife] service’s proposed deadline of June 30, 2008 for submission of the final listing determination for the polar bear to the Federal Register.” The government acknowledged that as far back as December 2006 officials had proposed listing the bear as threatened. Additional studies were ordered, however, and a draft decision is now in the hands of Lyle Laverty, the department’s assistant secretary for fish and wildlife and parks. Laverty “anticipates a final listing decision will be completed” by the June date, the department's lawyers wrote.

They also asked the court to allow the decision to go into effect 30 days after its publishing in the register, meaning no protections would kick in until about Aug. 1. The filing noted that 670,000 public comments have been received on the issue.

“The assistant secretary must ensure that the final determination has addressed the public comments, is supported by the best available scientific and commercial data, and is legally sufficient,” the government attorneys wrote. Additionally, they argued that a 30-day waiting period “will have a negligible effect” on the bear, which they contended is adequately covered in the short term by the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

The move came barely a day after President Bush warned against attempts to use the endangered species law and other federal statutes to prod action on climate change (see Climate Law Update story here).

Kassie Siegel, an attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, told Climate Law Update the government has handed out oil and gas leases in the region and is also issuing permits for related seismic exploration. Officials, she charged, do not want to go through the additional steps “on any of that stuff” that they would be required to take if the bear were listed. The plaintiffs also issued a written statement criticizing the administration (see text here). 

In a statement (see text here), the Sierra Club, which is not a plaintiff in the case, charged that the government’s delay has “allowed just enough time for the Interior Department to open polar bear habitat to oil drilling.” It added that seismic tests in the Chukchi Sea, a part of the Arctic Ocean, could begin this summer.

Shane Wolfe, an Interior Department spokesman, told Climate Law Update Friday that the court filings, including a sworn statement from Laverty, would speak for themselves “because there’s a lot of information” in them. He added, however, that the Chukchi Sea lease sale had been “long-scheduled” and constituted only a “very early step in the process of producing oil and natural gas.” He pointed to Laverty’s court declaration, which noted that the government had previously determined that oil and gas development, among other potential dangers, “do not threaten the polar bear throughout its range.”

In light of that finding, Wolfe said Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne has argued that to cancel the lease sale “would really say that what we said [earlier] wasn’t true.” 

(Photo: Steve Hillebrand, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

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Climate Change and Sustainable Energy Blog - April 29, 2008 2:48 AM
A federal judge in California late Monday gave the federal government barely two weeks to make a final decision on protecting the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act, a move that could have significant implications for regulatory efforts to...
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