Alternet.org
June 2016
Seismic testing methods used for oil-and-gas
exploration off the coasts of most of the oceans around the world is like dynamite going off in your neighborhood every 10 minutes, and going
on and on and on.
Marine species need sound for everything they do, and have exquisite
hearing. But now the sounds of ships is ubiquitous in all of the
open oceans. The average noise levels in Admiralty Inlet [in the Pacific
Northwest] is higher than the maximum allowable threshold by the National
Marine Fisheries Service.
"Marine species need sound for everything they do," says Dr. Kenneth Balcomb. "But now the sounds of ships is ubiquitous in all of the open oceans."
A blue whale is able to communicate with another blue whale across the
breadth of an entire ocean basin, and can hear storms more than 1,000 miles
away.
"Whales are reliant upon their hearing to live," Dr. Sylvia Earle, a marine
biologist, author and lecturer who has been a National Geographic
explorer-in-residence since 1998 says in the documentary
Sonic Sea.
Earle, who has logged more than 7,000 hours underwater, refers to the oceans
as "the blue heart of the planet," and has dedicated her life to researching
and protecting them.
Part of this is due to the fact that the amount of sound humans are
injecting into them is so intense and frequent that it is, at times,
literally killing whales, dolphins and other sea life.
I attended a screening of Sonic Sea in Port Townsend, Washington, where
Michael Jasny, the director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's
(NRDC) Marine Mammal Protection, and Dr. Kenneth Balcomb, the executive
director and senior scientist at the Center for Whale Research were present.
The film, which aired on the Discovery Channel, states that, "We
are acoustically bleaching our oceans," and underscores several deeply
disturbing facts about the ever-increasing level of noise in the sea,
including that:
Navy Acting "Lawlessly"
Jasny has done critical work like providing the California Coastal
Commission detailsof scientific studies that confirm the harmful impacts of
Navy sonar training and testing on marine mammals, and fighting on the
winning side of a settlement that required the Navy to take measures to
protect endangered blue whales and other marine mammals during Naval
training exercises and testing operations off the coasts of Hawai'i and
Southern California.
In Sonic Sea, Jasny states, "The Navy was acting lawlessly until we took
them to court."
The first time the NRDC did that was roughly 20 years ago.
After the screening, Jasny told me, "At that time, the Navy was in complete
non-compliance on every level. There were no environmental assessments, or
environmental impact statements being carried out."
"The NRDC has gone to court at least seven times against the Navy," Jasny
explained, "And we've won every case except one that went to a conservative
Supreme Court."
"But the Navy continues to do a lousy job of safeguarding the environment,
and their consistent activities have deep impacts on whales and other
species, [which] are experiencing significant impacts in both the Pacific
and Atlantic Oceans," Jasny told me.
The Navy has been reluctant to comply, every step of the way. When asked
what improvements the Navy has made, Jasny said, "Only after we started
applying legal pressure did they at least start paying lip service to the
law."
Oceans at Risk
Balcomb, a zoologist who went on to serve as an oceanographic specialist in
the Navy then before going on to become a leading whale researcher, is also
featured in the film.
After witnessing a mass stranding of whales in the Bahamas in 2000, he went
on to help prove that naval sonar kills whales.
In Sonic Sea, Balcomb told a moving story of a Vietnam War veteran he knew
who had multiple injuries from the war who simply wanted to see a whale.
Balcomb watched as two men took the vet out in an inflatable boat, and were
paid a visit by a whale.
"I watched with binoculars as the whale floated beside their small boat, and
reached a fin out of the water, and rested it atop the head of the wounded
veteran," Balcomb told me later. "And the veteran started picking barnacles off
the whale and they just stayed that way awhile."
The whale went on to follow the small boat back to the ship from which it
had launched, at which point Balcomb said he and several other people
slipped into the water, "And the whale just came up and visited each one of
us."
Back in Port Townsend, Jasny spoke to the large audience that had assembled
for the screening, and asked them to imagine themselves underwater.
"Imagine dynamite going off in your neighborhood every 10 minutes, and going
on and on and on," he said of seismic testing methods used for oil-and-gas
exploration off the coasts of most of the oceans around the world.
"Marine species need sound for everything they do, and have exquisite
hearing," he added. "But now the sounds of ships is ubiquitous in all of the
open oceans. The average noise levels in Admiralty Inlet [in the Pacific
Northwest] is higher than the maximum allowable threshold by the National
Marine Fisheries Service."
"We're putting the oceans at risk," concludes the film. "And if you put the
oceans at risk, you put all of us at risk."
Sonic Sea has been screening for several months across the US and
internationally, with more screenings scheduled.
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