Environmentalists warn Trump 'weakening' endangered species
protections
12 August 2019
Biologists warn the changes could be disastrous for species
like the monarch butterfly
The US federal government has announced an overhaul of the
way it enforces the Endangered Species Act, a law credited with preventing
countless extinctions.
Trump officials say the new plan will reduce regulations,
but environmental groups warn it will "crash a bulldozer" through the
landmark 1973 legislation.
The plan removes automatic protections for threatened
species and allows economic factors to be considered.
Critics say the new rules will speed extinction for
vulnerable wildlife.
Ten state attorneys general have announced plans to sue over
the new regulation.
The Endangered Species Act, which Republican President
Richard Nixon signed into law in 1973, protects more than 1,600 plant and
animals species today, and is credited with saving the California condor, the
Florida manatee, the gray whale and grizzly bear among others.
The new rules, which go into effect in 30 days, will for the
first time allow economic factors to be considered when weighing what
protections should be provided to vulnerable species.
Under current law, wildlife management decisions are only
allowed to be based on science and "without reference to possible economic
or other impacts of determination".
Interior Secretary David Bernhardt, a former oil lobbyist,
announced the change on Monday, saying the change allowed the law to
"ensure it remains effective in achieving its ultimate goal - recovery of
our rarest species," he said.
"An effectively administered act ensures more resources
can go where they will do the most good: on-the-ground conservation."
Gary Frazer, assistant director of the US Fish and Wildlife
Service, told reporters that cost of care will be disclosed to the public, and
will not violate Congress' stipulation that economic costs not be weighed.
"Nothing in here in my view is a radical change for how
we have been consulting and listing species for the last decade or so," he
said.
'A wrecking ball'
Critics said the rule change would speed the extinction of
many species, and was done just to allow industries to expand onto land
required for ecological diversity.
Noah Greenwald, the Center for Biological Diversity's
endangered species director, said in a statement: "These changes crash a
bulldozer through the Endangered Species Act's lifesaving protections for
America's most vulnerable wildlife."
"For animals like wolverines and monarch butterflies,
this could be the beginning of the end," Mr Greenwald added
Drew Caputo, from the group Earthjustice, threatened to sue,
saying: "This effort to gut protections for endangered and threatened
species has the same two features of most Trump administration actions: it's a
gift to industry, and it's illegal."
Several critics noted a UN report from May, which warned
that more than one million plants and animals are facing global extinction due
to human development and climate change.
Democrat Senator Tom Udall, who represents the state of New
Mexico, said the new regulation will "take a wrecking ball to one of our
oldest and most effective environmental laws".
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