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- Center for Biological Diversity v. Raimondo
Center for Biological Diversity v. Raimondo
Geography
Year
2018
Document Type
Litigation
Part of
About this case
Filing year
2018
Status
Final rule and 2021 biological opinion remanded and question of vacatur of the 2021 biological opinion held in abeyance.
Geography
Docket number
1:18-cv-00112
Court/admin entity
United States → United States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.D.C.)United States → United States Federal Courts
Case category
Federal Statutory Claims (US) → Endangered Species Act and Other Wildlife Protection Statutes (US)
Principal law
United States → Administrative Procedure Act (APA)United States → Endangered Species Act (ESA)United States → Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA)
At issue
Lawsuit alleging that authorization and management of lobster fishery violated federal law due to impacts on North American right whales.
Topics
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Documents
Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics
Beta
11/17/2022
Final rule and 2021 biological opinion remanded and question of vacatur of the 2021 biological opinion held in abeyance.
The federal district court for the District of Columbia remanded a 2021 biological opinion for lobster and crab fishing off the Atlantic coast to the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and held the question of vacatur of the biological opinion in abeyance. Further briefing is to be submitted after NMFS issues a new final Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan Amendment Rule, which NMFS must do no later than December 9, 2024. The court held earlier this year that NMFS violated both the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act when it issued the rule and biological opinion, which authorized zero lethal takes of the endangered North Atlantic right whales despite the projection that the American lobster fishery would potentially kill and seriously injure the whales at over three times the sustainable rate. The court concluded that holding the decision on vacatur in abeyance was “the wisest course because facts on the ground are shifting rapidly, as new data emerge on right-whale migratory patterns, mortality factors, technological change, and more.” Those changes include “climate shifts” that push the whales’ habitat northward.
Decision
07/08/2022
Plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment granted.
Decision
04/09/2020
Plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment granted.
The federal district court for the District of Columbia ruled that a 2014 biological opinion for the American lobster fishery was invalid because the National Marine Fisheries Service did not include an incidental take statement despite finding that the fishery had the potential to harm the endangered North American right whale at more than three times the sustainable rate. The court described the “largest modern threats” to the right whale as ship strikes and fishing-gear entanglement, but the complaint alleged that the biological opinion recognized other threats, including ingestion of plastic debris and global climate change. The court did not address the plaintiffs’ other arguments regarding the inadequacies of the biological opinion and said it would accept briefing from the parties on the scope of an injunctive remedy.
Decision
10/31/2019
Motion to stay denied.
The federal district court for the District of Columbia denied the National Marine Fisheries Service and other federal defendants’ (NMFS’s) motion to stay a lawsuit challenging the management of the American lobster fishery. Plaintiffs asserted that the federal defendants failed to adequately address the fishery’s impacts on the endangered North American right whale, including by failing to consider cumulative effects of climate change. NMFS argued that the case should be stayed because its pending promulgation of two conservation measures would moot the claims, but the court found that NMFS had not shown a compelling need for a stay. The court decided that the case should proceed “because harm to a critically endangered species hangs in the balance.”
Decision
01/18/2018
Complaint filed.
Three non-profit groups filed a lawsuit in the federal district court for the District of Columbia alleging that the authorization and management of the American lobster fishery violated the Endangered Species Act, Marine Mammal Protection Act, and Administrative Procedure Act due to impacts on endangered North American right whales. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) issued a biological opinion in 2014 determining that ongoing operations of the fishery were likely to kill or seriously injure more than three right whales every year but that fishery was not likely to jeopardize the right whales’ continued existence. The complaint alleged, among other things, that the NMFS’s jeopardy analysis was “patently unlawful” and had “improperly consider[ed] only the isolated share of responsibility for impacts to right whales from operation of the fishery, rather than adding the direct and indirect effects of operation of the fishery to all other activities and influences that affect the status of the species,” which include threats from climate change.
Complaint
Summary
Lawsuit alleging that authorization and management of lobster fishery violated federal law due to impacts on North American right whales.
Topics mentioned most in this case Beta
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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance