The recent deaths of seven whales off New Jersey, mostly humpbacks, got a lot of attention. The federal NOAA Fisheries agency is responsible for whales.
An outrageous statement by their spokesperson got me to do some research on humpback whale deaths.
The results are appalling. The evidence seems clear that offshore wind development is killing whales by the hundreds. [emphasis, links added]
Here is the statement as reported in the press:
“NOAA said it has been studying what it calls “unusual mortality events” involving 174 humpback whales along the East Coast since January 2016. Agency spokesperson Lauren Gaches said that period pre-dates offshore wind preparation activities in the region.”
Gaches is NOAA Fisheries press chief.
The “unusual mortality” data is astounding. In short, the humpback death rate roughly tripled starting in 2016 and continued high thereafter. You can see it here.
But the claim that this huge jump in mortality predates offshore wind preparation activities is wildly false. In fact, it coincides with the large-scale onset of these activities.
This strong correlation is strong evidence of causation, especially since no other possible cause has appeared.
To begin with, offshore lease sales really geared up in 2015-16, with nine big sales off New Jersey, New York, Delaware, and Massachusetts. These sales must have generated a lot of activity, likely including potentially damaging sonar.
In fact, 2016 also saw the beginning of what is called geotechnical and site characterization surveys. These surveys are licensed by NOAA Fisheries, under what are called Incidental Harassment Authorizations or IHA.
There is some seriously misleading jargon here. IHAs are incidental to some other activity, in this case, offshore wind development. They are not incidental to the whales. The term “harassment” specifically includes injuring whales. That is called “level A harassment”.
To date, NOAA has issued an astounding 46 one-year IHAs for offshore wind sites. Site characterization typically includes the protracted use of what I call “machine gun sonar.”
This shipboard device emits an incredibly loud noise several times a second, often for hours at a time, as the ship slowly maps the seafloor.
Mapping often takes many days to complete. A blaster can log hundreds of miles surveying a 10-by-10-mile site. Each IHA is typically for an entire year.
Here is a list of the IHAs issued to date and those applied for.
There are lots of ways this sonar blasting might cause whales to die. Simply fleeing the incredible noise could cause ship strikes or fish gear entanglements, the two leading causes of whale deaths.
Or the whales could be deafened, increasing their chances of being struck by a ship later on. Direct bleeding injury, like getting their ears damaged, is another known risk, possibly leading to death from infection. So there can be a big time difference between blasting and death.
Note also that these deaths need not be near the sonar blasting, so the spatial correlation is unlikely.
Humpbacks in particular are prodigious travelers. One group was tracked traveling 3,000 miles in just 28 days, over 100 miles a day on average. Another group routinely migrates 5,000 miles. Both are winter-summer migrations, which can happen twice a year.
Thus sonar blasting and site characterization in one place could easily lead to multiple whale deaths hundreds of miles away. If one of these blasters suddenly goes off near a group of whales, they might go off in different directions, then slowly die.
The point is that the huge 2016 jump in annual humpback mortality coincides with the huge jump in NOAA IHAs. It is that simple, and surely NOAA Fisheries knows this.
Nor is this just about humpbacks. Some of the dead whales off New Jersey are endangered sperm whales. And of course, there are the severely endangered North Atlantic Right Whales, on the verge of extinction.
Even worse, the IHAs are about to make a much bigger jump. There are eleven pending IHA applications and eight of these are for actually constructing eight different monster wind “farms”.
Driving the hundreds of enormous monopiles that hold up the turbine towers and blades will be far louder than the sonic blasters approved to date, especially with eight sites going at once.
These construction sites range from Virginia to Massachusetts, with a concentration in New Jersey and New York.
See this post for more on this noise.
We need a moratorium on new Incidental Harassment Authorizations until the safety of the whales and other marine species can be assured.
Hundreds of whales may have already been killed by offshore wind activities. The evidence is right there.
Read more at CFACT
Where is Greenpeace when the Whales need them? Sailing around in their Fossil Fueled Ships Arctic Sunrise and Rainbow Warrior II