August 31, 2015 — Washington, D.C. — President Obama’s first extended visit to Alaska coincides with release of a Care 2 petition signed by more than 100,000 people asking that he use his executive powers to designate the first Marine National Monuments in Alaskan waters, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). While more than half of Alaska’s lands enjoy permanent federal protection, none of Alaska’s federal offshore waters receive comparable protective status.
Half of the nation’s entire shoreline and three-fourths of its total continental shelf are in Alaska. This vast area hosts some of the most abundant populations of fish and marine life in the world ocean. But this ecological treasure trove is at growing risk from climate change, overfishing, pollution, increased shipping, and offshore oil drilling. In addition, many Alaska marine mammal, seabird, and fish populations are in decline, including some that have become threatened or endangered species.
The Care 2 petition was authored by Richard Steiner, a member of the PEER Board of Directors and a retired University of Alaska professor of marine conservation, who said “Designating marine monuments would be the only viable means for permanently shielding Alaska’s offshore waters, whales, polar bears, walruses, seals, sea lions, sea otters, seabirds, fish, cold-water corals, and coastal communities from the cascading effects of climate change combined with marine ecological degradation. President Obama cannot leave office with a complete environmental legacy without addressing Alaska’s fragile and unraveling offshore ecosystems.” The petition was forwarded today directly to The White House.
Read the full story at Yuba.net