Story updated at 1 p.m., 5/11/2018
A federal court order to protect endangered loggerhead sea turtles has forced the to immediately close the shallow-set longline fishery in Hawaii for the rest of the year.
A 2012 lawsuit filed by the and the , represented by the nonprofit law firm , was rejected in a Hawaii district court but they eventually won a split decision on appeal in December.
The parties reached an agreement Friday to settle the case. It included an immediate shutdown of the shallow-set longline fishery, which targets swordfish. NMFS Thursday.

鈥淭he National Marine Fisheries Service, which is supposed to be protecting our wildlife, has instead been illegally helping the longliners push sea turtles to the brink of extinction,鈥 Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff said in a news release. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 allow it.鈥
In 2012, NMFS issued a biological opinion that found no adverse effect on certain endangered species from the longline fishery. In deciding to expand the fishery, NMFS allowed the longliners to hook or entangle twice as many endangered turtles 鈥 up to 26 leatherbacks and 34 loggerheads each year.
The environmental nonprofits challenged the opinion, which led to an appeals court finding that NMFS was 鈥渁rbitrary and capricious in its no-jeopardy determination for North Pacific loggerhead turtles.鈥
Federal scientists will work on a new biological opinion during the closure.
鈥淲e scored a victory for loggerhead sea turtles,鈥 Todd Steiner, biologist and executive director of Turtle Island Restoration Network, said in the release. 鈥淔or decades the Hawaii longline fishery has gotten away with killing and injuring sea turtles, seabirds and marine mammals. A healthy ocean belongs to all of us and shouldn鈥檛 be threatened by a small group of industrial fishing vessels.鈥
Michael Tosatto, NMFS regional administrator, said in a statement that the agency is “disappointed with the Court’s ruling on loggerheads because all available information shows that the population is experiencing strong recovery, and the shallow set fishery continues to have a negligible impact on loggerhead abundance.”
He noted that the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision was split, 2-1, and that while it reversed a District Court judge’s decision affirming NMFS’ no-jeopardy finding for North Pacific loggerhead sea turtles, it聽affirmed all other NMFS findings in the biological opinion.
Messages were left with the Hawaii Longline Association and the , which makes fishery management recommendations to NMFS.
Update Wespac officials said in a news release Friday afternoon that the sworfish fishery’s closure underscores the successes of sea turtle management. The fishery has reached 33 of its 34 allowed loggerhead sea turtle interactions for the year and was closed until Jan. 1 as part of the settlement agreement.
New measures, such as the use of circle hooks and mackerel bait, have reduced the number of turtle interactions by 93 percent since they were implemented in the early 2000s. The industry also has 100 percent observer coverage, meaning an independent person is aboard the boats to monitor compliance.
鈥淭he record of 99 percent live releases, only two mortalities in 24 years and increasing loggerhead
abundance over the past two decades underscore the management success of the Hawaii shallow-set
longline fishery,鈥 Wespac Executive Director Kitty Simonds said.
Wespac has valued Hawaii’s longline fishery in excess of $300 million when retail markets and support industries are factored. Hawaii longliners provide half of the U.S. domestic swordfish, according to Wespac.
The U.S. has a fleet of roughly 145 longline boats in the Pacific, predominantly based in Honolulu. Most target bigeye tuna, or ahi, for the fresh sashimi markets. But about 30 vessels go after swordfish, which is popular for grilling, according to the nonprofit .
The swordfish season聽begins in January and the majority of the catch is landed by May, according to HSF.
Miyoko Sakashita, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, said聽more needs to be done to permanently address the harm caused by longliners in the Pacific.
鈥淔or a few months, sea turtles will get a respite from millions of deadly hooks,鈥 she said in the release.
Read the federal order below.
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .