Hawaii congressman says “our world’s oceans are at mortal risk.”
President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that he would expeditiously expand and increase environmental protections for a group of remote atolls and islands in the Central Pacific and the nearly 777,000 square miles of waters around them.
He鈥檚 directing the commerce secretary to consider initiating a new national marine sanctuary designation within the next 30 days around the Pacific Remote Islands, which would further his goal of .
and members of Hawaii鈥檚 congressional delegation among others applauded Biden’s decision, though there were some lingering concerns.
鈥淲ith his support, this action ensures a healthy marine ecosystem of native species, corals, seabirds, and all of the marine 鈥榦hana that support the perpetuation of traditional voyaging practices in Oceania,鈥 Jonee Peters, executive director of , said in a release.
Johnston Atoll, Wake Island, Jarvis Island, Palmyra Atoll/Kingman Reef and the Baker and Howland Islands have been protected since President George W. Bush established the in 2009, which banned deep-sea mining and commercial fishing in their waters out to 50 miles.
President Barack Obama expanded the monument more than fivefold in 2014 by pushing the boundary out to the federal limit of 200 miles around all the islands and atolls except Palmyra/Kingman and Baker and Howland. This brought the total protected area to 495,189 square miles.
After playing defense during the Trump administration, which sought to roll back monument protections there and around the country, environmental groups last year renewed their push to include the areas Obama left out after resistance from commercial fishing interests in Hawaii among others.
鈥淥ur world鈥檚 oceans are at mortal risk, a breaking point precipitated by the unsustainable overfishing and other resource extraction, debris and land-based pollution, exacerbated and compounded by the devastating and pervasive marine effects of climate change,鈥 Congressman Ed Case said in a release. 鈥淎s a nation, we have a duty to ensure the long-term survival of the PRI鈥檚 ecological, scientific and cultural value.鈥
Biden stopped short of using his executive authority under the Antiquities Act as his predecessors did to expand the Pacific Remote Islands monument to include the unprotected areas.
The sanctuary designation would give the Pacific Remote Islands 鈥渃lear and comprehensive legal protections鈥 for sanctuary resources and complement the high level of protection provided by the existing monument, according to a release from the Pacific Remote Islands Coalition.
The diverse group, which formed in 2014 to protect the area, is asking Biden to rename the area through a culturally appropriate process and ensure co-management includes Indigenous Pacific Islanders as part of the process. The coalition also requested the president honor the service and sacrifice of the young Native Hawaiian men known as the Hui Panala鈥檃u who secured U.S. territorial claim to the islands in the run-up to World War II.
The Biden intends to do just that.
At nearly 777,000 square miles, the proposed sanctuary would create the world’s largest highly protected marine protected area in national waters, according to the PRI Coalition.
That’s larger than Papahanaumokuakea Marina National Monument which protects 583,000 square miles around the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. It was the world’s largest marine protected area at the time when Obama expanded it in 2016.
The president also announced Tuesday that he is releasing the first-ever and is establishing Avi Kwa Ame in Nevada and Castner Range in Texas as national monuments that 鈥渄efine our identity as a nation.鈥
While many applauded Biden’s conservation actions, others criticized his “climate hypocrisy,” the Associated Press reported. Activists rallied outside the Interior Department where he spoke Tuesday, demanding he reverse his decision to approve the massive Willow oil-drilling project in Alaska.
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About the Author
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Nathan Eagle is the deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .