| For Immediate  Release, June 21, 2018   Lawsuit Challenges  Trump Administration for Failing to Protect Gulf of Mexico Wildlife From  Offshore Drilling Agencies Failed to Hold Legal  Consultation on Offshore Drilling After Deepwater Horizon   TAMPA, Fla.—  Earthjustice, on behalf of three conservation groups, sued the Trump administration  today for failing to complete a legally required consultation about offshore drilling’s  harms to threatened and endangered species in the Gulf of Mexico.  The National  Marine Fisheries Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are required  under the Endangered Species Act to complete a consultation with the Bureau of  Ocean Energy Management on oil and gas operations that could impact threatened  and endangered species. The last time the agencies completed a consultation,  called a biological opinion, was in 2007, three years before the BP Deepwater  Horizon disaster, the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history. With today’s  lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Florida, the Gulf Restoration  Network, Sierra Club, and Center for Biological Diversity are challenging the  agencies for unreasonably delaying completion of a new consultation and seeking  a court order to compel them to complete it within three months. A new  biological opinion likely would result in additional safeguards to prevent  further harm to sea turtles, whales, and other threatened and endangered  species from oil and gas operations in the Gulf.
 In 2010, the  BP oil spill caused the death or serious harm to billions, if not trillions, of fish, sea  turtles, whales, and other animals, including more than 100,000 individuals of  species listed as threatened or endangered, according to scientists’ estimates.
 Recognizing  that the disaster devastated the Gulf ecosystem and its wildlife—and invalidated  many of the assumptions in the 2007 biological opinion—the Services and BOEM  reinitiated the consultation process in late 2010. However, more than seven  years later, the agencies still have not completed a new biological opinion,  even as the Trump administration plans to ramp up offshore drilling operations  in the Gulf.  “The Gulf of  Mexico has long been written off as America’s gas station, leaving Gulf Coast  communities, coastal economies, and thousands of whales, sea turtles, dolphins,  oysters, and other wildlife vulnerable to oil and gas spills. We seek to hold  the Trump Administration accountable to the law in its duty to protect  endangered species and compel the oil and gas industry to clean up its act in  the Gulf,” said Chris Eaton, Earthjustice attorney.  “For over 10  years, the federal agencies that are responsible for the protection of  threatened and endangered species in the Gulf of Mexico have been sitting on  their hands. As we saw in the BP disaster, the harm caused by the oil and gas  industry wreaks havoc on our Gulf. It’s time for these agencies to do their job  and comply with the law,” said Cynthia  Sarthou, executive director of Gulf Restoration Network. “The Gulf  has been treated as a sacrifice zone for corporate polluters for far too long,”  said Athan Manuel, Director of the  Sierra Club’s Lands Protection Program. “We will not allow the Trump  administration to ignore serious threats to coastal ecosystems in their  reckless quest to sell off America’s waters to the fossil fuel industry for  offshore drilling.”  “The Trump administration can’t keep turning a blind-eye to  the damage offshore drilling does to the Gulf’s most imperiled species,” said Kristen Monsell, oceans program legal  director at the Center. “Trump officials want to expand offshore drilling  and fracking into nearly every corner of the Gulf before they understand what’s  out there. Our government has a moral and legal obligation to carefully study  the risks to rare whales, sea turtles, and other animals before allowing these  dirty, dangerous practices. It’s time for the courts to remind the agencies of  this important duty.”  Reporter  Resources: “Oil and Gas in  the Gulf of Mexico,” report by the Gulf Restoration  Network “Programmatic Damage  Assessment and Restoration Plan, Chapter 4- Injury to Natural Resources,” National Oceanic and Atmospheric  Administration on the BP oil spill.  Online  version of this press release						   |