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						   For Immediate Release, May 2, 2019 
                          Contact: Shaye Wolf, (510) 844-7101, [email protected] 
                          Lawsuit  Launched Over Trump's Failure to Protect Emperor Penguins 
                         
                          WASHINGTON— The Center for Biological  Diversity filed a notice today of its intent to sue the Trump  administration for failing to act on a petition to grant the emperor penguin  Endangered Species Act protection. The notice follows news that the world’s  second-largest emperor penguin colony has nearly vanished because of sea-ice  loss.  
                          “Emperor penguins have needed protection  for a long time, but Trump’s fossil-fuel-first agenda has dialed up the  urgency,” said Shaye Wolf, the Center’s climate science director. “Chicks are  drowning as climate change melts their habitat. Further delay in slashing  carbon pollution could wipe out one of our planet’s most amazing birds.” 
                          Emperor penguins need reliable sea  ice for breeding and raising their chicks. In parts of Antarctica where sea ice  is disappearing, emperor penguin populations are declining or have been lost  entirely.  
                          Last week’s widely covered study found that  the emperor penguin colony at Halley Bay suffered catastrophic breeding failure  during the past three years due to record-low sea ice and early ice breakup. In 2016 more than 10,000 chicks are estimated to have  perished when the sea ice broke up before they were ready to swim.  
                          The emperor penguin colony featured in  the film March of the Penguins has  declined by more than 50 percent, and the Dion Island colony in the Antarctic  Peninsula has disappeared. 
                          Warming ocean temperatures and melting  sea ice in the Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica have also diminished the  availability of krill, a key food source for emperor penguins. Ocean  acidification, resulting from the ocean’s absorption of carbon dioxide, and  industrial krill fisheries further threaten the penguins’ food supply.  
                          Without large-scale cuts in carbon  pollution, emperor penguins could experience a global population decline of 40 to 99 percent over  three generations by the end of the century.   
                          In 2006 the Center filed a petition to list 12  penguin species, including the emperor penguin, as threatened or endangered.  The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service protected seven penguin species, but not the  emperor penguin. In 2011 the Center re-petitioned  based on new scientific evidence. In 2014 the agency agreed that the emperor  penguin may be endangered by climate change, but it has failed to make the  required 12-month finding on whether to propose protections.  
                          An Endangered Species Act listing would compel  the government to address threats to the penguin, including the greenhouse gas  emissions driving climate change and industrial overfishing of key prey species.  U.S.-flagged fishing vessels operating on the high seas would be required to  minimize their harms to penguins. And federal agencies would be required to  ensure that their actions, including those generating large volumes of carbon  pollution, do not jeopardize the penguin or its habitat.  
                          “Emperor penguins capture our  imaginations because they’re devoted parents and tough survivors,” Wolf said. “To  stem their suffering, and our own, we have to demand bold action to keep  climate-killing fossil fuels in the ground.”                           
						  
                                      
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