Tell Your Legislators: No Offshore Oil Drilling or Seismic
Exploration of our Oceans
After four years of wrangling, congress delivered an
energy bill to the president. On August 8th, President Bush signed it into
law. This is a bill that only energy companies could love as it provides
them with $8.5 billion in tax breaks and billions more in loan guarantees
and other subsidies while doing nothing to address global warming or reduce
our dependence on oil.
What most people don't realize about this egregious bill is that it
is a serious threat to marine life in our oceans. The bill allows an
offshore oil and gas inventory to be conducted on the Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS) of the U.S. coast. This is the first step to undermining and
dismantling the 24-year bipartisan moratorium on offshore drilling that
protects America's most sensitive coastal national treasures.
The inventory would be conducted using destructive seismic survey
ships that tow air guns emitting underwater explosions over thousands
of miles along the coast.
Take Action: Mercury in San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay is rife with mercury. The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) has listed San Francisco Bay waters as impaired due to
mercury contamination, in accordance with the National Clean Water
Act (CWA § 303 (d) List).
Take Action: Marine Debris
The National Academy of Sciences estimated in 1975 that cargo ships
and cruise liners dumped an estimated 14 billion pounds of garbage
into the ocean. In 1988, the U.S. entered a treaty with 64 other
nations (MARPOL) that made it illegal to dump plastics into the ocean.
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Sharks are among the most ancient of all vertebrates, having
first appeared about 375 million years ago. These ancient predators
have been so successful that 368 different species can be found
worldwide and 16 of them live in the The Sanctuary, ranging from
the small brown smoothhounds that grow up to three feet long to
the 45-foot behemoth Basking Sharks. These sharks also take many
different forms, from the familiar open ocean predatory White
Sharks (sometimes called "Great Whites") to the unusually
shaped bottom-feeding Pacific Angel Shark. Read More >>
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