Groups Sue to Protect
Polar Bears
December 16, 2005 — By Dan Joling, Associated Press
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Three
environmental groups sued the federal government Thursday, seeking to
protect polar bears from extinction because of disappearing Arctic sea
ice.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in San Francisco, demands that the
government take action on a petition environmentalists filed earlier to
have polar bears listed as "threatened" under the Endangered Species
Act.
Once a species is listed as threatened, the government is barred from
doing anything to jeopardize the animal's existence or its habitat. In
the case of the polar bear, the environmentalists hope to force the
government to curb U.S. emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide.
The Center for Biological Diversity, the Natural Resources Defense
Council and Greenpeace said extensive scientific evidence shows sea ice
is melting because of global warming.
"Global warming and rising temperatures in the Arctic jeopardize the
polar bear's very existence," said Melanie Duchin of Greenpeace. "Polar
bears cannot survive without sea ice. Polar bears could disappear in our
lifetime if we don't take action."
Valerie Fellows, a Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoman in Washington,
said she did not have the lawsuit in front of her and could not comment
on its specifics.
America's polar bears are found in Alaska. The Beaufort Sea stock off
Alaska's northern coast is estimated at 2,000 animals. The
Bering-Chukchi stock off Alaska's northwest coast, a population shared
with Russia, is estimated at 2,000 to 5,000.
There is no firm count of polar bears, and the lawsuit did not indicate
how many may have been lost because of retreating ice.
In September, the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data
Center, NASA and the University of Washington announced a "stunning
reduction in Arctic sea ice at the end of the northern summer."
Source: Associated Press
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