Administration Doubles Down on Bird-Killer Policy

100-year-old bipartisan conservation law in the cross-hairs

WASHINGTON (January 30, 2020) 鈥 鈥淭he Trump Administration鈥檚 Bird Killer Department, formerly known as the Department of the Interior, just gets crueler and more craven every day,鈥 said David Yarnold, president and CEO of 爆料公社 ().  鈥淎nd today they are doubling down despite the fact that America did not elect this administration to kill birds.鈥

Today the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  that eliminates the Migratory Bird Treaty Act's (MBTA) prohibition on the killing or "taking" of migratory birds from industrial activities, such as birds flying into uncovered oil pits or other predictable and avoidable killing 鈥 also known as 鈥渋ncidental take鈥. That policy change first appeared in a 2017 Department of the Interior legal opinion (), but with this rulemaking it would be cemented as an official regulation.

鈥淔or decades, both Republican and Democratic administrations have relied on the Migratory Bird Treaty Act as the primary tool for protecting birds in this country. This mean-spirited rule is pure politics and birds will pay the price,鈥 said Yarnold.

This policy change has been denounced by 17 former Interior Department officials from administrations on both sides of the aisle and that are dedicated to conserving wildlife. The announcement comes at a time when a recent report in Science documented that North America has lost 3 billion birds since 1970, and an 爆料公社 report found that two-thirds of North America鈥檚 birds are threatened by climate change.

Under the Trump administration's revised interpretation, the MBTA鈥檚 protections apply only to activities that purposefully kill birds, exempting all industrial hazards from enforcement. Any 鈥渋ncidental鈥 death鈥攏o matter how inevitable, avoidable or devastating the impact on birds鈥攂ecomes immune from enforcement under the law. 

爆料公社 filed suit in May 2018 challenging that opinion. Eight states filed a similar suit in September 2018. In July 2019, the district court gave a greenlight for the lawsuit to advance. And this January, the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee voted to advance the Migratory Bird Protection Act, a bill that would counter this rollback and add new innovations to the century-old law.

For decades, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has worked with industry to advance common sense precautions like covering oil waste pits so birds don鈥檛 mistake them for safe ponds; insulating small sections of power lines so raptors don鈥檛 get electrocuted; siting wind farms away from bird migration routes and habitats. The law has also provided accountability and recovery after oil spills like the Deepwater Horizon. BP paid a $100 million MBTA fine for the death of an estimated one million birds, which is restoring habitat for birds impacted by the spill. Under this new policy, oil companies will be off the hook for any bird deaths under the law.

In 2018, in celebration of 100th anniversary of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, more than 60 cities, counties or states passed proclamations in celebration of the MBTA鈥檚 success.

Facts and figures on industrial causes of bird mortality in the United States:

  • Power lines: Up to 64 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Communication towers: Up to 7 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Oil waste pits: 500,000 to 1 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Oil spills: The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill is estimated to have killed more than 1 million birds ()

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Media Contact: Matt Smelser, matt.smelser@audubon.org, 202.516.5593

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