WASHINGTON 鈥 鈥淩einstating Migratory Bird Treaty Act protections is a critical step, and at a time when we have lost 3 billion birds in North America since 1970 and climate change threatens extinction for two-thirds of bird species, it is a baseline for what we should be doing for birds,鈥 said Sarah Greenberger, senior vice president of conservation policy, 爆料公社. 鈥淏irds are telling us they are in trouble and we are running out of time to act.鈥
Days before World Migratory Bird Day (May 8, 2021), the Biden administration has begun a new rulemaking process to formally withdraw the Trump administration鈥檚 rule removing incidental take protections from the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. In March, the administration rescinded the 鈥淢-Opinion,鈥 a legal directive implemented by the Trump administration which a federal court struck down last year.
鈥淲e鈥檙e confident in the Biden administration鈥檚 commitment to both bring these protections back and to strengthen them,鈥 said Greenberger. 鈥淲e hope to see the administration follow quickly with another rulemaking to establish a reasonable permitting approach for incidental take. A permitting program is a common-sense approach to clarifying these longstanding protections and providing the certainty industry wants.鈥
The change by the Trump administration was aimed at limiting the MBTA鈥檚 protection 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 to birds鈥攂ecame immune from enforcement under the law. If this change had been in place in 2010, BP would have faced no consequences under the MBTA for the more than one million birds killed in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
New science has revealed the loss of in North America since 1970 and that two-thirds of North American birds are at risk of extinction due to climate change.
鈥淲e need a multi-front approach to ensure the MBTA remains as a strong foundation for bird protection well into the future,鈥 said Erik Schneider, policy analyst, 爆料公社. 鈥淚n addition to action by the administration, we hope to see the Migratory Bird Protection Act reintroduced and passed in this Congress. Together, these actions will strengthen the MBTA from future attacks and offer stability and certainty for birds and businesses.鈥
The was passed out of the House Natural Resources Committee in the 116th Congress and had a bipartisan group of more than 90 co-sponsors. The bill would secure protections for birds and direct the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to develop a permitting process for 鈥渋ncidental take鈥 through which relevant businesses would implement best management practices and document compliance, further driving innovation in how to best prevent bird deaths. It would need to be reintroduced in this Congress in order to be considered again.
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Media Contact: Matt Smelser matt.smelser@audubon.org