ANCHORAGE, Alaska - The state of Alaska is trying to bolster its efforts
to overturn the listing of the polar bear as threatened under the
Endangered Species Act.
Attorney General Dan Sullivan announced Wednesday he has filed a
supplement to the state's earlier lawsuit in federal court in Washington,
D.C. In it, the state claims the U.S. Department of Interior did not
respond to the state's concerns in a timely manner before polar bears
were listed last year.
Former Gov. Sarah Palin and the state filed its initial lawsuit in August
2008, fearing a listing would cripple offshore oil and gas development in
the Chukchi and Beaufort seas in Alaska's northern waters, which provide
prime habitat for the only polar bears under U.S. jurisdiction.
Gov. Sean Parnell, who succeeded Palin upon her resignation last summer,
joined Sullivan at the Wednesday news conference in which they said the
Endangered Species Act was being used as a way to shut down resource
development along Alaska's northern coast.
Parnell said he does not intend to let that happen.
Sullivan reiterated concerns over models used by the government to list
the bears. He claimed the models projecting future declines in sea ice
are flawed.
A message left after business hours Thursday with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service was not immediately returned.
Fish and Wildlife officials in Washington, D.C., were expected Thursday
to discuss a proposal to designate critical habitat for polar bears.
The listing of polar bears by the federal government was wrong on several
accounts, Sullivan said.
It used speculative scientific models that went too far into the future
and failed to take into account what is already successfully being done
to protect them, he said.
"The listing of the polar bears under the ESA is unprecedented," Sullivan
said. "We are doing and others have been doing a good job in protecting
the species."
Rebecca Noblin with the Center for Biological Diversity said the move by
the state is disappointing. The center first petitioned to get polar
bears listed in February 2005.
"We are really disappointed to see that the state of Alaska is continuing
to deny the science of climate change," she said. "It is ironic in a
state that is feeling the impacts of global warming before everyone else
that the state would take this position that can only hurt Alaskans."
 
 
 
 
 
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