Admin
note:
All
emphasis
is
mine.
US
lists
polar
bear
as
threatened
species
-
Yahoo!
News
By
H.
JOSEF
HEBERT,
Associated
Press
Writer
33
minutes
ago
WASHINGTON
-
The
Interior
Department
declared
the
polar
bear
a
threatened
species
Wednesday
because
of
the
loss
of
Arctic
sea
ice
but
also
cautioned
the
decision
should
not
be
viewed
as a
path
to
address
global
warming.
Interior
Secretary
Dirk
Kempthorne
cited
dramatic
declines
in
sea
ice
over
the
last
three
decades
and
projections
of
continued
losses,
meaning,
he
said,
that
the
polar
bear
is a
species
likely
to
be
in
danger
of
extinction
in
the
near
future.
But
Kempthorne
said
it
would
be
"wholly
inappropriate"
to
use
the
protection
of
the
bear
to
reduce
greenhouse
gases,
or
to
broadly
address
climate
change.
The
Endangered
Species
Act
"is
not
the
right
tool
to
set
U.S.
climate
policy,"
said
Kempthorne,
reflecting
a
view
recently
expressed
by
President
Bush.
The
department
outlined
a
set
of
administrative
actions
and
limits
to
how
it
planned
to
protect
the
bear
with
its
new
status
so
that
it
would
not
have
wide-ranging
adverse
impact
on
economic
activities
from
building
power
plants
to
oil
and
gas
exploration.
"This
listing
will
not
stop
global
climate
change
or
prevent
any
sea
ice
from
melting,"
said
Kempthorne.
He
said
he
had
consulted
with
the
White
House
on
the
decision,
but
"at
no
time
was
there
ever
a
suggestion
that
this
was
not
my
decision."
Kempthorne,
at a
news
conference,
was
armed
with
slides
and
charts
showing
the
dramatic
decline
in
sea
ice
over
the
last
30
years
and
projections
that
the
melting
of
ice
— a
key
habitat
for
the
bear
—
would
continue
and
may
even
quicken.
He
cited
conclusions
by
department
scientists
that
sea
ice
loss
will
likely
result
in
two-thirds
of
the
polar
bears
disappearing
by
mid-century.
The
bear
population
across
the
Arctic
from
Alaska
to
Greenland
doubled
from
about
12,000
to
25,000
since
1960,
but
he
noted
that
scientists
now
predict
a
significant
population
decline.
Studies
last
year
by
the
U.S.
Geological
Survey
suggested
15,000
bears
would
be
lost
in
coming
decades
with
those
in
the
western
Hudson
Bay
area
of
Alaska
and
Canada
under
the
greatest
stress.
But
when
asked
how
the
bear
will
be
afforded
greater
protection,
Dale
Hall,
director
of
the
U.S.
Fish
and
Wildlife
Service,
had
difficulty
coming
up
with
examples.
Better
management
of
bear
habitat
on
shore
and
making
sure
bears
aren't
threatened
by
people
including
hunters,
more
studies
on
bear
population
trends
and
their
feeding
habits
were
among
the
areas
mentioned.
"I
don't
want
to
prejudge
recommendations
for
(bear)
management,"
said
Hall
whose
agency
administers
the
Endangered
Species
Act.
Environmentalists
were
already
mapping
out
plans
to
file
lawsuits
challenging
the
restrictive
measures
outlined
by
Kempthorne.
"They're
trying
to
make
this
a
threatened
listing
in
name
only
with
no
change
in
today's
impacts
and
that's
not
going
to
fly,"
said
Jamie
Rappaport
Clark
of
Defenders
of
Wildlife
and
a
former
U.S.
Fish
and
Wildlife
Service
director.
Members
of
Congress
also
were
skeptical.
The
Bush
administration
"is
forcing
the
polar
bear
to
sink
or
swim,"
said
Rep.
Edward
Markey,
D-Mass.,
chairman
of a
House
committee
on
global
warming.
Sen.
John
Kerry,
D-Mass.,
called
it
"a
lifeline
for
our
last
remaining
polar
bears"
but
said
the
bear's
survival
won't
be
assured
without
limits
on
oil
development
in
the
same
Arctic
waters
where
the
bears
are
found.
Despite
the
new
listing,
the
announcement
underscores
the
need
to
approve
climate
legislation
that
would
limit
the
release
of
greenhouse
gases
and
avert
the
future
effects
on
climate
change,
said
Sen.
Barbara
Boxer,
D-Calif.,
chairwoman
of
the
Environment
Committee.
Scientists
have
blamed
global
warming
for
the
disappearance
of
sea
ice
which
is
vital
for
the
bear's
survival.
Summer
ice
surrounding
the
North
Pole
declined
an
average
of
10
percent
per
decade
since
1979,
with
a
loss
of
about
28,000
square
miles
per
year,
according
to
the
National
Snow
and
Ice
Data
Center.
Last
year
was
the
sharpest
drop,
as
the
amount
of
sea
ice
in
September
fell
to
1.65
million
square
miles,
or
23
percent
below
the
previous
low
in
2005.
Kempthorne
proposed
15
months
ago
to
investigate
whether
the
polar
bear
should
be
declared
threatened
under
the
Endangered
Species
Act.
That
triggered
a
year
of
studies
into
the
threats
facing
the
bear
and
its
survival
prospects.
A
decision
had
been
expected
early
this
year,
but
the
Interior
Department
said
it
needed
more
time
to
work
out
many
of
the
details,
prompting
criticism
from
members
of
Congress
and
environmentalists.
Environmentalists
filed
a
lawsuit
aimed
at
forcing
a
decision
and
a
federal
court
on
April
29
set
a
May
15
deadline
for
a
decision.
A
species
is
declared
"threatened"
under
the
Endangered
Species
Act
if
it
is
found
to
be
at
risk
of
becoming
endangered
in
the
foreseeable
future.
If
it
does
not
make
progress
toward
recovery,
it
can
be
declared
"endangered"
meaning
it
is
at
risk
of
extinction
and
needs
even
greater
protection.