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Facing The Prospect Of Extinction, Polar Bears Deserve More From Salazar

Polar Bear

First Posted: 12/30/10 12:50 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:20 PM ET

From the Center for Biological Diversity's Kassie Siegel:

The future of the mighty polar bear, the world's largest bear and one of the planet's most remarkable and iconic creatures, will be decided by what we do in the coming years. Climate change is pushing it ever closer to extinction as warming temperatures rapidly melt the sea ice it needs to survive. If greenhouse pollution trends continue the species will be driven extinct.
We had hoped the Obama administration would do its part to throw polar bears a lifeline at the close of 2010. Sadly, it did not.

Instead, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has reaffirmed a Bush-era decision that listed the polar bear as "threatened," rather than the more protective "endangered," under the Endangered Species Act. The Dec, 23 decision is all too typical of what we have seen to date from the Obama administration and Secretary Salazar: rather than break with the flawed policies of the Bush administration, they have embraced them. Salazar denied polar bears full "endangered" status for the same reason as the Bush administration: doing so allows the government to exempt greenhouse gas emissions from regulation under the Endangered Species Act.
Salazar's decision was in response to a November court ruling in our ongoing case seeking full protection for the polar bear as "endangered." The judge rejected one of the Interior Department's arguments defending the "threatened" listing - that extinction must be "imminent" before a species is listed as endangered - and told the government to reconsider. The Interior Department came back with a new explanation, but said essentially the same thing in different words - that the polar bear must be "on the brink" of extinction before it is protected as "endangered." The decision is bad policy, ignores the science and will likely get overturned when we are back in front of the judge in February.

It may be politically expedient to forestall aid for the polar bear but the reality is that the devastating effects of global warming have already arrived in the Arctic. These incredible bears - which are completely dependent on sea ice for hunting, mating and raising their young - are starving and drowning as warming temperatures rapidly melt their habitat.
As a matter of science, the case for endangered status for the polar bear is unassailable. The government's own studies show an 80 percent chance that two-thirds of the world's bears will be extinct in 40 years, and quite possibly well before then.

Eight of the world's 19 polar bear populations are already in decline, with the more southerly populations hit the hardest and earliest. The Western Hudson Bay population, in Manitoba, Canada, is the most well-studied scientifically, the most visited by tourists, and one of the first to be impacted. I was there in November and saw some of the depressing effects on these magnificent bears first-hand.

Polar bears in western Hudson Bay must come to land each spring when the sea ice melts and fast until the ice freezes again in the fall. The average date of breakup of the sea ice there is now about three weeks earlier than it was 30 years ago, while freeze-up comes several weeks later. The western Hudson Bay polar bear population declined 22 percent between 1987 and 2004, the latest year for which we have final population counts. There's every reason to believe the decline is continuing and accelerating.

Simply put, there is no scientific rationale - or valid legal footing - to deny polar bears the maximum protection available. Unfortunately, Salazar has embraced the Bush administration's illogical position that greenhouse gases are somehow fundamentally different than other pollutants and, when it comes to protecting our nation's most vulnerable wildlife, should be exempted from regulation under the Endangered Species Act. Existing programs under the Act have a long track record for saving imperiled species including by reducing pesticides that harm bald eagles and frogs, and reducing toxic mercury that kills fish and harms other aquatic ecosystems. It makes no sense to exempt greenhouse gases, the greatest threat the world has ever known, from these effective proven programs that are already in use.

While the Endangered Species Act on its own does not provide a complete solution to global warming, the fight over whether greenhouse gas emissions should be exempted from its reach reflects the issues in the larger war over carbon and the future of our planet. Although Obama's Environmental Protection Agency is finally moving forward with greenhouse reductions under the Clean Air Act - certainly our most important tool for cutting major sources of greenhouse pollution - the agency has been slow and tentative. That says nothing, too, of the failure of Congress to pass a climate bill or the inability of U.S. leaders at world climate talks to match the urgency and magnitude of this global crisis. The great irony of U.S. inaction on climate, of course, is that we have the strongest and most successful domestic environmental laws in the world, but seem unwilling to use them.

Salazar's polar bear decision is not just a blow to the polar bear, it is completely at odds with Obama's fading promises of restoring scientific integrity to government decision-making. Fortunately, we are not without recourse. Just as the courts have overturned Salazar's attempts to strip wolves of Endangered Species Act protections, they will likely do so with his polar bear decision. But there is a larger point at play here: Ultimately the fate of polar bears - and the rest of us - will depend on decisions that prioritize environmental protection over profits, science over politics and the long-term survival of all the planet's inhabitants over short-term gains of a few.

Kassie Siegel is Director of the Center for Biological Diversity's Climate Law Institute. She wrote the petition that compelled the Bush administration to first list the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act, and is litigating the ongoing case by the Center for Biological Diversity, Natural Resources Defense Council and Greenpeace, seeking full protection for the polar bear. A court hearing on the proper listing status for the polar bear is set for February 23, 2011, in Washington, D.C.

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From the Center for Biological Diversity's Kassie Siegel: The future of the mighty polar bear, the world's largest bear and one of the planet's most remarkable and iconic creatures, will be decided b...
From the Center for Biological Diversity's Kassie Siegel: The future of the mighty polar bear, the world's largest bear and one of the planet's most remarkable and iconic creatures, will be decided b...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SweetJudith
07:58 PM on 01/04/2011
Salazar the rancher and animal killer should be fired!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
01:36 PM on 01/04/2011
Can we get back to doing something about over population and saving the tigers? Or are the polar bears the only ones that matter?
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12:28 AM on 01/04/2011
I hope the Polar Bear wins.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
11:54 PM on 01/03/2011
Another betrayal by Obama. Just when I re-convince myself that he might be doing a good job, something like this comes out. This is very disappointing.
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April Pells
07:42 PM on 01/03/2011
Why exactly do the polar bears deserve anything? They are delightfully neato, but I don't see how that makes them deserve anything.
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12:25 AM on 01/04/2011
Polar Bears are not delightfully neato.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
April Pells
09:27 AM on 01/04/2011
Oh come on, their hair alone is nifty. It's pigment free and hollow.
01:41 PM on 01/19/2011
So, in order to be worthy of "deserving" anything polar bears must have... what? Superpowers? The ability to speak English and take part in the debate themselves? Be paying taxes?

I really just don't understand why an animal - why any living being - should prove itself worthy of "deserving" the chance to live it's life before we decide that it simply doesn't matter. Why do babies facing abortion "deserve" to live? Why do YOU "deserve" anything that you have? This comment is just asinine.
06:16 PM on 01/03/2011
Mmm, polarburgers.
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AyeChart
Retired Army, half-retired physician
05:58 PM on 01/03/2011
Humans face the prospect of extinction, too.  A comet might strike the earth, or an asteroid.

But seriously, polar bear numbers are expanding, getting bigger, there are more of them, they are growing, and  that's far from facing extinction.  They just move around.  If the ice melts, they cliimb up onto the coastal tundra or northern Canada or Alaska.  It's been worse before and it will probably be worse again.  And besides, the ice will return, the water refreeze, etc.

I am reminded of a grandson who, when reading listening to a sister read a book about dinosaurs, came to the part where the book said "Dinosaurs are extinct."  Grandson piped up with "YEAH, they're extinct!  And they're dead, too!"
11:12 AM on 01/02/2011
The Obama Administration once again disappoints me..Obama needs to replace Salazar!!
11:17 AM on 01/01/2011
There were and estimated 8,000 Polar Bears Worldwide in 1965
There is an estimated 25,000 Polar Bears Today.
This must mean that the Bera Population is in Decline. Like Colder mean warmer ? or is it warmer mean colder? Wet droughts and dry floods?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreenKate
02:11 AM on 01/02/2011
Hate to bust your bubble but you've been had. There is NO WAY to count polar bears. Predictions of their extinction are based upon the fact that their habitat is being destroyed.
10:21 AM on 01/02/2011
NO WAY to count polar bears? Then how can they be in Danger? ..and since we have more ice and snow not less and since their Habitat is on land, which does not melt, ..only one conclusion possible.
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AyeChart
Retired Army, half-retired physician
06:00 PM on 01/03/2011
There are ways to estimate polar bear population, and we are tired of being herded around by computer models that are fudged every few days to keep them from predicting that doom occurred yesterday.

Politico headline:
After a year that started with fallout from the "Climategate" e-mail release, saw the cap-and-trade bill die in Congress, and ended with a gang of Republican climate skeptics winning House and Senate seats, global warming experts are going back to basics.
Environmentalists, scientists and lawmakers have renewed public relations efforts to put global warming plainly before Americans' eyes and also rebut opponents who say nothing is happening.
(So, by returning to basics, it seems they mean just ginning up more propaganda rather than doing actual research...but WE ARE NOT BUYING THE CARP that you are selling.)
11:12 AM on 01/01/2011
I spent ten years working as a medic on resource exploration jobs in the north; from seismic exploration in the Mackenzie mountains west of Inuvik to diamond exploration in Nunavut as well as Dew Line reclamation jobs. In all places I worked with local Inuit and discussed many of the issues seen from the south. The issue of polar bear population decline was never accepted by any Inuit I met. Every one always stated the opposite- that they were increasing.

One fellow told me he shot one trying to climb through his daughters window. As for hunting them, there are strict limits ; in Canada each village is allowed a maximum of three annually and they sell those permits to international hunters , usually for about $20,000. The money is then used to help ship supplies up to the village. A case of soda is about $40, a banana is about $5. Food is incredibly expensive and hunting isn't a guaranteed thing. They don't hunt the bears for themselves and if they shoot one in self defense, it goes on their allotment so they don't shoot them needlessly.
Regardless , no Inuit will agree that polar bears are disappearing and they live there all year round. They don't go up for the summer like the university types and publish papers about their experiences.
I tend to believe the Inuit over the summer only dudes.
01:22 PM on 01/01/2011
I have been working in the Yukon, Northwest Terrritories, and Nunavut (originally part of the NWT) since 1975. The Inuit have very mixed opinions and perceptions on the status of polar bear populations. Those who are claiming that polar bear numbers are increasing are most often associated with the very lucrative guiding industry for foreing trophy hunters. Many Inuit elders have voiced serious concerns about the guided hunts and the self serving opinions of the guides who profit from these hunts. The point is that there is serious disagreement among the Inuit regarding the status of polar bears.

The best science shows some subpopulations are increasing, whereas others are decreasing. This discrepancy causes confusion among those people who have only a local and limited geogrpahical perspective. Overall, however, the global polar bear population is decreasing and changing environmental conditions threaten the long term persistence of all populations.
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GreenKate
02:33 AM on 01/02/2011
So these villages are living off of the $20K each hunter is paying to kill a polar bear. Yet you think they have no vested interest in saying the bears are plentiful (and, thus not deserving of protection). It would be laughable if not so sad.
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12:27 AM on 01/04/2011
kinda reminds me of the buffalo, with the shoe on the other foot
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
05:19 PM on 12/31/2010
“[It is a phenomenon that fr*ghtens the native people that live around the Arctic.
Many fe*r their children will never know a polar bear.]
The ice is moving further and further north… In the Bering Sea the ice leaves earlier and earlier.
On the north slope, the ice is retreating as far as 300 or 400 miles offshore.â€
~ Charlie Johnson, Inupiat Eskimo, Exec. Dir. for the Alaska Nanuuq Commission

Some links to help the Polar Bears ♥ =^..^= ♥ ☮  ♥  ☮ 

World Wildlife Fund: Polar Bear Conservati­on:
http://www.worldwildlife.org/species/finder/polarbear/polarbear.html

NRDC: Save The Polar Bears: 
http://www.savebiogems.org/polar/

Save The Polar Bear:
http://www.savethepolarbear.ca/

Anchorage Daily News:
http://www.adn.com/2010/12/14/1604473/endangered-listing-needed-to-save.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonmaster
02:17 PM on 12/31/2010
These majestic beats certainly deserve more then this kind of an end- human beings however in the end will treat each other no better- as they attempt to also force humans in the future into a similar predicament.
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Papa Swamp
Research Peon, apex predator, ocean freak.
11:16 AM on 12/31/2010
Bogus...the population estimates are based on computer models and some helicopter surveys.
The inuit report the population is increasing.

Harry Flaherty, chair of the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board in the capital of Iqaluit, says the polar bear population in the region, along the Davis Strait, has doubled during the past 10 years. He questions the official figures, which are based to a large extent on helicopter surveys.

“Scientists do a quick study one to two weeks in a helicopter, and don’t see all the polar bears. We’re getting totally different stories [about the bear numbers] on a daily basis from hunters and harvesters on the ground,†he says.

Gabriel Nirlungayuk, director of wildlife for Nunavut Tuungavik Inc., is another doubter who questions the accuracy of helicopter surveys. “Helicopters have many limitations, including fuel capacity. They can’t go far out into the open water,†he says. But hunters crisscrossing the area by dog team, snowmobile or boat “are seeing polar bears where scientists and helicopters are not traveling.â€

Forty years ago, old-timers living in the area around Hudson Bay were lucky to see a polar bear, Nirlungayuk says. “Now there are bears living as far south as James Bay.â€
http://www.examiner.com/seminole-county-environmental-news-in-orlando/canada-s-growing-polar-bear-population-becoming-a-problem-locals-say

Of course no one wants to mention the Antarctic Sea Ice is expanding....not quite global warming.
01:31 PM on 12/31/2010
Don't confuse the libs with facts.
"A fact to a liberal is like kryptonite to Superman."-Larry Elder
01:57 PM on 12/31/2010
You make is sound like helicopters were the only factor in contributing to the status of the Polar Bears, It is exact thinking like yours that lead to many other extinction of animals. However there are many documentaries and news, you can find many other sources. It is indeed as fact that Polar Bears are going extinct, since who had ever heard of Polar Bears drowning? Documentaries in channels such as animal planet or discovery channel, when they are showing Polar Bears nowadays, they tend to say polar bears move out earlier than usual, because the ice is melting faster than the past years.
10:03 AM on 01/01/2011
lead to many other extinction of animal??? Like ?
08:13 AM on 12/31/2010
Where were you all when they stuck it to the dinosaurs?

All you can think about is cute cuddly white bears!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
signgrrl
typeface geek
09:41 AM on 01/01/2011
i'll assume you are trying to be funny . . . .
09:52 AM on 01/01/2011
No. I am DEADLY serious. (the tears in my eyes mean nothing!)
04:43 AM on 12/31/2010
We all know that should be friendly with environment. People just need take action right now!

www.welcomeget.com
02:06 PM on 12/31/2010
The question is, Are you?