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International Regulation of Underwater Sound: Establishing Rules and Standards to Address Ocean Noise Pollution (Solid Mechanics and Its Applications) PDF

300 Pages·2004·5.88 MB·English
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INTERNATIONAL REGULATION OF UNDERWATER SOUND Establishing Rules and Standards to Address Ocean Noise Pollution This page intentionally left blank INTERNATIONAL REGULATION OF UNDERWATER SOUND Establishing Rules and Standards to Address Ocean Noise Pollution by Elena McCarthy Marine Policy Center Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS NEW YORK,BOSTON, DORDRECHT, LONDON, MOSCOW eBookISBN: 1-4020-8078-6 Print ISBN: 1-4020-8077-8 ©2004 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc. Print ©2004 Kluwer Academic Publishers Boston All rights reserved No part of this eBook maybe reproducedortransmitted inanyform or byanymeans,electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise,withoutwritten consent from the Publisher Created in the United States of America Visit Springer's eBookstore at: http://www.ebooks.kluweronline.com and the Springer Global Website Online at: http://www.springeronline.com Contents Chapter One – Introduction 1. A Brief History of the Use of Sound in the Ocean 1 2. Ambient Noise in the Sea 4 3. Effects of Sound on Marine Mammals 5 4. Regulation of Noise in the Ocean-Some Background 7 Chapter Two – Scientific Aspects of Underwater Sound 1. The Physics of Underwater Sound 9 2. Effects of AcousticEmissions 14 2.1 Health Threats to Marine Mammals 14 2.2 Health Threats to Humans 16 2.3 Threats to other Marine Life 18 2.4 Acoustic Interference 19 3. Summary – Effects of Acoustic Emissions 20 4. Sources of Naturally-Occurring Sound in the Ocean 23 4.1 Physical & Geophysical Sources 23 4.2 Biological Sources 24 4.3 Sounds from Marine Mammals 25 5. Anthropogenic Sound in the Sea 28 5.1 Is Ambient Noise Increasing? 28 5.2 The Many Uses of Sonar 31 5.3 Shipping and Shipping Trends 32 5.4 Dredging and Coastal Construction 37 5.5 Offshore Oil and Mineral Exploration 41 5.6 Recreational Boating 47 5.7 Fishing and Aquaculture 50 5.8 Military Activities 52 5.9 Oceanographic Research 55 5.10 Other Sources 58 5.11 Ambient Noise-Summary 60 6. Hotspots – Sensitive Areas of Intense Acoustic Activity 62 6.1 Stellwagen Bank 66 6.2 The Ligurian Sea 71 6.3 Other Hotspots 80 Chapter Three - Focusing Events 1. What are Focusing Events? 83 2. The Role of Non-Governmental Organizations 85 2.1 What are Environmental NGOs? 86 2.2 Public Perception of Marine Mammals 87 2.3 The Natural Resources DefenseCouncil 88 2.4 Other NGOs involved in Ocean Noise Pollution 91 2.5 The Emergence of New NGOs 94 3. Key Focusing Events 95 3.1 Ship Shock Testing 96 3.2 Acoustic Thermometry of Ocean Climate (ATOC) 97 3.3 The North Pacific Acoustic Laboratory (NPAL) 101 3.4 Greek Whale Strandings and NATO 102 3.5 Surveillance Towed ArraySensor System (SURTASS) 104 3.6 Bahamas Strandings 112 3.7 Littoral Warfare Advanced Development (LWAD) 115 3.8 Other Focusing Events 116 4. Other Factors Contributing to the Noise Controversy 118 vi Chapter Four – Policy Development 1. Trail Smelter & Regulation of Transboundary Pollutants 121 2. The Pollution Provisions of the Law of the Sea Convention 124 3. Ocean Noise as a TransboundaryPollutant 128 4. Previous Regulation of Transboundary Pollutants 131 4.1 Thermal Ocean Pollution 131 4.2 Radiation 132 4.3 Air Pollution 137 5. Existing International Regulatory Framework 142 5.1 The United Nations Environmental Programme 143 5.2 The International Maritime Organization 145 5.3 International Whaling Commission 148 5.4 International SeabedAuthority 150 5.5 The European Union 151 5.6 The Use of Regional Agreements 153 5.6.1 The OSPAR Convention 153 5.6.2 The Arctic Council 155 5.6.3 ASCOBANS 157 5.6.4 ACCOBAMS 160 5.6.5 NATO 164 Chapter Five - Politics, Potential Solutions, & Obstacles 1. International Institutions 169 1.1 The Value of International Regimes and Organizations 169 1.2 GESAMP 173 1.3 The Development of an International Treaty 176 2. Conventional Approaches to Pollution Control 180 3. Policy Instruments for Addressing Ocean Noise Pollution 193 3.1 Taxes 194 3.2 Performance Bonds and Subsidies 196 3.3 Permits 197 3.4 Technological Standards- BAT and BPT 205 3.6 BestPracticable Environmental Option 208 3.7BansandZoning 209 3.8 Marine Protected Areas 211 4. The Trend Toward Ecosystem Based Ocean Management 211 5. Policy Instruments – A Summary 216 Chapter Six – The Use Of Marine Protected Areas 1. Unilateral MPAS in the U.S. and Abroad 219 2. Multilateral MPAs 223 3. The Potential of MPAs to Prevent Acoustic Disturbance 226 4. Zoning in MPAs 226 4.1 Activity-Specific Zones 228 4.2 Individual Source-Specific Zones 230 4.3 Buffer Zones 231 5. Challenges in Implementing MPAs and Zoning 234 Chapter 7 – Conclusion 1. The Politics of Policy-Making 247 1.1 Where is the Issue of Ocean Noise? 249 1.2 Incrementalism and Public Policy 251 2. Summary of Findings 257 Appendix A – Glossary 263 Appendix B – List of Acronyms 265 Bibliography 267 Preface In May 1996, the Alliance, an oceanographic research vessel operated by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), was conducting experiments with a new sonar off the coast of Greece. Several hours after the experiments, 17 beaked whales stranded in the Kyparissiakos Gulf and subsequently died.1 These events came to light much later when a Greek biologist published a correspondence in the journal Nature, which raised the concern that the sonar in some way had contributed to the deaths of the whales.2 As a result of the article, NATO held an international inquiry in June 1998. I attended this meeting, and listened to the many possibilities of physiological and behavioral effects that the sonar could have created. In part due to the lack of necropsy data, however, no conclusion was reached as to the cause of the whales’ deaths.3 I left the meeting thinking of something other than ocean physics and marine mammal physiology though—I began to think about who is responsible in such a situation? What types of rules and regulations apply— if, in fact, such rules and regulations even exist? This event underscored the regulatory challenges posed by the presence of noise in the international arena: The sonar was owned by the US 1 The number of stranded animals was reported to be between 12-17; the exact remains unknown, as most cetaceans sink when they die. 2See A. Frantzis, “Does Acoustic Testing Strand Whales?,” Nature 392 (1998): 29. See also “Quiet, Please. Whales Navigating,” The Economist, March 7, 1998 at 85 and “Beached Whales and Military Testing”, The Washington Post, March 9, 1998 at A2. 3 SACLANTCEN Summary Record, SACLANTCEN Marine Mammal Environmental Policy and Mitigation Procedures Panel, La Spezia, Italy, 17–19 June 1998. viii International Regulation of Underwater Sound government; the ship was owned by the 16 NATO nations but flew a German flag; and the experiment was carried out in Greek waters.4 Determining who was responsible, let alone who might regulate the use of the sonar in this scenario, was complex and the international implications were significant.5 The challenge of regulating ocean noise in an international context became disturbingly evident. Addressing this challenge formed the basis of my research. This book examines the issue of anthropogenic, or manmade, sound in a global context. It investigates the nature and significance of problems associated with anthropogenic sound in the ocean, identifies conflicting uses of ocean space related to noise, and considers the need for new regulatory initiatives. In particular, it considers the response of the international legal system to the nascent problem of ocean noise. In doing so, it identifies the existing legal, economic, and political barriers to the creation and implementation of a new international regime designed to manage anthropogenic noise in the ocean. Because underwater noise can travel thousands of miles across the high seas and into waters under the jurisdiction of other states, its impacts can be international in scope. Presently, there are no rules of international law that specifically address the transmission of sound through the ocean.6 This lack of international rules and standards for regulating underwater sound has stimulated intense controversy in scientific, environmental, and legal communities. As a result, there is now a need to develop internationally accepted rules and standards for sound propagation and transmission in the world’s oceans. Noise is clearly different from traditional pollutants such as oil or sewage because it is not a substance, but a form of energy.7 As such, it shares certain attributes with other types of energy pollutants such as radiation and heat. For this reason, the book examines the historical treatment of radiation and thermal energy by the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of 4John Peterson of SACLANTCEN provided a detailed explanation of why the NATO vessel flies a German flag. Personnel e-mail correspondence, May/June 1998. 5 Although this NATO event was not the first time ocean noise and its effects on marine mammals was in the spotlight, it was the first incident that had such overwhelming international implications. Otherevents are discussed in detail in Chapter Three. 6See Harm Dotinga & Alex Oude Elferink, “AcousticPollution in the Oceans: The Search for Legal Standards,” Ocean Development And International Law 31 (2000): 162. 7In this book no distinction is made between the terms “noise” and “sound”. They are often used interchangeably. Noise is a somewhat relative term and has been defined as “sound or a sound that is loud, unpleasant, unexpected, or undesired.” Also as “sound or a sound of any kind.” The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, ed., (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1996). Preface ix the Sea. It then seeks to identify the appropriatetreatment for noise as a type of pollution that directly and indirectly impacts on the ocean ecosystem. Finally, the book proposes some new approaches that could be used by the international community to address the problems that have been identified. Specifically, it focuses on the potential of marine protected areas, sanctuaries, and multi-lateral regional initiatives in regulating underwater noise pollution. The first chapter outlines the history of the use of sound in the sea, the effects of sound on marine life, and the evolution of noise regulation in the ocean. Chapter Two provides an explanation of the scientific aspects of underwater sound including the physics of sound, its sources, and its effects. Additionally, it analyzes statistical and technical data to determine trends in anthropogenic noise in the ocean and to locate geographical areas that pose the greatest threat to marine life and habitat. Chapter Three examines how ocean noise became an international concern, specifically the catalyzing role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and environmental groups in bringing the issue of underwater noise pollution to the attention of governments, intergovernmental organizations, and the public. Chapter Three also describes several of the key “focusing events” that brought this issue to the public’s attention. These include the highly publicized Acoustic Thermometry of Ocean Climate (ATOC) experiment—the first event to prompt a debate over the use of sound in the ocean and its possible harm to marine mammals. It also takes an in-depth look at the development of the US Navy’s SURTASS-LFA system, the stranding of whales in Greece during the NATO sea trial, the US Navy’s submarine and surface ship shock tests, and whale deaths in the Bahamas during US naval operations. Chapter Four outlines the “route to government” that has guided international pollution issues in the past and validates the concept of noise as a type of transboundary pollutant. It then looks at the existing international legal framework to determine whether it can be applied to the issue of anthropogenic ocean noise. It focuses on the evolution of international policy that regulates thermal, radioactive, and air pollution, including a case study of the 1979 Convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution. Chapter Four also discusses the current role of the United Nations (UN) and other intergovernmental bodies in controlling pollution and comments on the applicability of the legal framework provided by the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). It then considers the existing responsibilities and potential contributions from other international organizations such as the Arctic Council, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the International Whaling Commission (IWC), the

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Numerous incidents suggest that man-made sound injures and can kill marine mammals. This book offers an objective look at how ocean noise should be addressed given the lack of regulatory structure and the scientific uncertainty over the effects of noise on marine life. It is an essential text for po
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