Press Release from Turtle Island Restoration
Network, 5/30/19
Turtle Island Restoration Network
and Beyond Nuclear filed a formal notice in May of their intent to sue the U.S.
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for failing to protect endangered
species from illegal intake and harm at the St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant in
Jensen Beach, Florida
Press Contacts: Todd Steiner,
Turtle Island Restoration Network, (415) 488-7652
JENSEN BEACH, Florida—Turtle
Island Restoration Network and Beyond Nuclear filed a formal notice today of
their intent to sue the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for
failing to protect endangered species from illegal intake and harm at the St.
Lucie Nuclear Power Plant in Jensen Beach, Florida.
For decades, the reactor site’s
cooling water intake system, which draws in nearly three billion gallons of sea
water daily, has routinely captured, harmed and killed thousands of marine
animals, most notably endangered and threatened species of sea turtle as well
as the endangered smalltooth sawfish. But it’s not just countless species of
marine wildlife—two scuba divers were sucked through the unprotected cooling
intake park on separate occasions, one of whom is suing the
power plant for being entrained at the plant in 2016.
“For years, the National Marine
Fisheries Service has knowingly allowed the nuclear industry to get away with
murder, allowing endangered species to be sucked towards the edge of extinction
in the name of unsustainable energy,” said Turtle Island Restoration Network
Executive Director Todd Steiner. “Almost drowning humans hasn’t even compelled
the federal government to take action, so we are.”
The notice states the Fisheries
Service’s failure to insure that adequate protective measures are adopted in
the power plant has resulted in incidental take exceedances for three
endangered species is in violation of the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
Smalltooth sawfish, Kemp’s ridley sea turtles and green sea turtles that swim
too close to intake pipes in the Atlantic Ocean are sucked into St. Lucie
nuclear power plant, which is owned by Florida Power & Light (FPL).
The Fisheries Service provides
the plant with a limited “exemption” under Section 7 of the ESA that requires a
scientifically prepared Biological Opinion from the agency to set “Incidental
Take Limits” for protected marine animals. Since 2006 however, NMFS, FPL, and
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission have been stalling a Section 7 Review
for a Biological Opinion under the ESA.
“The responsible federal agencies
have been out of compliance for decades,” said Deborah Sivas, director of the
Environmental Law Clinic at Stanford University. “Allowing the continued
unfettered entrainment of marine life through intake pipes is a prescription
for disaster that undermines the Endangered Species Act and is a misstep we
intend to solve through legal action.”
FPL has been obligated to limit
the number of endangered species killed by the plant’s intake system since its
operating license was amended in 2001. In 2016, National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS) issued new rules that allow FPL to suck 1,143 protected sea
turtles from the ocean into the St. Lucie nuclear power plant’s intake canal,
with specific limits for each of the five species—143 more than before. In one
year alone, the plant captured 933 sea turtles.
But after more than a decade of
research and testing as required by a federal Biological Opinion under the
Endangered Species Act, FPL has failed to deliver a functioning Turtle Excluder
Device (TED) to reduce its excessive takes and harm to sea turtles and smalltooth
sawfish at St. Lucie. Turtles presently are entrained into the large diameter
pipe where they can be injured on the long turbulent ride only to be discharged
into the plant’s intake canal where they are impinged on nets where they drown
(suffocate) if not promptly rescued.
The best and most ecological
operational change would be to require FPL to switch over from its current
once-through cooling system and construct evaporative cooling towers to
dramatically reduce the intake of cooling water and harm to endangered marine
life and habitat, say the groups. Alternatively, St. Lucie’s current intake
system should be required to install and maintain an operable TED as do shrimp
trawls, thereby providing escape routes for turtles, rather than being drawn
into the intake system risking injury and death. Instead, this requirement
appears to have been removed from consideration by FPL and the NRC.
“Given this nuclear power station
was built on a major sea turtle nesting beach, it’s outrageous that the nuclear
industry is unwilling to make reasonable operational changes to save these
endangered animals from harm and death,” said Paul Gunter, a spokesperson for
Beyond Nuclear and co-author of Licensed
to Kill: How the nuclear power industry destroys endangered marine wildlife and
ocean habitat to save money. “The price that sea turtles, sawfish, and
even humans are being forced to pay just to save the nuclear power industry
money is simply too high and too drastic to accept,” he concluded.
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