NOAA postpones controversial bottom trawling experiment in Alaska’s Northern Bering Sea

The project, called the Northern Bering Sea Effects of Trawling Study, or NETS, has been envisioned as an experiment to examine impacts of commercial bottom trawling in an area of the Bering Sea where it is currently banned. Bottom trawling is a method of fish harvesting that uses nets to sweep the seafloor. While it is prohibited in the Northern Bering Sea, the shift in fish populations caused by climate change may build pressure for bottom trawling there in the future, according to the study plan. The study has been designed as a multiyear project to start as early as this August. It was to be conducted by the Alaska Fisheries Science Center, a branch of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Fisheries Service, also known as the National Marine Fisheries Service. News of the decision came in an emailed letter from Janet Coit, director of NOAA Fisheries, to tribal organizations that had expressed opposition to the project. more, >>click to read<< 09:52

One Response to NOAA postpones controversial bottom trawling experiment in Alaska’s Northern Bering Sea

  1. Joel Hovanesian says:

    Yet another clueless Rhode Islander making decisions for an industry she’s clueless about.
    Along with Gina Raimondo, also from RI, your illustrious director of commerce who is also behind the push for Ocean industrialization/ Ocean wind.
    Rhode Island, A beautiful state that has been ruled by the democratic socialist party for far to long.

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