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Issues: Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

It's No Way to Save The Whales

April 28, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
bushadministration, internationalwhalingcommission, marinemammals, obama, whales, whaling

The Obama administration and the International Whaling Commission want to allow legal hunting again. It's misguided policy. No one was surprised when conservation organizations such as the Natural Resources Defense Council challenged the anti-environmental policies of President George W. Bush....

An Earth Day Message to Anglo American’s CEO Cynthia Carroll

April 21, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
angloamerican, biogems, bristolbay, copper, cynthiacarroll, gold, mining, pebblemine, yupikeskimos

Last year, a delegation from the Bristol Bay region traveled to London to attend the Anglo American shareholder meeting and meet with you and your staff.   They explained that the proposed project would threaten the way of life for local...

Zale Says No To Pebble

April 15, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
angloamerican, biogem, bristolbay, earthday, pebblemine

When Zale Corp., the nation’s second largest retail jeweler, announced this week that it would boycott minerals produced at the proposed Pebble Mine, the reaction of Pebble Partnership CEO John Shively was telling:  “Big deal,” he said, meaning, of course,...

Pebble Mine: Foreign Mining Companies' Scheme Would Poison America's Paradise

April 7, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
alaska, angloamerican, aulukestai, bristolbay, earthday, endangeredspecies, marinemammals, mining, nunamta, pebblemine, riotinto

On Earth Day, April 22, 2010, of all days, the British mining giant Anglo American is holding its annual shareholder meeting in London. Anglo American and Northern Dynasty Minerals, its Canadian partner, are scheming to construct one of the world's...

Say No Now to Pebble Mine

March 23, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Reviving the World's Oceans , Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
alaska, angloamerican, bristolbay, pebblemine

Pebble Limited Partnership CEO John Shively was on the stump last week asking people to withhold judgment, to wait and see whether the consortium of foreign mining corporations behind the massive Pebble Mine project proposed for the watershed above Bristol...

A Reunion at Laguna San Ignacio

March 5, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
bajacalifornia, biogem, glennclose, graywhales, lagunasanignacio, mexico, mitsubishi, piecebrosnan

I just returned from an extraordinary trip to an even more extraordinary place.  Laguna San Ignacio, on the west coast of the Baja California Peninsula in Mexico is a World Heritage Site, a biosphere reserve, a whale sanctuary, a migratory...

Stepping Backward Is Not A "Way Forward" For Protecting Whales At The IWC

February 22, 2010

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Reviving the World's Oceans , Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
biogems, commercialwhaling, internationalconventionfortheregulationofwhaling, internationalwhalingcommission, IWC, moratorium, sonar, whales, whaling

The International Whaling Commission (IWC) today released a report by the Chair of a small subcommittee charged with negotiating a compromise on a “way forward” for the IWC.  There is much discussion in the report about conservation, science, monitoring, governance,...

The Cove Exposes Senseless Dolphin Slaughter in Japan

July 23, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Reviving the World's Oceans , Saving Wildlife and Wild Places , The Media and the Environment

Tags:
dolphins, internationalwhalingcommission, japan, marinemammals, mercury, navysonar, oceanicpreservationsociety, taiji, thecove

Many people know about NRDC's on-going battle to save whales and dolphins from ear-splitting military sonar.  After watching an extraordinary and award-winning new movie, The Cove, hopefully many more will learn about the current battle to save thousands of dolphins...

Watching Whales Watching Us in California

July 13, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Reviving the World's Oceans , Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
bajacalifornia, biogems, graywhale, marinemammals, mitsubishi, sanignacio, sonar, whales

In yesterday's New York Times Magazine ("Watching Whales Watch Us"), author Charles Siebert lays out a compelling case for what many people have long suspected: that great whales are conscious, social, interactive animals with complex social structures and cultures.  The...

Historic Tejon Ranch Conservation Agreement Celebrates One-Year Anniversary

May 8, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
condor, conservation, ecosystems, landuse, openspace, stateparks, tejonranch, tejonranchconservancy

Most people have never seen a California condor. Last week, when I arrived at a meeting of the Tejon Ranch Conservancy at a cabin in the heart of the Tejon Ranch north of Los Angeles, a number of these...

The Fate of a Toll Road Through San Onofre State Beach

March 10, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
congestion, interstate5, orangecounty, sanonofre, savesanonofre, surfrider, tca, transportation, transportationcorridoragency, trestles

Today, the Los Angeles Times ran an op-ed I co-authored with Bobby Shriver on the fate of a disastrous toll road proposed by the Transportation Corridor Agencies in Southern California. I encourage you to discuss the article: O.C.'s road test Rejection of...

Fighting for the Lives of Marine Mammals in “The Cove”

February 2, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
dolphins, internationalwhalingcommission, louiepsihoyos, oceanicpreservationsociety, ops, ricobarry, savejapandolphins, sundance, taiji, thecove

Every once in a while there is a movie so good it's astonishing, and this morning I saw one.  It's called The Cove, and it has just been screened at the Sundance Film Festival to critical acclaim and standing ovations. ...

While Bush May No Longer Be President, His Legacy Endures

January 23, 2009

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
atlanticcoast, dolphins, gulfofmexico, hawaii, marinemammals, midnightrules, nationalmarinefisheriesservice, navy, navysonar, NMFS, NOAA, obama, presidentbush, sonar, southerncalifornia, whales

Former President Bush may have left DC, but his legacy to degrade national environmental laws and allow the military to circumvent marine mammal protection laws continues. I was disappointed today to see the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) issue final...

Major Turning Point in Our Fight to Save Whales

December 30, 2008

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
biogems, marinemammals, navy, ocean, settlement, sonar, whales

Last week, NRDC settled a significant case with the Navy. In 2005, we challenged mid-frequency active sonar training exercises that were being carried out around the world without the adequate environmental review required by federal law. Despite mounting evidence that...

Supreme Court to Examine the Navy's Use of Sonar

October 2, 2008

Posted by Joel Reynolds in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
dolphins, navy, nrdcv.winter, ocean, sonar, supremecourt, whales

Next Wednesday, in Washington, D.C., the U.S. Supreme Court will hear argument in Winter v NRDC, our case challenging the Navy's illegal use of sonar off the southern California coast. As I wrote about previously, NRDC challenged the Navy's refusal...

Joel Reynolds
Joel Reynolds
Director of NRDC's Urban Program, the Marine Mammal Protection and So. California Ecosystem projects
Santa Monica, CA
I graduated in 1978 from Columbia Law School, where I was a Harlan Fiske Stone...
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