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Conservation groups want U.S. to pressure Canada to protect right whales

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Transport Canada has fined six vessels for flouting protection measures in place for North Atlantic right whales. Elizabeth McSheffrey reports – Aug 13, 2019

American conservation groups are urging the U.S. government to apply pressure Canada to do more to protect the endangered North Atlantic right whale and avoid imposing a ban on various Canadian seafood products.

Nine U.S.-based organizations have sent an 11-page letter to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) expressing “deep concern” over the continued entanglement of right whales in Canadian waters.

READ MORE: Canada, U.S. must work together to save right whales from extinction

They point out the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act requires a ban on the import of fish, crab and lobster caught with gear that results in the killing or serious injury of marine mammals “in excess of United States standards.”

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They say current bycatch measures in Canada are not comparable to those in U.S. fisheries and that’s a situation that has to change.

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The groups say Canada should immediately strengthen its right whale protections in order to avoid an import ban and to “help save the species from extinction.”

WATCH: Federal government cracking down on abandoned fishing equipment

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Federal government cracking down on abandoned fishing equipment

NOAA announced the first death of a right whale in American waters on Tuesday, while eight have died in Canadian waters this summer out of a population numbering only about 400 animals.

Twenty-nine right whales have died in North American waters since 2017.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 18, 2019.

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