Yesterday, (Thursday, July 26, 2018), the U.S. Court of International Trade 
issued an opinion in our vaquita litigation.



The case, which was filed by NRDC, the Center for Biological Diversity, and 
Animal Welfare Institute, challenges the U.S. government's violation of the 
Marine Mammal Protection Act's imports provision. That provision requires the 
government to bar imports from foreign fisheries whose marine mammal bycatch 
exceeds the standards applicable to domestic fisheries. As readers of MARMAM 
are all too aware, bycatch is depleting the vaquita at the rate of almost half 
the population each year.



In its decision, the Court found that "the number of permissible vaquita deaths 
under the [MMPA] is being exceeded, that an embargo is legally required, and 
that the species is at risk of extinction." It explained that the risk of the 
vaquita's extinction from continued gillnet fishing in the Gulf outweighs the 
costs of an embargo. And it cited experts' statements that "extinction is . . . 
inevitable unless gillnets are completely removed from vaquita habitat."



The Court's order bars all imports, into the United States, from commercial 
fisheries that use gillnets within the vaquita's range. This includes shrimp, 
corvina, sierra, and chano.



Please reply offline if you'd like a copy of the decision (NRDC v. Ross).

Thank you,
Zak

Zak Smith
Senior Attorney
Director, Wildlife Trade Initiative
Nature Program

Natural Resources
Defense Council
1314 Second Street
Santa Monica, CA 90401
T 310.434.2334
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
@smithzak<http://twitter.com/smithzak>
NRDC.ORG<http://www.nrdc.org/>

Please save paper.
Think before printing.

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