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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumPacific gray whales facing 'catastrophic' die-off as climate crisis hits food supply
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jul/10/pacific-gray-whales-population-climate-changeTrump administration urged to relist a species in very, very serious trouble under Endangered Species Act
Tom Perkins
Fri 10 Jul 2026 09.00 EDT
Climate change is driving a gray whale catastrophic mortality event in the Pacific Ocean as melting sea ice depletes food sources and the animals starve, environmental groups warn.
Meanwhile, a range of other issues, like ship strikes, oil spills, microplastic pollution, algal blooms and Russian harvesting are also probably contributing to the die-off that has nearly halved the whales estimated population. It fell from 20,000 in 2019 to fewer than 13,000 this year, and the deaths appear to be accelerating.
Environmental groups have petitioned the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) to relist the gray whale under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), which would alleviate some problems, but its approval is a long shot as the Trump administration moves to gut wildlife protections.
The whales are in very, very serious trouble, said Rick Steiner, an Alaska marine ecologist and chair of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibilitys (Peers) board of directors.
Tom Perkins
Fri 10 Jul 2026 09.00 EDT
Climate change is driving a gray whale catastrophic mortality event in the Pacific Ocean as melting sea ice depletes food sources and the animals starve, environmental groups warn.
Meanwhile, a range of other issues, like ship strikes, oil spills, microplastic pollution, algal blooms and Russian harvesting are also probably contributing to the die-off that has nearly halved the whales estimated population. It fell from 20,000 in 2019 to fewer than 13,000 this year, and the deaths appear to be accelerating.
Environmental groups have petitioned the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) to relist the gray whale under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), which would alleviate some problems, but its approval is a long shot as the Trump administration moves to gut wildlife protections.
The whales are in very, very serious trouble, said Rick Steiner, an Alaska marine ecologist and chair of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibilitys (Peers) board of directors.
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Pacific gray whales facing 'catastrophic' die-off as climate crisis hits food supply (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
4 hrs ago
OP
Faux pas
(16,650 posts)1. ...
Stargleamer
(2,865 posts)2. Those who have power fuck everything up
OKIsItJustMe
(22,473 posts)3. To be fair, we help them
Who doesnt know that burning fossil fuels are killing the planet?
Are people flying less? No. Theyre flying more.
2025 Was The Busiest Year For US Air Travel In More Than 15 Years, FAA Says
Are people taking fewer cruises? No, theyre taking more.
Cruise Industry Hits Fourth Consecutive Record Year With 4.5% Growth in 2026
Are people driving more efficient vehicles? (Not really.) The best selling automobiles are Pickup trucks and SUVs.
The 25 Best-Selling Cars in 2025
(I can go on.)

Hey Joe
(922 posts)4. I guess keeping these species alive would be
placing too much burden on the profit margins of these corporations.
What a sad, sorry time we are living through.😩