Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales

Environmental regulations can only be effective if they are adhered to, but the motivations for regulatory compliance are not always clear. We assessed vessel operator compliance with a December 2008 regulation aimed at reducing collisions with the endangered North Atlantic right whale that requires...

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Main Authors: Gregory K. Silber, Jeffrey D. Adams, Christopher J. Fonnesbeck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-06-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/399.pdf
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spelling doaj-52d213919fda40839bf06699946d08632020-11-24T21:10:38ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-06-012e39910.7717/peerj.399399Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whalesGregory K. Silber0Jeffrey D. Adams1Christopher J. Fonnesbeck2Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Silver Spring, MD, USAOffice of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Silver Spring, MD, USADepartment of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USAEnvironmental regulations can only be effective if they are adhered to, but the motivations for regulatory compliance are not always clear. We assessed vessel operator compliance with a December 2008 regulation aimed at reducing collisions with the endangered North Atlantic right whale that requires vessels 65 feet or greater in length to travel at speeds of 10 knots or less at prescribed times and locations along the U.S. eastern seaboard. Extensive outreach efforts were undertaken to notify affected entities both before and after the regulation went into effect. Vessel speeds of 201,862 trips made between November 2008 and August 2013 by 8,009 individual vessels were quantified remotely, constituting a nearly complete census of transits made by the regulated population. Of these, 437 vessels (or their parent companies), some of whom had been observed exceeding the speed limit, were contacted through one of four non-punitive information programs. A fraction (n = 26 vessels/companies) received citations and fines. Despite the efforts to inform mariners, initial compliance was low (<5% of the trips were completely <10 knots) but improved in the latter part of the study. Each notification/enforcement program improved compliance to some degree and some may have influenced compliance across the entire regulated community. Citations/fines appeared to have the greatest influence on improving compliance in notified vessels/companies, followed in order of effectiveness by enforcement-office information letters, monthly summaries of vessel operations, and direct at-sea radio contact. Trips by cargo vessels exhibited the greatest change in behavior followed by tanker and passenger vessels. These results have application to other regulatory systems, especially where remote monitoring is feasible, and any setting where regulatory compliance is sought.https://peerj.com/articles/399.pdfRegulatory complianceVessel collisionsShip strikesEndangered whalesRemote monitoringLarge whale conservation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregory K. Silber
Jeffrey D. Adams
Christopher J. Fonnesbeck
spellingShingle Gregory K. Silber
Jeffrey D. Adams
Christopher J. Fonnesbeck
Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
PeerJ
Regulatory compliance
Vessel collisions
Ship strikes
Endangered whales
Remote monitoring
Large whale conservation
author_facet Gregory K. Silber
Jeffrey D. Adams
Christopher J. Fonnesbeck
author_sort Gregory K. Silber
title Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
title_short Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
title_full Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
title_fullStr Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
title_full_unstemmed Compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect North Atlantic right whales
title_sort compliance with vessel speed restrictions to protect north atlantic right whales
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Environmental regulations can only be effective if they are adhered to, but the motivations for regulatory compliance are not always clear. We assessed vessel operator compliance with a December 2008 regulation aimed at reducing collisions with the endangered North Atlantic right whale that requires vessels 65 feet or greater in length to travel at speeds of 10 knots or less at prescribed times and locations along the U.S. eastern seaboard. Extensive outreach efforts were undertaken to notify affected entities both before and after the regulation went into effect. Vessel speeds of 201,862 trips made between November 2008 and August 2013 by 8,009 individual vessels were quantified remotely, constituting a nearly complete census of transits made by the regulated population. Of these, 437 vessels (or their parent companies), some of whom had been observed exceeding the speed limit, were contacted through one of four non-punitive information programs. A fraction (n = 26 vessels/companies) received citations and fines. Despite the efforts to inform mariners, initial compliance was low (<5% of the trips were completely <10 knots) but improved in the latter part of the study. Each notification/enforcement program improved compliance to some degree and some may have influenced compliance across the entire regulated community. Citations/fines appeared to have the greatest influence on improving compliance in notified vessels/companies, followed in order of effectiveness by enforcement-office information letters, monthly summaries of vessel operations, and direct at-sea radio contact. Trips by cargo vessels exhibited the greatest change in behavior followed by tanker and passenger vessels. These results have application to other regulatory systems, especially where remote monitoring is feasible, and any setting where regulatory compliance is sought.
topic Regulatory compliance
Vessel collisions
Ship strikes
Endangered whales
Remote monitoring
Large whale conservation
url https://peerj.com/articles/399.pdf
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