HR-8496-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Julia Brownley (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would amend the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 to require the Secretary of Commerce to identify marine mammal species and population stocks threatened by climate change and develop formal "climate impact management plans" for each. The Secretary would have 24 months to publish an initial list of at-risk species, then 18–30 months to draft conservation plans for each listed species. The bill would also establish a NOAA monitoring program to track climate impacts on marine mammals and authorizes $80 million in total appropriations over five fiscal years (2027–2031) across three agencies.
Who benefits
Marine mammal species and populations facing climate-related threats, including polar bears, walruses, belugas, and ice-dependent seals. Coastal and indigenous communities whose food security, culture, and economies depend on healthy marine mammal populations. Marine biologists, conservation researchers, and NOAA scientists who would receive new funding and data infrastructure. Environmental advocacy organizations focused on ocean conservation. Fishing communities that depend on healthy prey-species ecosystems that marine mammals help sustain. Future generations who would benefit from preserved biodiversity.
Who is hurt
Commercial fishing operations that could face new restrictions on bycatch or gear types if management plans identify fishery interactions as a threat. Offshore energy developers, shipping companies, and other industries whose activities may be constrained if they conflict with climate impact management plan objectives. Federal agencies whose discretionary actions could be subject to new consistency requirements with the Secretary's plans. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of the $80 million authorization. Industries that rely on marine resources whose management could become more restrictive under revised stock assessments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that climate change is already measurably altering ocean temperatures, sea ice extent, and prey availability in ways that threaten dozens of marine mammal species, and that the existing Marine Mammal Protection Act lacks any mechanism to address these systemic, long-term threats. They contend that proactive, science-based management plans — with objective, measurable criteria and mandatory review cycles — are more cost-effective than emergency responses after populations collapse. They also point to the bill's explicit requirement that other federal agencies align their actions with conservation plans, closing a coordination gap that has historically allowed conflicting federal activities to undermine species recovery efforts.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates an expansive new regulatory framework with broad, loosely defined triggers — including a provision that "lack of quantitative information" cannot be used to exclude a species — that could subject a wide range of federal and private activities to new restrictions based on speculative long-range climate projections. They contend that the interagency consistency requirement, which directs all federal agencies to ensure their actions do not conflict with the Secretary's plans, effectively grants NOAA a veto over unrelated federal programs without clear statutory limits, raising concerns about agency overreach in the post-Loper Bright environment where courts independently scrutinize such delegations.
Constitutional context
The bill rests on Congress's Commerce Clause authority (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), which has long supported federal marine mammal regulation. However, the interagency consistency mandate — requiring all federal agencies to align their actions with NOAA-developed plans — may raise major questions doctrine concerns under West Virginia v. EPA (2022), as it could be read to grant the Secretary broad authority to constrain other agencies' actions without explicit congressional authorization for each affected program. Post-Loper Bright (2024), courts will independently assess whether the bill's delegation language is sufficiently clear to support the scope of authority it confers.
Checks and balances
The Secretary of Commerce (through NOAA) gains significant new planning and interagency coordination authority; checks include mandatory public notice-and-comment rulemaking, biennial congressional reporting requirements, five-year plan review cycles, and judicial review of any implementing regulations under the post-Chevron independent scrutiny standard.
Historical precedent
The Endangered Species Act of 1973 established a similar framework of listing, planning, and interagency consultation for at-risk species, and its Section 7 consultation requirement — which also directs federal agencies to avoid jeopardizing listed species — has been the subject of extensive litigation over the scope of agency authority.