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Navy Can Use High-Intensity Sonar off SoCal Coast Pending Court Challenge

An environmental group narrowly lost the second round in its legal efforts to prohibit the U.S. Navy from using high-intensity sonar off the Southern California coast. The case now heads to another co

Navy Can Use High-Intensity Sonar off SoCal Coast Pending Court Challenge

(Image: A screen capture from 'Lethal Sounds,' an NRDC video .)

An environmental group narrowly lost the second round in its legal efforts to prohibit the U.S. Navy from using high-intensity sonar off the Southern California coast. The case now heads to another court. KPBS reporter Ed Joyce has details.

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The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals voted 2-to-1 to lift an injunction that prevented the Navy from testing the mid-frequency sonar. The Natural Resources Defense Council says the use of high-intensity sonar harms marine life.

Joel Reynolds is an attorney with the NRDC and director of the group's Marine Mammal Protection Project. He says the group wants safeguards to protect marine life in the waters where the Navy is doing the testing.

Reynolds : It's an area where this sort of technology needs to be used, if at all, only with the greatest degree of caution, and that's what our litigation is intended to ensure.

He says a three-judge panel will now hear the full case in November. Reynolds says the Navy will likely conduct another sonar exercise before the case is heard. The Navy says the sonar program requires realistic and frequent training at sea. The exercises are scheduled to continue through 2009.

Ed Joyce, KPBS News.