US calls for talks with Mexico on endangered porpoise

Handout picture released by Sea Sheperd environmental organization showing a vaquita marina porpoise -the world’s smallest and which is nearly extinct- at the Gulf of California, Mexico on September 03, 2019. (Photo by HO / Sea Shepherd Conservation Society / AFP)S

WASHINGTON, D.C., United States (AFP) – Washington has invoked the environmental provisions of the North American free trade pact to urge Mexico to do more to protect the critically endangered vaquita porpoise, officials announced Thursday.

The office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) said it is requesting consultations with Mexico under the Environment Chapter of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA.

While Mexico last year put in place measures to protect the world’s most endangered marine mammal, there is evidence it is not meeting its commitments under the pact, USTR said in a statement.

“USTR is committed to protecting the environment and is requesting this consultation to ensure Mexico lives up to its USMCA environment commitments,” US Trade Representative Katherine Tai said. “We look forward to working with Mexico to address these issues.”

Handout picture released by Sea Sheperd environmental organization showing a vaquita marina porpoise dead in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northwestern Mexico, on March 12, 2019. – A specimen of a vaquita marina, a Mexican endangered species of porpoise, was found dead trapped in a network within a refuge zone in the northwest of the country, Sea Shepherd reported Thursday. The vaquita, the world’s smallest porpoise, is nearly extinct. Saving it has become a cause celebre for the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio and Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim. (Photo by HO / Sea Shepherd Conservation Society / AFP)

It is the first time a government has invoked the environmental provisions of the trade pact, which took effect in July 2020.

The vaquita is endemic to the Upper Gulf of California in Mexico, with at least six but likely fewer than 19 remaining, the statement said, noting that it is threatened largely by illegal gillnets used to catch shrimp and totoaba.

However, “scientists maintain that the species continues to be biologically viable, if given the space to recover.”

The consultations also cover illegal fishing of the totoaba.

Deputy USTR Jayme White told reporters Washington has “serious concerns about Mexico’s enforcement of its environmental laws,” and the talks will focus on finding “a durable solution.”

Under USMCA, consultations should be scheduled within 30 days, and at least 75 days must pass before Washington can escalate a dispute to the next level.

Handout picture released by Sea Sheperd environmental organization showing two vaquita marina porpoises -the world’s smallest and which is nearly extinct- at the Gulf of California, Mexico on September 03, 2019. (Photo by HO / Sea Shepherd Conservation Society / AFP)

Without a resolution it could lead to imposition of tariffs but senior USTR officials cautioned that it is premature to discuss any punitive actions.

Mexico’s economy ministry said it would coordinate work between authorities from the two countries to present “the efforts and measures adopted to protect marine species” in Mexican waters.

“The government of Mexico reaffirms its commitment to the correct implementation of USMCA and the responsibilities assumed under it,” it said in a statement.

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