Right whale protection: conservation group calls for mandatory speed limits for ships
HALIFAX — A conservation group trying to prevent ships from striking endangered whales in the Gulf of St. Lawrence says new satellite data indicates that vessels transiting the Cabot Strait are routinely ignoring voluntary speed limits.
Oceana Canada released the figures Thursday and called on Ottawa to impose mandatory speed limits to protect the dwindling number of North Atlantic right whales, which started arriving in the gulf last month as part of their spring migration.
But the federal Transport Department and a group that represents the shipping industry are challenging the numbers, saying they don’t reflect what is really happening on the water.
Oceana, an independent advocacy group, says that for the second year in a row, it found that a majority of vessels sailing through the strait exceeded the 10-knot voluntary speed limit during the first week it was in effect.


