The Endangered Species Committee — a body so rarely convened it is known informally as the 'God Squad' for its power to override species protections — has voted to exempt oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico from the Endangered Species Act. It is the first time the committee has been activated in over three decades.
The request came from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who argued that the Iran war necessitated expanded domestic energy production. The decision potentially dooms the Rice's whale, of which fewer than 50 remain alive.
Environmental groups have pointed to what they call a 'self-made gas crisis' — the argument being that the administration's own war created the energy disruption now being used to justify gutting protections that have been in place for decades.
The mechanism itself deserves scrutiny. The Endangered Species Committee exists as a legal override — a way for the government to formally decide that economic interests outweigh the survival of a species. It was designed as a last resort. Its activation now, under the cover of a war that dominates every news cycle, suggests something rather different.
Fifty Rice's whales remain. They inhabit the Gulf of Mexico year-round, making them uniquely vulnerable to drilling activity. Marine biologists have warned that increased seismic testing and vessel traffic alone could push the population past the point of recovery.
If the Rice's whale goes extinct — and biologists say the probability just increased substantially — this vote will be the moment it became inevitable. It happened on a Tuesday, while the world was watching Iran. Hardly anyone noticed.