NOAA right whale speed rule: what owners over 65 feet should do now before June 2
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NOAA right whale speed rule: what owners over 65 feet should do now before June 2

Redazione Batoo
14 mai 2026
6 min de lecture
NOAA’s right whale speed-rule review is back in focus after the May 13 industry call for comments. Here is what the rule requires today, which areas matter most, and how to prepare a useful submission if you operate on the U.S. East Coast.

Why this matters now

On May 13, 2026, Viking urged owners, captains, and marine businesses to submit public comments on NOAA’s review of the North Atlantic Right Whale Vessel Speed Rule. For Batoo readers, this is not just an industry talking point. It is an operational issue that affects passage planning, safety margins, and trip timing for boats over 65 feet on the U.S. East Coast.

NOAA’s public-comment window closes on June 2, 2026. Until then, the current rule remains in force, with mandatory speed limits in specific Seasonal Management Areas and voluntary Slow Zones when whales are detected in sensitive waters.

What the rule requires today

According to NOAA, most vessels 65 feet or longer must travel at 10 knots or less in certain locations and at certain times of year along the U.S. East Coast.

This is not an abstract off-season issue. NOAA’s right-whale vessel-strike page shows, among the active areas in May 2026, an East of Boston Slow Zone effective from May 2 to May 17, 2026. The Great South Channel seasonal management area also remains subject to restrictions from April 1 through July 31.

For an owner or captain, the practical implication is straightforward: the risk is not only a penalty. Poor planning can also mean inaccurate ETAs, weaker weather-window decisions, and tighter safety margins on real passages.

What NOAA is reviewing

In March 2026, NOAA published an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to consider changes to the 2008 rule. The agency says it is evaluating whether current seasonal restrictions could be replaced with alternative management areas and advanced technology-based strike-avoidance measures, while maintaining or improving conservation effectiveness.

NOAA is specifically asking for input on practical topics:

  • the effectiveness of technologies that reduce whale strikes
  • vessel-size-specific risk assessment
  • alternative management areas
  • improvements to safety deviations
  • the effectiveness of the current rule
  • economic impacts on industry
  • outreach

That matters because it moves the discussion beyond a simple argument over the 10-knot cap. The more useful question for owners is which operational evidence can actually improve the rule without weakening protection.

Why the May 13 push matters to boaters

Boating Industry’s May 13 report highlights Viking’s effort to encourage participation in the comment process. The key takeaway is not simply the yard’s position. It is that the industry is trying to put practical operating evidence into the public record, including navigation tools, offshore conditions, vessel maneuverability, and the impact on coastal operations.

If you own or manage a vessel above 65 feet, the practical message is clear: if your operation is affected by these areas, staying out of the process means letting others define your real safety and planning issues for you.

What to do before getting underway

1. Check whether your passage crosses active areas

Before any coastal run or delivery, review NOAA Seasonal Management Areas and Slow Zones. As of mid-May 2026, waters east of Boston are still within an active voluntary window, while the Great South Channel seasonal restriction continues through July 31.

2. Rebuild timing and fuel assumptions conservatively

If part of the route requires 10 knots or less, your ETA should be recalculated before departure. That matters even more when your trip depends on tides, bridge openings, marina slots, or daylight arrival.

3. Document the tools you actually use on board

NOAA is explicitly asking for input on technology effectiveness. If you operate with AIS, advanced chartplotters, alerting systems, Whale Alert, or internal bridge-resource procedures, documenting what you use and where it helps or falls short is more valuable than a generic complaint.

4. Separate safety, compliance, and opinion

A strong comment should not read like a slogan. It is more credible when it separates three things clearly:

  • where the current rule works
  • where it creates operational or safety problems
  • which tools or procedures could improve outcomes

5. Involve the captain or technical manager

Owners often feel the effect in scheduling, but the operational detail lives on board. If you plan to comment, build that submission with the people who route the boat, run the bridge, and see how reduced speed affects safety and timing in practice.

How to prepare a useful comment before June 2

NOAA is not asking for slogans. It is asking for information. A useful submission should include:

  • the areas or routes you typically operate
  • the vessel’s size and operating profile
  • the navigation or alerting equipment actually used on board
  • practical effects of the speed limit on safety, weather handling, port access, and timing
  • any suggestions for alternative areas or technology-based measures

If you do not operate in these waters, the issue may be less important day to day. If you run in New England, the Mid-Atlantic, or port approaches on the East Coast, this review can directly affect your season.

Batoo’s view

The news from the last 72 hours is not that a new rule has already been approved. It is that the public debate has intensified, the deadline is close, and there are immediate operating implications for larger recreational vessels.

The strongest position right now is neither to ignore the issue nor reduce it to politics. It is to operate in full compliance with the current rule, monitor active areas and Slow Zones, and use the comment window to tell NOAA which measures actually work in offshore and real coastal-navigation conditions.

For many owners, that is the part that matters most: not just arriving on time, but arriving with a routing plan that is safe, workable, and defensible under the current regulatory framework.

#NOAA#right whale#East Coast#regolamenti nautici#sicurezza in navigazione

Sources et références

Pour renforcer la fiabilité et le contexte, cet article cite des sources externes pertinentes sur le sujet.