UPDATE: A deal reached between BP and four environmental groups suing the company over the burning of endangered sea turtles in the Gulf of Mexico will see biologists monitor future oil burns and save as many turtles as they can.

The two sides involved in the litigation presented the agreement to US District Judge Carl Barbier on Friday, Reuters reports.

William Eubanks, an attorney for the environmental groups, told AP Friday that the deal will see “biologists or other trained observers … present whenever oil is burned.”

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The controlled oil burns in the Gulf have been on hold due to inclement weather. The agreement states that the observers will be in place before the controlled burns resume on July 6. The environmental groups have agreed to withdraw their request for a restraining order stopping the burns, but have reserved the right to bring the request back if BP and the Coast Guard don’t fulfill their side of the bargain, Bloomberg news service reports.

ORIGINAL STORY FOLLOWS BELOW

The Associated Press reports, “A federal judge says a settlement has been reached in a lawsuit that accused BP of killing turtles as it burns oil from its blown-out Gulf well.”

“US District Judge Carl Barbier said Friday that lawyers would be in court later in the day to announce details,” the AP articles adds.

“The Center for Biological Diversity and Turtle Island Restoration Network say theyÃ¢â‚¬â„¢ll file suit against BP as well as the US Coast Guard under the Endangered Species Act,” Democracy Now! reported earlier this week.

A RAW STORY article on sea turtles being burned alive has gone viral over the Internet, receiving over 17,000 Facebook links.

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Daniel Tencer reported,

A rare and endangered species of sea turtle is being burned alive in BP’s controlled burns of the oil swirling around the Gulf of Mexico, and a boat captain tasked with saving them says the company has blocked rescue efforts. Mike Ellis, a boat captain involved in a three-week effort to rescue as many sea turtles from unfolding disaster as possible, says BP effectively shut down the operation by preventing boats from coming out to rescue the turtles. “They ran us out of there and then they shut us down, they would not let us get back in there,” Ellis said in an interview with conservation biologist Catherine Craig. Part of BP’s efforts to contain the oil spill are controlled burns. Fire-resistant booms are used to corral an area of oil, then the area within the boom is lit on fire, burning off the oil and whatever marine life may have been inside. “Once the turtles get in there they can’t get out,” Ellis said.

(Original AFP story follows)

Turtle eggs to be rescued from Gulf of Mexico spil

MIAMI Ã¢â‚¬â€ In an ambitious and unprecedented plan to save wildlife, volunteers in coming weeks will move tens of thousands of turtle eggs from oil-soaked Gulf of Mexico beaches to safety on Florida’s Atlantic coast.

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The eggs, which could number some 70,000, will be carefully hand-picked, placed in special containers, and in driven in temperature-controlled FedEx trucks starting in mid-July, according to the company and rescue officials.

“There are about 700 nests in Florida and the affected area, and the number of eggs in each it can be anywhere to a 100 to a 128 per nest,” said Patricia Behnke, with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

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The eggs “will be incubated in a storage unit, a private facility close to Cape Canaveral,” on Florida’s Atlantic coast. she said.

After a 50-60 day incubation period the hatchlings “will be taken out to the beach at night and released into the sea, probably in an area in mid-eastern Florida coast,” Behnke said.

The whole process it could last up to four month, she said.

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“A plan like this is absolutely unprecedented and it would not be the choice of our scientists,” she said.

However the hatchlings are at great risk staying on the oil-soaked Gulf of Mexico beaches and within reach of ocean water polluted by oil and chemical dispersants, she said.

Staff with the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are also participating in the egg rescue.

NOAA warned of the risks of damaging the eggs, but said in a statement that taking no action “would likely result in the loss of all of this year?s northern Gulf of Mexico hatchlings.”

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Florida beaches have the highest concentration of turtle nests in the United States, many of them located in the oil-stricken northwestern panhandle area.

This egg moving plan “applies to nests deposited on Florida panhandle and Alabama beaches during the 2010 nesting season only, as it is this year?s cohort in the Northern Gulf area which is at the highest risk for encountering oil after entering the ocean,” said Barbara Schroeder, NOAA Fisheries national sea turtle coordinator.

Animal welfare groups on Wednesday sued BP for burning endangered sea turtles and asked a federal court to stop “controlled burns” in the Gulf.

“It is horrifying that these innocent creatures whose habitat has already been devastated by the oil spill are now being burned alive,” Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) President Cathy Liss told the court in Louisiana.

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An estimated 430 sea turtles from endangered species have died so far in the oil spill, according to animal welfare groups.

The lawsuit filed by AWI, Center for Biological Diversity, Turtle Island Restoration Network and Animal Legal Defense Fund said BP was violating the Endangered Species Act and other laws with their “controlled burns” in the Gulf of Mexico.

They asked the court for a temporary restraining order to stop all burning activities “until… mechanisms are implemented that will prevent any additional sea turtles from being burned alive.”

“Endangered sea turtles, including the Kemp’s Ridley, one of the rarest sea turtles on Earth, are caught in the gathered oil and unable to escape when the oil is set ablaze,” the animal welfare groups said.

(with AFP report)