California agency approves expansion of SeaWorld orca tanks -- but bans breeding of captive whales



LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — A California agency has approved a $100 million expansion of the tanks SeaWorld uses to hold killer whales in San Diego — but it has also banned the park from breeding captive orcas.

The California Coastal Commission added that amendment on Thursday as it approved an expansion that would triple the size of the current killer whale enclosures. The expanded "Blue World" exhibit is set to open in 2018.

The plan drew heated opposition from animal rights groups who say the new tanks will lead to more captivity for orcas.

However, the commission's approval comes with the provision that no new whales from the wild will be kept there.

SeaWorld says it hasn't captured wild orcas in more than 30 years.

Park attendance and income have suffered since the release of the popular 2013 documentary "Blackfish," which suggested SeaWorld's treatment of orcas provokes violent behavior.

According to KTLA in Los Angeles, PETA spokesman David Perle said the California Coastal Commission did right by orcas in requiring that SeaWorld stop breeding them, which "will ultimately end captivity for long-suffering orcas in California.”

“SeaWorld has admitted that it intended to breed even more orcas to fill the new tanks, but the commission’s action today ensures that no more orcas will be condemned to a nonlife of loneliness, deprivation, and misery,” Perle said.