For Immediate Release, July 14, 2026

Contact:

Dru Hara, Earthjustice, (808) 909-2573, [email protected]
Maxx Phillips, Center for Biological Diversity, (808) 284-0007, [email protected]
Jessica dos Santos, Kūpaʻa Kuilima, (808) 381-4069, [email protected]

Judge: Development at Turtle Bay Must Follow Environmental Protection Laws

HONOLULU— O‘ahu’s Environmental Court ruled today that the development of a new Ritz-Carlton resort at Kuilima on Oʻahu’s North Shore — the area commonly referred to as Turtle Bay — cannot move forward until more environmental studies are completed. Before building permits can be issued, the city and county must analyze potential harm to conservation lands and native species, including endangered native bees that live in the area.

Today’s ruling directs the city and county of Honolulu to require a supplemental environmental impact statement in compliance with Hawaiʻi law.

“The court’s ruling makes clear that the county can’t rely on an outdated environmental review to approve development at Kuilima. Hawai‘i’s environmental laws require decisions based on today’s science, not yesterday’s assumptions,” said Maxx Phillips, Hawai‘i and Pacific Islands director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The county must fully evaluate how this project would affect protected species like endangered Hawaiian yellow-face bees, and the places they live, before allowing development to move forward.”

Environmental and community groups filed a lawsuit in February challenging the county’s approval of a new Ritz-Carlton resort. The lawsuit was filed by Earthjustice on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity, Conservation Council for Hawaiʻi and community group Kūpa‘a Kuilima.

In today’s decision, the court ruled that the county unlawfully relied on an outdated environmental report issued 13 years ago for redevelopment of the Turtle Bay resort. The outdated study lacks information on newly listed endangered species and changed ecological conditions.

“The court’s decision affirms that Hawai‘i‘s bedrock environmental review laws are more than just a rubber-stamping paper exercise,” said Dru Hara, an attorney at Earthjustice. “The county must engage with the community, ensure an honest assessment of impacts and take steps to minimize harm to the exceptional species that we now know are thriving on the Kuilima coastline.”

“This is an important step to protect species and ecosystems found only in Hawaiʻi,” said Jonee Peters, executive director of Conservation Council for Hawai‘i. “We must ensure that any development in Kuilima properly accounts for how it would affect the surrounding environment and provide measures to prevent environmental harm.”

“Our community is thrilled that the court has upheld our environmental protections today,” said Jessica dos Santos of Kūpa‘a Kuilima. “Kuilima is not only one of the last stretches of pristine coast on O‘ahu, it’s also a place of cultural significance that’s beloved by residents throughout the area.”

Since the 2013 environmental review was approved, significant new information has emerged about native wildlife and ecosystems in the project area. Hundreds of acres abutting the areas slated for development have been designated as conservation lands.

Endangered Hawaiian yellow-faced bees, which were placed on the federal endangered species list in 2016, have been documented in the project area. The area has also become an important nesting area for Laysan albatross and has been designated as critical habitat for endangered Hawaiian monk seals. None of this new information was addressed in the 2013 environmental report.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.8 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Earthjustice is a premier non-profit public interest law firm committed to environmental justice. We wield the power of the law and the strength of partnership to protect people’s health, to preserve magnificent places and wildlife, to advance clean energy, and to combat climate change. www.earthjustice.org

 

www.biologicaldiversity.org