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Japan must be stopped in its push to resume commercial whaling worldwide

LONDON: After spending more than three decades slaughtering whales in defiance of an international moratorium on commercial whaling, Japan is proposing a package of measures at an International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting next month that would effectively lift the global ban on for-profit whaling.

Japan’s so-called IWC Reform Proposal calls for the formation of a Sustainable Whaling Committee to set catch quotas as well as the convening of a diplomatic conference to amend the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling.

The change would lower the proportion of votes required to set catch quotas from three-quarters of the IWC membership to a simple majority.

Ahead of the 4 September meeting in Florianópolis, Brazil, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) have released a new report, Commercial Whaling: Unsustainable, Inhumane, Unnecessary, which exposes continued commercial whaling by Iceland, Japan and Norway and makes the case against any weakening of the moratorium.

“If Japan gets its way, it would be a massive victory for those rogue whalers who have time and again defied the international ban on commercial whaling and an absolute disaster for the world’s whales,” said Clare Perry, EIA’s Ocean Campaigns Leader.

“According to our research, Japan and fellow commercial whaling countries Iceland and Norway have collectively killed at least 38,539 great whales since the 1986 ban was put in place. Many whale species have not yet recovered from massive overhunting in the past and are also facing a wide array of mounting existential threats ranging from climate change to marine pollution by chemical, plastics and noise.”

Japan has killed more than 22,000 whales in the Antarctic and North Pacific as part of its sham ‘scientific’ whaling program, selling the whale meat purportedly taken for research. In March 2014, the International Court of Justice ruled that Japan’s Antarctic hunt had no scientific basis.

Japan, however, has continued to kill whales under the guise of scientific research and faced intense public backlash in May after reporting that its whaling fleet had killed 122 pregnant whales during its annual ‘research’ hunt in the Southern Ocean last winter.

Norway continues commercial whaling under an objection lodged to the 1986 IWC moratorium, while Iceland has a disputed reservation to the moratorium which it has used to justify commercial catch quotas since 2006.

“We’re only just beginning to grasp the vital role whales play in maintaining the health of the world’s oceans,” said Kate O’Connell, AWI Marine Wildlife Consultant. “Weakening the ban now would be a fatal mistake and would open the doors to increased commercial whaling around the world. This cruel and unnecessary industry is a relic of the past that has no place in modern society.

“All other contracting governments to the IWC must step up to vigorously defend the moratorium from this new assault by Japan and its allies.”

 

MEDIA CONTACTS

  • Clare Perry, EIA Ocean Campaigns Leader, via clareperry[at]eia-international.org
  • Luke Pickering, EIA Head of Communications, via lukepickering[at]eia-international.org
  • Marjorie Fishman, AWI, via margie[at]awionline.org

 

EDITORS’ NOTES

  1. The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) investigates and campaigns against environmental crime and abuses.
  1. The Animal Welfare Institute is a non-profit charitable organisation founded in 1951 and dedicated to reducing animal suffering caused by people. AWI engages policymakers, scientists, industry and the public to achieve better treatment of animals everywhere – in the laboratory, on the farm, in commerce, at home and in the wild.
  1. Read and download Commercial Whaling: Unsustainable, Inhumane, Unnecessary at https://eia-international.org/reports-mm/keeptheban/
  1. A short campaign film to accompany the report is available for you to share or embed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Om5nM0POHrs&t=6s

 

Environmental Investigation Agency
62-63 Upper Street
London N1 0NY
UK
www.eia-international.org
Tel: +44 207 354 7960

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