International
Whaling Committee say proposal to resume hunt in Southern Ocean offers no
scientific evidence that it is necessary
The Guardian, Justin McCurry in Tokyo, Tuesday 14 April 2015
Japan’s hopes of resuming its whale hunts in the Southern Ocean have suffered a setback after International Whaling Committee experts said its latest plan offered no scientific justification for the slaughter.
The Guardian, Justin McCurry in Tokyo, Tuesday 14 April 2015
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| A handout image supplied by Sea Shepherd Australia in January 2013 shows three minke whales on the deck of the Japanese Ship Nisshin Maru. Photograph: Tim Watters/EPA |
Japan’s hopes of resuming its whale hunts in the Southern Ocean have suffered a setback after International Whaling Committee experts said its latest plan offered no scientific justification for the slaughter.
The IWC
panel said Japan’s revised programme, known as Newrep-A, did not contain enough
information for experts to determine whether Japan needed to kill whales to
fulfil two key objectives: calculating the size of populations necessary for a
return to sustainable commercial hunting, and gaining a better understanding of
the Antarctic marine ecosystem.
“With the
information presented in the proposal, the panel was not able to determine
whether lethal sampling is necessary to achieve the two major objectives,” the
IWC experts’ report said. “Therefore the current proposal does not demonstrate
the need for lethal sampling to achieve those objectives.”
Japanese
officials have been working on a revised whaling programme since last year when
the international court of justice in The Hague ordered an immediate halt to
its Antarctic hunts after concluding that they were not, as Japan had claimed,
being conducted for scientific research.
The UN
court’s ruling was in response to a landmark legal challenge to the Southern
Ocean hunts by Australia, which claimed Japan was using science as a cover for
commercial whaling.
Under the
moratorium on commercial whaling Japan is allowed to sell meat from the
“scientific” hunts on the open market, although consumption has fallen
dramatically since the postwar years when it was a rare source of protein.
Tokyo hoped
that its revised plan, involving the killing of fewer whales, would pave the
way for the resumption of the Antarctic hunts, possibly by the end of this
year.
Its whaling
fleet recently returned from the Southern Ocean, although it had not planned to
kill any whales, in accordance with the ICJ ruling.
“The ICJ
ruling ensured that for the first season in more than a century whales in the
southern hemisphere were not hunted for commercial purposes,” said Patrick
Ramage, global whale programme director for the International Fund for Animal
Welfare.
“It is
disappointing … that Japan’s fisheries bureaucrats would defy the world’s
highest court and try to restart illegal whaling in the Southern Ocean.”
In its
reworked plan Japan proposed an annual cull of up to 333 minke whales over the
next 12 years, down from more than 900 a year previously. The total cull over
that period would reach 3,996 whales, compared with the 13,000 whales it has
killed since the IWC ban on commercial whaling came into effect in 1987.
Japan has
long claimed that it needs to conduct “lethal research” to better understand
whale populations’ migratory, feeding and reproduction habits with a view to a
return to commercial whaling. It argues that many whale species, including
minke, are not endangered.
Japanese
officials said they would provide more information before the IWC’s scientific
committee meets in San Diego next month. “I believe that we’ll move forward
with the aim of resuming whaling around the end of the year,” the country’s
commissioner to the IWC, Joji Morishita, told reporters, although he did not
rule out changes to the proposal.
Morishita
said Japan took the panel’s report seriously but added: “They haven’t
unilaterally said that it’s no good; neither have they come out on the other
side with ‘Go ahead, do whatever research you want to do.’”
Environmental
campaigners welcomed the IWC panel’s decision. “[The findings] reiterate and
underline the concern of the international community: you don’t need to kill
whales in order to study them,” said Claire Bass, UK director of the Humane
Society International.
“It has
long been clear that Japan’s large-scale whaling operations are driven by
politicians, not scientists, and serve no useful conservation or scientific
need. This latest report from the IWC review panel essentially sends Japan back
to the drawing board as it has failed to make a case for the need to kill
whales in the name of science.”
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