Australian government ‘deeply disappointed’ by Japan’s decision to expand commercial whaling target list

Australian government ‘deeply disappointed’ by Japan’s decision to expand commercial whaling target list



The Australian government is “deeply disappointed” by Japan’s decision to add the world’s second-largest species to the list of species its commercial whale hunters will target.

Tanya Plibersek, the environment minister, attacked Japan’s decision to hunt fin – the world’s second-longest whale and considered vulnerable.

The Japanese government this week confirmed it would allow itself to take up to 59 in its commercial hunt, which is confined to the country’s economic zone.

Japan’s new US$47m (A$71m) ship, the Kangei Maru, is being readied for its maiden hunt and has a deck long enough to haul whales up to 25 metres long.

“Australia is deeply disappointed by Japan’s decision to expand its commercial whaling program by adding fin whales,” Plibersek said.

Japan left the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in 2019 after previously killing whales under a clause that allowed whaling for scientific research – a rationale challenged by conservationists.

Japan already catches Bryde’s, minke and sei whales. numbers globally are thought to be rising, but remain vulnerable according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The giant mammals can live up to 90 years.

The Kangei Maru, the Japanese whaling industry's new US$47m mother ship, moored off Shimonoseki. Photograph: Justin McCurry/The Guardian
The Kangei Maru, the Japanese whaling industry’s new US$47m mother ship, moored off Shimonoseki. Photograph: Justin McCurry/The Guardian

Plibersek said: “Australia is opposed to all commercial whaling and urges all countries to end this practice.

“Australia’s efforts through the International Whaling Commission have contributed to a whaling-free Southern Ocean and a decline in commercial whaling around the world. Australia will continue to advocate for the protection and conservation of whales and the health of our ocean for future generations.”

Darren Kindleysides, a whale campaigner and the chief executive of the Australian Marine Conservation Society, called the hunts “inhumane, cruel and unnecessary”.

“We welcome this strong statement from [Plibersek] in protection of whales and opposing commercial whaling,” he said.

“Australia has a long and bipartisan history of opposing commercial whaling and we expect Australia to take a strong stance when the IWC meets next month in Peru.”

In 1986 the IWC put a global moratorium in place on commercial whaling. Norway and Iceland have remained members of the commission, but have hunted under loopholes.

Whales are also caught by a small number of countries under IWC rules that allow for some indigenous and subsistence whaling.

Kindleysides said: “The world’s great whales have populations that are threatened. We still know relatively little about whales, but we do know for species like fin whales that they are at risk following the legacy of whaling in the 18- and 1900s, so we must do what we can to protect them.

“We have learned that whales are worth more alive than dead. We have a multimillion-dollar whale watching industry now on the back of the recovery of .”

This article by Graham Readfearn was first published by The Guardian on 1 August 2024. Lead Image: Fin whale numbers globally are thought to be rising, but remain vulnerable according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Photograph: Francois Gohier/VWPics/Alamy.

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