IWC rejects Japan's proposal to lift commercial whale hunting ban
A Japan-led proposal to lift a 32-year ban on the commercial hunting of
whales has been rejected by a global body for the conservation of the
mammals.
During a bi-annual summit in Brazil, member states of the International
Whaling Commission (IWC) on Friday voted down the motion by 41 to 27.
Two member states - Russia and South Korea - abstained, while one - Monaco - did not participate.
Norway and Iceland - the only countries to explicitly allow commercial whaling - were among those who backed Japan's bid.
Tokyo said it would undertake a "fundamental reassessment" of its IWC
membership following the vote, which guaranteed the body's 1986
moratorium on commercial whaling will continue.
Patrick Ramage, a director of marine conservation for the International
Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), welcomed the result as "good news for
whales", adding that Japan's "audacious proposal would have been a big
step backward".
"[The proposal] could have erased a generation of conservation measures
and restrictions on whale hunting," Ramage told Al Jazeera from the
summit in Florianopolis, the capital of Brazil's southeastern Santa
Catarina state.
"It's increasingly clear that Japan needs to reconcile itself to the
emerging global consensus for whale conservation instead of whale
killing," he added.
On Thursday, the IWC also passed a non-binding "Florianopolis
Declaration" stating commercial whaling is no longer a necessary
economic activity by 40 votes to 27.
International controversy
Japan's call for the IWC's moratorium to be lifted formed part of a
proposal for wider reform of the organisation, which it suggested should
focus on "resource management" and permit species of whales "whose
population is healthy enough to be harvested sustainably".
In particular, Tokyo was eager to win a concession allowing for the
regulated hunting of Minke whales, a species it has claimed are abundant
and in no danger of extinction.
Minke whales, comprising the Common and Antarctic varieties, are not
listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of
Nature.
"Minke whaling is an integral part not only of our history, but also of
our own lives," the Japanese delegation said in its opening statement to
the summit.
"We are proud that Japan's small-type coastal minke whaling has always
been a sustainable fishery. Our fishery has not negatively impacted the
ecosystem and it never will," the statement added.
Whale meat is a popular foodstuff among certain parts of Japan's
population, though demand for it has fallen significantly in recent
decades, according to a 2013 IFAW report.
Japan, the current chair of the IWC, officially observes the body's
prohibition on commercial hunting but continues to capture hundreds of
Minke whales each year under an exception to the ban, which permits the
killing of whales for scientific purposes.
In 2014, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Japan to halt
its whaling programme in the Southern Ocean, also called the Antarctic
Ocean, after determining that the hunting permits granted by authorities
were not being used "for purposes of scientific research".
Japan resumed the programme in 2016, under a significantly reduced
hunting quota of 333, while Iceland and Norway hunted a combined 637
Minke whales in 2016, the last year for which IWC records are available.
Norway and Iceland are the only countries to explicitly allow commercial whaling [File: AP]
'Many threats'
Under the terms of the 1986 moratorium, certain aboriginal communities
are also allowed to catch and kill a regulated number of whales, in line
with their historical cultural practices and the mammals' nutritional
value.
In 2016, aboriginal catches totalled 361 - which comprised Fin,
Humpback, Minke, Gray and Bowhead whales. The hunting took place in
Russia, Denmark and the United States.
An estimated 45,000 whales have been killed since the IWC's 1986 ruling,
according to the UK-based Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society,
including those hunted under its exemptions (scientific purposes and
aboriginal catching).
Claire Bass, director of the US-based animal protection organisation
Humane Society International, said overturning the moratorium would have
risked "robbing future generations of the opportunity to meet, admire
and learn from the ocean's giants".
"Japan's proposal to resume commercial whaling would be like jumping from a plane without a parachute," Bass told Al Jazeera.
"Whales are long-lived, slow-breeding animals and this makes them especially vulnerable to over-hunting," she added.
"Whales face so many threats in our increasingly degraded oceans; it's
critical that the IWC focuses its time and resources on tackling the
many problems that we create for whales, such as entanglements in
fishing gear and pollution."
Six of the world's 13 "great whale species" are classified as endangered, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
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