The differences of opinion at the
annual meetings of the International Whaling Commission are so
familiar and fundamental that observers have become accustomed to
deadlock. But this year in Berlin, where the Commission met in
plenary session from June 16-19, it was hard not to feel the logjam
breaking up—in the whales’ favor.
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Whale-watching is becoming a lucrative business, even in
Japan, a country that refuses to give up the inhumane practice
of killing whales under the pretext of “scientific whaling.”
IFAW/R. Sobol
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On the very first day, over the
thunderous objections of the Norwegian and Japanese delegations and
their supporters, the Commission gaveled into existence a new
conservation committee by a vote of 25-20. Normally, the creation of
yet another committee would hardly be cause for celebration, but
this one clearly signaled a shift towards whale protection and away
from the killing of whales. The new committee was fought vigorously
by the whalers because it will focus on conservation, and gather
information and recommend solutions on bycatch (drowning of whales
and dolphins in fishing nets) and the growing environmental threats
to whales such as toxic contamination and LFA sonar, information not
likely to bolster their assertion that there are plenty of healthy
whales to kill. Nongovernmental organizations will need to work hard
with their governments over the next year to see this committee
become effective; Japan, Norway, Iceland, and their allies have
stated their intent to undermine the decision.
The vote spread also indicated that
the Japanese have perhaps hit a high-water mark in their purchase of
the commission through “economic assistance” to developing
countries. Although they added two more countries to their chorus
line (Nicaragua and Belize), they still lack the numbers to carry a
simple majority, much less the 3/4 vote necessary on “schedule
changes” such as dropping the moratorium on commercial whaling.
While they were able to block important major initiatives such as
the creation of whale sanctuaries in the South Pacific and South
Atlantic, they could not stop the conservation committee, two votes
condemning their bogus “scientific” whaling, the vote against their
“small-scale coastal whaling,” or the vote against allowing secret
ballots. In a low moment before the conservation committee
discussion, Japan and its pro-whaling allies moved to strike all
conservation issues from the agenda; fortunately, that was turned
back.
Apparently, Japan’s whaling
industry has collided with a new economic powerhouse with far more
clout than even they can muster: whale watching. The newly formed
International Association of Whale Watchers attended the meeting for
the first time and gave a press conference announcing their
formidable presence. More and more developing countries are
beginning to realize significant economic and social benefits from
whale-watching tourism. In just a few years, the industry has
ballooned to an annual income of one billion U.S. dollars spread
across 97 countries, giving them an economic relevance that
whale-killing can’t touch.
Iceland may offer the first
showdown between whaling and whale-watching. Having re-joined the
Commission this year with its reservation on the moratorium on
commercial whaling intact, Iceland immediately announced its
intention to begin its own yearly “scientific” whale-kill of 100 fin
whales and 50 sei whales (classified as endangered by the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature) as early as
2004. Despite the belligerence of their Commissioner, Stefan
Asmundsson, within the IWC, these plans may be derailed by pressure
at home. Icelandic whale watchers, who earned over $8 million from
90,000 visitors in 2001, have joined with Icelandair and the
powerful Icelandic fishery industry to oppose the resumption of
whaling.
Other information presented leaves
no doubt that killing whales for food in the year 2003 is a brutal
anachronism:
—Some whales take as long as five
hours to die when struck by harpoons, a new report presents the
possibility that some whales are conscious when butchered.
—The World Wildlife Fund estimates
that 300,000 dolphins and whales are killed yearly after becoming
entangled in fishing nets.
—Greenland’s so-called aboriginal
subsistence whaling was criticized for its huge commercial component
and the recent slaughter of 32 orca whales.
AWI has attended the IWC meetings
since the Commission’s inception. We oppose all forms of whaling
except those that are truly necessary for aboriginal subsistence.
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