×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

Japan will conduct Pacific whale hunt despite court ruling

by Reuters
Friday, 18 April 2014 10:15 GMT

* Quotas to be cut for less well-known Pacific whale hunt

* Minister says ruling permits whaling for managing whales as a "resource"

* Japan to consider new action against anti-whaling activists (Adds details throughout)

By Elaine Lies

TOKYO, April 18 (Reuters) - Japan said on Friday it would conduct its annual Northwest Pacific whaling campaign this year despite an international court ruling against the programme last month, but in a sharply scaled down form.

The decision to proceed with the hunt was certain to provoke international anger.

Tokyo's decades-old and disputed "scientific whaling" programme suffered a blow last month when the International Court of Justice (ICJ), in a surprise ruling, ordered a halt to its annual hunts in the Southern Ocean. That prompted Japan to cancel whaling there for 2014-2015.

The Pacific hunt was not specifically mentioned in the ruling and is much less known internationally. Yet in the 2012-2013 campaign, it took three times as many whales as the Antarctic hunt, including three sperm whales.

Yoshimasa Hayashi, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said the ruling upheld the notion of "the sustainable use of whales as a resource".

"Based on this ... and in line with international law and scientific principles, our nation will carry out research whaling to get the scientific information essential to manage whales as a resource," he said.

Japan has long maintained that most whale species are not endangered and began what it called scientific whaling in 1987, a year after an international moratorium came into effect. It has also said it hopes for the eventual resumption of commercial whaling, a view it repeated on Friday.

The ministry said quotas for the Pacific hunt would be reduced in consideration of the court ruling. One proposal, still to be finalised by scientists, would cut the number from 380 whales to 210 in activity extending from Japan's coastline out into a broad swathe of the Pacific.

In the 2012-2013 season, the fleet killed 319 whales in the Pacific. The Antarctic hunt took 103 whales out of a quota of more than 1,000, partly due to the sometimes violent attempts by environmental groups, such as Sea Shepherd, to disrupt it.

According to the proposal, no sperm whales will be taken and the quota of minkes will be reduced to 100 from 220, with the quota for Bryde's and sei whales also cut.

NEW PLAN, NEW MEASURES AGAINST PROTESTERS

The ministry said it would submit a new plan for Antarctic whaling to the International Whaling Commission in 2015 for the purpose of resuming whaling in that area later in the year.

"We will also consider measures against anti-whaling activists," the ministry said.

Japan says eating whale is a cherished cultural tradition, and it was a key protein source for the impoverished nation after its defeat in World War Two. But costly whale meat now rarely appears on Japanese tables.

Fears of complaints from key allies such as the United States and Australia, as well as the cost of maintaining Japan's ageing whaling fleet, prompted some observers to say Tokyo might cancel the Pacific hunt this year.

But a vocal lobby pressed for it to continue, citing economic benefits to the Pacific hunt's home port of Ishinomaki, devastated by the 2011 tsunami.

No details were given about when the fleet would depart. It was originally set to leave on April 22, the day before U.S. President Barack Obama arrives in Japan for a state visit, but media reports said its departure would be delayed until April 26, the day after Obama leaves. (Editing by Ron Popeski)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.


-->