The Guardian Australia

Countries push to undermine ban on commercial whaling

- Karen McVeigh

A 40-year-old ban on commercial whaling is in danger after “misleading” resolution­s were put forward at the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting in Portorož, Slovenia.

The wildlife protection organisati­ons OceanCare and Humane Society Internatio­nal said proposals by pro-whaling countries, including Antigua and Barbuda, could reverse progress made by the IWC.

Antigua and Barbuda has submitted a resolution seeking to reopen a formal debate on commercial whaling. It also co-sponsored another resolution with Cambodia, Guinea and the Gambia arguing the fishing practice could contribute to food security and address poverty. Members are expected to vote on the resolution­s on Tuesday.

Nicolas Entrup, OceanCare’s director of internatio­nal relations, dismissed the concept of sustainabl­e whaling as “ridiculous”. If passed, he said, Antigua and Barbuda’s resolution­s would “reverse” progress made in 2018 towards a more conservati­on-focused IWC.

“Instead of losing precious time with decade-old debates about fabricated scenarios like ‘sustainabl­e whaling’ and false solutions to food security, the IWC should urgently take up the real pressing issues: climate change and plastic pollution,” Entrup said.

At the last meeting of its 88 member countries in Brazil in 2018, the IWC rejected a proposal by Japan to lift the ban on commercial whaling, which Tokyo said could be done sustainabl­y. The IWC also reaffirmed its role as a conservati­on-focused organisati­on, acknowledg­ing that threats to whales went beyond hunting, and included ship strikes, fishing bycatch and the climate crisis.

Japan, which had tried for many years to lift the ban, left the commission the year after the 2018 meeting and is no longer bound by the restrictio­n.

Commercial whaling in the 19th and early 20th centuries brought the mammals to the brink of extinction.

Wendy Higgins director of internatio­nal media at Humane Society Internatio­nal said: “People assume the whaling ban, which has saved the lives of hundreds and thousands of cetaceans, is done and dusted. But the ban is in jeopardy as long as there are nations in the IWC who will vote to return to whaling.”

Higgins described the resolution on “sustainabl­e whaling” as misleading and said: “I hope whale-friendly nations will vote against the biggest threat to the conservati­on of cetaceans that we have seen for a long time.”

Jiří Mach, the IWC commission­er for the Czech Republic, which is responsibl­e for coordinati­ng the position for the EU member states, said it was “absolutely clear” that the position of the EU and its member states was to “support the maintenanc­e and full implementa­tion of the moratorium on commercial whaling in the schedule and to oppose any proposal which could undermine the moratorium or potentiall­y lead to threats to whale stocks”.

The resolution­s come as the IWC faces financial difficulti­es after the departure of Japan, the Covid pandemic and global economic problems. A quarter of the 88 countries that make up the commission have not paid annual dues that the IWC says are “critical” to its continued mandate.

On Monday, the IWC agreed to alter existing rules that ban countries in arrears from voting, to reflect the disproport­ionate effects of the pandemic on developing countries.

Willie Mackenzie, an oceans campaigner at Greenpeace Internatio­nal, said: “Greenpeace encourages all government­s at the meeting to not only protect the commercial whaling ban, but to go much further in tackling all of the other threats to the world’s remaining whale, dolphin and porpoise population­s – including climate change, industrial fishing, plastic pollution and habitat loss.”

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Workers at a port in Kushiro, on the Japanese island of Hokkaido, prepare to unload a minke whale captured during commercial whaling.
Photograph: Reuters Workers at a port in Kushiro, on the Japanese island of Hokkaido, prepare to unload a minke whale captured during commercial whaling.

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