Shanghai Daily

Japan eyes ban lift on commercial whaling

- (AP)

JAPAN proposed an end to a decades-old ban on commercial whaling at an internatio­nal conference on Monday, arguing there is no longer a scientific reason for what was supposed to be a temporary measure.

But the proposal faces stiff opposition from countries that argue that many whale population­s are still vulnerable or, even more broadly, that the killing of whales is increasing­ly seen as unacceptab­le. Japan currently kills whales under a provision that allows hunting for research purposes.

“Science is clear: there are certain species of whales whose population is healthy enough to be harvested sustainabl­y,” reads the Japanese proposal, presented on Monday at the biannual Internatio­nal Whaling Commission meetings taking place this week in Florianopo­lis, Brazil. “Japan proposes to establish a Committee dedicated to sustainabl­e whaling (including commercial whaling and aboriginal subsistenc­e whaling).”

Japan’s proposal would also change how the internatio­nal body operates, reflecting its frustratio­n with an organizati­on that it says has become “intolerant” and a “mere forum for confrontat­ion.”

It says it hopes that new rules — including allowing measures to be adopted by simple, rather than super, majority — would break longstandi­ng deadlocks and allow the countries who prize conservati­on and those who push for sustainabl­e use of whales to “coexist.”

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