The Asian Age

Nations lock horns as whalers, opponents meet in Brazil

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Florianopo­lis, Brazil: Pro- and anti- whaling nations locked horns Monday as the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission ( IWC) began meeting in Brazil amid outrage over Japan’s proposal to end a threedecad­e moratorium on commercial whale hunting.

Brazil’s environmen­t minister Edson Duarte told the opening session it was “time for progress, not setbacks”, reminding delegates of their “duty to give definitive direction to the conservati­on of cetaceans”.

Incoming IWC chairman Joji Morishita said the meeting could determine the future of the 89- member intergover­nmental body, torn for years by nagging disputes between conservati­onists and whalers.

Morishita told AFP he wants to “change the paradigm to mutual respect from mutual denial”, so the IWC can develop “rather than just fighting with each other”. But the sides appeared as far apart as ever on the emotive issue of whale hunting as the weeklong meeting got underway in the surfers’ paradise of Florianopo­lis.

With southern right whales breaching and spouting huge plumes of mist in Florianopo­lis Bay, host country Brazil and Japan are proposing two diametrica­lly opposed visions of how to manage them.

Japan is presenting a “Way Forward” document that would create a “Sustainabl­e Whaling Committee” for nations wishing to allow their nationals to hunt healthy whale population­s for commercial purposes.

Anti- whaling members like Australia, the European Union and New Zealand have vowed to block them.

Brazil is trying to rally anti- whaling nations behind a “Florianopo­lis Declaratio­n” that insists commercial whaling is no longer a necessary economic activity and would allow the recovery of all whale population­s to pre- industrial whaling levels.

The Brazilian minister said his country was proposing to create a South Atlantic Whale Sanctuary, with partners Argentina, Gabon, South Africa and Uruguay.

Brazil also introduced a draft resolution on “ghost gear” entangleme­nt of whales and dolphins by abandoned fishing gear, aiming to further highlight the growing problem “and to clean up the material already accumulate­d in the ocean”.

The IWC say the full extent is hard to assess as most entangleme­nts are never observed, but research suggests over 300,000 whales and dolphins die annually due to entangleme­nt in fishing gear, with more becoming trapped in marine debris.

Other key issues being discussed in the meeting are risks to whales of human- made underwater noise pollution, ship strikes and the effects of climate change.

The moratorium — agreed in 1986 amid fears that some species were becoming extinct — is still in place, with some exceptions.

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