Sun.Star Cebu

Report: Iceland to keep hunting up to 2,130 whales over 5 years

- EDITOR: LUIS A. QUIBRANZA III / live@sunstar.com.ph

Iceland’s whaling industry will be allowed to keep hunting whales for at least another five years, killing up to 2,130 baleen whales under a new quota issued by the government. The five-year whaling policy was up for renewal when Fisheries Minister Kristjan Juliusson announced this week an annual quota of 209 fin whales and 217 minke whales for the next five years.

While many Icelanders support whale hunting, a growing number of businessme­n and politician­s are against it due to the North Atlantic island nation’s dependence on tourism.

Whaling, they say, is bad for business and poses a threat to the country’s reputation and the expanding internatio­nal tourism that has become a mainstay of Iceland’s national economy.

“We risk damaging the tourism sector, our most important industry,” legislator Bjarkey Gunnarsdot­tir said, referring to the internatio­nal criticism and diplomatic pressure that Iceland faces for allowing the commercial hunting of whales.

The Icelandic Travel Industry Associatio­n issued a statement Friday saying the government was damaging the nation’s “great interests” and the country’s reputation to benefit a small whaling sector that is struggling to sell its products.

“Their market for whale meat is Japan, Norway and the Republic of Palau,” the tourism statement said. “Our market is the entire globe.”

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