Dayton Daily News

Japanese firm opens whale meat vending machines

- By Mari Yamaguchi and Kwiyeon Ha

A Japanese whaling operator, after struggling for years to promote its products amid protests from conservati­onists, has found a new way to cultivate clientele and bolster sales: whale meat vending machines.

The Kujira (Whale) Store, an unmanned outlet that recently opened in the port town of Yokohama near Tokyo, houses three machines for whale sashimi, whale bacon, whale skin and whale steak, as well as canned whale meat. Prices range from 1,000 yen ($7.70) to 3,000 yen ($23).

The outlet features white vending machines decorated with cartoon whales and is the third location to launch in the Japanese capital region. It opened late last month after two others were introduced in Tokyo earlier this year as part of Kyodo Senpaku Co.’s new sales drive.

Whale meat has long been a source of controvers­y but sales in the new vending machines have quietly gotten off to a good start, the operator says. Anti-whaling protests have subsided since Japan in 2019 terminated its much-criticized research hunts in the Antarctic and resumed commercial whaling off the Japanese coasts.

Conservati­onists say they are worried the move could be a step toward expanded whaling.

“The issue is not the vending machines themselves but what they may lead to,” said Nanami Kurasawa, head of the Iruka & Kujira (Dolphin & Whale) Action Network.

Kurasawa noted the whaling operator is already asking for additional catches and to expand whaling outside of the designated waters.

Kyodo Senpaku hopes to set up vending machines at 100 locations nationwide in five years, company spokespers­on Konomu Kubo told The Associated Press. A fourth is set to open in Osaka this month.

The idea is to open vending machines near supermarke­ts, where whale meat is usually unavailabl­e, to cultivate demand, a task crucial for the industry’s survival.

Controvers­y, supply limit availabili­ty

Major supermarke­t chains have largely stayed away from whale meat to avoid protests by anti-whaling groups and remain cautious even though harassment from activists has subsided, Kubo said.

“As a result, many consumers who want to eat it cannot find or buy whale meat. We launched vending machines at unmanned stores for those people,” he said.

Company officials say sales at the two Tokyo outlets have been significan­tly higher than expected, keeping staff busy replenishi­ng products.

At the store in the Motomachi district of Yokohama, a posh shopping area near Chinatown, 61-year-old customer Mami Kashiwabar­a went straight for whale bacon, her father’s favorite. To her disappoint­ment, it was sold out, and she settled for frozen onomi, tail meat that is regarded as a delicacy.

Kashiwabar­a says she is aware of the whaling controvers­y but that whale meat brings back her childhood memories of eating it at family dinners and school lunches.

“I don’t think it’s good to kill whales meaningles­sly. But whale meat is part of Japanese food culture and we can respect the lives of whales by appreciati­ng their meat,” Kashiwabar­a said. “I would be happy if I can eat it.”

Kashiwabar­a said she planned to share her purchase of a 3,000 yen ($23) hand-size chunk, neatly wrapped in a freezer bag, with her husband over sake.

The meat mostly comes from whales caught off Japan’s northeaste­rn coast.

Japan resumed commercial whaling in July 2019 after withdrawin­g from the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission, ending 30 years of what it called research whaling, which had been criticized by conservati­onists as a cover for commercial hunts banned by the IWC in 1988.

Under its commercial whaling in the Japanese exclusive economic zone, Japan last year caught 270 whales, less than 80% of the quota and fewer than the number it once hunted in the Antarctic and the northweste­rn Pacific in its research program.

The decline occurred because fewer minke whales were found along the coast. Kurasawa says the reason for the smaller catch should be examined to see if it is linked to overhuntin­g or climate change.

While conservati­on groups condemned the resumption of commercial whaling, some see it as a way to let the government’s embattled and expensive whaling program adapt to changing times and tastes.

In a show of determinat­ion to keep the whaling industry alive in the coming decades, Kyodo Senpaku will construct a 6 billion yen ($46 million) new mothership for launch next year to replace the aging Nisshin Maru.

Uncertaint­y remains

Whaling is losing support in other whaling nations such as Iceland, where only one whaler remains.

Whales may also be moving away from the Japanese coasts due to a scarcity of saury, a staple of their diet, and other fish, possibly due to the impact of climate change, Kubo said.

Whaling in Japan involves only a few hundred people and one operator and accounted for less than 0.1% of total meat consumptio­n in recent years, according to Fisheries Agency data.

Still, conservati­ve governing lawmakers staunchly support commercial whaling and consumptio­n of the meat as part of Japan’s cultural tradition.

Conservati­onists say whale meat is no longer part of the daily diet in Japan, especially for younger generation­s.

Whale meat was an affordable source of protein during Japan’s undernouri­shed years after World War II, with annual consumptio­n peaking at 233,000 tons in 1962.

Whale was quickly replaced by other meats. The whale meat supply fell to 6,000 tons in 1986, the year before the moratorium on commercial whaling imposed by the IWC banned the hunting of several whale species.

Under the research whaling, criticized as a cover for commercial hunts because the meat was sold on the market, Japan caught as many as 1,200 whales annually. It has since drasticall­y cut back its catch after internatio­nal protests escalated and whale meat supply and consumptio­n slumped at home.

Annual meat supply had fluctuated in a range of 3,000-5,000 tons, including imports from Norway and Iceland. The amount further fell in 2019 to 2,000 tons, or 20 grams (less than 1 ounce) of whale meat per person a year, the Fisheries Agency statistics show.

Whaling officials attributed the shrinking supply in the past three years to the absence of imports due to the pandemic, and plan to nearly double this year’s supply with imports of more than 2,500 tons from Iceland.

Japan managed to get Iceland’s only remaining whaler to hunt fin whales exclusivel­y for shipment to Japan, whaling officials said. Iceland caught only one minke whale in the 2021 season, according to the IWC.

Criticizin­g Iceland’s export to Japan, the Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare said it “opposes all commercial whaling as it is inherently cruel.”

With an uncertain outlook for imports, Kyodo Senpaku wants the government to raise Japan’s annual catch quota to levels that can supply about 5,000 tons, which Kubo describes as the threshold to maintain the industry.

“From a long-term perspectiv­e, I think it would be difficult to sustain the industry at the current supply levels,” Kubo said.

With the limited supply, whale meat processing cannot be a viable business and may not last for the next generation­s, he added.

 ?? KWIYEON HA / AP ?? Konomu Kubo, a spokespers­on for Kyodo Senpaku Co., explains how whale meat is sold from a vending machine at the firm’s store in Yokohama, Japan, on Jan. 26. The whaling operator has struggledf­or years to promote its controvers­ial products.
KWIYEON HA / AP Konomu Kubo, a spokespers­on for Kyodo Senpaku Co., explains how whale meat is sold from a vending machine at the firm’s store in Yokohama, Japan, on Jan. 26. The whaling operator has struggledf­or years to promote its controvers­ial products.

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