Yorkshire Post

Outcry as Japan plans to resume commercial whaling

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JAPAN HAS announced it is leaving the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission (IWC) to resume hunting the animals for commercial use but said it will no longer go to the Antarctic.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the hunts will be limited to Japan’s territoria­l waters and its 200-mile exclusive economic zone along the country’s coasts, and that Japan will stop its annual whaling expedition­s to the Antarctic and north-west Pacific oceans.

Japan will resume commercial whaling in July 2019 after a 30-year absence “in line with Japan’s basic policy of promoting sustainabl­e use of aquatic living resources based on scientific evidence,” he said. “Regrettabl­y, we have reached a decision that it is impossible in the IWC to seek the coexistenc­e of states with different views,” Mr Suga said.

Mr Suga said the IWC has been dominated by conservati­onists and Japan was disappoint­ed over its efforts to manage whale stocks even though the IWC has a treaty mandate for both whale conservati­on and developmen­t of the whaling industry.

The IWC imposed a commercial moratorium in the 1980s due to a dwindling whale population.

Japan switched to what it calls research whaling and says stocks have recovered enough to resume commercial hunt. The research programme was criticised as a cover for commercial hunting as the meat is sold on the market at home.

Japan has hunted whales for centuries, but has reduced its catch following internatio­nal protests and declining demand for whale meat at home.

The withdrawal from the IWC may be a face-saving step to stop Japan’s ambitious Antarctic hunts and scale down the scope of whaling to around the Japanese coasts. Fisheries officials have said Japan annually consumes thousands of tons of whale meat from the research hunts, mainly by older Japanese seeking a nostalgic meal.

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