The Guardian (USA)

Japan’s new whaling ‘mother ship’ being built to travel as far as Antarctica

- Mostafa Rachwani

A Japanese company is building a new whaling ship designed to travel as far as Antarctica, sparking fears commercial operations could resume in the Southern Ocean.

Australia’s environmen­t minister, Tanya Plibsersek, reaffirmed the Albanese government’s commitment to a global moratorium on commercial whaling, while Greenpeace condemned the practice as “brutal and unnecessar­y”.

Kyodo Senpaku Kaisha announced it was building a new “mother ship” that can sail for 60 days and travel 13,000km.

The term “mother-ship method” refers to a process in which smaller, more agile vessels are used to hunt whales, before the carcasses are returned to the mother ship for freezing and storage.

The company’s president, Hideki Tokoro, told reporters the ship was intended to pass on “whaling culture”.

“We want to contribute to Japan’s food security,” he said. “We designed the ship to be able to travel as far as the Antarctic Ocean, in the hope it will be useful in times of food crisis.

“Unless a new mother ship is built, we cannot pass on our whaling culture to the next generation.”

Plibersek said the government was aware of reports of the new whaling vessel, but that Japanese government had provided assurances it “has not provided financial support for the ship”.

“I am strongly opposed to whaling,” Plibersek said. “The Australian government is committed to upholding the global moratorium on commercial whaling and preventing a return to Southern Ocean whaling.”

A senior campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, Richard George, said whales and their habitats are already threatened.“Whales in the waters surroundin­g Australia and Antarctica are under threat from a number of fronts – from destructiv­e offshore gas and oil drilling, through to deep sea mining and climate change that is threatenin­g their fragile ocean environmen­ts,” he said.

“We simply can’t afford to have a whaling super-ship hunting whales in southern waters. Commercial whaling is brutal and unnecessar­y and there is no place for it.”

The ship will only be able to operate within Japan’s exclusive economic zone, and there is little expectatio­n that will change.

The UN convention on the law of the sea grants nations significan­t discretion over the management and exploitati­on of living resources in their exclusive economic zones.

Commercial whaling was banned under an Internatio­nal Whaling Commission moratorium in 1986 but with a clause that allowed Japan to continue to hunt whales legally in the Southern Ocean for what it claims to be “scientific research”.

The internatio­nal court of justice ordered Japan to end its annual hunt in 2014, which it did after pulling out of the IWC in 2019.

At the time of its withdrawal, the Japanese government announced that it would limit its commercial whaling to within its own waters.

 ?? ?? A Japanese whaling ship with two dead Antarctic minke whales in the Southern Ocean. Photograph:Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Alamy
A Japanese whaling ship with two dead Antarctic minke whales in the Southern Ocean. Photograph:Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Alamy

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