Whaling on trial: Vindication!

Japan finally starts taking action against its corrupt whaling industry

TOYKO: After two and a half years of hard work in Japan to expose corruption at the heart of the whaling industry - we have a significant victory!

Read full story

Whaling on trial: Vindication!

Japanese Whaling

Ending Japan's Southern Ocean Whaling

The Fisheries Agency of Japan's whaling fleet sails thousands of miles every year to the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary to hunt for a self-determined, constantly increasing quota of hundreds of whales.

Claimed to be 'scientific research', in reality it is a poorly-disguised commercial operation. Now Japanese taxpayers are growing angry, and the country's media have levelled criticism on the waste of public funds on subsidising unprofitable, unsustainable and unwanted whale hunt.

This could be the year that whaling finally ends in the Southern Ocean. The whaling controversy is damaging Japan's image both at home and abroad.

Outcry and scandal

In December 2007, a 31-one country coalition delivered a demarche (diplomatic protest) to Japan, condemning the whale hunt.  Japan's Prime Ministers rarely speak on whaling issues, but by January 2008, Mr. Fukuda had to defend Japan's position in the national parliament, the Diet.

Then, in May 2008, Greenpeace uncovered a huge scandal; prime cuts of whale meat were being smuggled ashore by the crew of the Japanese whaling factory ship, Nisshin Maru, for illegal trade and personal gain, at the Japanese taxpayer's expense. The story drew massive media coverage in Japan, and the ire of many Japanese people, incensed at the corruption at the heart of the whaling industry. Our work resulted in an investigation of the whaling industry by Tokyo's public prosecutor, and a massive blow to the credibility of Japan's whaling programme.

A month a later, however Japanese police arrested two Greenpeace activists who had exposed the smuggling, while the public prosecutor suddenly dropped the investigation into the whale meat smuggling. This prompted protests outside Japanese embassies worldwide, and 250,000 people sent emails to the Japanese government demanding for the activists be released. They were held for 23 before being charged, but were freed on bail in mid-July 2008. You can read more about the Tokyo Two here.

Meanwhile, there have been moves by key countries within the International Whaling Commission (IWC) to resolve the deadlock between those interested in conserving whales, and those who want to hunt them. The June 2006 IWC meeting in Santiago, Chile, took place with less controversy than normal, as the both sides began formulating a new future for the organisation.

Taxpayers' money

The whaling programme in the Southern Ocean costs the Japanese taxpayer 1.2 billion yen every year -- that's about 10 million Euros, or 12 million US dollars -- just in direct subsidies.  The Japanese government spends additional funds "recruiting" countries into the International Whaling Commission, on marketing and promotion campaigns for whale meat, and other indirect subsidies that have raised eyebrows in the Japanese business press.

And, as we discovered when we interviewed people on the streets of Tokyo, very few Japanese citizens even know that it's their taxes that pay for whaling. When asked, most would rather their hard-earned money was spent on more senisble things, like health care, and welfare.

Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary

While it seems absurd that Japan would send a whaling fleet to the ends of the Earth to catch whales, the motives of the officials behind the hunt are crystal clear. With three-quarters of the world's remaining whale populations found in the southern hemisphere, the whaling industry would need access to them to return to full scale commercial whaling.  This is why Greenpeace campaigned strongly for the creation of a Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary - and why we're still pressing for it to become a real sanctuary by getting Japan to end its annual commercial whaling hunt there. Protecting the Southern Ocean is the key to stopping commercial whaling around the world.

When the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary was announced in 1994, it was countered by an increase of 100 whales taken by Japan's whaling fleet. At the June 2005 International Whaling Commission meeting, the Japanese government controversially announced plans to add endangered Antarctic fin and threatened humpback whales to its annual shopping list, and doubled its quota for minke whales.

However, in the face of public outcry and diplomatic pressure from around the world - from the United States and Australia in particular - in December 2007, Japan announced a temporary back-down on its plans to kill 50 humpbacks in the 2007-2008 season.

Under pressure

Since then, the Japanese government has shown signs of discomfort and internal bickering. Prior to December 2007, the government was represented on the whaling issue by Fisheries Agency officials, and occasionally the fisheries minister. Following the humpback debacle, responsibility began to move to the foreign ministry's officials, before Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura spoke on the issue. By January 2008, Prime Minister Fukuda was fielding questions in parliament on the issue.

In April 2008, the factory ship Nisshin Maru arrived home having killed 551 whales. While this was much less than planned, it was 100 more than three years ago. The whalers blamed environmental groups for their low catch. Embattled at home by politics and the recent whale meat scandal, and at sea by protests, the whalers are clearly in an unhappy situation. This pressure must continue if Japan is to fully remove its whaling fleet from the Southern Ocean.

More info

The latest updates

 

Whale Shark in Pacific Waters

Image | March 27, 2012 at 12:59

A whale shark swims in the warm water off the coast of the Philippines. According to the Australian government, around 66% of whales and other toothed cetaceans die as a result of botched attempts to use whale sharks as lures for tuna. Greenpeace... Read more >

'Big Miracle' Whale Rescue, Alaska

Slideshow | February 3, 2012

The big picture behind ‘Big Miracle’

Blog entry by Martin Lloyd | January 27, 2012 7 comments

“This is Campbell Plowden, Whale Campaign Coordinator for Greenpeace.  I’d like to let you know that the Soviet Union is going to send two icebreakers to help clear a path for the whales trapped in Alaska.”     24 years ago... Read more >

Japanese food retailer promises radiation-free food

Blog entry by Wakao Hanaoka | November 9, 2011 11 comments

In the months since the beginning of the Fukushima nuclear crisis, Japanese consumers have rightly been worried about the radiation levels of food they are buying and eating. Now, following months of discussion, Greenpeace seafood... Read more >

Protecting the wild south: Antarctica

Blog entry by Richard Page | October 31, 2011 6 comments

Oceans campaigner Richard Page is currently attending the annual meeting of CCAMLR Commission, where discussions are underway for a representative network of marine protected areas across the Southern Ocean by 2012. Although it’s... Read more >

Japan’s radioactive seafood problem

Blog entry by dwalsh | October 21, 2011 6 comments

Since the beginning of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Greenpeace has been working on the ground in Fukushima prefecture , providing independent information on contamination levels.  More recently, we’ve been testing fish and... Read more >

Whales and narwhals under threat from oil drilling

Blog entry by Richard Page | July 11, 2011

In 1996 I was part of a Greenpeace team dispatched to document an oil spill resulting from the grounding of the Sea Empress on the coast of South-West Wales. Approximately 72,000 tonnes of crude oil were released into the sea, oiling... Read more >

Marine life soaking up radiation along Fukushima coast

Blog entry by Greg McNevin | May 26, 2011 31 comments

Two week’s ago we released preliminary results from our marine radiation monitoring work off the coast of Japan, near the melted-down and leaking Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. These results showed worrying levels of... Read more >

Whaling On Trial

Publication | April 28, 2011 at 3:30

In early 2010, two Greenpeace activists went on trial in Japan in an unprecedented court case - one that court papers will register simply as a case of theft and trespass but which, over the course of the past two years, has become so much more. Read more >

Toru answers your questions about our campaign to save whales

Blog entry by LisaV | February 10, 2011 14 comments

Toru Suzuki, one of the Tokyo Two activists , answers Greenpeace supporter questions about Japan's whaling industry, and the Greenpeace campaign to stop whaling in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary . Junichi Sato, the other Tokyo... Read more >

1 - 10 of 477 results.

Categories