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Humpback whales migrate from the Cook Islands in the South Pacific.

The Great Whale Trail

Whales must not be allowed to die in the thousands for needless, discredited "research," and we're satellite tracking whales in the Southern Ocean to prove it.

The Great Whale Trail is a collaboration between Greenpeace and scientists working on humpback whales in the South Pacific.

With financial support from Greenpeace, humpback whales have been tagged by the Cook Islands Whale Research and Opération Cétacés (New Caledonia). 

The whales are now being tracked via satellite as they migrate from breeding and calving areas in the tropical South Pacific to the feeding grounds of the Southern Ocean.

Check out the early results

This project will produce important information on the movements and migratory destinations of humpback whales from small, unrecovered populations off Rarotonga (Cook Islands) and New Caledonia.

Greenpeace is communicating this critical non-lethal scientific research to the wider public as part of their campaign against Japan's unnecessary lethal "research" in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

On their journey, the humpbacks, like hundreds of thousands of other whales, face a range of threats including ship strikes, entanglement in fishing gear, pollution and the impacts of climate change.

Every year, more than 300,000 whales and dolphins die just caught in nets. The one place you might think they would be safe is a whale sanctuary like the Southern Ocean. Not so. Once in Antarctic waters they face the threat most easily ended - whaling.

The Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary was meant to be a safe haven but every year the Fisheries Agency of Japan send a fleet of whaling ships to kill in the name of science. For the third year running they aim to hunt down almost 1,000 minke whales.

This year, they also plan to kill 50 threatened humpback whales and 50 endangered fin whales.

All of these whales will die for so-called 'scientific research' - but even the International Whaling Commission has labelled the "research" needless and urged the Japanese government to stop.

Why catching whales for science is a hoax

In reality, the "research" is commercial whaling in disguise - and the whale meat actually ends up in supermarket shelves in Japan, even though few people eat it anymore. Commercial whaling is banned under IWC rules.

In contrast, the Great Whale Trail project is contributing to real scientific efforts without killing whales.

The latest updates

 

The big picture behind ‘Big Miracle’

Blog entry by Martin Lloyd | January 27, 2012 4 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 >

Protecting the wild south: Antarctica

Blog entry by Richard Page | October 31, 2011 5 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 >

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 >

Japanese whaling will come to an end - the question is simply when

Blog entry by Junichi Sato | January 28, 2011 40 comments

On December 22, 2010 - the Fisheries Agency of Japan (FAJ) acknowledged and publicly apologised for embezzlement within the whaling industry . An official from the powerful agency gave a 90 degree bow of apology on national... Read more >

Whaling on trial: Vindication!

Feature story | December 23, 2010 at 12:32

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 more >

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Write to Japan's Foreign Minister in support of the Tokyo Two

US activity in support of Tokyo Two

Image | September 6, 2010 at 12:51

Greenpeace staff members hold a banner in front of the United States Supreme Court building. Read more >

Colombian activity in support of Tokyo Two

Image | September 6, 2010 at 12:43

Greenpeace activists protests in front of Japans Embassy at Bogota, Colombia. Justice for the whales and the T2. Read more >

Tokyo Two - statement of concern

Publication | September 5, 2010 at 16:28

This is a joint statement of concern by International Non-Governmental Organisations, urging the Japanese government, as well as governments around the world to ensure that Greenpeace activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki are not unjustly and... Read more >

Fail Whales

Blog entry by LisaV | June 24, 2010 4 comments

Karli Thomas, Greenpeace oceans campaigner writes from the IWC meeting in Morocco... The town of Sidi R’bat on Morocco’s Atlantic coast is where the biblical Jonah is said to have been vomited up by a whale. Less than 100km from... Read more >

The future of whale conservation

Blog entry by LisaV | June 23, 2010 1 comment

John Frizell - Greenpeace International whales campaigner writes from the IWC meeting in Morocco,  Greenpeace campaigners at international meetings usually find themselves crammed into chairs at the back trying to listen to the... Read more >

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