Skip navigation.
A tearful wife of a whaler bids farewell to the Japanese whaling fleet 
leaving Shimonoseki. The fleet is bound for the Southern Ocean Whale 
Sanctuary with plans to harpoon 935 mink whales and 10 endangered fin 
whales, before returning to Japan in March 2007.

A tearful wife of a whaler bids farewell to the Japanese whaling fleet leaving Shimonoseki. The fleet is bound for the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary with plans to harpoon 935 mink whales and 10 endangered fin whales, before returning to Japan in March 2007.

Enlarge Image

Tokyo, Japan — Despite international condemnation and little domestic support, a six-ship whaling fleet is due to sail from Shimonoseki in Japan, with plans to hunt nearly 1,000 whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. Greenpeace is calling on the Japanese government to keep the fleet in port, stop their fake research program and commit to protecting endangered species instead of hunting them.

In what is officially described as a 'feasibility study' for expanded 'research' whaling, the fleet plans to harpoon 935 minke whales and 10 endangered fin whales, before returning to Japan in March 2007 with boxes of whale meat ready for market.

"To claim this whaling program is research is an insult to science and to the Japanese people," said Junichi Sato, Greenpeace Japan Oceans Campaign Project Manager. "This `research' project is being pursued by small numbers of politicians and bureaucrats simply to maintain their vested interests in one of the most outdated industries in Japan and at the expenses of Japanese taxpayers' money".

During the 2005/2006 whaling season the fleet sailed thousands of miles to the Southern Ocean Sanctuary to carry out the first phase of the new 'feasibility study' - to see if they could harpoon about 1000 whales. They found they could, except when Greenpeace activists put themselves between the harpoon and the whales. According to the Japanese delegation at this year's International Whaling Commission the expedition was "a complete success".
 
"If the last feasibility study was a so successful, then why do they need another one?" said John Frizell, Greenpeace International Ocean Campaigner. "This programme is just a flimsy excuse to push for a resumption of commercial whaling, despite having no market needs in Japan"
 
Recently, in response to a proposal to export whale meat caught by the newly licensed commercial whaler in Iceland, the Japanese ambassador to Iceland admitted there is a massive stockpile of meat that had not been sold.
 
An opinion poll in Japan carried out in June 2006 by the Gallup affiliate, the Nippon Research Centre, showed that 95% of Japanese never or rarely eat whale meat and more than 70 % of Japanese do NOT support whaling in the Southern Ocean.

Related news stories

Learn more
Global warming
Oceans
Forests
Nuclear
Toxics
Staff blog
Media center
Press contacts
News releases
Bloggers Center
Experts
Photos
Videos
Get involved
Take action
Jobs
Greenpeace Organizing Term
Greenpeace Student Network
Donate
Renew your membership

Greenpeace Fund
Make a tax-deductible donation
Gift and estate planning

702 H Street, NW, Suite 300, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 462-1177