This video about whales is called Whale activists: ‘Meet us don’t eat us’.
From Wildlife Extra:
Iceland abandons Fin whale hunt – For now
IFAW welcomes end to Fin whaling in Iceland
May 2012. The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) has welcomed the news that Iceland has called an end to the cruel practice of harpooning endangered Fin whales.
Kristjan Loftsson, the lone Icelandic whaler responsible for killing 280 Fin whales (seven Fin whales were killed in Iceland’s waters in 2006, 125 in 2009 and 148 in 2010) in Icelandic waters over the past six years, cited difficulties in trading the meat with Japan following its tsunami tragedy as a reason for cancelling last year’s hunt. He has now abandoned plans to train his harpoons on the whales in 2012, according to Icelandic media reports.
Whale watching possibilities
IFAW, which has worked alongside Icelandic whale watch operators for several years to promote whale watching as a humane and profitable alternative to the cruelty of whaling, welcomed the decision.
Robbie Marsland, UK Director of IFAW, said: “We are delighted to hear that no more Fin whales will be cruelly and needlessly slaughtered in Iceland. We are also pleased to hear Mr Loftsson acknowledge that this outdated industry is uneconomic. This is exactly what IFAW-commissioned research has shown over recent years; it is just a shame that 280 Fin whales had to die in this failed commercial experiment.”
Icelandic media reports that Loftsson failed to reach collective agreement with the Association of Icelandic Fishermen on salaries and conditions for deckhands and that he believes the market for whale meat in Japan has still not recovered since the 2011 tsunami. Loftsson regularly exports relatively small amounts of Fin whale meat to his own company in Japan, but has yet to find a demand for the meat on the Japanese market.
Minke whale hunt continues
Sadly, however, commercial hunting of Minke whales in Iceland continues. IFAW urges Iceland to end all whaling and instead work to promote responsible whale watching.
In total, 58 Minke whales were killed in Iceland last season, by two companies. This was from a self-allocated catch limit of 216. The first Minke whales of the 2012 whaling season were harpooned in recent weeks.
In 2011 IFAW launched its ‘Meet Us Don’t Eat Us‘ campaign in Iceland, encouraging tourists visiting the country to support responsible whale watching but to avoid sampling whale meat. The campaign will continue this summer.
Related articles
- Whales’ synchronised swimming when endangered (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Japanese whaling fleet leaves port (abc.net.au)
- Good Irish whale news (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- California shipping lanes shifted for whales (abclocal.go.com)
- Illegal whale meat trade in Denmark (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Japan split on whale hunts, poll shows (guardian.co.uk)
- 30-foot beached whale found in NY (newsfixnow.com)
Reblogged this on Ann Novek–With the Sky as the Ceiling and the Heart Outdoors and commented:
Thanks Icelanders! We will come and visit your fab country!
LikeLike
Pingback: New whale research | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Yahoo profits from killing whales and dolphins | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Stop pseudo-scientific whaling | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Icelandic whaling scandal | Dear Kitty. Some blog