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Earth Japan

Japan Announces Withdrawal From International Whaling Commission, To Resume Commercial Whaling (straitstimes.com) 274

Japan is withdrawing from the International Whaling Commission (IWC) and will resume commercial whaling next year, a government spokesman said on Wednesday, in a move expected to spark international criticism. From a report: "We have decided to withdraw from the International Whaling Commission in order to resume commercial whaling in July next year," top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters. "Commercial whaling to be resumed from July next year will be limited to Japan's territorial waters and exclusive economic zones. We will not hunt in the Antarctic waters or in the southern hemisphere," Mr Suga added.

The announcement had been widely expected and comes after Japan failed in a bid earlier this year to convince the IWC to allow it to resume commercial whaling. Tokyo has repeatedly threatened to pull out of the body and has been regularly criticised for catching hundreds of whales a year for "scientific research" despite being a signatory to a moratorium on hunting the animals. Mr Suga said Japan would officially inform the IWC of its decision by the end of the year, which will mean the withdrawal comes into effect by June 30. Leaving the IWC means Japanese whalers will be able to resume the hunting in Japanese coastal waters of minke and other whales currently protected by the commission. But Japan will not be able to continue the so-called scientific research hunts in the Antarctic that has been exceptionally allowed as an IWC member under the Antarctic Treaty.

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Japan Announces Withdrawal From International Whaling Commission, To Resume Commercial Whaling

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  • The UK does not hunt whales. Why can't you copy that, too?

  • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @01:44AM (#57860090) Homepage

    As long as it is only in Japanese territory their choice but how long they take to put the whale down should be taken into account, a cruel extended death should be banned and any method should require pretty much instant death for the whale. Not that I would eat whale or promote it's killing but prevention of cruelty to animals laws should apply.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Unfortunately animals tend not to respect international borders. The UK is just now discovering this with Brexit and fishing rights too. It really depends if the waters in Japanese territories are important to whales, e.g. they use them as spawning grounds.

      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        I may be anecdotal but animals may, in fact, respect borders if their survival depend on it.
        We have a natural park where fishing is forbidden, and not only there are a lot more fish than the areas right next to it but they also easier to approach. In other area, they keep their distance, especially if you carry a harpoon. Yep, they also recognize harpoons and know the approximate range in order to stay out of it.

    • International waters aren't Japanese.

      Extinction doesn't give a shit about possession.

      Whales are no different from any other international traveller, beyond higher intelligence. That doesn't depend a whole lot on your view of whale intelligence. They don't belong to Japan.

      • We can strongly discourage this behavior by applying an export tax on what they make. Just like we can discourage America ignoring global warming by taxing their exports. I see no evidence we care enough to do either.
    • "They can do what they want in their own country unless it's something very specific I care about. "

      Does that kind of sum up your post?

    • This commission existed exactly for that: to ensure sustainable and non-cruel hunting of whales. But it got captured by countries not dependent on whaling industry so they used it to shut down commercial whaling to gain an economic advantage. But this failed because it's not based on legally binding international agreements and countries are free to leave. So Japan and other countries with whaling industry have no other choice than to abscond from this commission and make a new one.
    • To be honest, no one in Japan likes eating whale. They only do whaling to prove that they can.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @01:51AM (#57860110)

    Whalehunters do give money to Japanese politicians. Lots of money.

    Japanese politics is all about money.

    If this has a negative impact on the 2020 Olympics, then whaling will be banned just as quickly.

    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by yuvcifjt ( 4161545 )

      Japanese politics is all about money.

      What a strange thing to say - and American (or any democratic / capitalist) politics isn't about money?!

      There's probably no other country in the World who is as well funded by large corporate interests as USA - look up lobbying (bribing).

      • And America ranks badly on corruption, pollution, destruction of endangered species, destruction of areas of special scientific interest, destruction of history...

        That it's the same in every othet corrupt nation shouldn't be a shock.

      • My guess is that whaling in Japan is similar to coal in the US. Both are dying industries that still have enough political clout to get money from the government to prop up their businesses and keep them going long past when they should have died.

  • Research (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @01:52AM (#57860112)

    Ah yes "research" whales that just happen to end up in the fish markets.

    • Well yes, wouldn't want to waste the meat unnecessarily while carrying out the very real research of how many whales we can pointlessly kill before people care.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Animals hunted and used everywhere around the world. Species are going extinct all around the world. I don’t know why people act outraged when the cute or glamorous ones are the victims. So if we’re gonna be outraged about this, we should just probably stop destroying the planet in the 1000 other ways. “They” always claim we’ll slow down economic progress, disrupt economies, etc, but somehow they’re perfectly fine with automation, globalization and Walmart ruining your ho
  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @07:42AM (#57860710) Journal

    One day we might get some independent data on the amount of radionuclides in Japanese fisheries considering the amount of radioactive effluents the ongoing Fukushima disaster is putting into their food chain. I wouldn't be surprised if they know all this and opening up options for themselves.

    The volcanic region made seafood a rich harvest for Japan and now they have poisoned it. Bio-accumulation of radionuclides in the food chain is real no matter how much Japan suppresses information. It will continue to poison the Pacific until we take the clean-up effort away from TEPCO and make it an international issue that we address with maximum priority to stop it spreading any further.

    That would be the honorable thing to do.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      One day we might get some independent data on the amount of radionuclides in Japanese fisheries considering the amount of radioactive effluents the ongoing Fukushima disaster is putting into their food chain.

      I suppose it is easy to get them yourself, just buy a bit of Japanese fish and a Geiger counter, or send it to a lab for more precise measurements.

    • Until Fukushima Japan had no limits on radioactivity of foods. After Fukushima they quickly introduced some which are similar to those standards set in other countries.

      People were critical of the level since (just like you) people can't seem to fathom how a nuclear disaster didn't irradiate the oceans, and they continue to be critical despite the fact that lowing the limit any further would effectively ban Japan from eating any bananas from anywhere in the world.

      Yeah that's right, if you worry about radiati

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @03:42PM (#57862710)
      There's this widespread mistaken belief that radiation is not normal, and is only created by nuclear weapons and nuclear reactors. Radiation is completely normal and is everywhere around you [xkcd.com].

      The highest radiation dose most people receive in a year actually comes from their own bodies. There's a naturally occurring radioactive isotope of potassium, and our nervous system needs potassium to function. Likewise, foods high in potassium can give you an elevated radiation dose. The radiation sensors at our border checkpoints designed to detect terrorists trying to smuggle in a dirty bomb are forever being triggered by cat litter, tiles, and foods high in potassium like bananas, nuts, etc. [slate.com].

      After that comes rocks - mainly granite, but also things like beach sand [youtube.com]. They have trace amounts of natural uranium which is radioactive. Having granite countertops in your kitchen substantially increases your annual radiation dose. The radon which can build up in your basement if you live in the mountains comes from rocks. Radon is one of the byproducts of uranium's natural decay chain.

      After that is cosmic rays from space. Living at higher altitudes increases your exposure to this radiation source, since there's less atmosphere above you to absorb it. A transcontinental flight exposes you to about as much additional radiation as a medical x-ray. All the people who fled Japan after Fukushima by flying home unwittingly subjected themselves to more radiation during the flight than they would have received from Fukushima if they had just stayed in Japan.

      Anyhow, uranium is water soluble. As a result, seawater has a much higher concentration of natural radionuclides [waterencyclopedia.com] than you normally encounter on land. So if you're that paranoid about radiation, you shouldn't swim in the ocean (you shouldn't even go to the beach, where the sand and sun will irradiate you). The increase in radioactivity from pre- to post-Fukushima is tiny compared to natural levels. The reason we know it's coming from Fukushima is not because the water has suddenly become radioactive. It's because the radioactivity is coming from certain isotopes which have short half-lives so have long since disappeared as a natural radiation source. Fukushima was the only recent event which created a bunch of those short-lived isotopes, so we know that if we detect radiation from those isotopes, that they must have come from Fukushima.
  • Japan is generally respectful of nature. They have a slightly different value system than whats promoted by the typical modern western intellectualism.

    They subscribe to ancestor worship, Buddhist doctrine. That the movies of The Superstar [scmp.com] became an unlikely hit in Japan, much liked by the older generation shows they have some strong value system not visible to the West.

    So, it is particularly disappointing that they don't value whales and they seem to condone exterminating a species. Hope something cha

    • Huh? The Japanese are people. I don't know what you think makes them immune from arsehole wasteful industries that bribe politicians to keep their dying business afloat.

  • Their actual plan is to get us down to only 2 humpback whales, in the hopes of attracting starships from the future. They can then capture one and harvest the technology.

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @10:50AM (#57861292)

      Their actual plan is to get us down to only 2 humpback whales, in the hopes of attracting starships from the future. They can then capture one and harvest the technology.

      The part that was cut out of the script was that after finding out what what had happened, Space Whales invaded earth to harvest Japanese people for research purposes.

  • It's sad to have to destroy such an intelligent animal into pieces--to prove the point that it's not so different than killing wales.
  • Will have to make a return time voyage to stop them.

  • Has anyone considered working with the whales on how they can defend themselves? Just a thought.

  • Collect the whole set.
  • It's only sensible. (Score:5, Informative)

    by SEE ( 7681 ) on Wednesday December 26, 2018 @02:13PM (#57862282) Homepage

    There are a whole bunch of species of whale that are neither particularly smart nor anywhere near endangered, like the common minke whale [wikipedia.org]. Anyone who isn't a vegetarian has no business pretending there's a moral issue here.

    And the general IWC moratorium, now over three decades old, is in blatant defiance of the purpose stated in the convention that established the IWC -- to make the whaling industry orderly, in order to increase whale stocks, so that more whales can be hunted. A general ban on commercial whaling isn't what the Japanese signed up for, and it's ludicrous to claim they should be bound to keep going along with the abuse of a treaty that's been perverted against its explicit text.

    • Most environmental issues are the same way. Motte and bailey strategy. Take a public, reasonable sounding position that hides your real, extreme views. Then when you're challenged retreat to the defensible position. When people stop listening take your real stance.
  • Reading through the summary it seems like maybe having Japan hunt whales near Asher they live, may be better than having them hunt whales around Antartica (which is what they were doing).

    Antartica still has a long way to go to recover from the whaling days, and if they are hunting locally maybe it will be more sustainable.

    Too bad they can't just give up whaling altogether though,

  • Think about it, commercial whaling will be done only for profit. The things they did with research disguising was government paid. And all indications are that the younger generation despise whaling, and the older one only did it as a tradition (not for the horrid taste). Often whale meat was left to rot because nobody bought it. Thus if it is commercial whaling only... a few may try... Then with collapsing market and nobody buying it, it dies out. Win win on the long run : the japanese government can prete

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