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IWC whaling proposal unacceptable: McCully

IWC whaling proposal unacceptable: McCully

Foreign Minister Murray McCully has blasted proposed whaling catch limits set out by the International Whaling Commission as unacceptable to New Zealand and a backward step in the process to find a diplomatic solution.

But Greenpeace is suggesting there is still room for a compromise solution and that New Zealand can help get an acceptable one.

Mr McCully will be contacting other foreign ministers ahead of the IWC full meeting in Morocco in June in a bid to get the proposal improved.

The alternatives were “pretty awful”, he said, suggesting that anarchy on the high seas in terms of whaling was possible.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/iwc-meeting/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501022&objectid=10640511

Norway, Japan prop up whaling industry with taxpayer money


Economics and Subsidies to Whaling found that Norway and Japan provide commercial whalers with huge government subsidies—even though killing whales is unlikely to ever be profitable without taxpayer support.

“In this time of global economic crisis, the use of valuable tax dollars to prop up what is basically an economically unviable industry, is neither strategic, sustainable, nor an appropriate use of limited government funds,” said Dr Susan Lieberman, Species Programme Director, WWF International.

The analysis considers a range of direct and indirect costs associated with whaling and the processing and marketing of whale products, such as whale meat. Researchers conclude that these costs, combined with declining demand for whale meat and the risk of negative impacts such as trade or tourism boycotts, make commercial whaling unlikely to produce benefits for either country’s economies or taxpayers.

In Norway, for example, the government since 1992 has spent more than US$4.9 million on public information, public relations, and lobbying campaigns to garner support for its whaling and seal hunting industries, according to the report. In addition, government subsidies for the whaling industry have equalled almost half of the gross value of all whale meat landings made through the Rafisklaget, the Norwegian Fishermen’s Sales Organisation.

The report notes similar use of taxpayer funds by Japan. During the 2008-09 season, the Japanese whaling industry, for example, needed US$12 million in taxpayer money just to break even. Overall, Japanese subsidies for whaling amount to US$164 million since 1988.
http://wwf.panda.org/wwf_news/news/?uNewsID=167621

Whale News in Taiwan

Beached whales released back to sea

Seventeen pygmy killer whales were returned safely to the ocean yesterday after becoming stranded on the beach near Hsinta Port in Kaohsiung County, the Forestry Bureau said.

The bureau said in a statement that it received a report at 11pm on Sunday that 21 whales were stranded on the beach near the port.

The bureau sent Wang Jiann-ping, director of Taijiang Cetacean Rescue Center, to direct the rescue operations.

Led by a speed boat from the Kaohsiung Fire Department, the 21 stranded pygmy killer whales attempted to swim back out to sea.
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2010/04/20/2003471007

Society for the Advancement of Animal Wellbeing | SAAW