24 January 2007 - Reykjavik, Iceland — In Iceland we have
discovered an unprecedented amount of the whale meat from
the recent hunt has not been used. Even whaling captain
Sigurður Njálsson has said the meat is unfit
for domestic consumption. 200 tonnes of the meat is in storage
with a further 179 tonnes of entrails buried at a landfill
site. But despite demand for whale meat plummeting, Japan
and Iceland continue to hunt whales.
An icy landfill site has been used to dump a vast proportion
of the fin whale remains. Underneath the snowy floor around
179 tonnes of bones and entrails have been left to rot.
Around 200 tonnes of meat and blubber - a vast proportion
of the total yield - are sitting elsewhere in storage waiting
to be tested for chemical contamination.
“Iceland claims their commercial whaling is sustainable
– but how can they justify it when they are hunting endangered
species, without domestic demand, and an over-supply of
whale products in Japan?” said Greenpeace Nordic Oceans
campaigner, Frode Pleym. “Both Iceland and Japan continue
to whale in the face of domestic and international opposition,
even though there is no scientific, economic or environmental
justification for it,” added Pleym.
Destination: Japan
Dumping site for 179 tonnes of whale entrails in Iceland.
The Icelandic meat and blubber in storage is intended for
export to Japan, despite the fact that Japan already has
4962 tonnes of whale meat stockpiled (as of October 2006)
according to the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Foresty
and Fisheries.
Last year, 5500 tons of whale meat was supplied to the
Japanese market. This includes whale meat which does not
get eaten and is simply thrown away because it didn't sell.
Even if we generously assume all of the meat was in fact
eaten, that is only about 46g of whale meat per person ,
as opposed to 5.6kg of beef, 12.1kg of pork, and 10.5kg
of chicken.
“It is no surprise that there are massive stockpiles of
whale meat, when a recent survey shows that 95 pecent of
Japanese people never or have rarely eaten whale meat. It
is time for all governments to make a commitment to the
whales and not an outdated, unwanted and pointless industry,”
said Greenpeace Japan's campaign director, Junichi Sato.
No scientific, economic, or environmental justification
An old whaling station at Hvalfjörður in Iceland.
It seems that there is an awful lot of whale meat sitting
in storage or buried in landfill, begging the question as
to how these hunts can possibly be justified. Despite this,
the Japanese Fisheries Agency whaling fleet is currently
preparing to hunt 10 endangered fin whales and 935 minke
whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
On Thursday the crew of the Greenpeace ship Esperanza will
sail to the Southern Ocean, in order to put themselves between
the harpoons and the whales.