The Prague Post - Japan's new whaling mothership sets sail on first hunt

EUR -
AED 4.276718
AFN 77.153317
ALL 96.717252
AMD 442.907975
ANG 2.084563
AOA 1067.868872
ARS 1696.093962
AUD 1.769122
AWG 2.099056
AZN 1.983829
BAM 1.957161
BBD 2.340327
BDT 141.988732
BGN 1.956055
BHD 0.439043
BIF 3432.472023
BMD 1.164525
BND 1.508142
BOB 8.029583
BRL 6.204388
BSD 1.162008
BTN 104.541693
BWP 15.528931
BYN 3.373246
BYR 22824.685088
BZD 2.336925
CAD 1.626993
CDF 2579.422616
CHF 0.933786
CLF 0.027428
CLP 1075.973957
CNY 8.233775
CNH 8.221155
COP 4443.826444
CRC 572.195418
CUC 1.164525
CUP 30.859906
CVE 110.341726
CZK 24.125695
DJF 206.913877
DKK 7.468575
DOP 73.350689
DZD 151.573415
EGP 55.337753
ERN 17.467871
ETB 179.466191
FJD 2.637769
FKP 0.880407
GBP 0.879641
GEL 3.142444
GGP 0.880407
GHS 13.211186
GIP 0.880407
GMD 84.427507
GNF 10095.976864
GTQ 8.901189
GYD 243.099038
HKD 9.063455
HNL 30.613287
HRK 7.536451
HTG 152.055078
HUF 380.649411
IDR 19355.565859
ILS 3.784008
IMP 0.880407
INR 105.047002
IQD 1522.158429
IRR 49041.04969
ISK 148.604817
JEP 0.880407
JMD 186.157846
JOD 0.82562
JPY 181.233243
KES 150.630825
KGS 101.837862
KHR 4652.214931
KMF 494.922993
KPW 1048.048893
KRW 1710.023441
KWD 0.357369
KYD 0.968373
KZT 589.119643
LAK 25210.772533
LBP 104280.122448
LKR 358.828726
LRD 205.673014
LSL 19.898738
LTL 3.438539
LVL 0.70441
LYD 6.331403
MAD 10.751776
MDL 19.73513
MGA 5198.614844
MKD 61.677888
MMK 2445.804381
MNT 4141.373729
MOP 9.31878
MRU 46.242758
MUR 53.661639
MVR 17.935375
MWK 2014.901056
MXN 21.280406
MYR 4.803085
MZN 74.425309
NAD 19.899337
NGN 1682.28569
NIO 42.759549
NOK 11.771656
NPR 167.267027
NZD 2.024392
OMR 0.447762
PAB 1.162008
PEN 3.919025
PGK 4.926404
PHP 68.403598
PKR 328.258163
PLN 4.231126
PYG 8058.60353
QAR 4.246953
RON 5.090254
RSD 117.435386
RUB 89.607675
RWF 1690.661079
SAR 4.371228
SBD 9.584728
SCR 16.455551
SDG 700.397028
SEK 10.953053
SGD 1.508421
SHP 0.873695
SLE 26.783825
SLL 24419.499565
SOS 662.855223
SRD 44.882533
STD 24103.311146
STN 24.516943
SVC 10.16707
SYP 12876.135606
SZL 19.896005
THB 37.103508
TJS 10.730762
TMT 4.087482
TND 3.424181
TOP 2.803896
TRY 49.45566
TTD 7.877478
TWD 36.529629
TZS 2869.98988
UAH 49.139469
UGX 4153.888396
USD 1.164525
UYU 45.755958
UZS 13822.611518
VES 287.751501
VND 30720.745151
VUV 142.478649
WST 3.261054
XAF 656.413435
XAG 0.020101
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.147186
XCG 2.094156
XDR 0.816368
XOF 656.413435
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.622761
ZAR 19.906212
ZMK 10482.117742
ZMW 26.696563
ZWL 374.976494
  • RBGPF

    1.2200

    79

    +1.54%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    13.74

    -0.44%

  • BCC

    0.0600

    75.19

    +0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.71

    -0.51%

  • SCS

    -0.0100

    16.37

    -0.06%

  • VOD

    0.2500

    12.38

    +2.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.28

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    0.3700

    72.34

    +0.51%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.43

    +0.47%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    75.64

    -0.01%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    39.73

    +0.03%

  • GSK

    1.0800

    48.27

    +2.24%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    23.37

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    -0.2000

    57.93

    -0.35%

  • BP

    -0.1500

    36.36

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    -0.3500

    90.17

    -0.39%

Japan's new whaling mothership sets sail on first hunt
Japan's new whaling mothership sets sail on first hunt / Photo: Yuichi YAMAZAKI - AFP

Japan's new whaling mothership sets sail on first hunt

The chef fires up the grill and bastes a chunky whale steak, a Japanese delicacy that could soon appear on more plates nationwide as a new whaling mothership sets sail despite criticism from conservationists.

Text size:

Fatty raw pink-and-white whale meat is also on the menu at Nisshinmaru, a restaurant named after Japan's previous huge vessel for catching the marine mammals, now retired after three decades at sea.

The last mothership was aggressively pursued in the Antarctic by activists determined to disrupt operations, but Japan has built an even bigger boat to replace it.

The brand-new, nearly 9,300-tonne lead vessel for Japan's whaling flotilla departed Tuesday on its maiden hunt -- heralding a new era for an industry defended by the government as an integral part of Japanese culture.

Called the Kangei Maru, the ship has "an in-house processing facility where the meat is processed before being refrigerated", explained Ryosuke Oba, the restaurant's manager.

"This ship is like a factory. That's its most attractive feature," he told AFP in the city of Shimonoseki, which has a long history of whaling.

Proudly displayed on the wall at the restaurant is a picture of the Nisshin Maru sailing through icy waters with the word "research" painted in bold letters on its side.

Until Japan pulled out of the International Whaling Commission in 2019, it was criticised for exploiting a loophole in the IWC's moratorium on commercial whaling that allows scientific hunts.

Now the nation has resumed commercial whaling in its own waters, making it one of only three countries who do so along with Norway and Iceland.

- Whaling 'identity' -

"Please catch big whales! Please return safely!" said a letter read by small children who danced at a ceremony as the Kangei Maru set off from Shimonoseki on a months-long hunting expedition along Japan's northeastern coast.

The 7.5 billion yen ($48 million) boat plans to catch around 200 whales by the end of the year.

Senior members of the ship's 100-strong crew were handed bouquets as family members said farewells beside the ship with its fresh coat of blue and white paint.

"This is a new ship for a new era, symbolic of the new period of resumed commercial whaling," announced Hideki Tokoro, president of the whaling company that built the Kangei Maru.

Japan hunts minke, Bryde's and sei whales, and wants to expand the list to include fin whales -- the second-largest animal species on the planet after the blue whale.

"Fin whales can weigh up to 70 tonnes. The ship is equipped with a winch able to lift up a whale that big," Tokoro said.

Japan has hunted whales for centuries, and the meat was a key source of protein in the years after World War II.

Even today it is part of school lunches in Shimonoseki, where a gleaming silver statue of a whale tail stands outside city hall.

But in recent decades the country's appetite for whale meat has dwindled sharply, something the city's mayor Shintaro Maeda is determined to change.

"Our biggest goal is to boost demand for whale meat and raise public awareness of it," he told AFP, describing whaling as "part of Japanese people's identity".

- Food security argument -

Kazuhiro Fujino runs a Shimonoseki whale meat shop and has "high hopes" that increased supply, and the possible fin whale catch, will help drive sales.

"These days, Japan relies on imports for everything," he said, so "it's a good idea to catch whales so that we can supply our own food".

But conservationists dispute this argument, saying whales live for a long time and reproduce slowly, so are not a sustainable food source.

Although campaign groups have slammed Japan's plans, little remains of the international fury seen a decade ago when whalers faced clashes with activists in the Antarctic.

"Commercial whaling in the 21st century is unjustifiable. It's an inhumane practice that exists purely for the profit of a few," campaigners World Cetacean Alliance said this month.

Tokoro said it would be "very unlikely" that the Kangei Maru would go to the Antarctic for commercial whaling.

"If we do, it would be when the government orders us to secure a source of protein due to a crisis, due to famine. In that case, we would be ready to go any time."

O.Ruzicka--TPP