Berliner Boersenzeitung - WiFi, drones and sharp blades on Japan's whaling mothership

EUR -
AED 4.302284
AFN 73.79152
ALL 95.519449
AMD 435.016244
ANG 2.096485
AOA 1075.24958
ARS 1645.097597
AUD 1.631275
AWG 2.109797
AZN 1.981892
BAM 1.958678
BBD 2.358646
BDT 144.010393
BGN 1.953842
BHD 0.441885
BIF 3484.606239
BMD 1.171296
BND 1.495285
BOB 8.091856
BRL 5.851328
BSD 1.171011
BTN 110.654662
BWP 15.838139
BYN 3.304027
BYR 22957.405813
BZD 2.355251
CAD 1.602275
CDF 2720.332915
CHF 0.924557
CLF 0.026533
CLP 1044.257244
CNY 8.008679
CNH 8.011319
COP 4228.484753
CRC 532.678221
CUC 1.171296
CUP 31.03935
CVE 110.573169
CZK 24.35898
DJF 208.162768
DKK 7.472794
DOP 69.39913
DZD 155.197898
EGP 61.862878
ERN 17.569443
ETB 184.332752
FJD 2.573804
FKP 0.864375
GBP 0.866536
GEL 3.156613
GGP 0.864375
GHS 13.048374
GIP 0.864375
GMD 86.090628
GNF 10281.049662
GTQ 8.947071
GYD 245.000027
HKD 9.178453
HNL 31.179575
HRK 7.534009
HTG 153.404117
HUF 363.828077
IDR 20206.148134
ILS 3.462301
IMP 0.864375
INR 110.85774
IQD 1534.398042
IRR 1541425.818283
ISK 143.202224
JEP 0.864375
JMD 184.511138
JOD 0.830463
JPY 186.888564
KES 151.212171
KGS 102.405963
KHR 4696.898074
KMF 493.115923
KPW 1054.161689
KRW 1725.788327
KWD 0.360267
KYD 0.975926
KZT 536.774205
LAK 25704.095103
LBP 104948.141179
LKR 373.27534
LRD 215.225644
LSL 19.367393
LTL 3.458533
LVL 0.708505
LYD 7.431886
MAD 10.84181
MDL 20.25359
MGA 4859.707991
MKD 61.630591
MMK 2459.768137
MNT 4212.39697
MOP 9.45265
MRU 46.852263
MUR 54.793673
MVR 18.096215
MWK 2039.226662
MXN 20.366035
MYR 4.629553
MZN 74.8578
NAD 19.385473
NGN 1610.051947
NIO 43.004161
NOK 10.924685
NPR 177.047659
NZD 1.99224
OMR 0.450368
PAB 1.171016
PEN 4.118327
PGK 5.088989
PHP 71.536886
PKR 326.469566
PLN 4.248467
PYG 7340.724493
QAR 4.267324
RON 5.095253
RSD 117.349849
RUB 88.216818
RWF 1710.678122
SAR 4.393361
SBD 9.400748
SCR 16.337831
SDG 703.366245
SEK 10.85663
SGD 1.495983
SHP 0.874491
SLE 28.843226
SLL 24561.491489
SOS 669.395643
SRD 43.882586
STD 24243.466812
STN 24.890045
SVC 10.24697
SYP 129.485942
SZL 19.385253
THB 38.068064
TJS 10.984542
TMT 4.105393
TND 3.377726
TOP 2.8202
TRY 52.783411
TTD 7.962633
TWD 36.927473
TZS 3054.298954
UAH 51.608197
UGX 4356.364467
USD 1.171296
UYU 46.217522
UZS 14137.545157
VES 567.631891
VND 30861.312672
VUV 138.477201
WST 3.195077
XAF 656.916728
XAG 0.016026
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.165486
XCG 2.110483
XDR 0.817235
XOF 655.342887
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.530362
ZAR 19.373273
ZMK 10543.070433
ZMW 22.218555
ZWL 377.156903
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    22.83

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    -1.2500

    82.61

    -1.51%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.2

    -0.26%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    186.68

    -0.44%

  • GSK

    0.2500

    54.47

    +0.46%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.5

    -0.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    15.2

    -1.32%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    87.45

    +0.25%

  • RIO

    -1.4600

    98.49

    -1.48%

  • RELX

    -0.3800

    36.01

    -1.06%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    15.49

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    58.47

    +1.97%

  • BP

    0.3800

    46.35

    +0.82%

WiFi, drones and sharp blades on Japan's whaling mothership
WiFi, drones and sharp blades on Japan's whaling mothership / Photo: Yuichi YAMAZAKI - AFP

WiFi, drones and sharp blades on Japan's whaling mothership

In whale-motif jacket, shirt and tie plus a whale-shaped hat, Hideki Tokoro shows off Japan's new whaling "mothership", the Kangei Maru -- slicing blades, butchery deck, freezers and all.

Text size:

"(Whales) eat up marine creatures that should feed other fish. They also compete against humans," said Tokoro, the president of whaling firm Kyodo Senpaku, touting an industry argument long rejected by conservationists.

"So we need to cull some whales and keep the balance of the ecosystem... It's our job, our mission, to protect the rich ocean for the future," he added while speaking with reporters invited to tour the Kangei Maru after it had docked in Tokyo.

The 9,300-tonne vessel set off this week from western Japan, bigger, better and more modern than its recently retired predecessor, with individual cabins for crew members, WiFi and drones to spot its quarry.

The whales will be harpooned by a smaller vessel and then brought, dead, to the Kangei Maru where a powerful winch can haul carcasses weighing up to 70 tonnes up a ramp and onto a lower deck around 40 metres (130 feet) long.

Once inside workers will butcher the whales using 30-centimetre (foot-long) blades attached to wooden staffs, discarding around half the animals' total weight as waste.

"Be careful, they are very sharp," Tokoro said, as a crew member unwrapped one such steel blade to show off.

The rest of the whale is processed, packaged and stored in 40 freezer containers, each with a capacity of 15 tonnes, ready to be transported around Japan once the ship returns to port.

- 'Scientific' -

Activists aggressively pursued the Kangei Maru's predecessor when prior to 2019 Japan hunted whales in the Antarctic and North Pacific for "scientific" purposes.

That year Japan quit the International Whaling Commission and nowadays conducts commercial whaling, but only in its own waters, and on what it calls a sustainable scale.

Japan has a quota this year of around 350 Bryde's, minke and sei whales, species which the government says are "abundant".

The Bryde's and common minke are listed as being of "least concern" on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List, but globally the sei is "endangered".

Japan also wants to resume hunting fin whales, the world's second-biggest animal after the blue whale. Fin whales are listed as "vulnerable" by the IUCN.

Tokyo argues that eating whale is part of Japanese culture and an issue of "food security" in the resource-poor country which imports large amounts of animal meat.

But consumption of whale has fallen to around 1,000 or 2,000 tonnes per year compared to around 200 times that in the 1960s.

"Japan has advanced bogus arguments about food security to justify its whaling for decades, even as its public has turned up its nose to whale meat," said Patrick Ramage from the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Conservationists have also long refuted Japan's arguments that whales compete with humans for marine resources, saying that in fact the mammals improve the health of the ocean and therefore fish stocks.

Also they "have a unique role to play in global carbon dioxide capture and storage, acting like giant swimming tropical rainforests absorbing harmful CO2", said Nicola Beynon from the Humane Society International Australia.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)