Japan to resume whaling in the Antarctic

Japan has announced it will resume whaling next year, but says the new program will be "scientifically reasonable".

A minke whale captured off Kushiro

Japan has announced it will resume whaling in the Antarctic Ocean by the end of March. (AAP) Source: AAP

Japan will resume whaling in the Antarctic Ocean by the end of March, after a hiatus since last year, in a move likely to prompt international outrage.

The International Court of Justice last year ruled that Japan's decades-old whale hunt in the Antarctic should stop, prompting Tokyo to cancel the bulk of its whaling for the 2014/2015 season.

But the Japanese Fisheries Agency has notified the International Whaling Commission that Japan will resume whaling in the 2015/2016 season under a revised plan.
The plan, which calls for cutting annual minke whale catches by two-thirds to 333, is scientifically reasonable, the agency said in a document filed with the IWC.

Japan began what it calls scientific whaling in 1987, a year after an international whaling moratorium took effect.

Japan has long maintained that most whale species are not endangered and that eating whale is part of its food culture.

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Published 28 November 2015 2:35pm
Updated 28 November 2015 6:28pm
Source: AAP


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