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11 January 2006

Why we took this photo

by Andrew, onboard the Esperanza

Click for larger.
©Greenpeace/Sutton-Hibbert
"What do you mean there's
a harpoon behind me?"
If you're from the US you probably recognize that guy in the yellow hat as "the Gorton's fisherman". Gorton's is wholly owned by of Nissui, which is also a major shareholder of the Kyodo Senpaku - the company actually doing the whaling. So Gorton's is Nissui's "child company", or a "branch" of Nissui, or one of Nissui's "tentacles". Whatever metaphor you use, it is all about the same in my eyes - just follow the money. Nissui supports whaling and Gorton's supports Nissui with tons of cash from its profitable line of seafood products.

So, if you're like me and you don't want to support a company linked to the whaling industry - as a consumer you choose not to support Gorton's. And you tell them about it.

   

Comments

Go to this website to send some letters to PM of Japan, Fisheries Dept. and Ambassador (Don't know date letter was composed but may as well give it a try.) I sent the 3 letters and received email copies.
http://whales.netfirms.com/alert/japan/letter.html
This is text of the letter in case you are wondering:
Japanese Whaling Protest Letter
Dear Sir,
Your government is currently using Article VIII of the International Convention For The Regulation Of Whaling, 1946, under which a Contracting Government may "grant to any of its nationals a special permit authorizing that national to kill, take, and treat whales for purposes of scientific research". This Article has enabled your government to continue harvesting whales since the 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling.

The issue is whether the whale hunt actually constitutes valid scientific research.
Dr Roger Payne, a scientific advisor to the IWC, has pioneered the use of non-lethal research techniques that make it possible to collect the same kind of data as lethal research but with one key difference: the data are more representative and cheaper and easier to collect. Dr Payne calls the scientific whaling conducted by Japan an "egregious misuse of science." He points out that that whaling is "done by the same people in the same boats hunting the same whales in the same areas and selling the same products to the same markets."

The vast majority of marine science is conducted by non-lethal means such as DNA analysis of skin samples of whales and analysis of photos of caudal fins. Your lethal research is both unwanted and out-of-step with all other marine science.

Results of DNA analysis work presented at the International Whaling Commission (IWC) last June reveal your whalers are illegally hunting and trading in endangered whales. Researchers from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, tested 120 pieces of meat, blubber and skin purchased in 1998 and 1999 from Japanese retail shops and fish markets. The tests uncovered products from three protected species - Fin, Sei and Sperm whales, as well as other irregularities.

Article VIII does allow the proceeds of this research to be sold. Whale meat is regularly sold in your markets and for very high prices in restaurants and shops. It is clear to detached observers that the issuance of scientific permits by your government to members of the Japanese Whaling Association has a strong commercial motivation.

Claims that lethal research will help develop a new quota under the Revised Management Procedure (RMP) are erroneous. Dr Sidney Holt, a prominent scientific advisor to the IWC since 1960, states that "the RMP, no matter how safe it might seem to be in ideal circumstances (and there are still some doubts about that) and even if reinforced with nominal inspection schemes, CANNOT be a sound basis for conservation of whales.

The original intent of Article VIII was to allow scientists to take specimens for their research without having to wait several years for the permit to be processed through the IWC. Japan takes 440 Minke whales from the Antarctic and 100 from the Pacific annually. This is clearly not in keeping with the original intent of the scientific permit exemption.

Media statements declare that Japanese research whaling "complies with all IWC rules and management requirements." May I respectfully point that the decimation of previous whale stocks such as Blue and Fin whales and fisheries such as the cod fishery was also done in compliance with applicable regulations and laws of the time, often by democratically elected governments.

These are the facts. But there is one more compelling reason: moral grounds. In the words of Roger Payne:

"It is because whales are such grand and glowing creatures that their destruction for commerce degrades us so. It will confound our descendants. We were the generation that searched Mars for the most tenuous evidence of life but could not rouse enough moral courage to stop the destruction of the grandest manifestations of life here on earth."

A recent Australian resolution urging your government to refrain from issuing special permits for scientific whaling was carried by a large majority at the International Whaling Commission meeting. I urge you to demand your government reconsider its views and to join all nations in refraining from conducting "lethal scientific" whaling.

Yours Sincerely,
Name: (Your real name)
email: (Your real email address - for your copy of the letter)
SEND PROTEST LETTER RESET
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Whales in Danger Information Service - http://www.whales.org.au

Posted by: echo at January 11, 2006 6:30 PM

Everyone who wishes to take action, in addition to following Andrew's lead, should check earlier blog coments to find a number of Nissui holdings in the US and Canada.

Sealord in New Zealand is 1/2 owned by Nissui.
Cascade Seafoods in Bellingham, Washington, is wholly owned by Nissui. Nissui has holdings in Nederlands and elsewhere. They are easy to find.

There is no way Nissui will cease whaling except through significant financial loss. Japan, which subsidizes the costs to a major extent, should be put on notice as well, that the costs will mount, through international pressure. It is up to you to create that pressure, through contacting your government, and the government of Japan.
What better way to spend a day than actually doing something about this? Just click to follow up information, jot it down, and write to the perpetrators and those who can influence them to cease.

If you are serious about it, you should consider ceasing to buy anything Japanese. Korea makes a number of excellent automobiles if you wish your large purchases to reflect your displeasure. They and Taiwan, although raising questions of pollution and environmental damage, produce electronic consumer items of equivalent quality.

On can always use less products altogether, and enjoy a fuller, healthier life through active pursuits (such as taking cold showers in an open boat in Antartctica!). What do we really need to buy from those who would wantonly kill, and impoverish the earth?

Posted by: mike at January 11, 2006 6:34 PM

If you surf to the Nissui site (http://www.nissui.co.jp) you can view the site in english, click on "Overseas Offices" and you will find a map where you can find the addresses, websites, etc of other organisations such as Sealord NZ.

If we send these organisations a message and tell them that you will no longer be supporting their products unless they send a protest message back to Nissui on the whaling actions. Let them know you will tell your familiy and friends. This small action may help the fight against the whaling.

Posted by: Juzzy at January 12, 2006 3:48 AM

Contact info to reach Gorton's directly:


Gorton's Seafood
Steven Warhover
President


Steve.Warhover@gortons.com


128 Rogers St
Gloucester, Ma 01930-5005

Phone: 978-283-3000 – if it is after 4 pm on the US eastern seaboard, you can use the automated company directory to reach the voicemail of the person you would like to leave message for.

Toll Free: 800-343-8382 - this seems to bring you to the same line as the toll number.

Fax: 978-281-8295

sales@gortons.com

Posted by: kfj at January 15, 2006 3:56 AM

All updates from the Southern Ocean whaling 2007 leg »
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